Battle of Kalimantsi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Battle of Kalimantsi | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Second Balkan War | |||||||
|
|||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Kingdom of Bulgaria | Kingdom of Serbia Kingdom of Montenegro |
||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Gen.Vicho Dikov | Field Marshal Radomir Putnik Gen. Petar Bojović Prince Aleksandar Karađorđević Gen. Živojin Mišić |
||||||
Strength | |||||||
unknown | unknown | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
unknown | unknown |
|
The Battle of Kalimantsi was fought between the Serbian army and Bulgarian army during the Second Balkan War. The battle took place between the 15th and 19th of July 1913. The Bulgarian army scored a defensive victory over the Serbians.
Contents |
[edit] Prelude
During the Second Balkan War, in the dramatic days and weeks of July, 1913, Bulgaria was surrounded by its enemies from all sides. Against the 500,000 Bulgarian army, worn-out by taking the main burden of the two Balkan wars, fighting against the Turks, and then against its allies, stood refreshed and reinforced troops of 5 Balkan countries: Serbia, Greece, Montenegro, Romania, and Turkey, numbering more than 1,000,000. In the decisive battles of this month: Battle of Kalimantsi and Battle of Kresna Gorge, the Bulgarian soldiers paid with their blood the errors of the Bulgarian government and saved Bulgaria from a complete defeat. At day 10 from the beginning of the Second Balkan War, the Greek army had achieved a deep invasion through the Struma Valley, reaching close to the town of Gorna Djumaya (Blagoevgrad). In Macedonia (region), the Serbian army advanced from the town of Kochani. The joint aim of the Serbian and the Greek commanders, as agreed to in a secret pact between the two countries, was to reach the line Kyustendil-Dupnitsa-Gorna Djumaya and undertake a common advance against Sofia where to dictate their conditions for a peace agreement. At the stake was the very existence of Bulgaria.
[edit] The battle
The decisive battle took place in the region defended by the 4th Bulgarian Army near the village of Kalimantsi, located southwest of Tsarevo selo (today Delchevo, Republic of Macedonia). The Serbian advance began on July 4, 1913. The Serbian command threw 5 infantry divisions against 3 incomplete Bulgarian divisions (7th, 8th, and 2nd) and detachments of the Macedono-Odrin Volunteer Corps. The 4th Bulgarian Army, retreating, decimated the Serbian detachments with a series of counter-attacks, and on July 4 it occupied an unsurmountable position on the Kalimantsi Plateau, a high strategic field between Osogovo Mountain and Bregalnitsa River in the direction of Vardar. The Serbian army attacked the Bulgarian positions for 17 consecutive days and each time they were forced to withdraw under the pressure of the thinned Bulgarian defenders.
The most intensive fighting took place on July 5, 6, and 10. In the battle of July 5, the whole Montenegrin division advanced against the Bulgarian 31st Varna infantry regiment. This regiment undertook a counter-attack, supported by two battalions of 8th Seaside and 21st Middle Mountain regiments. In the subsequent terrible close battle with knives and fists, the Montenegrins were beaten and retreated back into Bregalnitsa River. In the following days, the thrust of the Serbian attacks was pointed at the positions of the 22th Thracian infantry regiment that was located on the key defensive peaks Rocky Hill and Golden Hill. The most difficult and dramatic fight took place on July 10 with mass heroic self-sacrifice by the Bulgarian soldiers. For instance, Battalion Commander Lieutenant-Colonel Sapunov, who previously was granted with the Order Golden Sword for precise shooting, fought in the trenches together with his soldiers. Company Leader Lieutenant Georgi Tanovski, who subsequently became a general and outstanding functionary of the Military Union, shot together with his soldiers and encouraged them by singing loudly patriotic songs. The soldiers of a company, occupying an important position of the Bulgarian defence were not able to stand the attack, and started to retreat. Then the Regiment Commander, Colonel Sava Savov ordered the regiment band to go to the front positions. Soon after this, the Bulgarian national anthem Shumi Maritsa sounded above the rumble of the battle. This sudden moral support made the retreating soldiers come back to the trenches and counter-attack the attacking enemy. In the region of defense of the 22nd regiment there was only one artillery battery that was commanded by Lieutenant Vladimir Zaimov, son of Stoyan Zaimov, an outstanding revolutionary in the battle for Bulgarian National Liberation (Zaimov subsequently became Artillery General and Political Secretary of the Military Union). In order to raise the morale of the infantry, Lieutenant Zaimov deployed two cannons among the trenches that disconcerted the enemy attacks with their precise shooting. In the unequal encounter with the more numerous Serbian artillery, when four of his cannons were destroyed and he had the right to be substituted, Lieutenant Zaimov himself repaired two of the cannons and remained on his place among the exulted Hooray of the defenders. His battery played a decisive role for the successful defence of the Kalimantsi positions.
Meanwhile, the 5th Bulgarian Army, consisting entirely of the Macedono-Odrin Volunteer Corps, on July 5 repulsed the Serbian and Montenegrin troops and occupied the strategic peak Govedarnik.
[edit] Aftermath
The victory of the Bulgarian army in the Battle of Kalimantsi and the surrounding of the Greek troops in the Battle of Kresna Gorge made the countries that won the war a little more yielding. They agreed to a truce and a peace agreeming in Bucharest, in which Bulgaria preserved Pirin Macedonia and western Thrace, although it lost large territory in those two regions. Vladimir Zaimov was wounded at Kalimantsi. He was visited by the heir to the throne, Prince Boris of Tarnovo, who, seeing him lying on a tarpaulin covered in blood, kneeled and kissed him on the forehead with the words: "Savior of Kalimantsi!". Tsar Ferdinand sent a telegram to his father Stoyan Zaimov with the words:
"God bless the father of the Savior of Kalimantsi!"[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Ivan Ivanov. Bulgarian Military Standards and Flags (Bulgarian). 1998. Retrieved on 2007-08-14.
- ^ Borislav Dichev. Kalimantsi is our Golgotha in 1913 (Bulgarian). Standard News, July 18, 2003. Retrieved on 2007-08-14.