Battle of Sculeni

The Battle of Sculeni was fought on 29 June 1821 in Sculeni, Moldavia between the Ottoman forces of Sultan Mahmud II and Greek Filiki Eteria forces led by Prince George Catakouzenos.[1] It came as a result of Ottoman reprisals for Alexander Ypsilantis' expedition in the two Danubian Principalities, and followed in the aftermath of the Battle of Dragashani (as a prelude to the Greek War of Independence). When the Ottomans crossed the Bahlui River in Iaşi on 25 June 1821, Lieutenant Catakouzenos and his forces, originally stationed on the Russian frontier, crossed the Prut River.[2]

Battle of Sculeni
Part of the Greek War of Independence

Athanasios Agrafiotis fights in Pruth by Peter von Hess
Date29 June 1821
Location
Sculeni, Moldavia
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Greek revolutionaries  Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
George Cantacuzenus
Giorgakis Olympios
Athanasios Agrafiotis
Sultan Mahmud II
Strength
400-500 soldiers 5000 soldiers
Casualties and losses
375 soldiers

Battle

The Ottomans possessed a military that outnumbered the Greeks at approximately ten to one.[3] Catacouzenos imitated the retreat of Ypsilantis to the Austrian Empire after Dragashani, by fleeing to Russia. However, his forces, made up of around 500 young Greek soldiers (Edwin Emerson places the number at 400 soldiers[3]), wanted to stay and fight against the Ottoman Empire. During the battle, approximately one-fourth of the Greek army fled by swimming across the Prut. The remaining soldiers continued to fight until they were either killed by the Ottomans or by the stream itself. The Russians, positioned on the opposite bank of the river, applauded the bravery of the Greeks. Giorgakis Olympios, a military leader who commanded an army in Wallachia, was garrisoned in the Moldavian Secu Monastery; Giorgakis fought until the Ottomans stormed the monastery and forced him to light powder kegs from which he perished in the explosion. However, Giorgakis had a Macedonian comrade by the name of Yiannis Pharmakis, who continued the fight for a fortnight longer. In the end, on 4 October 1821, Pharmakis surrendered on the promise that his life would be spared. The promise was not kept by the Ottomans, and Pharmakis was ultimately decapitated in Constantinople.[1]

Aftermath

After the battle, all Greek uprisings in the Danubian Principalities and other northern areas subject to the Ottoman Empire ceased.[2] However, the primary task, which was to divert significant Ottoman military forces at all costs towards the Northern Balkans, that would otherwise be used to fight and crush the Greek War of Independence in the South, was accomplished.

gollark: This "efficiency" metric is mostly unnecessary.
gollark: Okay, sure, and?
gollark: No, you need 3 machines, and the 1$ is entirely irrelevant.
gollark: Cost is not ””how many machines”” though.
gollark: No, it's just ceil(x / input handled per machine).

References

Citations
  1. Miller, p. 69.
  2. Phillips, p. 43.
  3. Emerson, p. 673.
Bibliography
  • Emerson, Edwin. A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year. P. E. Collier and Son, 1901 (New York Public Library).
  • Ghervas, Stella. Réinventer la tradition. Alexandre Stourdza et l'Europe de la Sainte-Alliance. Paris, Honoré Champion, 2008. ISBN 978-2-7453-1669-1
  • Miller, William. The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors, 1801-1927. Routledge, 1966.
  • Phillips, Walter Alison. The War of Greek Independence, 1821 to 1833. Smith, Elder and Company, 1897 (University of Michigan).

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.