Battle of Molodi
Part of the Russo-Crimean Wars

Molodi village. A foundation stone to commemorate the victory in the Battle of Molodi in 1572.
Date29 July–2 August 1572
Location
Molodi, 50 km south of Moscow. 55°30′N 37°32′E / 55.500°N 37.533°E / 55.500; 37.533
Result Russian victory[1]
Belligerents
Tsardom of Russia Crimean Khanate
Ottoman Empire[2]
Commanders and leaders
Ivan the Terrible
Mikhail Vorotynsky
Devlet I Giray
Strength
23,000–25,000 men[3] 40,000–60,000 men
Casualties and losses
4,000–6,000 25,000–27,000[3]

The Battle of Molodi (Russian: Би́тва при Мóлодях) was one of the key battles of Ivan the Terrible's reign. It was fought near the village of Molodi, 40 miles (64 km) south of Moscow, in July–August 1572 between the 40,000–60,000-strong[4] horde of Devlet I Giray of Crimea and about 23,000–25,000 Russians led by Prince Mikhail Vorotynsky. The Crimeans had burned Moscow the previous year, but this time they were thoroughly defeated.

While the Tsardom of Russia was involved in the Livonian War, the Crimean khan hoped to make profit from the weakness of its southern borders. In the course of three expeditions, Devlet I Giray devastated South Russia and even sacked and set Moscow to fire in 1571. On 26 July 1572 the huge horde of the khan, equipped with cannons and reinforced by Turkish janissaries, crossed the Oka River near Serpukhov, decimated the Russian vanguard of 200 men, and advanced towards Moscow in order to pillage it once again.[3] Little did they know, however, that the Russians had prepared for the new invasion, setting up innovative fortifications just beyond the Oka.

The Russian forces, variously estimated at between 23,000–25,000 men, were placed under the supreme command of Prince Mikhail Vorotynsky. Prince Repnin led the left flank, while the right flank was commanded by Prince Odoevsky. On 30 July the armies clashed near the Lopasnya River without so much as a prior reconnaissance. The fighting continued for several days, reaching its peak on 8 August. The large amount of close-in fighting made the Tatars' famed skill in archery quite useless:[3] the battle was fought principally with sabers and spears. Artillery and arquebuses were also used by the Russians to great effect. The outcome was decided by Prince Khvorostinin who bypassed the horde with his gulyay-gorod (гуляй-город) mobile fortifications and infiltrated into the rear.

After the battle, only 20,000 Tatar horsemen returned to the Crimea, while the khan left his tent and banner on the battlefield and barely managed to escape alive. The battle claimed the lives of his sons and a grandson.

Based on contemporary documents, the Russian forces were as follows:[5]

Group Composition Number
Main:
  • Regiment of Prince Mikhail Vorotynsky
  • Regiment of Ivan Vasilievich Sheremetev
  • Regiment of Prince Andrey Paletsky from Dedilov
  • Regiment of Prince Yuri Kurlyatev from Donkov
  • Regiments of Galician, Koryak, Kostroma and Balakhon
  • Strelets of the regiments of Osip Isupov and Mikhail Rzhevsky
  • Hired Cossacks of the regiments of Yuri Bulgakov and Ivan Fustov
  • German and Cossack mercenary regiments of Yuri Frantsbek, Yuryev and Rugodiv, Atalyk Kvashnin, the "Onikey children", Ignatiy Kobyakov, and Yuri Tutolminus
  • 1840
  • 1065
  • 350
  • 200
  • 1430
  • 1000
  • 1000
  • 1300
Total: 8,255
Right Hand:
  • Regiment of Prince Nikita Romanovich Odoevsky
  • Regiment of Fyodor Vasilyevich Sheremetev
  • Regiment of Prince Grigory Dolgorukov
  • Sagittarius
  • Cossacks
  • 1225
  • 1015
  • 350
  • 500
  • 500
Total: 3,590
Forward:
  • Regiment of Prince Andrey Petrovich Khovansky
  • Regiment of Prince Dmitry Ivanovich Khvorostinin
  • Regiment of Prince Mikhail Lykov
  • Smolensk, Ryazan and Epifan archers
  • Cossacks
  • Vyatchane in strugs on the rivers
  • 1095
  • 2040
  • 350
  • 535
  • 650
  • 900
Total: 4,475
Guard:
  • Regiment of Prince Ivan Petrovich Shuisky
  • Regiment of Vasily Ivanovich Smart-Kolychev
  • Regiment of Prince Andrey Vasilyevich Repnin
  • Regiment of Peter Ivanovich Khvorostinin
  • Cossacks
  • 956
  • 1713
  • 766
  • 585
  • 650
Total: 4,670
Total: 20,034
and Mikhail Cherkashenin's Cossacks (3,000—5,000)


Contemporary chronicles give very large and unreliable figures when talking about the Tatar army. The Novgorod Second Chronicle gives its strength as 120,000 and the Moscow Chronicle about 150 thousand. According to modern Russian historians, the khan's army most likely numbered 40,000-60,000, of which two-thirds were the Crimean army proper, and the rest Nogai, Circassians, and janissaries sent by the Ottoman Sultan.[6]

Sources

  1. Robert Payne and Nikita Romanoff, Ivan the Terrible, (Cooper Square Press, 2002), 329.
  2. Пенской В. В. Сражение при Молодях 28 июля — 3 августа 1572 г // История военного дела: исследования и источники. — СПб., 2012. — Т. 2. — С. 156. — ISSN 2308-4286.
  3. 1 2 3 4 A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East, Vol.II, ed. Spencer C. Tucker, (ABC-CLIO, 2010), 531.
  4. Новгородская вторая летопись. Год 7080(1572).ПСРЛ т. III, СПб, 1841
  5. Документы о сражении при Молодях // Исторический архив, № 4. 1959
  6. Пенской В. В. Сражение при Молодях 28 июля — 3 августа 1572 г // История военного дела: исследования и источники. — СПб., 2012. — Т. 2. — С. 156. — ISSN 2308-4286.
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