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Siege of Przemyśl

Siege of Przemyśl
Part of the Eastern Front of World War I

Przemyśl Fort I in March 1915
Date16 September 1914 – 22 March 1915[1]
(6 months and 6 days)
Location
Result First Siege: Russians discontinue Siege Second Siege: Russian Siege succesful
Belligerents
 Austria-Hungary Russian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Hermann Kusmanek
Svetozar Boroević
Radko Dimitriev
Andrei Selivanov
Units involved
Przemyśl fortress garrison 3rd Army
11th Army
Strength
138,000 men:
93,000 soldiers
45,000 impressed levy[2]
300,000 men
Casualties and losses
137,000
20,000 dead
117,000–120,000 captured (including wounded)
700 artillery pieces[2]
115,000 total casualties (40,000 casualties were sustained in the first few days of the siege.[3])

The siege of Przemyśl[a] was the longest siege in Europe during the First World War.[4] The siege was a crushing defeat of the Austro-Hungarian Army by the Russian Army. Przemyśl was a fortress-town and stronghold on the River San in what is now southeastern Poland. The investment of Przemyśl began on 16 September 1914 and was briefly suspended on 11 October, due to an Austro-Hungarian offensive. The siege resumed again on 9 November and the Austro-Hungarian garrison surrendered on 22 March 1915, after holding out for a total of 133 days.[1] The siege has been referred to as "Austria-Hungary's Stalingrad".[5][6]

Background edit

In August 1914, Russian armies moved against both German East Prussia and one of Austria-Hungary's largest provinces, Galicia, straddling the present-day border between Poland and Ukraine. Its advance into Germany was soon repulsed but its Galician campaign was more successful. General Nikolai Ivanov overwhelmed the Austro-Hungarian forces under Conrad von Hötzendorf[citation needed] during the Battle of Galicia, and the whole Austrian front fell back over 160 kilometres (100 mi) to the Carpathian Mountains. The fortress at Przemyśl was the only Austrian post that held out and by 28 September, was completely behind Russian lines. The Russians were now in a position to threaten the German industrial region of Silesia, making the defense of Przemyśl of importance to the Germans as well as the Austro-Hungarians.

50 kilometres (30 mi) of new trenches were dug and 1,000 km (650 mi) of barbed wire were used to make seven new lines of defence around the perimeter of the town. Inside the fortress, a military garrison of 127,000, as well as 18,000 civilians, were surrounded by six Russian divisions. Przemyśl reflected the nature of the Austro-Hungarian Empire – orders of the day had to be issued in fifteen languages. Austrians, Poles, Jews and Ruthenians (Ukrainians) were together in the besieged town, that was hit constantly with artillery fire, and as the toll of dead and sick and wounded rose, and starvation threatened, so did mutual distrust and ethnic tension.[7]

First siege edit

 
Map of Przemysl and surrounding forts

On 24 September, General Radko Dimitriev, commander of the Russian Third Army began the siege of the fortress with six divisions. Dimitriev, after a brief artillery bombardment, ordered a full-scale assault on the fortress. The fortress was defended by 120,000 soldiers, under the command of Hermann Kusmanek von Burgneustädten. For three days the Russians attacked and accomplished nothing at the cost of 40,000 casualties.[8]

During the Battle of the Vistula River, Svetozar Boroevic von Bojna's Third Army advanced towards Przemyśl. On 5 October, Russian assaults continued, under the command of General Scherbakov, including a major one on 7 October. Yet, with Austro-Hungarian forces advancing, the Russian assault was discontinued. On 9 October, a cavalry unit from the Third Army entered the besieged fortress, and the main body on 12 Oct.[8]: 327–328 

Second siege edit

By the end of October, the German and Austro-Hungarian armies were retreating west after their reversals in the Battle of the Vistula River. On 4 November, civilians were ordered to leave Przemyśl. On 10 November, the second siege started.[8]: 354–355  The Russian 11th Army (General Andrei Nikolaevich Selivanov) took up the siege operations. Selivanov did not order any frontal assaults as Dimitriev had, and instead settled to starve the garrison into submission. By mid-December, the Russians were pounding the fortress with ceaseless artillery fire seeking to compel the town's surrender. During the winter 1914–1915 the Habsburg armies continued to fight their way to the fortress. Months of fighting resulted in great losses, largely from frostbite and disease but relieving forces failed to reach the garrison at Przemyśl.

