Battle of Piteå

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Date25 August 1809
Location
Piteå, Sweden
65°13′30″N 21°32′45″E / 65.22500°N 21.54583°E / 65.22500; 21.54583
Result Russian victory
Battle of Piteå
Part of the Finnish War

Locations of the Battle of Piteå
Date25 August 1809
Location
Piteå, Sweden
65°13′30″N 21°32′45″E / 65.22500°N 21.54583°E / 65.22500; 21.54583
Result Russian victory
Belligerents
Sweden Russian Empire Russian Empire
Commanders and leaders
C. F. Hauswolff Russian Empire Nikolay Mikhailovich Kamensky
Strength
The frigate Jarramas
6 cannon sloops
One infantry battalion
One unit of cossacks
Casualties and losses
6 killed
19 wounded
13 killed
20 wounded
7 captured

The Battle of Piteå occurred on 25 August 1809, near Piteå, Sweden. A Swedish naval force under the command of Major C.F. von Hauswolff was ordered to cut off the northward retreat of a Russian force under General Nikolay Kamensky which had been defeated by the Swedes five days earlier at Ratan. The Swedish attempt to hem in the Russians was rebuffed as the Russian victory became the last battle which took place on Swedish soil during the war, and remains today the most recent battle to have taken place in Sweden.

On 20 August 1809, the Russian army had been defeated by the Swedes at the village of Ratan, north of Umeå, and had afterwards retired northwards in the direction of Piteå. The Russians were tailed by a naval force of Swedes that had departed from Ratan on 23 August under Major C.F. von Hauswolff, who was the leading officer aboard a Swedish frigate, the Jarramas. This ship, accompanied by six 'cannon sloops', was tasked with the mission of cutting off and trapping the Russian force, by taking up positions on the northern shore of the Pite River near Pitsund, and destroying the bridge that crossed it, thus cutting off the Russians' escape route northwards and forcing them to face the main Swedish force which was still further to the south.[1][2]

Battle

Aftermath

References

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