The 'Battle of Orsha' took place
September 8,
1514, between the forces of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania and
Kingdom of Poland (less than 30,000 troops), under the command of
Hetman Konstanty Ostrogski, and the army of
Grand Duchy of Moscow under
Konyushy (конюший, "Tsar's Equerry")
Ivan Chelyadnin (Иван Челяднин) and
Kniaz (Prince)
Mikhail Golitsa (Михаил Голицын). The Battle of Orsha was part of a long chain of the
Russo-Lithuanian Wars conducted by
Russian rulers striving to gather all the
Old Ruthenian lands under their rule.
The much smaller army of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania and
Poland defeated the
Muscovite forces, capturing their camp and commander.
Eve of battle
At the end of
1512,
Grand Duchy of Moscow began a new war for the
Ruthenian lands of present-day
Belarus and
Ukraine that were part of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
Albrecht I Hohenzollern von Brandenburg-Ansbach, Grand Master of the Teutonic Order rebelled and refused to give a vassal pledge to
Sigismund I the Old. Albert I was supported by
Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor.
[1]
The fortress of
Smolensk was then the easternmost outpost of the Grand Duchy and one of the most important strongholds guarding it from the east. It repelled several Muscovite attacks, but in July
1514 a Muscovite army of 45,000 men and 300 guns besieged and finally captured it. (Some historians claim that the size of Muscovy's army has been overstated: see "
Disputed data," below.)
Spurred on by this initial success, the
Grand Prince of
Moscow Vasili III ordered his forces farther into Belarus, occupying the towns of
Krichev,
Mstislavl and
Dubrovno.
Meanwhile King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania
Sigismund the Old gathered some 35,000 troops for war with the eastern neighbor. This army was inferior in numbers, but comprised mostly well-trained
cavalry. The forces of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Kingdom of
Poland placed under the command of Hetman
Konstanty Ostrogski included:
★ 16,000 horse of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania,
★ 14,000
Polish cavalry (light and heavy),
★ 3,000
mercenary infantry,
★ 2,500 volunteers, mostly from
Bohemia.
Marching into
Belarus,
King Sigismund secured the town of
Barysau with a 4,000-5,000
- strong force, while the main forces, around 30,000, moved on to face the
Muscovites.
At the end of August, several skirmishes took place at crossings of the
Berezina,
Bobr and
Drut Rivers, but the
Muscovite army avoided a major confrontation.
Suffering negligible losses, the Muscovites advanced to the area between
Orsha and
Dubrovno on the
Krapivna River, where they set up camp.
Ivan Chelyadnin, confident that the Lithuanian-Polish forces would have to cross one of two bridges on the
Dnepr, split his own forces to guard those crossings. However, Ostrogski's army crossed the river farther north via two
pontoon bridges. On the night of
September 7, it began preparations for a final battle with the
Muscovites. Hetman Konstanty Ostrogski placed most of his 16,000 horses from Grand Duchy in the center, while most of the Polish
infantry and the auxiliary troops manned the flanks. The
Bohemian and
Silesian infantry were deployed in the center of the line, in front of reserves comprising
Lithuanian and
Polish cavalry.
Battle

''Muscovite campaign against the Lithuanians'' (1903).
On
September 8,
1514, shortly after dawn,
Ivan Chelyadnin gave the order to attack. The
Muscovite forces attempted to outflank the
Lithuanians and
Poles by attacking the flanks, manned by Polish troops. One of the pincers of the attack was commanded by Chelyadnin personally, while the other was led by
Prince Bulgakov-Golitsa. The initial attack failed, and the
Muscovites withdrew toward their starting positions. Chelyadnin was still confident that the almost 3:1 odds in his favor would give him the victory. However, preoccupied with his own wing of the Muscovite forces, he lost track of the other sectors and failed to coordinate a defense against the counterattack by the Lithuanian cavalry, which until then had been kept in reserve.
The Lithuanian
light horse attacked the overstretched center of the Muscovite lines in an attempt to split them. At the crucial moment the horse of the
Grand Duchy seemed to waver, then went into retreat. The Muscovites pursued with all their
cavalry reserves. The Lithuanian horse, after retreating for several minutes, chased by the Muscovites, suddenly turned to the sides. The Muscovite horse now found themselves confronted by
artillery concealed in the
forest. From both sides, Polish forces appeared and proceeded to surround the Muscovites. Ivan Chelyadnin sounded
retreat, which soon became somewhat panicky. The Muscovite forces were pursued by the army of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania for five kilometers.
The Muscovite defeat is often attributed to repeated failures by Ivan Chelyadnin and
Golitsa to coordinate their operations.
Sigismund von Herberstein reported that 40,000 Muscovites were killed
. According to accounts in Polish
chronicles, at the Battle of Orsha 30,000
Muscovites were killed and an additional 3,000 were taken captive, including Ivan Chelyadnin and eight other commanders. The forces of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania and
Kingdom of Poland seized the
Muscovite camp and all 300
cannon.
