|  | READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |  | 
|  |  | 
| ANNALS OF WAR
 
           
 
 
 1700I. A PEACE THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.—2. A BRITISH FLEET
          SENT TO THE BALTIC.—3. WAR BETWEEN DENMARK AND SWEDEN—TREATY AT TRAVENDAHL.—4.
          WAR BETWEEN SWEDEN, POLAND, AND RUSSIA. 5. THE BATTLE OF NARVA.—6. DEATH OF
          CHARLES II., KING OF SPAIN. LOUIS XIV OF FRANCE SEIZES THE SPANISH
          NETHERLANDS.
              
 
 War of the Spanish Succession 1701-17141701.
          I. WAR BETWEEN THE GRAND ALLIANCE AND FRANCE. — 2. WAR
          IN ITALY BETWEEN THE IMPERIALISTS AND THE FRENCH.—3. WAR IN
          SCANDINAVIA. 4. NAVAL WAR. 5. DEATH OF JAMES II., KING OF ENGLAND,
          AND HIS MILITARY CHARACTER.
          
           17021. DEATH OF WILLIAM III, KING OF ENGLAND, AND HIS
          MILITARY CHARACTER.—2. WAR IN ITALY. 3. BATTLE OF LEZZARA.—4. THE EARL OF
          MARLBOROUGH NAMED GENERALISSIMO OF THE ALLIES.— 5. THE SIEGE OF
          KAISERSWERTH.—6. THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY AND MARSHAL BOUFLERS ASSUME THE COMMAND
          OF THE FRENCH ARMY. — 7. MARLBOROUH TAKES THE FIELD.—8. SIEGE OF
          VENLOO. 9. SIEGE OF LIEGE.—10. BATTLE OF FRIEDLINGEN.—11. MARLBOROUGH
          NARROWLY ESCAPES BEING MADE PRISONER.—12. BRITISH NAVAL EXPEDITION TO CADIZ AND
          VIGO.—13. NAVAL WAR IN THE WEST INDIES.—14. BATTLE OF CLISSAU. —15. WAR IN
          RUSSIA.
          
 
 1704.
          1. THE ARCHDUKE CHARLES PROCLAIMED KING OF SPAIN.—2.
              WAR IN GERMANT.—3. MARLBOROUGH TAKES THE FIELD.—4. HE ADVANCES INTO THE
              EMPIRE.—5. THE MARSHALS VILLEROY AND TALLARD FOLLOW HIM.—6. BATTLE OF
              DONAUWORTH OR THE SCHELLENBERG. MARLBOROUGH DEFEATS THE ELECTOR.—7- THE ARMIES
              OF MARSHALS TALLARD AND VILLEROY SEPARATE.— 8. PRINCE EUGENE JOINS
              MARLBOROUGH.—9. THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM OR BLINDflElM.—10.
              CONSEQUENCES OF THE VICTORY.—11. THE WAR IN FLANDERS.—12. THE WAR IN
              ITALY.—13. THE REVOLT IN HUNGARY.—14. THE WAR IN SCANDINAVlI. 15.
              THE WAR IN SPAIN. 16. ADMIRAL SIR G.ROOKE CAPTURES GIBRALTAR.—17. NAVAL
              BATTLE OFF MALAGA.
              
 1705.
              I. WAR IN THE LOW COUNTRIES.—2. MARLBOROUGH FORCES THE
              FRENCH LINES. 3. OFFERS BATTLE NEAR WATERLOO.—4. WAR IN ITALY. 5. WAR
              IN SPAIN. 6. THE EARL OF PETERBOROUGH TAKES BARCELONA.—7. CATALONIA AND
              VALENCIA DECLARE FOR KING CHARLES. 8. WAR IN HUNGARY.—9. WAR IN
              SCANDINAVIA.—10. NAVAL WAR.
              1706.
              
 -----------------------------------------1800.
            1. BONAPARTE OFFERS
            PEACE TO FOREIGN POWERS. — 2. HIS INTERNAL ADMINISTRATION.—3. HE FORMS
            SECRETLY AN ARMY OF RESERVE. — 4. WAR IN ITALY. — 5. GENERAL MELA  ADVANCES
            AGAINST MASSENA.— 6. SUCHET, WITH THE REPUBLICAN CENTRE, IS DRIVEN BEHIND THE
            VAR.— 7. SIEGE AND BOMBARDMENT OF GENOA. — 8. WAR ON THE RHINE. — 9. BATTLE OF
            ENGEN. — 10. BATTLE OF MOSKIRCH. —11. AFFAIR AT
            BIBERACH — THE AUSTRIANS ENTRENCH THEMSELVES AT ULM.— 12. THE FIRST CONSUL, IN
            COMMAND OF THE ARMY OF RESERVE, CROSSES THE ST. BERNARD INTO ITALY.— 13.
