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Hub AI
Surrender at Ozora AI simulator
(@Surrender at Ozora_simulator)
Hub AI
Surrender at Ozora AI simulator
(@Surrender at Ozora_simulator)
Surrender at Ozora
The Surrender at Ozora, was an important event of the early stage of the Hungarian War of independence of 1848-1849. The 9,000 strong Croatian corps which invaded the Transdanubia region of Hungary, trying to join the Croatian main army led by Lieutenant General Josip Jelačić, which was sent by the Habsburg Empire to chase away the revolutionary government of Hungary, and reimpose the total imperial suvereignity over the country, was forced to surrender by Hungarian regular and insurrectionist forces led by Major Artúr Görgei and Colonel Mór Perczel. Thanks to this the Croatian invasion and the Habsburg plans against Hungary suffered a total defeat.
On 11 September 1848, the Croatian troops sent by the Habsburg Empire to depose the Hungarian revolutionary government led by Lajos Batthyány, crossed the Dráva river. Ten days after the Croatian main army led by Lieutenant General Josip Jelačić crossed at Légrád, another large force led by Karl Roth crossed the river to march eastwards across the Danube towards Pest-Buda. Jelačić initially planned the campaign to join his army with Roth's corps somewhere in the region of Székesfehérvár before reaching the capital, but the favorable start of the campaign, such as: the retreat of the hugely outnumbered Hungarians and the mass desertion of the officers, as well as the changing sides of many military units from the Hungarian to the Croatian side, gave him enough confidence to overconfidently engage in battle with the Hungarian troops led by Lieutenant-General János Móga before the corps of Roth arrived, which ended in the Croatian defeat in the Battle of Pákozd on 29 September. Jelačić, after this defeat, simply abandoned the approaching to his aid reinforcements, and retreated towards Vienna, while Major-General Karl Roth and Nicolaus Philippovich von Philippsberg pushed on northwards, unsuspecting what had happened. The Hungarian general staff, expecting the arrival of the new army corps, even tried to increase the generals' unsuspicion, by blocking the routes to the south, and thus also blocking information about the battle of Pákozd to reach them.
After the defeat of Jelačić, the National Defence Commission (the temporary de facto Hungarian government led by Lajos Kossuth), which took office on 2 October and replaced the Batthyány government, saw an opportunity to try forcing the Croatian column to surrender.
As seen above, on 21 September, Major General Karl Roth's Slavonian division of about 9,000 men, made up of border guards and poorly equipped Seressaners, entered Hungary at Drávasztára, with the purpose to march through the counties of Baranya and Tolna to join Jelačić's army. However, the march of the Croatian troops was not met with a happy, submissive, or cooperative population, but with active resistance, which caused increasing losses for the Croats. Already after the Croatian invasion, Prime Minister Lajos Batthyány wrote a letter to the főispáns and government commissioners of the Transdanubian counties asking them to hinder the enemy at all costs, to obstruct him, to prevent him from getting food, to encourage the population so that the enemy could not advance finding no help in the Hungarian homeland, in order to make his advance impossible.
The call did not fell on deaf ears. The popular uprising against the Croatian invaders, which followed had a decisive influence on the course of events. The Hungarian main force's southern flank was covered by a small detachment. The commander of this detachment was the Honvéd Major Artúr Görgei. Görgei was in command of Csepel Island from 24 September. His task was to prevent Jelačić's possible crossing to the right bank of the Danube, and also to prevent the Roth reserve column from joining up with Jelačić's main force. Görgei gathered his entire army at Adony on the right bank of the Danube and from there he led it to the Sárvíz Canal, towards Soponya, where he set up two outpost lines, one facing north towards Székesfehérvár, the other facing south towards the direction of Roth's advance. Its force of about 3,000 infantry volunteers, two companies of hussars, and 12 guns was insufficient to disrupt the operations of any enemy column, but by isolating them from each other it could do the Hungarian main force a great service. But Görgei was not only the commander of this force. On 25 September, Batthyány placed under his command the National Guard of the Danube Region, and on 26 September also the forces of the popular uprising.
On 29 September, at one of the northern outposts sat by Görgei, Jelačić's emissary, Count Ödön Zichy, the former administrator of Fejér County, who had already disgraced himself in this quality by his dubious conduct and cruelties, was captured and detained. Görgei brought Zichy before the court, which sentenced the Count to death by hanging, on the basis of the documents found in his possession, which were from Jelačić, addressed to General Roth, and other suspicious contents, as an accomplice of the enemies of Hungary and as a spreader of illegal manifests against the Hungarian nation and its freedom. Zichy was hanged the next day on 30 September in Lórév. This uncompromising, ruthless act of Görgei caused a great stir throughout the country, and from this time onwards the reputation and popularity of the heavy-handed Honvéd major of the army rose day by day, and Kossuth also took notice of him.
