Battle of Lule Burgas
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| Battle of Lule Burgas | |||||||
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| Part of First Balkan War | |||||||
"The attack of the Preslav Division at the Karaagach river" by Dimitar Giudzhenov |
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| Strength | |||||||
| 108,000 116 machine guns; 360 guns[2] |
130,000 300 guns[3] |
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| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 2,536 killed, 17,000 wounded[4] |
40,000 killed and wounded, 2,800 captured[5] 50 guns captured[6] |
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The Battle of Lule Burgas (Turkish: Lüleburgaz Muharebesi) or 'Battle of Luleburgas - Bunarhisar line[citation needed] (Bulgarian: Битка на линията Люлебургас - Бунархисар , Turkish: Lüleburgaz - Pınarhisar Muharebesi) was a battle between the Kingdom of Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire. The battle took place from the 28 October to 3 November 1912. The outnumbered Bulgarian forces made the Ottomans retreat to Çatalca line, 30 km from the Ottoman capital Constantinople. In terms of forces engaged it was the largest battle fought in Europe between the end of the Franco-Prussian War and the beginning of the First World War[7]
[edit] Battle
Following the quick Bulgarian victory on the Petra - Seliolu - Geckenli line and the capture of Kirk Kilisse (Kırklareli), the Ottoman forces retreated in disorder further east and south. The Bulgarian Second Army under the command of gen. Nikola Ivanov besieged Adrianople (Edirne) but the First and Third armies failed to chase the retreating Ottoman forces. Thus the Ottomans were enabled to re-group and took new defensive positions along the Lule Burgas - Bunar Hisar line. The Bulgarian Third Army under gen. Radko Dimitriev reached the Ottoman lines on October 28. The attack began the same day by the army's three divisions - 5th Danubian Infantry Division (commander major-gen. Pavel Hristov) on the left flank, 4th Preslav Infantry Division (major-gen. Kliment Boyadzhiev) in the centre and 6th Bdin Infantry Division (major-gen. Pravoslav Tenev) on the right flank. By the end of the day 6th Division captured the town of Lule Burgas. With the arriving of First Army on the battlefield the following day, attacks continued along the entire front but were met with fierce resistance and even limited counter-attacks by the Ottomans. Heavy and bloody battles occurred on the next two days, the casualties were high by both sides. At the cost of heavy losses, the Bulgarian Fourth and 5th Division managed to push the Ottomans and gained 5 km of land in their respective sectors of the frontline on October 30.
Bulgarians continued to push the Ottomans on the entire front, 6th division managed to breach the Ottoman lines on the right flank. After another two days of fierce combat the Ottoman defence collapsed and on the night of November 2 the Ottoman forces began full retreat along the entire frontline. Bulgarians again didn't followed and chased them and lost contact with the Ottoman forces, which allowed the Ottoman army to took positions on the Çatalca defence line just 30 km west of Constantinople.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Mitrany, David, The Balkans - A History of Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece, Rumania, Turkey, (Aristophanes Press, 2008), 75.
- ^ Фичев, И. Българското командъване през Балканската война 1912-1913, с.136
- ^ ЦВА, ф.40, оп. 2, а.е. 126, л. 34
- ^ Войната между България и Турция 1912-1913. 1, с.236
- ^ Димитриев, P., цит. съч., с. 293, 296—298; Държавен вестник, № 242. 25. Х. 1912.
- ^ ЦВА, ф.40, оп. 2, а.е. 126, 135
- ^ Erickson (2003), p.102.
[edit] Sources
- Hall, Richard C. (2000). The Balkan Wars, 1912–1913: Prelude to the First World War. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-22946-4. http://books.google.com/books?id=ZSllgZ-1D4YC.
- Erickson, Edward J. (2003). Defeat in Detail: The Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 1912–1913. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-275-97888-5. http://books.google.com/books?id=3fYuy5iUi_sC.