            BONAPARTE ENTERS MILAN.—14. GENOA SURRENDERS TO THE AUSTRIAN GENERAL MELAS.
            —15. THE FRENCH MARCH TO ENCOUNTER THE AUSTRIANS — BATTLE OF MONTEBELLO.
            —16. BATTLE OF MARENGO. —17. THE IMPERIALISTS DEMAND AN ARMISTICE. —18. THE
            FIRST CONSUL RETURNS TO PARIS. —19. WAR IN EGYPT. — 20. BATTLE OF HELIOPOLIS. —
            21. ASSASSINATION AND MILITARY CHARACTER OF GENERAL KLEBER. — 22. WAR IN
            GERMANY. — 23. CAPTURE OF THE CITADEL OF VALETTA BY THE BRITISH. — 24. NAVAL
            WAR. — 25. BOAT ATTACKS. — 26. BRITISH CONJUNCT EXPEDITIONS.— 27. NEGOTIATIONS
            BETWEEN THE AUSTRIANS AND FRENCH. — 28. WAR IN GERMANY. — 29. BATTLE OF
            HOHENLINDEN. — 30. THE AUSTRIANS RETIRE BEHIND THE SALTZACH.— 31. THE ARCHDUKE
            CHARLES RE8UME8 HIS COMMAND. — 32. ARMISTICE OF STEYER. — 33. WAR IN ITALY. —
            34. MACDONALD CROSSES THE SPLUGEN. — 35. BATTLE OF POZZOLO AND MONZAMBANO — THE
            FRENCH CROSS THE MINCIO. — 36. BRITISH EXPEDITION UNDER SIR RALPH ABERCROMBIE
            SAILS FOR EGYPT. — 37. NAVAL WAR.— 38. BOAT ATTACKS. — 39. THE ISLAND OF CURAÇOA
            SURRENDERED TO THE BRITISH.
            
             | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 THE GREAT SECOND NORTHERN WAR (1700–1721)
 was a conflict in which a coalition led by
        the Tsardom of Russia successfully contested the supremacy of
        the Swedish
        Empire in Northern, Central and Eastern Europe. The initial
        leaders of the anti-Swedish alliance were Peter I of
        Russia, Frederick IV of Denmark–Norway and Augustus II
        the Strong of Saxony–Poland–Lithuania. Frederick IV and Augustus II
        were defeated by Sweden, under Charles XII, and forced out of the alliance
        in 1700 and 1706 respectively, but rejoined it in 1709 after the defeat of
        Charles XII at the Battle of Poltava. George I of Great
        Britain and the Electorate of Hanover joined the coalition in
        1714 for Hanover and in 1717 for Britain, and Frederick William
        I of Brandenburg-Prussia joined it in 1715.
         Charles XII led the Swedish army. Swedish
        allies included Holstein-Gottorp, several Polish magnates
        under Stanislaus I Leszczyński (1704–1710)
        and Cossacks under the Ukrainian Hetman Ivan
        Mazepa (1708–1710). The Ottoman Empire temporarily hosted
        Charles XII of Sweden and intervened against Peter I.
         The war began when an alliance
        of Denmark–Norway, Saxony and Russia, sensing an
        opportunity as Sweden was ruled by the young Charles XII, declared war on the
        Swedish Empire and launched a threefold attack on Swedish Holstein-Gottorp, Swedish
        Livonia, and Swedish Ingria. Sweden parried the Danish and Russian attacks
        at Travendal (August 1700)
        and Narva (November 1700) respectively, and in a counter-offensive
        pushed Augustus II's forces through the Polish–Lithuanian
        Commonwealth to Saxony, dethroning Augustus on the way (September 1706)
        and forcing him to acknowledge defeat in the Treaty of Altranstädt (October
        1706). The treaty also secured the extradition and execution of Johann
        Reinhold Patkul, architect of the alliance seven
        years earlier. Meanwhile, the forces of Peter I had recovered from defeat
        at Narva and gained ground in Sweden's Baltic provinces, where they
        cemented Russian access to the Baltic Sea by founding Saint
        Petersburg in 1703. Charles XII moved from Saxony into Russia to
        confront Peter, but the campaign ended in 1709 with the destruction of the main
        Swedish army at the decisive Battle of Poltava (in
        present-day Ukraine) and Charles’ exile in the Ottoman town
        of Bender. The Ottoman Empire defeated the Russian-Moldavian army in
        the Pruth River Campaign, but that peace treaty
        was in the end without great consequence to Russia's position.