In February 1915, Boroevic led another relief effort towards Przemyśl. By the end of February, all relief efforts having been defeated, Hötzendorf informed Hermann Kusmanek von Burgneustädten that no further efforts would be made. Selivanov was given sufficient artillery to reduce the fortress. The Russians overran the northern defenses on 13 March. An improvised line of defense held up the Russian attacks long enough for Kusmanek to destroy anything left in the city that could be of use to the Russians once captured. On March 19 Kusmanek ordered an attempt to break out but his sallies were repulsed and he was forced to retreat back into the city. With nothing useful left within the city, Kusmanek had no choice but to surrender. On 22 March, the remaining garrison of 117,000 surrendered to the Russians. Among the captured were nine generals, ninety-three senior staff officers, 2,500 other officers,[9][10] and the Hungarian war poet Geza Gyoni.

Life in Przemyśl under siege edit

Diaries and notebooks kept by various people in the town have survived. The diary of Josef Tomann, an Austrian recruited into military service as a junior doctor, reveals the results of the activities of garrison officers: "The hospitals have been recruiting teenage girls as nurses. They get 120 crowns a month and free meals. They are, with very few exceptions, utterly useless. Their main job is to satisfy the lust of the gentlemen officers and, rather shamefully, of a number of doctors, too … New officers are coming in almost daily with cases of syphilis, gonorrhea and soft chancre. The poor girls and women feel so flattered when they get chatted up by one of these pestilent pigs in their spotless uniforms, with their shiny boots and buttons." Other accounts reveal the pervasive presence of starvation and disease, including cholera, and the diary of Helena Jablonska, a middle-aged, quite wealthy Polish woman, reveals class and antisemitic and racial tensions in the town; " The Jewish women in basements rip you off the worst", and on March 18, 1915 – "The Jews are taking their shop signs down in a hurry, so that no one can tell who owns what. … They've all got so rich off the backs of those poor soldiers, and now of course they all want to run away!" When the Imperial Russian Army finally took the city in March, the Tsarist soldiers unleashed a violent pogrom against the Jewish population of the city. Jablonska noted: "The Cossacks waited until the Jews set off to the synagogue for their prayers before setting upon them with whips. There is such lamenting and despair. Some Jews are hiding in cellars, but they'll get to them there too."[11]

 
Censored balloon mail from Przemysl to Vienna

Mail communications edit

Airmail flights from Przemyśl during both sieges when airmail postcards, mostly military mail, were flown from the besieged city on twenty-seven flights. Following a forced landing, mail from one flight was confiscated by the Russians and sent to Saint Petersburg for postal censorship and onward transmission. Balloon mail, on some manned but mainly unmanned paper balloons, was also carried out of the city.[12] Pigeon mail was also used to send messages out of the city.[13]

Results edit

 
Statue commemorating the siege of Przemyśl in Budapest, Hungary

The fall of Przemyśl led many to believe that Russia would now launch a major offensive into Hungary. This anticipated offensive never came, but the loss of Przemyśl was a serious blow to Austro-Hungarian morale. A further blow to Austria-Hungary was the fact that Przemyśl was only supposed to be garrisoned by 50,000, yet over 110,000 Austro-Hungarians surrendered with the fortress, a much more significant loss. The Russians held Przemyśl until the summer of 1915 when the Gorlice–Tarnów offensive pushed back the Russian front in Galicia. Przemyśl stayed in Austro-Hungarian hands until October 1918, at which point Eastern Galicia left the Austro-Hungarian Empire and became part of the newly created independent state of Poland. The Austro-Hungarian army never recovered from its losses in the winter of 1914–1915 and the Habsburgs would rely henceforth on German assistance both in their sector of the Eastern Front and in the Balkans.[14]

