Battle of Herend: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Ruvelka]]
[[Category:Ruvelka]]
[[Category:History of Ruvelka]]
[[Category:History of Ruvelka]]
[[Category:Tyran]]

Latest revision as of 05:29, 6 August 2020

Battle of Herend
Part of the Ruvelkan Civil War
Date5 September 1916 – 20 October 1916
(1 months, 2 weeks, 2 days)
Location
Herendi Region, Ruvelka
Result Imperial Separatist Victory
Belligerents
Ruvelkan SR Ruvelka Imperial Separatists
Commanders and leaders
Adrián Katona
Aram Kevranian
Zurab Kobalia
Marekhi Gabashvili
Norhad Hekimyan
Thomas Kocharyan
Ruvelka Paloma Keresztes
Ruvelka Alexander Vincze
Ruvelka Martin Barna
Ruvelka Veronika Krjalian
Ruvelka Dorina Horváth
Ruvelka Albert Márton
Strength
38 divisions 29 divisions
Casualties and losses
101,000 casualties 77,000 casualties

The Battle of Herend, fought between 5 September 1916 and 20 October 1916 in the Matra mountains near the town of Herend, was a key engagement that is considered the turning point in the western theater of the Ruvelkan Civil War. Following her army’s capture of Püspökladány, Imperial Separatist General Keresztes began transporting her troops via rail to break the Red Army Siege of Aszód. In response, Communist General Katona dug in approximately two-thirds of his army in the mountains in and around the old mining town of Herend. The Separatist Southern Army halted their advance several kilometers outside of Herend and began amassing their forces for an attack.

The extreme terrain of the mountains made it difficult for both sides to maneuver, often taking days to coordinate attacks and set up static artillery positions to support infantry assaults. As a result of this, Keresztes began granting her officers and unit commanders significant autonomy to pursue what they believed was the best course of action to complete their objectives. Shock trooper tactics implemented by Keresztes Imperial Fusiliers played an important role in overwhelming Red Army strongpoints and allowed the Imperials to deploy their Line Divisions where they could affect the most damage.

After bloody mountain-top engagements, the Imperials finally overwhelmed the Red Army defenders in mid-October. The threat of encirclement and having suffered heavy losses in both Herend and in the ongoing Siege of Aszód forced General Katona to withdraw to Pannonhalma without having completed his objective of securing the southwest.