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词条 Siege of Narva (1704)
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  1. See also

  2. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2017}}{{For|other Battles of Narva|Battle of Narva (disambiguation){{!}}Battle of Narva}}{{Infobox Military Conflict
|conflict=Siege of Narva
|partof=the Great Northern War
|image=
|caption=Peter the Great leads the Russian troops storming Narva in 1704
|date=27 June – 9 August 1704
|place =Narva, Swedish Empire (present-day Estonia)
|result=Russian victory
  • Treaty of Narva

|combatant1= Swedish Empire
|combatant2= Tsardom of Russia
|commander1= Henning Rudolf Horn af Ranzien (POW)
|commander2= Tsar Peter I
Georg Benedict von Ogilvy
|strength1=3,800 infantry and 1,300 cavalry
|strength2=20,000[1]{{rp|697}}
|casualties1=3,200 dead or wounded 1900 captured
|casualties2=up to 3,000 dead or wounded[1]
}}{{Campaignbox Great Northern War}}

The Siege of Narva ({{lang-ru|Осада Нарвы}}, {{lang-sv|Belägringen av Narva}}), also known as the Second Battle of Narva, was the second Russian siege of Swedish Narva during the Great Northern War from 27 June to 9 August 1704.[2]

The siege came four years after the first battle of Narva, where the Russians were defeated by a much smaller Swedish force defending the city. Tsar Peter I marched to the area again with a reorganized army in an attempt to capture Narva and occupy Swedish Ingria, previously a Swedish logistical center and territory ceded by Russia in 1617.[3]{{rp|697}} Marshal Boris Sheremetev's force of 20,000 captured Tartu on 24 June and then Russian forces led by Georg Benedict von Ogilvy besieged Narva, with the garrison under the Commandant Major-General Henning Rudolf Horn af Ranzien and consisting of only 3,800 infantry and 1,300 cavalry.[3]{{rp|697}} After a long siege followed by a three-fronted attack, the Russians captured Narva on 20 August 1704, massacring hundreds of its Swedish garrison and inhabitants before Peter I stopped them.[3]{{rp|69}} General Horn, several officers and a large number of Swedish soldiers were captured, after roughly 3,200 casualties in the siege and aftermath. The Russians lost up to 3,000 men in total, with some estimates being over 10,000.[4]

In August, Peter I signed the Treaty of Narva in the town, aligning the Sandomierz Confederation faction of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth with Russia against Sweden in the war.

On 11 September, the surviving citizens of Narva swore allegiance to Peter I in the courtyard of the town hall, and the city was incorporated into the Russian Tsardom.[5]

See also

  • Lovisa von Burghausen
  • Brigitta Scherzenfeldt
  • Anna Ivanovna Kramer
  • Names of the Russian Generals, who command at the Siege of Narva, 1704 & Specification of the Regiments employed in the Siege of Narva.

References

1. ^Военный энциклопедический лексикон. Часть 9-я. СПб, 1845, с. 376
2. ^{{cite book|last=Dupuy, Richard Ernest|author2=Dupuy, Trevor Nevitt|title=The encyclopedia of military history from 3500 B.C. to the present |publisher=Harper & Row|date=1986|edition=2|isbn=0-06-181235-8}}
3. ^Tucker, S.C., 2010, A Global Chronology of Conflict, Vol. Two, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, LLC, {{ISBN|9781851096671}}
4. ^Военный энциклопедический лексикон. Часть 9-я. СПб, 1845, с. 376
5. ^Петров А.В. Город Нарва, его прошлое и достопримечательности. СПб, 1901, с. 175
{{coord missing|Estonia}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Narva (1704), Battle Of}}

9 : Battles of the Great Northern War|Conflicts in 1704|1704 in Europe|History of Narva|Military history of Estonia|Sieges involving Russia|Sieges involving Sweden|Russia–Sweden military relations|18th century in Estonia

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