Meanwhile Austro-Hungarian attempts to relieve the fortress ended catastrophically as the poorly supplied and outnumbered imperial forces attempted offensive after offensive through the Carpathian Mountains. Casualties for January to April 1915, in the Carpathians, were officially reported as 800,000, mostly due to weather and disease rather than combat. Russian casualties were nearly as high, but easier to replace, and balanced out more by the surrender of 117,000 Austro-Hungarian troops at the end of the siege.[15] All told, the siege and the attempts to relieve it cost the Austro-Hungarian army over a million casualties and inflicted on it significant damage from which it would never recover.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Polish: Oblężenie twierdza Przemyśl; German: Belagerung von Premissel; Russian: Перемы́шльская осада
  1. ^ a b Dowling, Timothy C. (2014). Russia at War: From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan, Chechnya, and Beyond. Przemyśl, Siege of (September 24, 1914 – March 22, 1915). Vol. 2 volumes. ABC-CLIO. pp. 170, 681–682, 913. ISBN 978-1-59884-948-6.
  2. ^ a b "Przemysl leltára" [account of Przemyśl] (in Hungarian). Budapest, Hungary: Huszadik század. April 1915. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
  3. ^ "Przemyslt teljesen felszabadítottuk" [Przemyśl has been fully liberated] (in Hungarian). Budapest, Hungary: Huszadik század. October 1914. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
  4. ^ A War in Words, p. 69, Svetlana Palmer & Sarah Wallis, Simon & Schuster 2003 [ISBN missing]
  5. ^ Watson, Alexander (2020-07-22). "World War I's Stalingrad: The Siege of Przemyśl and Europe's Bloodlands". The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. Retrieved 2024-04-03.
  6. ^ Wilson, Peter H. (2023). Iron and Blood: A Military History of the German-Speaking Peoples since 1500 (1st ed.). Harvard University Press. p. 535. ISBN 978-0-674-98762-3.
  7. ^ A War in Words, p.70, Svetlana Palmer & Sarah Wallis, Simon & Schuster 2003
  8. ^ a b c Buttar, Prit (2016). Collision of Empires, The War on the Eastern Front in 1914. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 272–274. ISBN 978-1-4728-1318-3.
  9. ^ Rothenburg 1976, p. 185.
  10. ^ Buttar, Prit (2017). Germany Ascendant, The Eastern Front 1915. Oxford: Osprey. pp. 57–61, 138–144. ISBN 978-1-4728-1937-6.
  11. ^ A War in Words, pp. 87–88
  12. ^ Kupiec-Weglinski, Jerry (December 2009). "The Siege Of Przemysl 1914–15". Airpost Journal. 80 (12). Mineola, NY: American Air Mail Society: 494–509. ISSN 0739-0939.
  13. ^ "PIGEON POST FROM PRZEMYSL.; " We Are Doing Very Well," Says Message to Vienna", New York Times, p. 2, 1914-11-29
  14. ^ A War in Words, p. 93
  15. ^ Tucker, Spencer. World War I: A Student Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO Publishing. 2005. p. 349.

References edit

  • Dowling, Timothy C. (2014). Russia at War: From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan, Chechnya, and Beyond. Przemyśl, Siege of (September 24, 1914 – March 22, 1915). Vol. 2 volumes. ABC-CLIO. pp. 170, 681–682, 913. ISBN 978-1-59884-948-6.
  • Rothenburg, G. (1976). The Army of Francis Joseph. West Lafayette, Ind: Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-0-911198-41-6.
  • Tucker, Spencer (2002) [1997]. The Great War, 1914–1918. Routledge. ISBN 1134817495 – via Goggle Books.

Further reading edit

  • Tunstall, Graydon A. (2016). Written in Blood: The Battles for Fortress Przemysl in WWI. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253021977.
  • Watson, Alexander (2019). The Fortress: The Great Siege of Przemysl. London: Allen Lane. ISBN 9780241309063. online review in H-DIPLO
  • Watson, Alexander (2020). The Fortress: The Siege of Przemysl and the Making of Europe's Bloodlands. Basic Books. ISBN 978-1-5416-9732-4.

