Today 1 February is the anniversary of the Skirmish at Bender when in 1713 around 600 Ottomans attacked Swedish King Charles XII protected by around 40 soldiers. Why did the Ottomans attack the Swedish King so far away from his home in modern-day Moldavia? I explain... (thread)
After the battle of Poltava in 1709 where the Russians defeated the Swedish, Swedish King Charles XII fled to the Ottoman Empire, an enemy of Russia. He would spend the next 4 years in the Ottoman lands!
The Swedish King was initially well accepted and settled in Bender, an Ottoman-controlled town in modern-day Moldavia which had a fortress.
There the Swedes set up their camp. From the comfort of this camp, Charles XII was convincing the Ottomans to attack Russia and involved himself in the Ottoman politics. However this also brought him enemies.
Many Ottomans were beginning to get tired of him including the people of Bender where Charles' entourage accumulated debts! The Ottomans started seeing him as a burden. They decided to capture him which led to this skirmish of Bender.
However the skirmish proved very difficult for the Ottomans. Despite outnumbering the Swedish 600 to 40, the fighting lasted for 7 hours. The Swedes were well equipped and experienced veterans, and the Ottomans' plan to capture Charles XII alive also hindered them somewhat.
Charles XII himself killed one of the Turkish soldiers with a sword, and was shooting at them from his sleeping quarters! After futile assaults, the Ottomans wisely started using fire arrows to set the roof of the building on fire and force the Swedes to come out!
Charles XII was captured after he tripped on his own spurs during escape. He would be kept a prisoner in Constantinople where he would play chess and study the Ottoman navy until he returned to Sweden in autumn the same year.
This skirmish at Bender is also called "kalabalik" from the Turkish word meaning crowd. Because of this skirmish this word entered Swedish language meaning disorder, riot or chaos!
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This is where Napoleon first displayed his greatness.
The Siege of Toulon in 1793.
"I have no words to describe Bonaparte's merit: much technical skill, an equal degree of intelligence, and too much gallantry."
What was so impressive about this young Corsican man?
Let's see.
Like Napoleon said himself,
"It was in Toulon that my reputation began."
The siege of Toulon was a very important battle for revolutionary French Republic as they faced an alliance of local rebels and foreign powers of the anti-French coalition. They had recapture the very important and well fortified naval base of Toulon.
During his long military career that spanned from 1476 to 1529, Nicholas of Salm fought against a "who's who" of legendary military units at the time. His experience was unmatched when he defended Vienna as a 70 year old veteran.
Let's take a look at his resume! (thread)
At 17 years of age he fought his first battle against the Burgundians at Morat in 1477 for Lower League alliance, facing the most powerful ruler in Europe at the time, Charles the Bold, the Duke of the West, and his feared knights of the Order of the Golden Fleece!
In 1483 he entered the service of Austrian Habsburgs and under their banner fought against the legendary Black Army of Hungary, the strongest army in Europe at the time. Ferocious mercenaries who fought for Matthias Corvinus of Hungary with a stellar record and brutal reputation.
The war between Teutonic Order and the Lithuanian pagans was one of the longest conflicts ever! There was some kind of fighting almost every year from 1283 to 1406, but very few big battles. It was basically a war of attrition, but with both sides getting stronger in the process.
The fighting revolved around raids into enemy territory where both sides pillaged enemy territory back and forth. However these raids had to be well organized and the logistics were very difficult. Campaigning was only possible for a limited time of the year!
This is primarily due to two things: geography and climate. These lands were covered by dense forests, bogs, lakes and rivers. There was a belt of uncleared land between the two enemies as a no man's land. This presented logistical challenges that were very difficult to overcome.
Did all the Teutonic Knights follow their vows of chastity as warrior monks like this? Hard to generalize but many of them likely did and the vow of chastity was taken seriously as the historian Eric Christiansen notes in the book The Northern Crusades. However... (thread)
Christiansen also notes how "the knight-brother was exposed to strong temptations, because war and power continually put women at his mercy. They were booty, and the expectation of raping them was what kept his native auxiliaries up to the mark."
These native auxiliaries were the Old Prussian Baltic pagans, former enemies of the Order now serving as their mercenaries. Most of the Baltic crusades revolved around brutal raids into enemy territory and these natives acted as guides and irregulars for the Teutonic Knights.
Did you know? There is an old legend documented by chroniclers that one of the Teutonic Knights decided to test his commitment to chastity by ordering the prettiest virgin girl they could find to sleep next to him naked for entire year and he didn't touch her.
This Teutonic Knight was Bertold Brühaven hailing from Duchy of Austria. He served the Order in the Baltic crusades and was Komtur (commander) of Königsberg from 1289 to 1302. The chronicles praise him as a great warrior who conducted many successful raids deep in pagan lands!
For example Nikolaus von Jeroschin writes that in 1291 "that ever reliable warrior for God" Brother Bertold Brühaven attacked ferociously the area called Junigeda, burning and looting it and also killing or taking prisoner approximately 700 local Baltic heathen men and women!
Italian noblewoman Simonetta Vespucci (1453 - 1476) was so famous for her beauty that she earned the nickname La Sans Pareille, "The Unparalleled One"!
Born in Genoa as Simonetta Cattaneo, she moved to Florence after marrying important nobleman Marco Vespucci.
She was allegedly the model for many paintings by Sandro Botticelli, Piero di Cosimo, and other Florentine painters!
When she died at only 22 years of age she was carried through the city of Florence in an open coffin "so that all might see her beauty, which was even greater in death than it had been in life." Many poets wrote poems grieving over the young beauty's tragic demise!