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Battle of Gemauerthof

Battle of Gemauerthof
Part of the Great Northern War
Mūrmuižas kauja (Johans Kristofs Broce; 1705).jpg
The Battle of Gemauerthof (engraving from the Johann Christoph Brotze's collection)
Date July 15, 1705 (O.S.)
July 16, 1705 (Swedish calendar)
July 26, 1705 (N.S.)
Location Gemauerthof, Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, (present day Mūrmuiža about 80 km south-west of Riga, Latvia)
Result Swedish victory
Belligerents
Sweden Swedish Empire Russia Tsardom of Russia
Commanders and leaders
Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt Boris Sheremetyev
Strength

7,000:

4,000 infantry,
3,000 cavalry,
17 regimental guns

13,000 or 20,000:

3,600 infantry,
8,000–14,000 dragoon,
2,000 irregular,
16 artillery pieces
Casualties and losses

1,900:

900 killed,
1,000 wounded

5,000:

2,000 killed,
2,000–3,000 wounded,
400 captured

7,000:

13,000 or 20,000:

1,900:

5,000:

The Battle of Gemauerthof was a battle in the Great Northern War, fought south of Riga, in present-day Latvia in July 1705. The Swedish forces under Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt fought a Russian army under Boris Sheremetyev. The Swedes, exhausted after forced marching, went to camp and were cooking supper when the news came of a large Russian army with 16 artillery pieces nearby. The Swedes, who themselves had 17 artillery pieces quickly deployed into battle formation and, encouraged by General Lewenhaupt, attacked the Russians. Although suffering severe setbacks on their right flank, the assault continued. On the left, the Swedish cavalry charged and broke the Russians. The infantry in the centre fired carefully at point-blank range and then charged, pushing their foes back in disorder. The battle ended in a confused melee, which was eventually won by the Swedes. The Russian cavalry withdrew while the infantry was destroyed by a combined-arms assault leaving 5,000 men dead, wounded or captured. The Swedes were victorious, but the victory was only symbolic. In August, the Russians conquered Courland.

Alf Åberg & Göte Göransson "Karoliner" p. 114 - 115

Coordinates: 56°26′04″N 23°31′31″E / 56.43444°N 23.52528°E / 56.43444; 23.52528



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