Siege of Anapa (1788)
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| 1788 siege of Anapa | |||||||
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| Part of Anapa campaign of 1788 of the Sheikh Mansur Movement and Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792) | |||||||
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| Strength | |||||||
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22,000 • • |
17,500 33 cannons | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 700 killed |
300 killed 12 cannons | ||||||
The siege of Anapa of 1788 was a major confrontation between the North Caucasians led by Sheikh Mansur and Turkish troops led by the commander of Anapa, Tatal-Bey, with a Russian force led by General Peter Tekeli. During the battle, the Russian army managed to force the Turks and North Caucasians into the fortress, after which they began besieging it. However, according to General Tekeli, the Russian army was not ready to storm Anapa yet, and if they managed to capture fortress, it would be difficult to hold. Thus, the Russian troops retreated from Anapa on October 15, 1788, and, except for minor skirmishes with Circassian mountaineers, the siege of Anapa was the last major battle of the campaign and the year 1788 as a whole.
On April 22, Prince Grigory Potemkin ordered General Peter Tekeli to quickly begin military operations in the North Caucasus and attack the fortresses of Sudzhuk-Kale and Anapa. However, the unusually strong flood of mountain rivers in 1788 forced Tekeli to postpone the campaign to August of the same year.[1]