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Battle of Tashkessen

Battle of Tashkessen
Part of Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)
Date December 31, 1877
Location Near Tashkessen, Bulgaria
Result

Ottoman withdrawal

  • The Ottomans withdraw after the battle
Belligerents
 Russian Empire  Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders

General Arkadiy Kurlov

General Iosif Gurko
Valentine Baker
Strength

24,000, 17 guns, of which about 17,000 engaged

Russian estimate: 15,000, 22 guns

2,000-2,400 or 3,000, 7 guns and 2 squadrons of cavalry

Russian estimate: about 4,000, 7 artillery pieces
Casualties and losses

2,000+ (British claim)

562 killed and wounded (Russian estimate)
half of the army (800-1,000 men)

Ottoman withdrawal

General Arkadiy Kurlov

24,000, 17 guns, of which about 17,000 engaged

2,000-2,400 or 3,000, 7 guns and 2 squadrons of cavalry

2,000+ (British claim)

The Battle of Tashkessen or Battle of Tashkesan (Turkish: Taşkesen Muharebesi) was a battle of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878. It was fought between the Ottoman Empire and the Russian Empire on December 31, 1877, in what is now Bulgaria.

The army of Shakir Pasha, some 14,000 men, was on retreat from the village of Kamarli towards Sofia. Shakir Pasha's army was threatened by a Russian force that Burnaby claimed had 30,000 men and "30 battalions of the Russian Guard" from its left flank, under the command of General Iosif Gurko, and another one, said to be 22,000 men strong before Kamarli. 2,400–4,000 men, 7 guns and two cavalry squadrons of Shakir Pasha's army had been detached under the command of Valentine Baker, a British-born Ottoman general. Baker Pasha was given orders to hold off the advancing Russian army in order to secure the retreat of Shakir Pasha's remaining troops. Baker Pasha entrenched his forces in the village of Taşkesen (now Sarantsi, Bulgaria). The superior Russian army surrounded the Ottomans, but its troops were scattered over a large territory, could not unite together and were slowed by deep snow, winter storm and difficult mountain terrain, so that only a part of them engaged; having a strong defensive position and with weather in their favour, the Ottomans successfully managed to hold off the advancing Russian forces for ten hours, allowing Shakir Pasha to withdraw, and hastily retreated as soon as the firing died down. At the end of the day the Ottoman forces were facing a Russian force ten times its size and ultimately left their position. Burnaby declared that the skirmish had cost the Russians more than 2,000 men and the Ottomans had lost more than 800 men, although the Russians established that only 562 of their men were killed and wounded in total.


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