         After Poltava, the anti-Swedish coalition
        revived and subsequently Hanover and Prussia joined it. The remaining Swedish
        forces in plague-stricken areas south and east of the Baltic Sea were
        evicted, with the last city, Tallinn, falling in the autumn of 1710. The
        coalition members partitioned most of the Swedish dominions among
        themselves, destroying the Swedish dominium maris baltici. Sweden proper was invaded from the west
        by Denmark–Norway and from the east by Russia, which had occupied
        Finland by 1714. Sweden defeated the Danish invaders at the Battle of
        Helsingborg. Charles XII opened up a Norwegian front but was killed
        in the Siege of Fredriksten in 1718.
         The war ended with the defeat of Sweden,
        leaving Russia as the new dominant power in the Baltic region and as a new
        major force in European politics. The Western powers, Great
        Britain and France, became caught up in the separate War of the
        Spanish Succession (1701–1714), which broke out over the
        Bourbon Philip of Anjou's succession to the Spanish throne and a
        possible joining of France and Spain. The formal conclusion of the Great
        Northern War came with the Swedish-Hanoverian and
        Swedish-Prussian Treaties of Stockholm (1719), the
        Dano-Swedish Treaty of Frederiksborg (1720), and the
        Russo-Swedish Treaty of Nystad (1721). By these treaties Sweden ceded
        its exemption from the Sound Dues and lost the Baltic provinces and
        the southern part of Swedish Pomerania. The peace treaties also ended its
        alliance with Holstein-Gottorp. Hanover gained Bremen-Verden,
        Brandenburg-Prussia incorporated the Oder estuary (Stettin Lagoons),
        Russia secured the Baltic Provinces, and Denmark strengthened its position
        in Schleswig-Holstein. In Sweden, the absolute monarchy had come
        to an end with the death of Charles XII, and Sweden’s Age of
        Liberty began.
         Background
             Between 1560 and
        1658, Sweden created a Baltic empire centred on the Gulf of Finland and comprising the provinces
        of Karelia, Ingria, Estonia, and Livonia. During
        the Thirty Years' War Sweden gained tracts in Germany as well,
        including Western Pomerania, Wismar, the Duchy of Bremen,
        and Verden. During the same period, Sweden conquered Danish and
        Norwegian provinces north of the Sound (1645; 1658). These
        victories may be ascribed to a well-trained army, which despite its
        comparatively small size, was far more professional than most continental
        armies, and also to a modernization of administration (both civilian and
        military) in the course of the 17th century, which enabled the monarchy to
        harness the resources of the country and its empire effectively. Fighting in
        the field, the Swedish army (which during the Thirty Years' War contained more
        German and Scottish mercenaries than ethnic Swedes, but was
        administered by the Swedish Crown) was able, in particular, to make quick,
        sustained marches across large tracts of land and to maintain a high rate
        of small arms fire due to proficient military drill.
         However, the Swedish state ultimately
        proved unable to support and maintain its army in a prolonged war. Campaigns on
        the continent had been proposed on the basis that the army would be financially
        self-supporting through plunder and taxation of newly gained land, a concept
        shared by most major powers of the period. The cost of the warfare proved to be
        much higher than the occupied countries could fund, and Sweden's coffers and
        resources in manpower were eventually drained in the course of long conflicts.
             The foreign interventions in Russia during
        the Time of Troubles resulted in Swedish gains in the Treaty of Stolbovo (1617). The treaty deprived Russia of direct
        access to the Baltic Sea. Russian fortunes began to reverse in the final
        years of the 17th century, notably with the rise to power of Peter the
        Great, who looked to address the earlier losses and re-establish a Baltic
        presence. In the late 1690s, the adventurer Johann Patkul managed
        to ally Russia with Denmark and Saxony by the secret Treaty of Preobrazhenskoye, and in 1700 the three powers attacked.
         Swedish camp
             Charles XII of Sweden succeeded Charles
        XI of Sweden in 1697, aged 14. From his predecessor, he took over the
        Swedish Empire as an absolute monarch. Charles XI had tried to keep the empire
        out of wars, and concentrated on inner reforms such as reduction and allotment,
        which had strengthened the monarch's status and the empire's military
        abilities. Charles XII refrained from all kinds of luxury and alcohol and usage
        of the French language, since he considered these things decadent and superfluous.
        He preferred the life of an ordinary soldier on horseback, not that of
        contemporary baroque courts. He determinedly pursued his goal of dethroning his
        adversaries, whom he considered unworthy of their thrones due to broken
        promises, thereby refusing to take several chances to make peace. During the
        war, the most important Swedish commanders besides Charles XII were his close
        friend Carl Gustav Rehnskiöld, also Magnus
        Stenbock and Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt.
