The 'Russo-Polish War of 1654–1667', also called the ''War for Ukraine'', was the last major conflict between
Tsardom of Russia and the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Known in Poland as part of the
"Deluge", the war ended with significant Russian territorial gains and marked the beginning of the rise of Russia as a
great power in Eastern Europe.
Background
The conflict was triggered by the
Khmelnytsky Rebellion of
Ukrainian Cossacks against the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Cossack leader,
Bohdan Khmelnytsky, derived his main foreign support from
Alexis of Russia and promised his allegiance in recompense. Although the
Zemsky Sobor of
1651 was poised to accept the Cossacks into the Moscow
sphere of influence and to enter the war against Poland on their side, the Tsar waited until
1653, when a new popular assembly eventually authorized the unification of
Ukraine with
Tsardom of Russia. After the Cossacks ratified this agreement at the
Pereyaslav Rada the Russo-Polish War became inevitable.
Invasion of the Commonwealth
In July
1654 the Russian army of 41,000 (nominally under the Tsar, but in fact commanded by Princes
Yakov Cherkassky,
Nikita Odoevsky and
Andrey Khovansky) captured the border forts of
Bely and
Dorogobuzh and laid siege to
Smolensk.
The Russian position at Smolensk was endangered as long as
Great Lithuanian Hetman, Prince
Janusz Radziwiłł with 10,000 men held
Orsha, slightly to the west. Cherkassky defeated Radziwill near
Shklov. After a three-month siege, Smolensk — the main object of the
previous Russo–Polish War — fell to the Russians on
23 September.
In the meantime, Prince
Aleksey Trubetskoy led the southern flank of the Russian army from
Bryansk to Ukraine. The territory between the
Dnieper and
Berezina was overrun quickly, with Trubetskoy taking
Mstislavl and
Roslavl and his Ukrainian allies capturing
Homel. On the northern flank,
Fyodor Sheremetev set out from
Pskov and seized the Lithuanian cities of
Nevel (July 1),
Polotsk (July 17), and
Vitebsk (November 17).
Thereupon the Tsar's troops swarmed over Polish
Livonia and firmly established themselves in
Ludza and
Rezekne. Simultaneously, the combined forces of Khmelnitsky and the Muscovite boyar
Buturlin struck against
Volynia. Despite many disagreements between the commanders, they took hold of
Ostrog and
Rovno by the end of the year.
Campaign of 1655
In the winter and spring of
1655, (Prince) Radziwill launched a counter-offensive in
Belarus, recapturing
Orsha and besieging
Mogilyov. This siege continued for three months with no conclusion. In January, Sheremetev and Khmelnitsky routed the Poles at
Akhmatov while a second Polish army (allied with the
Tatars) crushed a Russian-Ukrainian contingent at Zhashkov.
Alarmed by these reverses, the Tsar hastened from Moscow and at his instigation a massive offensive was launched. The Lithuanian forces offered little effective resistance and surrendered
Minsk to the Cossacks and Cherkassky on
3 July.
Vilnius, the capital of the
Great Duchy of Lithuania, was taken by the Russians on
31 July. This success was followed up by the conquest of
Kowno and
Hrodno in August.
Elsewhere, Prince
Volkonsky sailed from
Kiev up the Dnieper and the
Pripyat, routing the Lithuanians and capturing
Pinsk on his way. Trubetskoy's unit overran
Slonim and
Kletsk, while Sheremetev managed little beyond seizing
Velizh on
June 17. A Lithuanian garrison still resisted the Cossacks' siege in
Stary Bykhov, when Khmelnitsky and Buturlin were already active in
Galicia. They laid attacked the Polish city of
Lwów in September and entered
Lublin after
Sapieha's defeat near
Brest.
Armistice
The Russian advance into the Polish Commonwealth led to the kingdom of Sweden
invading Poland in 1655 under King
Charles X.
Afanasy Ordin-Nashchokin then opened negotiations with the Poles and signed an armistice on
2 November. After that, Russian forces marched on Swedish Livonia and besieged
Riga in the
Russo-Swedish War of 1656-1658.
The Livonian imbroglio had unexpected repercussions in Ukraine. Khmelnitsky, who considered Sweden his ally, viewed the armistice as a betrayal and was prepared to break with the Tsar up until the
hetman's death in August
1657. His successor,
Ivan Vyhovsky,
allied himself with the Poles -- who by then had defeated and repelled the Swedish invasion.
Campaign against Vyhovsky
Under such circumstances, the Tsar concluded with Sweden the advantageous
truce of Valiersari, which allowed him to resume hostilities against the Poles in October
1658. During the two years of peace, the Belarusian nobility (and many Cossack leaders) had changed sides and now would help the Poles to launch a winter offensive in Belarus against the Russians.
In the north, Sapieha's attempt to blockade Vilnius was checked by Prince
Yury Dolgorukov (October 11). In the south, the Ukrainian Vyhovsky failed to wrest
Kiev from Sheremetev's control. In July
1659, however, Vyhovsky and his
Crimean Tatar allies
inflicted a heavy defeat upon Trubetskoy's army, then besieging
Konotop.
The threat to the Russians during their conquests in Ukraine was relieved by Sheremetev's forces, which set out from Kiev in August. Whilst Vyhovsky was defeated near
Chyhyryn and fled to Poland, the Cossacks deposed him and elected Khmelnitsky's son
Yurii as the new hetman of Ukraine.
End of the war

Most of the eastern areas marked with light pink were lost by Commonwealth to Russia in 1667; remaining in the
Grzymułtowski's Peace Treaty of 1686.
The tide turned in Poland's favor in
1660. Although the new
Cossack hetman,
Yuhym Somko, was not as outspoken a critic of the Moscow regime as his predecessor, he nevertheless gravitated towards an alliance with the Poles. And Polish King
John II Casimir, having concluded the
Northern Wars against Sweden with the
Treaty of Oliva, was now able to concentrate all his forces on the Eastern front.
The Poles unleashed a major offensive and drove the Russians out of Belarus by the end of
1660. Sapieha defeated Khovansky and Sheremetev was forced to capitulate near
Chudniv. The most brilliant Polish general of the period was
Stefan Czarniecki: he routed Dolgorukov's army in the
Battle of Polonka and recaptured Vilnius in
1661. Other towns of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were retaken by the Polish-Lithuanian forces one by one. These reverses forced the Tsar to accept the humiliating
Treaty of Kardis, by way of averting a new war against Sweden.
Towards the end of 1663, the Polish King crossed the Dnieper and invaded
Left-bank Ukraine. Most towns in his path would surrender without resistance, but his siege of
Glukhov in January was a costly failure and he suffered a further setback at
Novgorod-Seversky. However, the last notable action of the war was a defeat of Russian forces near Vitebsk in summer 1664.
Peace negotiations dragged on from
1664 until January
1667, when
Jerzy Lubomirski's
rebellion forced the Poles to conclude the
Treaty of Andrusovo, whereby Poland ceded to Russia the fortress of Smolensk and the Left-bank Ukraine (including
Kiev).
References
★ Malov A.V. ''Russo-Polish War (1654-1667)''. Moscow: Exprint, 2006. ISBN 5-94038-111-1.
External links
★
Russo-Polish War, 1654-1667
★
The Muscovite Wars and the Polish Ascendancy