External links edit

  • Fall of Przemysl (1915) on YouTube
  • Wayback capture.

siege, przemyśl, other, uses, battle, przemyśl, disambiguation, part, eastern, front, world, iprzemyśl, fort, march, 1915date16, september, 1914, march, 1915, months, days, locationprzemyśl, austria, hungary, present, poland, resultfirst, siege, russians, disc. For other uses see Battle of Przemysl disambiguation Siege of PrzemyslPart of the Eastern Front of World War IPrzemysl Fort I in March 1915Date16 September 1914 22 March 1915 1 6 months and 6 days LocationPrzemysl Austria Hungary present day Poland ResultFirst Siege Russians discontinue Siege Second Siege Russian Siege succesfulBelligerents Austria HungaryRussian EmpireCommanders and leadersHermann Kusmanek Svetozar BoroevicRadko Dimitriev Andrei SelivanovUnits involvedPrzemysl fortress garrison3rd Army 11th ArmyStrength138 000 men 93 000 soldiers45 000 impressed levy 2 300 000 menCasualties and losses137 00020 000 dead117 000 120 000 captured including wounded 700 artillery pieces 2 115 000 total casualties 40 000 casualties were sustained in the first few days of the siege 3 The siege of Przemysl a was the longest siege in Europe during the First World War 4 The siege was a crushing defeat of the Austro Hungarian Army by the Russian Army Przemysl was a fortress town and stronghold on the River San in what is now southeastern Poland The investment of Przemysl began on 16 September 1914 and was briefly suspended on 11 October due to an Austro Hungarian offensive The siege resumed again on 9 November and the Austro Hungarian garrison surrendered on 22 March 1915 after holding out for a total of 133 days 1 The siege has been referred to as Austria Hungary s Stalingrad 5 6 Contents 1 Background 2 First siege 3 Second siege 4 Life in Przemysl under siege 5 Mail communications 6 Results 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editIn August 1914 Russian armies moved against both German East Prussia and one of Austria Hungary s largest provinces Galicia straddling the present day border between Poland and Ukraine Its advance into Germany was soon repulsed but its Galician campaign was more successful General Nikolai Ivanov overwhelmed the Austro Hungarian forces under Conrad von Hotzendorf citation needed during the Battle of Galicia and the whole Austrian front fell back over 160 kilometres 100 mi to the Carpathian Mountains The fortress at Przemysl was the only Austrian post that held out and by 28 September was completely behind Russian lines The Russians were now in a position to threaten the German industrial region of Silesia making the defense of Przemysl of importance to the Germans as well as the Austro Hungarians 50 kilometres 30 mi of new trenches were dug and 1 000 km 650 mi of barbed wire were used to make seven new lines of defence around the perimeter of the town Inside the fortress a military garrison of 127 000 as well as 18 000 civilians were surrounded by six Russian divisions Przemysl reflected the nature of the Austro Hungarian Empire orders of the day had to be issued in fifteen languages Austrians Poles Jews and Ruthenians Ukrainians were together in the besieged town that was hit constantly with artillery fire and as the toll of dead and sick and wounded rose and starvation threatened so did mutual distrust and ethnic tension 7 First siege edit nbsp Map of Przemysl and surrounding forts On 24 September General Radko Dimitriev commander of the Russian Third Army began the siege of the fortress with six divisions Dimitriev after a brief artillery bombardment ordered a full scale assault on the fortress The fortress was defended by 120 000 soldiers under the command of Hermann Kusmanek von Burgneustadten For three days the Russians attacked and accomplished nothing at the cost of 40 000 casualties 8 During the Battle of the Vistula River Svetozar Boroevic von Bojna s Third Army advanced towards Przemysl On 5 October Russian assaults continued under the command of General Scherbakov including a major one on 7 October Yet with Austro Hungarian forces advancing the Russian assault was discontinued On 9 October a cavalry unit from the Third Army entered the besieged fortress and the main body on 12 Oct 8 327 328 Second siege