         Charles Frederick, son of Frederick
        IV, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp (a cousin of Charles XII) and Hedvig
        Sophia, daughter of Charles XI of Sweden, had been the Swedish heir since 1702.
        He claimed the throne upon Charles XII’s death in 1718, but was supplanted
        by Ulrike Eleonora. Charles Frederick was married to a daughter of Peter
        I, Anna Petrovna.
         Ivan Mazepa was
        a Ukrainian Cossack hetman who fought for Russia but
        defected to Charles XII in 1708. Mazepa died in 1709 in Ottoman exile.
         Allied camp
             Augustus II of Poland (left)
        and Frederick William I of Prussia (right) Peter the
        Great became Tsar in 1682 upon the death of his elder
        brother Feodor but did not become the actual ruler until 1689. He
        commenced reforming the country, turning the Russian tsardom into
        a modernized empire relying on trade and on a strong, professional
        army and navy. He greatly expanded the size of Russia during his reign while
        providing access to the Baltic, Black, and Caspian seas. Beside Peter, the
        principal Russian commanders were Aleksandr Danilovich
        Menshikov and Boris Sheremetev.
         Augustus II the Strong, elector of
        Saxony and another cousin of Charles XII, gained the Polish crown
        after the death of King John III Sobieski in 1696. His ambitions to
        transform the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth into an absolute
        monarchy were not realized due to the zealous nature of the Polish nobility and
        the previously initiated laws that decreased the power of the monarch. His
        meeting with Peter the Great in Rawa Ruska in September 1698, where the plans to attack Sweden were made,
        became legendary for its decadence.
         Frederick IV of Denmark-Norway, another
        cousin of Charles XII, succeeded Christian V in 1699 and
        continued his anti-Swedish policies. After the setbacks of 1700, he focused on
        transforming his state, an absolute monarchy, in a manner similar to Charles XI
        of Sweden. He did not achieve his main goal: to regain the former eastern
        Danish provinces lost to Sweden in the course of the 17th century. He was not
        able to keep northern Swedish Pomerania, Danish from 1712 to 1715. He did put
        an end to the Swedish threat south of Denmark. He ended Sweden's exemption from
        the Sound Dues (transit taxes/tariffs on cargo moved between the
        North Sea and the Baltic Sea).
         Frederick William I entered the war
        as elector of Brandenburg and king in Prussia—the royal title
        had been secured in 1701. He was determined to gain the Oder estuary
        with its access to the Baltic Sea for the Brandenburgian core areas, which had been a state goal for centuries
         George I of the House of Hanover,
        elector of Hanover and, since 1714, king of Great Britain and of
        Ireland, took the opportunity to connect his landlocked German electorate to
        the North Sea.
         In 1700, Charles XII had a
        standing army of 77,000 men (based on annual training). By 1707 this number had
        swollen to at least 120,000 despite casualties.
             Russia was able to mobilize a larger army
        but could not put all of it into action simultaneously. The Russian
        mobilization system was ineffective and the expanding nation needed to be
        defended in many locations. A grand mobilization covering Russia's vast
        territories would have been unrealistic. Peter I tried to raise his army's
        morale to Swedish levels. Denmark contributed 20,000 men in their invasion of
        Holstein-Gottorp and more on other fronts. Poland and Saxony together could
        mobilize at least 100,000 men.
             1700: Denmark, Riga and Narva
             Frederik IV of Denmark–Norway directed
        his first attack against Sweden's ally Holstein-Gottorp. In March 1700, a
        Danish army laid siege to Tönning. Simultaneously, Augustus
        II's forces advanced through Swedish Livonia, captured Dünamünde and laid siege to Riga.
         Charles XII of Sweden first focused on
        attacking Denmark. The Swedish navy was able to outmaneuver the
        Danish Sound blockade and deploy an army near the Danish
        capital, Copenhagen. At the same time, a combined Anglo-Dutch fleet had also
        set course towards Denmark. Together with the Swedish fleet, they carried out a
        bombardment of Copenhagen from 20 to 26 July. This surprise move and pressure
        by the Maritime Powers (England and the Dutch Republic) forced
        Denmark–Norway to withdraw from the war in August 1700 according to the terms
        of the Peace of Travendal.
         Charles XII was now able to speedily deploy
        his army to the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea and face his
        remaining enemies: besides the army of Augustus II in Livonia, an army of
        Russian tsar Peter I was already on its way to invade Swedish Ingria, where
        it laid siege to Narva in October. In November, the Russian and
        Swedish armies met at the First Battle of Narva where the Russians
        suffered a crushing defeat.
