Battle of Wenden (1601)
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| Battle of Wenden | |||||||
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| Part of the Polish–Swedish War (1600–1611) | |||||||
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| 700 (including 350 Polish hussars)[1] | More than 3,000[1] | ||||||
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10 killed 60 wounded[1] |
Around 300–1,900 killed and wounded[2][1] 100 captured[1] 13 banners | ||||||
The Battle of Wenden (also known as Battle of Kieś) took place on 7 January 1601, during the Polish–Swedish War (1600–1611). Polish–Lithuanian forces were led by Jürgen von Farensbach (Jerzy Farensbach) and Maciej Dębiński. The Swedes were under Hans Bengtsson. The battle is significant as the first encounter between Swedish reiters and Polish hussars.[1]
The military campaign began in late 1599. Swedish forces captured Narva, Estonia, then after gathering 10 thousands troops under the command of Charles IX Parnu they captured Fellin, and on 6 January 1601 Dorpat. The day after the capture of Dorpat, the Swedish forces (3,000 soldiers) suddenly attacked the Poles and Lithuanians camped under Wenden.[1]