Siege of Kamenets (1687)

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Date2 September 1687[1]
Result Ottoman–Crimean victory
Siege of Kamenets (1687)
Part of Polish–Ottoman War (1683–1699), Great Turkish War

Kamenets in 1684
Date2 September 1687[1]
Location
Result Ottoman–Crimean victory
Belligerents
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
border=no Cossack Hetmanate
Commanders and leaders
James Louis Sobieski
Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski
Andrzej Potocki
border=no Andriy Mohyla
Huseyin Pasha
Strength
27,000 men 10,000
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

The siege of Kamenets was a military engagement by the Polish to seize the Ottoman fortress of Kamenets. The siege ended in failure.

In July 1687,[2] the Polish king, Jan III, dispatched an army of 27,000 men to recapture Kamenetes. He placed the army under the leadership of his eldest son, James. He placed the grand hetmans under the prince's command. Jan hoped his son would win and thus make his candidacy possible.[3] The Polish army was supported by the Cossacks of hetman Andriy Mohyla.[4][5] The Ottoman governor of Kamanetes, Huseyin Pasha, the Bosnian, heard of the large Polish army coming and reported the situation to Serdar Bozoklu Mustafa Pasha.[6] The Polish army was poorly equipped, and the Hetmans preferred not to attack. James was not a military genius like his father.[7] The Crimean Khan dispatched a force of 10,000 Ottoman-Crimean troops to relive the siege. The arrival of the relief army scattered the Polish troops and forced them to retreat, taking with them their baggage.[8][9]

Aftermath

References

Sources

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