Battle of Daugavpils
| Battle of Daugavpils | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of Polish-Soviet War and Latvian War of Independence | |||||||
FT-17 tanks of the Polish 1st Tank Regiment preparing for the battle |
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| Combatants | |||||||
| Commanders | |||||||
| Unknown | |||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 2 infantry divisions, a tank regiment |
Unknown | ||||||
| Casualties | |||||||
| Unknown | Unknown | ||||||
| Polish-Soviet War |
|---|
| 1919 Target Vistula – Bereza Kartuska – Pińsk – Lida – Wilno – Minsk – 1st Berezina – Daugavpils 1920 |
Battle of Daugavpils (also known as the Battle of Dyneburg) was the final battle of the joint Polish and Latvian Operation Winter
against the Red Army. It took place in late December of
From the Polish perspective it was a part of the Polish-Bolshevik War, while in Latvia it is referred to as a part of Latvian War of Independence.
The Polish commander of the 1st Legions Infantry Division
general (later Marshal of Poland) Edward
Rydz-Śmigły in late autumn of
However, the situation changed in December of 1919, after an military alliance had been signed between the governments of Poland and Latvia. General Rydz-Śmigły was given the command over a small operational group composed of his 1st Legions Division, as well as the 3rd Legions Infantry Division and several minor Latvian auxiliary forces.
The battle for the city and its surroundings took place under harsh weather conditions, the area was covered with more than one meter of snow and the temperature dropped below -30 C°. The Polish-Latvian forces reached the area of the Daugavpils fortress almost unopposed; Poles attacking from the south and Latvians from the north. Polish forces moved into the city and took the fortress without much opposition from the Russians.
Soon afterward the Poles relinquished control of the city to the Latvians. Thanks to that, the interwar relations between Poland and Latvia were good, although Latvia refused to join Poland in its continued struggle against Soviet Russia. The problems that precluded the Polish and Latvian governements from expanding their relationship were the opposition from Lithuania (which was hostile towards Poland after the Polish-Lithuanian War) and a dispute about six Latvian communes with majority of Polish inhabitants (south to the Daugava river).[1] Several forms of alliance were proposed by Poland, such as Latvia joining the Miedzymorze federation of Poland. It chose to join the Baltic Entente instead.
See also
References
- ^ (Polish) Łotewski sojusznik (Latvian ally) by Daniel Kochan, last accessed on 25 October 2006
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