Aftermath
Upset at word of the massive defeat,
Moscow Grand Prince Vasili III allegedly remarked that "the prisoners [were] as useful as the dead" and declined to negotiate their return. The Battle of Orsha was one of the biggest battles of
16th-century Europe. Ostrogski's forces continued their pursuit of the routed
Muscovite army and retook most of the previously captured strongholds, including
Mstislavl and Krychev, and advancement of Muscovites was stopped for four years
. However, the
Lithuanian and
Polish forces were too exhausted to besiege
Smolensk before winter. Also
Ostrogski did not reach the gates of Smolensk until late September, giving
Vasili III enough time to prepare defense.
In December
1514,
Hetman Konstanty Ostrogski triumphantly entered
Vilnius. To commemorate the victory, two Orthodox churches were erected: the
Church of the Holy Trinity and the
Church of Saint Nicholas, which remain among the most impressive examples of
Orthodox Church architecture in Lithuania.
Impressed by the scope of the Lithuanian and Polish victory, grotesquely inflated by vernacular authorities and historians, Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, started peace negotiations with
Jagiellons in Vienna. On 22 July, 1515, final agreements on peace were made and a broad coalition against Lithuania and Poland ceased
.
The war between the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania and
Grand Duchy of Moscow lasted until
1520. In
1522 a
peace was signed, under the terms of which the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania was forced to cede to
Grand Duchy of Moscow about a quarter of its
Ruthenian possessions, including
Smolensk. The latter city was not retaken from
Russia until almost a century later, in
1611. After the peace agreement of 1522, Grand Duchy of Lithuania one more time tried to attack Russia, but major military conflicts were settled for around 40 years.
Disputed data
Due to the spectacular proportions of the defeat, information about the Battle of Orsha was suppressed in
Muscovite chronicles. Even reputable historians of the
Russian Empire such as
Sergey Solovyov rely on non-Russian sources. On the other hand, King
Sigismund I of Poland sought to gain as much political advantage as possible from his victory. Hence the figures quoted regarding the sizes of the respective
forces, and the numbers of casualties and prisoners taken, are questioned by some modern historians.
Immediately after the victory, the Polish state started to exploit the fact for its
propaganda in Europe, aimed at improving the image of Poland abroad, seriously undermined after huge territorial losses in the wake of the
Battle of Vedrosha. Several panegyrical accounts of the battle were sent to
Rome. "The Polish message was similar to Bomhover's: the Muscovites are not Christians; they are cruel and barbaric; they are Asians and not Europeans; they are in league with Turks and the Tatars to destroy Christendom".
[2] Wishing to capitalize on the popular anti-Turkish hysteria, a Hungarian observer present at the battle "inaugurated a new era in anti-Russian propaganda"
[3] by proclaiming in his broadsheet that many Muscovites suffered for their
Roman Catholicism at the hands of a cruel and tyrannical Orthodox monarch.
[4]
In particular, the size of the
Muscovite army (80,000) is thought to have been seriously exaggerated. Even
Ivan the Terrible, who commanded a larger territory than his father, could never muster more than 40,000 troops, 20% of whom were newly-conquered
Tatars and
Finns. As a consequence, the number of killed (30,000) is also questioned.
Indirect evidence of exaggeration may be that King Sigismund wrote
Pope Leo X and other European rulers that his army had killed 30,000 Russians and taken prisoner 46 commanders and 1,500 nobles. Extant
Polish and
Lithuanian documents, however, list all captured nobles by name, only 611 men in all.
Modern times
The battle is regarded as one of the symbols of Belarusian national revival by Belarusian nationalists, but its significance is being suppressed by the Belarusian authorities. In September of
2005, by order of president of Belarus
Aleksander Lukashenka, four members of
Belarusian National Front opposition were sentenced to almost 4 millions roubles (roughly 1500
Euro) fine each for celebration of the 491st anniversary of the battle.
References
★ The battle was described by
Sigismund von Herberstein in his ''
Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii'' (Notes on Muscovite Affairs,
1549).
1. Tomas Baranauskas. ''Oršos mūšis – didžiausia Lietuvos karinė pergalė prieš Rusiją'' (Battle of Orsha - biggest military victory of Lithuania against Russia). 08 September, 2006
2. Marshall T. Poe. ''A People Born to Slavery: Russia in Early Modern European Ethnography, 1478-1748''. Cornell University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8014-3798-9. Page 21.
3. Ibid.
4. Jacob Piso. ''Epistola Pisonis ad Ioannem Coritium, de conflictu Polonorum et Lituanorum cum Moscovites.'' In Ianus Damianus, ''Iani Damiani Senensis ad Leonem X. Pont. Max. de expeditione in Turcas Egegia''. Basel: Ioannes Frobenius, 1515.