Battle of Racławice

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox military conflict {{#invoke:Military navigation|main |name = {{safesubst:#if: | |{{safesubst:#if:Kościuszko Uprising |Campaignbox Kościuszko Uprising |}} }} |state = |border = |title = {{safesubst:#if:Kościuszko Uprising|Kościuszko Uprising|Campaignbox Kościuszko Uprising}} |bodyclass = |listclass = hlist |list1 = * Racławice

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File:Raclawice.jpg
Battle of Racławice on a 19th-century sketch by Michał Stachowicz

The Battle of Racławice was one of the first battles of the Kościuszko Uprising against Russia. It was fought on 4 April 1794 near the village of Racławice in Lesser Poland.<ref name=Storozynski>Storozynski, A., 2009, The Peasant Prince, New York: St. Martin's Press, Template:ISBN</ref>Template:Rp

The battle site is one of Poland's official national Historic Monuments (Pomnik historii), as designated on 1 May 2004. Its listing is maintained by the National Heritage Board of Poland. In the original text of Poland Is Not Yet Lost, the battle is mentioned in the last verse.

Battle

General Denisov, with 2,500 troops, had planned to attack the Poles from the south, while Tormasov's force of 3,000 troops blocked Kościuszko.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp Encountering Tormasov's force first, Kościuszko occupied a nearby hill, General Antoni Madalinski on his right and General Józef Zajączek on his left.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp Not waiting any longer, Tormasov attacked the hill by 15:00, setting up their cannon.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp Kosciuszko inspired his peasant brigade with shouts of "My boys, take that artillery! For God, and the Fatherland! Go forward with faith!"<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp

The first group of serfs captured 3 twelve-pound cannons and the second wave captured eight more cannons.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp Moving to his left flank, Kosciuszko led a bayonet charge when the Russians fled, followed closely by the scythemen.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp

The Polish Order of Battle was as follows:

unit superior soldiers
2 battalions Infantry Regiment of Czapski 400 bayonets
2 battalions Infantry Regiment of Wodzicki 400 bayonets
2 battalions Infantry Regiment of Ożarowski 400 bayonets
1 battalion Infantry Regiment of Raczyński 200 bayonets
10 squadrons of cavalry under Antoni Madaliński 400 sabres
10 squadrons of cavalry under Magnet 400 sabres
4 cavalry squadrons under Biernacki 160 sabres
2 auxiliary cavalry squadrons Duchy of Württemberg 80 sabres
  2440 men altogether

In addition, Lesser Poland fielded approximately 2,000 peasants armed with war scythes and pikes, known as kosynierzy, as well as 11 cannons. The outcome of the battle was a tactical Polish victory, with Kościuszko defeating the numerically inferior enemy. However, his forces were too small to undertake a successful pursuit, and the Corps of General Denisov evaded destruction and continued to operate in Lesser Poland.

Aftermath

Kościuszko marched back to Kraków and made camp in the fields of Bosutow.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp After the battle, Kościuszko paraded before his troops in a sukmana, a traditional attire worn in Lesser Poland, in honour of the bravery of the peasants, whose charge ensured the quick capture of the Russian artillery.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp He also praised Wojciech Bartosz Głowacki, a peasant who was the first to reach the cannons (he is visible in Matejko's painting, above).<ref name="Smaczniak">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He smothered its fuse with his hat before it fired.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp In return he received an award of nobility, his freedom, a tract of land and made standard-bearer.<ref name=Storozynski/>Template:Rp

The victory was subsequently promoted in Poland as a major success and helped in spreading the Kościuszko Uprising to other areas of Poland and instigating the Warsaw Uprising of 1794. Also, the participation of peasant volunteers was seen by many as the starting point of the Polish peasantry's political evolution from serfs to equally entitled citizens of the nation.

Legacy

File:PSP Dywizjon 303.jpg
Emblem of the 303rd Squadron
File:RotundaPanoramyRaclawickiej.jpg
Racławice Panorama in Wrocław

Military

The red cap worn by Kościuszko's soldiers and the homemade war scythes were later featured on the emblem of the RAF's 303 (Polish) Fighter Squadron, which took part in the Battle of Britain.

The Battle of Racławice is commemorated on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Warsaw, with the inscription "RACŁAWICE 4 IV 1794".

Art

Jan Matejko's painting, Kościuszko at Racławice, depicts the battle and is on display at the Sukiennice Museum, a branch of the National Museum in Kraków.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A monumental panorama (measuring 15 x 114 meters) known as the Racławice Panorama was completed a century after the battle in 1894, and is currently on display in Wrocław as a branch of the National Museum in Wrocław.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See also

References

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