         After the dissolution of the first
        coalition through the peace of Travendal and
        with the victory at Narva, the Swedish chancellor, Benedict Oxenstjerna, attempted to use the bidding for the favour of Sweden by France and the Maritime Powers (then on
        the eve of the War of the Spanish Succession) to end the war and make
        Charles an arbiter of Europe.
         1701–1706: Poland-Lithuania and Saxony
             Charles XII then turned south to
        meet Augustus II, Elector of Saxony, King of
        Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania. The Polish–Lithuanian
        Commonwealth was formally neutral at this point, as Augustus started the
        war as an Elector of Saxony. Disregarding Polish negotiation proposals
        supported by the Swedish parliament, Charles crossed into the
        Commonwealth and decisively defeated the Saxe-Polish forces in the Battle
        of Klissow in 1702 and in the Battle of Pultusk in 1703. This successful invasion enabled
        Charles XII to dethrone Augustus II and coerce the Polish sejm to replace him with Stanislaus
        Leszczyński in 1704. August II resisted, still possessing
        control of his native Saxony, but was decisively defeated at the Battle of Fraustadt in 1706, a battle sometimes compared
        to the Ancient Battle of Cannae due to the Swedish forces' use
        of double envelopment, with a deadly result for the Saxon army. In 1706,
        after a Swedish invasion of Saxony, August II was forced to sign
        the Treaty of Altranstädt in which he made
        peace with the Swedish Empire, renounced his claims to the Polish crown,
        accepted Stanislaus Leszczyński as king, and ended his alliance with
        Russia. Patkul was also extradited and executed
        by breaking on the wheel in 1707, an incident which, given his
        diplomatic immunity, infuriated opinion against the Swedish king, who was then
        expected to win the war against the only hostile power remaining, Tsar Peter's
        Russia.
         1702–1710: Russia and the Baltic provinces
             The Battle of Narva dealt a
        severe setback to Peter the Great, but the shift of Charles XII's army to
        the Polish-Saxon threat soon afterward provided him with an opportunity to
        regroup and regain territory in the Baltic provinces. Russian victories
        at Erastfer and Nöteborg (Shlisselburg) provided access
        to Ingria in 1703, where Peter captured the Swedish fortress
        of Nyen, guarding the mouth of the River Neva. Thanks to
        General Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt, whose
        outnumbered forces fended the Russians off in the battles of Gemäuerthof and Jakobstadt,
        Sweden was able to maintain control of most of its Baltic provinces. Before
        going to war, Peter had made preparations for a navy and a modern-style army,
        based primarily on infantry drilled in the use of firearms.
         The Nyen fortress was soon abandoned and
        demolished by Peter, who built nearby a superior fortress as a
        beginning to the city of Saint Petersburg. By 1704, other fortresses were
        situated on the island of Kotlin and the sand flats to its south.
        These became known as Kronstadt and Kronslot. The
        Swedes attempted a raid on the Neva fort on 13 July 1704 with ships and landing
        armies, but the Russian fortifications held. In 1705, repeated Swedish attacks
        were made against Russian fortifications in the area, to little effect. A major
        attack on 15 July 1705 ended in the deaths of more than 500 Swedish men, or a
        third of its forces.
         In view of continued failure to check
        Russian consolidation, and with declining manpower, Sweden opted to blockade
        Saint Petersburg in 1705. In the summer of 1706, Swedish General Georg
        Johan Maidel crossed the Neva with 4,000 troops and defeated an opposing
        Russian force, but made no move on Saint Petersburg. Later in the
        autumn Peter I led an army of 20,000 men in an attempt to take the
        Swedish town and fortress of Viborg. However, bad roads proved impassable
        to his heavy siege guns. The troops, who arrived on 12 October, therefore had
        to abandon the siege after only a few days. On 12 May 1708, a Russian galley
        fleet made a lightning raid on Borgå and
        managed to return to Kronslot just one day before the
        Swedish battle fleet returned to the blockade, after being delayed by unfavourable winds.
         In August 1708, a Swedish army of 12,000
        men under General Georg Henrik Lybecker attacked Ingria,
        crossing the Neva from the north. They met stubborn resistance, ran out of
        supplies and, after reaching the Gulf of Finland west of Kronstadt, had to be
        evacuated by sea between 10 and 17 October. Over 11,000 men were evacuated but
        more than 5000 horses were slaughtered, which crippled the mobility and
        offensive capability of the Swedish army in Finland for several
        years. Peter I took advantage of this by redeploying a large number
        of men from Ingria to Ukraine.