editBy the end of October the German and Austro Hungarian armies were retreating west after their reversals in the Battle of the Vistula River On 4 November civilians were ordered to leave Przemysl On 10 November the second siege started 8 354 355 The Russian 11th Army General Andrei Nikolaevich Selivanov took up the siege operations Selivanov did not order any frontal assaults as Dimitriev had and instead settled to starve the garrison into submission By mid December the Russians were pounding the fortress with ceaseless artillery fire seeking to compel the town s surrender During the winter 1914 1915 the Habsburg armies continued to fight their way to the fortress Months of fighting resulted in great losses largely from frostbite and disease but relieving forces failed to reach the garrison at Przemysl In February 1915 Boroevic led another relief effort towards Przemysl By the end of February all relief efforts having been defeated Hotzendorf informed Hermann Kusmanek von Burgneustadten that no further efforts would be made Selivanov was given sufficient artillery to reduce the fortress The Russians overran the northern defenses on 13 March An improvised line of defense held up the Russian attacks long enough for Kusmanek to destroy anything left in the city that could be of use to the Russians once captured On March 19 Kusmanek ordered an attempt to break out but his sallies were repulsed and he was forced to retreat back into the city With nothing useful left within the city Kusmanek had no choice but to surrender On 22 March the remaining garrison of 117 000 surrendered to the Russians Among the captured were nine generals ninety three senior staff officers 2 500 other officers 9 10 and the Hungarian war poet Geza Gyoni Life in Przemysl under siege editDiaries and notebooks kept by various people in the town have survived The diary of Josef Tomann an Austrian recruited into military service as a junior doctor reveals the results of the activities of garrison officers The hospitals have been recruiting teenage girls as nurses They get 120 crowns a month and free meals They are with very few exceptions utterly useless Their main job is to satisfy the lust of the gentlemen officers and rather shamefully of a number of doctors too New officers are coming in almost daily with cases of syphilis gonorrhea and soft chancre The poor girls and women feel so flattered when they get chatted up by one of these pestilent pigs in their spotless uniforms with their shiny boots and buttons Other accounts reveal the pervasive presence of starvation and disease including cholera and the diary of Helena Jablonska a middle aged quite wealthy Polish woman reveals class and antisemitic and racial tensions in the town The Jewish women in basements rip you off the worst and on March 18 1915 The Jews are taking their shop signs down in a hurry so that no one can tell who owns what They ve all got so rich off the backs of those poor soldiers and now of course they all want to run away When the Imperial Russian Army finally took the city in March the Tsarist soldiers unleashed a violent pogrom against the Jewish population of the city Jablonska noted The Cossacks waited until the Jews set off to the synagogue for their prayers before setting upon them with whips There is such lamenting and despair Some Jews are hiding in cellars but they ll get to them there too 11 nbsp Censored balloon mail from Przemysl to ViennaMail communications editAirmail flights from Przemysl during both sieges when airmail postcards mostly military mail were flown from the besieged city on twenty seven flights Following a forced landing mail from one flight was confiscated by the Russians and sent to Saint Petersburg for postal censorship and onward transmission Balloon mail on some manned but mainly unmanned paper balloons was also carried out of the city 12 Pigeon mail was also used to send messages out of the city 13 Results edit nbsp Statue commemorating the siege of Przemysl in Budapest Hungary The fall of Przemysl led many to believe that Russia would now launch a major offensive into Hungary This anticipated offensive never came but the loss of Przemysl was a serious blow to Austro Hungarian morale A further blow to Austria