Battle of Varja

1700 battle in Estonia during Great Northern War
59°24′54″N 27°07′39″E / 59.415°N 27.1275°E / 59.415; 27.1275Result Disputed, both sides having successBelligerents Swedish Empire Tsardom of RussiaCommanders and leaders Georg Reinhold von Patkul
Hans Henrik von Tiesenhausen Boris SheremetevStrength 800 men[1] 5,000 men[1]Casualties and losses 280 killed, wounded and captured[1] 1,500 killed, wounded and captured[1]
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Great Northern War
Denmark and Holstein-Gottorp (1700)
Swedish Baltic dominions
Courland and Western Lithuania
  • Tryškiai
  • Darsūniškis
  • Vilnius
  • Saločiai
  • Jakobstadt
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  • 1st Grodno
  • Valkininkai
  • Kletsk
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Poland and Saxony
Russia and Eastern Lithuania
Sweden proper (including Finland)
Moldavia
Swedish German dominions
Mecklenburg and Holstein-Gottorp
Norway
Naval battles

Treaties

The Battle of Varja took place on November 7, 1700, close to the villages of Varja and Aa, in the Duchy of Estonia of the Swedish Empire during the Estonian campaign of the first year in the Great Northern War.[2]

Prelude

A Swedish force consisting of 800 men[3] under the command of generals Georg Reinhold von Patkul and Hans Henrik von Tiesenhausen were sent out from Rakvere[2] to secure the road at which the main army under Charles XII of Sweden were going in order to relief the city of Narva, which had been besieged by the Russians for a while.[3]

Battle

At the villages of Varja and Aa[2] they surprised a Russian force of 2,000 men[1] from Boris Sheremetev's detachment gathering supplies for their army at Narva. The Russians were caught completely off guard and subsequently took cover within the houses to avoid the Swedish onslaught, these were however, soon put on fire[2] by the Swedes, an action resulting in 1,500 Russians killed, wounded or captured to about 200 Swedes with only 500 Russians who managed to escape.[1] Later during the day, as the Swedes were looting the Russian supplies, a larger force[2] of 3,000 men under Sheremetev himself, arrived and in turn surprised the Swedes who were driven off with a loss of 80 men[1] among them, the Swedish commander Georg Reinhold Patkul who was captured during the retreat.[3]

Aftermath

The Russians here received important information about the approach of the Swedish main army under Charles, who arrived at the two villages about two weeks later.[2] Sheremetev later faced the Swedish vanguard at Pühhajoggi; however after initial skirmishes he was soon driven off,[4] leading to the Battle of Narva, where the Russian main army saw itself decisively defeated by the Swedish army.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Giovanni van Ghelen. Avvisi italiani, ordinarii e straordinarii, Volume 18. Vienna, 1701. p. 2.2
  2. ^ a b c d e f Margus Laidre. Segern vid Narva. Bokförlaget Natur & Kultur, Stockholm, 1996. pp. 141–142
  3. ^ a b c Daniel Defoe. The History of the Wars, of His Late Majesty Charles XII, King of Sweden. H. P, 1720. pp. 60–61
  4. ^ Margus Laidre. Segern vid Narva. Bokförlaget Natur & Kultur, Stockholm, 1996. p. 143
  5. ^ Kerala J. Snyder. The Organ As a Mirror of Its Time: North European Reflections, 1610–2000, 2002. p. 137