         Charles spent the years 1702–06 in a
        prolonged struggle with Augustus II the Strong; he had already inflicted
        defeat on him at Riga in June 1701 and took Warsaw the following
        year, but trying to force a decisive defeat proved elusive. Russia left Poland
        in the spring of 1706, abandoning artillery but escaping from the pursuing
        Swedes, who stopped at Pinsk. Charles wanted not just to defeat the
        Commonwealth army but to depose Augustus, whom he regarded as especially
        treasonous, and have him replaced with someone who would be a Swedish ally,
        though this proved hard to achieve. After years of marches and fighting around
        Poland he finally had to invade Augustus’ hereditary Saxony to take
        him out of the war. In the treaty of Altranstädt (1706), Augustus was finally forced to step down from the Polish throne, but
        Charles had already lost the valuable advantage of time over his main enemy in
        the east, Peter I, who then had the time to recover and build up an army that
        was both new and better.
         At this point, in 1707, Peter offered to
        return everything he had so far occupied (essentially Ingria) except Saint
        Petersburg and the line of the Neva, to avoid a full-scale war, but
        Charles XII refused. Instead he initiated a march from Saxony to
        invade Russia. Though his primary goal was Moscow, the strength of his forces
        was sapped by the cold weather (the winter of 1708/09 being one of
        the most severe in modern European history) and Peter's use
        of scorched earth tactics. When the main army turned south to
        recover in Ukraine, the second army with supplies and reinforcements
        was intercepted and routed at Lesnaya—and so
        were the supplies and reinforcements of Swedish ally Ivan
        Mazepa in Baturyn. Charles was crushingly
        defeated by a larger Russian force under Peter in the Battle of
        Poltava and fled to the Ottoman Empire while the remains of his
        army surrendered at Perevolochna.
         This shattering defeat in 1709 did not end
        the war, although it decided it. Denmark and Saxony joined the war again and
        Augustus the Strong, through the politics of Boris Kurakin, regained the
        Polish throne. Peter continued his campaigns in the Baltics, and
        eventually he built up a powerful navy. In 1710 the Russian forces
        captured Riga, at the time the most populated city in the Swedish
        realm, and Tallinn, evicting the Swedes from the Baltic provinces, now
        integrated in the Russian Tsardom by the capitulation of Estonia and
        Livonia.
         Formation of a new anti-Swedish alliance
               After Poltava, Peter the Great and Augustus
        the Strong allied again in the Treaty of Thorn (1709); Frederick IV of
        Denmark-Norway with Augustus the Strong in the Treaty of Dresden (1709);
        and Russia with Denmark–Norway in the subsequent Treaty of Copenhagen. In
        the Treaty of Hanover (1710), Hanover, whose elector was to
        become George I of Great Britain, allied with Russia. In
        1713, Brandenburg-Prussia allied with Russia in the Treaty of
        Schwedt. George I of Great Britain and Hanover concluded three alliances in
        1715: the Treaty of Berlin with Denmark–Norway, the Treaty of
        Stettin with Brandenburg-Prussia, and the Treaty of
        Greifswald with Russia.
         1709–1714: Ottoman Empire
               When his army surrendered, Charles XII of
        Sweden and a few soldiers escaped to Ottoman territory, founding a colony
        in front of Bender, Moldova. Peter I demanded Charles's eviction, and when
        the sultan refused, Peter decided to force it by invading the Ottoman
        Empire. The ensuing Pruth River
        Campaign resulted in a disaster for the Russians as Peter's army was
        trapped by an Ottoman army at the Pruth river.
        However, Peter managed to negotiate a retreat, making a few territorial
        concessions and promising to withdraw his forces from the Holy Roman
        Empire as well as allowing Charles's return to Sweden. These terms were
        laid out in the Treaty of Adrianople (1713). Charles showed no interest in
        returning, established a provisional court in his colony, and sought to
        persuade the sultan to engage in an Ottoman-Swedish assault on Russia. The
        sultan put an end to the generous hospitality granted and had the king
        arrested in what became known as the "kalabalik" in
        1713. Charles was then confined at Timurtash and Demotika; later he abandoned his hopes for an Ottoman front
        and returned to Sweden in a 14-day ride.
         1710–1721: Finland
             Battle of Gangut (Hanko)
        The war between Russia and Sweden continued after the disaster
        of Poltava in 1709, though the shattered Swedish continental army
        could provide very little help. Russia captured Viborg in 1710 and
        successfully held it against Swedish attempts to retake the town in 1711. In
        1712 the first Russian campaign to capture Finland began under the command of
        General Admiral Fyodor Apraksin. Apraksin gathered an army of 15,000 men
        at Viborg and started the operation in late August. Swedish
        General Georg Henrik Lybecker chose not to face the Russians with his
        7,500 men in the prepared positions close to Viborg and instead withdrew west
        of Kymijoki river using scorched earth
        tactics. Apraksin's forces reached the river but
        chose not to cross it and instead withdrew back to Viborg, likely due to
        problems in supply. Swedish efforts to maintain their defences were greatly hampered by the drain of manpower by the continental army and
        various garrisons around the Baltic Sea as well as by the plague
        outbreak that struck Finland and Sweden between 1710 and 1713, which
        devastated the land killing, amongst others, over half of the population of Helsingfors (Helsinki).