Meanwhile, Görgei received reinforcements. On 3 October, Lieutenant-General Móga sent the Zrínyi Militia to his support, whose leader, Colonel Mór Perczel, was named main commander of the operations against Roth. The roads and bridges leading into Tolna County were blocked from the south by the national guards of Major Vilmos Csapó. On 4 October, Perczel, in order to cut off the advance of Roth, who was approaching Székesfehérvár, marched from Adony to Seregélyes with the Zrínyi, Hunyadi and Szabolcs rookie battalions, the Kecskemét and Kunság National Guards and some Hussars, a total of about 3000 infantry, 200 cavalry and 8 cannons. Another mass of the insurgents with 2 companies of the Hunyadi irregulars was directed to Aba via Sárosd as a left column.
In the meantime, Roth's division occupied unopposed Pécs on 23 September and left it on 25 September. But after that, the raids and actions in Baranya county constantly disrupted and delayed its movements. On 28 September, the National Guards of Baranya led by Major Gyula Perczel intercepted and captured his ammunition convoy at Oroszló. On the same day, Roth's troops entered Tolna County and moved north along the Dombóvár - Döbrököz - Pincehely line. On 30 September the vanguard was already stationed in Dég, and the next day the main column reached Ozora's vicinity. On the same day national guardsmen and popular insurrectionists from the area disarmed the guardians of Roth's arriving baggage wagons and took the wagons away. Soon the other half of the baggage and the convoy with the wounded soldiers arrived. The locals then attacked and captured this transport as well, beating the guards and wounded soldiers to death. On hearing this, Roth turned back to seek revenge. He demanded twenty-four oxen, six thousand sheep, three hundred gallons of wine and two thousand forints indemnity from the inhabitants of Pincehely. Then he commanded the bridge over the Kapos river to be dismantled, then ordered the cannonade and the burning of the village. According to the descriptions, he was terribly cruel. Because of this, he reached Székesfehérvár - the town whose inhabitants had disarmed the Croatian garrison the previous day - only in the morning of 4 October.
Surrender at Ozora
The Surrender at Ozora, was an important event of the early stage of the Hungarian War of independence of 1848-1849. The 9,000 strong Croatian corps which invaded the Transdanubia region of Hungary, trying to join the Croatian main army led by Lieutenant General Josip Jelačić, which was sent by the Habsburg Empire to chase away the revolutionary government of Hungary, and reimpose the total imperial suvereignity over the country, was forced to surrender by Hungarian regular and insurrectionist forces led by Major Artúr Görgei and Colonel Mór Perczel. Thanks to this the Croatian invasion and the Habsburg plans against Hungary suffered a total defeat.
On 11 September 1848, the Croatian troops sent by the Habsburg Empire to depose the Hungarian revolutionary government led by Lajos Batthyány, crossed the Dráva river. Ten days after the Croatian main army led by Lieutenant General Josip Jelačić crossed at Légrád, another large force led by Karl Roth crossed the river to march eastwards across the Danube towards Pest-Buda. Jelačić initially planned the campaign to join his army with Roth's corps somewhere in the region of Székesfehérvár before reaching the capital, but the favorable start of the campaign, such as: the retreat of the hugely outnumbered Hungarians and the mass desertion of the officers, as well as the changing sides of many military units from the Hungarian to the Croatian side, gave him enough confidence to overconfidently engage in battle with the Hungarian troops led by Lieutenant-General János Móga before the corps of Roth arrived, which ended in the Croatian defeat in the Battle of Pákozd on 29 September. Jelačić, after this defeat, simply abandoned the approaching to his aid reinforcements, and retreated towards Vienna, while Major-General Karl Roth and Nicolaus Philippovich von Philippsberg pushed on northwards, unsuspecting what had happened. The Hungarian general staff, expecting the arrival of the new army corps, even tried to increase the generals' unsuspicion, by blocking the routes to the south, and thus also blocking information about the battle of Pákozd to reach them.
After the defeat of Jelačić, the National Defence Commission (the temporary de facto Hungarian government led by Lajos Kossuth), which took office on 2 October and replaced the Batthyány government, saw an opportunity to try forcing the Croatian column to surrender.