Hungary was the fact that Przemysl was only supposed to be garrisoned by 50 000 yet over 110 000 Austro Hungarians surrendered with the fortress a much more significant loss The Russians held Przemysl until the summer of 1915 when the Gorlice Tarnow offensive pushed back the Russian front in Galicia Przemysl stayed in Austro Hungarian hands until October 1918 at which point Eastern Galicia left the Austro Hungarian Empire and became part of the newly created independent state of Poland The Austro Hungarian army never recovered from its losses in the winter of 1914 1915 and the Habsburgs would rely henceforth on German assistance both in their sector of the Eastern Front and in the Balkans 14 Meanwhile Austro Hungarian attempts to relieve the fortress ended catastrophically as the poorly supplied and outnumbered imperial forces attempted offensive after offensive through the Carpathian Mountains Casualties for January to April 1915 in the Carpathians were officially reported as 800 000 mostly due to weather and disease rather than combat Russian casualties were nearly as high but easier to replace and balanced out more by the surrender of 117 000 Austro Hungarian troops at the end of the siege 15 All told the siege and the attempts to relieve it cost the Austro Hungarian army over a million casualties and inflicted on it significant damage from which it would never recover Notes edit Polish Oblezenie twierdza Przemysl German Belagerung von Premissel Russian Peremy shlskaya osada a b Dowling Timothy C 2014 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond Przemysl Siege of September 24 1914 March 22 1915 Vol 2 volumes ABC CLIO pp 170 681 682 913 ISBN 978 1 59884 948 6 a b Przemysl leltara account of Przemysl in Hungarian Budapest Hungary Huszadik szazad April 1915 Retrieved 2 August 2011 Przemyslt teljesen felszabaditottuk Przemysl has been fully liberated in Hungarian Budapest Hungary Huszadik szazad October 1914 Retrieved 2 August 2011 A War in Words p 69 Svetlana Palmer amp Sarah Wallis Simon amp Schuster 2003 ISBN missing Watson Alexander 2020 07 22 World War I s Stalingrad The Siege of Przemysl and Europe s Bloodlands The National WWII Museum New Orleans Retrieved 2024 04 03 Wilson Peter H 2023 Iron and Blood A Military History of the German Speaking Peoples since 1500 1st ed Harvard University Press p 535 ISBN 978 0 674 98762 3 A War in Words p 70 Svetlana Palmer amp Sarah Wallis Simon amp Schuster 2003 a b c Buttar Prit 2016 Collision of Empires The War on the Eastern Front in 1914 Oxford Osprey Publishing pp 272 274 ISBN 978 1 4728 1318 3 Rothenburg 1976 p 185 Buttar Prit 2017 Germany Ascendant The Eastern Front 1915 Oxford Osprey pp 57 61 138 144 ISBN 978 1 4728 1937 6 A War in Words pp 87 88 Kupiec Weglinski Jerry December 2009 The Siege Of Przemysl 1914 15 Airpost Journal 80 12 Mineola NY American Air Mail Society 494 509 ISSN 0739 0939 PIGEON POST FROM PRZEMYSL We Are Doing Very Well Says Message to Vienna New York Times p 2 1914 11 29 A War in Words p 93 Tucker Spencer World War I A Student Encyclopedia ABC CLIO Publishing 2005 p 349 References editDowling Timothy C 2014 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond Przemysl Siege of September 24 1914 March 22 1915 Vol 2 volumes ABC CLIO pp 170 681 682 913 ISBN 978 1 59884 948 6 Rothenburg G 1976 The Army of Francis Joseph West Lafayette Ind Purdue University Press ISBN 978 0 911198 41 6 Tucker Spencer 2002 1997 The Great War 1914 1918 Routledge ISBN 1134817495 via Goggle Books Further reading editTunstall Graydon A 2016 Written in Blood The Battles for Fortress Przemysl in WWI Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253021977 Watson Alexander 2019 The Fortress The Great Siege of Przemysl London Allen Lane ISBN 9780241309063 online review in H DIPLO Watson Alexander 2020 The Fortress The Siege of Przemysl and the Making of Europe s Bloodlands Basic Books ISBN 978 1 5416 9732 4 External links editFall of Przemysl 1915 on YouTube The Siege of Przemysl A Sketch from a British War Correspondent Wayback capture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siege of Przemysl amp oldid 1221181014, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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