         The final days of the siege of Viborg,
        by Alexei Rostovtsev After the failure of 1712, Peter the Great ordered that
        further campaigns in war-ravaged regions of Finland with poor transportation
        networks were to be performed along the coastline and the seaways near the
        coast. Alarmed by the Russian preparations Lybecker requested naval units to be
        brought in as soon as possible in the spring of 1713. However, like so often,
        Swedish naval units arrived only after the initial Russian spring campaign had
        ended. Nominally under the command of Apraksin,
        but accompanied by Peter the Great, a fleet of coastal ships together with
        12,000 men—infantry and artillery—began the campaign by sailing
        from Kronstadt on 2 May 1713; a further 4,000 cavalry were later sent
        overland to join with the army. The fleet had already arrived at Helsinki on 8
        May and were met by 1,800 Swedish infantry under General Carl Gustaf Armfeldt, which started the Battle of Helsinki. Together
        with rowers from the ships the Russians had 20,000 men at their disposal even
        without the cavalry. The defenders, however, managed to fend off landing
        attempts by the attackers until the Russians landed at their flank at Sandviken, which forced Armfelt to retire
        towards Porvoo (Borgå) after setting afire
        both the town and all the supplies stored there as well as bridges leading
        north from the town. It was only on 12 May that a Swedish squadron under
        Admiral Erik Johan Lillie made it to Helsinki but there was nothing it could
        do.
         The bulk of the Russian forces moved along
        the coast towards Borgå and the forces of Lybecker,
        whom Armfelt had joined. On 21–22 May 1713 a Russian force of 10,000 men landed
        at Pernå (Pernaja)
        and constructed fortifications there. Large stores of supplies and munitions
        were transported from Viborg and Saint Petersburg to the new base of
        operations. Russian cavalry managed to link up with the rest of the army there
        as well. Lybecker's army of 7000 infantry and 3000 cavalry avoided contact with
        the Russians and instead kept withdrawing further inland without even
        contesting the control of Borgå region or the
        important coastal road between Helsinki (Helsingfors)
        and Turku (Åbo). This also severed the
        contact between Swedish fleet and ground forces and prevented Swedish naval
        units from supplying it. Soldiers in the Swedish army who were mostly Finnish
        resented being repeatedly ordered to withdraw without even seeing the enemy.
        Lybecker was soon recalled to Stockholm for a hearing and Armfelt was
        ordered to the command of the army. Under his command the Swedish army in
        Finland stopped to engage the advancing Russians at Pälkäne in
        October 1713, where a Russian flanking manoeuvre forced him to withdraw to avoid getting encircled. The armies met again later
        at Napue in February 1714, where the Russians won a decisive victory.
         In 1714, far greater Swedish naval assets
        were diverted towards Finland, which managed to cut the coastal sea route
        past Hangö cape already in early May 1714.
        This caused severe trouble for Russian supply route to Turku and beyond as
        supplies had to be carried overland. The Russian galley fleet arrived to the
        area on 29 June but stayed idle until 26–27 July when, under the leadership of
        Peter, Russian galleys managed to run the blockade making use of calm weather,
        which immobilized the Swedish battlefleet while losing only one galley of
        roughly 100. A small, hastily assembled Swedish coastal squadron met the
        Russian galley fleet west of Hangö cape in
        the Battle of Gangut and was overpowered by
        the Russians who had nearly ten-fold superiority. The Russian breach of the
        blockade at Hangö forced the Swedish fleet to
        withdraw to prevent the Russian fleet from reaching Sweden itself. The Russian
        army occupied Finland mostly in 1713–1714, capturing Åland from where the population had already fled to Sweden on 13 August 1714. Since
        the Russian galley fleet was not able to raid the Swedish coast, with the
        exception of Umeå, which was plundered on 18
        September, the fleet instead supported the advance of the Russian army, which
        led to hastily withdrawal by the Swedish army from Raahe (Brahestad) to Tornio (Torneå).
        The brutal occupation period of Finland in 1714–1721 is known as the Great
        Wrath.