As seen above, on 21 September, Major General Karl Roth's Slavonian division of about 9,000 men, made up of border guards and poorly equipped Seressaners, entered Hungary at Drávasztára, with the purpose to march through the counties of Baranya and Tolna to join Jelačić's army. However, the march of the Croatian troops was not met with a happy, submissive, or cooperative population, but with active resistance, which caused increasing losses for the Croats. Already after the Croatian invasion, Prime Minister Lajos Batthyány wrote a letter to the főispáns and government commissioners of the Transdanubian counties asking them to hinder the enemy at all costs, to obstruct him, to prevent him from getting food, to encourage the population so that the enemy could not advance finding no help in the Hungarian homeland, in order to make his advance impossible.
The call did not fell on deaf ears. The popular uprising against the Croatian invaders, which followed had a decisive influence on the course of events. The Hungarian main force's southern flank was covered by a small detachment. The commander of this detachment was the Honvéd Major Artúr Görgei. Görgei was in command of Csepel Island from 24 September. His task was to prevent Jelačić's possible crossing to the right bank of the Danube, and also to prevent the Roth reserve column from joining up with Jelačić's main force. Görgei gathered his entire army at Adony on the right bank of the Danube and from there he led it to the Sárvíz Canal, towards Soponya, where he set up two outpost lines, one facing north towards Székesfehérvár, the other facing south towards the direction of Roth's advance. Its force of about 3,000 infantry volunteers, two companies of hussars, and 12 guns was insufficient to disrupt the operations of any enemy column, but by isolating them from each other it could do the Hungarian main force a great service. But Görgei was not only the commander of this force. On 25 September, Batthyány placed under his command the National Guard of the Danube Region, and on 26 September also the forces of the popular uprising.
On 29 September, at one of the northern outposts sat by Görgei, Jelačić's emissary, Count Ödön Zichy, the former administrator of Fejér County, who had already disgraced himself in this quality by his dubious conduct and cruelties, was captured and detained. Görgei brought Zichy before the court, which sentenced the Count to death by hanging, on the basis of the documents found in his possession, which were from Jelačić, addressed to General Roth, and other suspicious contents, as an accomplice of the enemies of Hungary and as a spreader of illegal manifests against the Hungarian nation and its freedom. Zichy was hanged the next day on 30 September in Lórév. This uncompromising, ruthless act of Görgei caused a great stir throughout the country, and from this time onwards the reputation and popularity of the heavy-handed Honvéd major of the army rose day by day, and Kossuth also took notice of him.
Meanwhile, Görgei received reinforcements. On 3 October, Lieutenant-General Móga sent the Zrínyi Militia to his support, whose leader, Colonel Mór Perczel, was named main commander of the operations against Roth. The roads and bridges leading into Tolna County were blocked from the south by the national guards of Major Vilmos Csapó. On 4 October, Perczel, in order to cut off the advance of Roth, who was approaching Székesfehérvár, marched from Adony to Seregélyes with the Zrínyi, Hunyadi and Szabolcs rookie battalions, the Kecskemét and Kunság National Guards and some Hussars, a total of about 3000 infantry, 200 cavalry and 8 cannons. Another mass of the insurgents with 2 companies of the Hunyadi irregulars was directed to Aba via Sárosd as a left column.
In the meantime, Roth's division occupied unopposed Pécs on 23 September and left it on 25 September. But after that, the raids and actions in Baranya county constantly disrupted and delayed its movements. On 28 September, the National Guards of Baranya led by Major Gyula Perczel intercepted and captured his ammunition convoy at Oroszló. On the same day, Roth's troops entered Tolna County and moved north along the Dombóvár - Döbrököz - Pincehely line. On 30 September the vanguard was already stationed in Dég, and the next day the main column reached Ozora's vicinity. On the same day national guardsmen and popular insurrectionists from the area disarmed the guardians of Roth's arriving baggage wagons and took the wagons away. Soon the other half of the baggage and the convoy with the wounded soldiers arrived. The locals then attacked and captured this transport as well, beating the guards and wounded soldiers to death. On hearing this, Roth turned back to seek revenge. He demanded twenty-four oxen, six thousand sheep, three hundred gallons of wine and two thousand forints indemnity from the inhabitants of Pincehely. Then he commanded the bridge over the Kapos river to be dismantled, then ordered the cannonade and the burning of the village. According to the descriptions, he was terribly cruel. Because of this, he reached Székesfehérvár - the town whose inhabitants had disarmed the Croatian garrison the previous day - only in the morning of 4 October.