Siege of Küstrin
Siege of Küstrin | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Seven Years' War | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Prussia | Russia | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Schack von Wittenau | William Fermor | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
75 guns | Unknown | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
318 houses destroyed | 11 killed, 36 wounded |
- v
- t
- e
European theatre
- Lobositz
- Reichenberg
- Alt-Bunzlau
- Prague
- Siege of Prague
- Kolín
- Gabel
- Holitz
- Domstadtl
- Olomouc
- Prussian Bohemia Incursion
- Teplitz
Westphalia, Hesse and Lower Saxony
- Geldern
- Hastenbeck
- Rheinberg
- Krefeld
- Sandershausen
- Meer
- Lutterberg
- Bergen
- 1st Münster
- Minden
- Fulda
- 2nd Münster
- Corbach
- Emsdorf
- Warburg
- Kloster Kampen
- Langensalza
- 1st Cassel
- Grünberg
- Villinghausen
- Ölper
- Wilhelmsthal
- Lutterberg (1762)
- Nauheim
- Amöneburg
- Cassel (1762)
Electoral Saxony
- Pirna
- Rossbach
- Sonnenstein
- Hochkirch
- Torgau (siege)
- Wittenberg (1759)
- Torgau (2nd siege)
- Dresden (surrender)
- Torgau (1759)
- Korbitz
- Hoyerswerda
- Sackwitz
- Maxen
- Meissen
- Dresden
- Strehla
- Torgau (3rd siege)
- Wittenberg (1760)
- Torgau
- Döbeln
- Hilbersdorf
- Erbisdorf
- Freiberg
Brandenburg
- Berlin
- Küstrin
- Zorndorf
- Kay
- Kunersdorf
- Berlin (1760)
- Gostyn
- Moys
- 1st Schweidnitz
- Breslau
- Leuthen
- Breslau (1759 siege)
- Liegnitz
- 2nd Schweidnitz
- Cosel (1758)
- Neisse
- Neustadt
- Landeshut
- Glatz
- Breslau (1760 siege)
- Liegnitz
- Cosel (1760)
- 3rd Schweidnitz
- Adelsbach
- Burkersdorf
- Reichenbach
- 4th Schweidnitz
East Prussia
- Memel
- Gross-Jägersdorf
- Demmin
- Anklam
- Stralsund
- Tornow
- Fehrbellin
- Kolberg (1758)
- Güstow
- Frisches Haff
- Kolberg (1760)
- Pasewalk
- Kolberg (1761)
- Neuensund
- Green Redoubt
- Gülzow
- Gollnow
- Spie
- Neukalen
Naval Operations
- Fort St Philip
- Minorca
- Rochefort
- Cartagena
- Bay of Biscay
- St Malo
- Cherbourg
- Saint Cast
- Britain
- Quiberon Bay
- Belle Île
- Cádiz
- Cape Finisterre
The siege of Küstrin (Cüstrin) in 1758 was a siege of the Seven Years' War (1756-1763). It was conducted by the Russians against the fortified town of Küstrin in Prussia (now in Poland).
Aftermath
The Russian besiegers probably did not intend for the town to experience such destruction. Nevertheless, when the Prussian army saw how the Russian bombardment devastated the city it became a major cause for Prussian animosity towards the Russian army. However, this devastation was not necessarily unique to Küstrin. The sieges against Zittau (1757) and Dresden (1760) also were particularly destructive in an era generally characterized by restraint.[1]
References
- ^ Duffy, Christopher. The Military Experience in the Age of Reason. (New York: Atheneum, 1988) p. 9
Duffy, Christopher. The Military Experience in the Age of Reason. Atheneum, 1988 pp. 7, 9, 293.