         1710–1716: Sweden and Northern Germany
             Danish town of Altona burned down
        during Magnus Stenbock's campaign (1713). Russian forces retaliated by
        burning down the Swedish town of Wolgast in the same year. In 1710,
        the Swedish army in Poland retreated to Swedish Pomerania, pursued by the
        coalition. In 1711, siege was laid to Stralsund. Yet the town could not be
        taken due to the arrival of a Swedish relief army, led by general Magnus
        Stenbock, which secured the Pomeranian pocket before turning west to defeat an
        allied army in the Battle of Gadebusch. Pursued by coalition forces,
        Stenbock and his army was trapped and surrendered during the Siege of Tönning.
         In 1714, Charles XII returned from the
        Ottoman Empire, arriving in Stralsund in November. In
        nearby Greifswald, already lost to Sweden, Russian tsar Peter the
        Great and British king George I, in his position as Elector of
        Hanover, had just signed an alliance on 17 October. Previously a
        formally neutral party in the Pomeranian
        campaigns, Brandenburg-Prussia openly joined the coalition by
        declaring war on Sweden in the summer of 1715. Charles was then at war
        with much of Northern Europe, and Stralsund was doomed. Charles remained there
        until December 1715, escaping only days before Stralsund fell.
        When Wismar surrendered in 1716, all of Sweden's Baltic and German possessions
        were lost.
         1716–1718: Norway
             Representation of Charles XII of
        Sweden, shot dead during the Siege of Fredriksten in
        1718 After Charles XII had returned from the Ottoman Empire and resumed
        personal control of the war effort, he initiated two Norwegian Campaigns,
        starting in February 1716, to force Denmark–Norway into a separate peace
        treaty. Furthermore, he attempted to bar Great Britain access to the Baltic
        Sea. In search for allies, Charles XII also negotiated with the
        British Jacobite party. This resulted in Great Britain declaring war on
        Sweden in 1717. The Norwegian campaigns were halted and the army
        withdrawn when Charles XII was shot dead while besieging Norwegian Fredriksten on 30 November 1718. He was succeeded by
        his sister, Ulrika Eleonora
         1719–1721: Sweden
             The Battle of Grengam.
        A 1721 etching by Alexey Zubov. After the death of Charles XII, Sweden
        still refused to make peace with Russia on Peter's terms. Despite a continued
        Swedish naval presence and strong patrols to protect the coast, small Russian
        raids took place in 1716 at Öregrund, while in
        July 1717 a Russian squadron landed troops at Gotland who raided for
        supplies. To place pressure on Sweden, Russia sent a large fleet to the Swedish
        east coast in July 1719. There, under protection of the Russian battlefleet,
        the Russian galley fleet was split into three groups. One group headed for the
        coast of Uppland, the second to the vicinity
        of Stockholm, and the last to coast of Södermanland.
        Together they carried a landing force of nearly 30,000 men. Raiding continued
        for a month and devastated amongst others the towns of Norrtälje, Södertälje, Nyköping and Norrköping, and almost all the buildings in the archipelago
        of Stockholm were burned. A smaller Russian force advanced on the Swedish
        capital but was stopped at the battle of Stäket on
        13 August. Swedish and British fleets, now allied with Sweden, sailed from the
        west coast of Sweden but failed to catch the raiders.
         After the treaty of
        Frederiksborg in early 1720, Sweden was no longer at war with Denmark,
        which allowed more forces to be placed against the Russians. This did not
        prevent Russian galleys from raiding the town of Umeå once
        again. Later, in July 1720, a squadron from the Swedish battlefleet engaged the
        Russian galley fleet in the battle of Grengam.
        While the result of the battle is contested, it ended Russian galley raids in
        1720. As negotiations for peace did not progress, the Russian galleys were once
        again sent to raid the Swedish coast in 1721, targeting primarily the Swedish
        coast between Gävle and Piteå.
         Peace
             By the time of Charles XII's death, the
        anti-Swedish allies became increasingly divided on how to fill the power gap
        left behind by the defeated and retreating Swedish armies. George I and
        Frederik IV both coveted hegemony in northern Germany, while Augustus the
        Strong was concerned about the ambitions of Frederick William I on the
        southeastern Baltic coast. Peter the Great, whose forces were spread all around
        the Baltic Sea, envisioned hegemony in East Central Europe and sought to
        establish naval bases as far west as Mecklenburg. In January 1719, George
        I, Augustus and emperor Charles VI concluded a treaty in
        Vienna [no] aimed at reducing Russia's frontiers to the pre-war
        limits.
         Hanover-Great Britain and
        Brandenburg-Prussia thereupon negotiated separate peace treaties with Sweden,
        the treaties of Stockholm in 1719 and early 1720, which partitioned
        Sweden's northern German dominions among the parties. The negotiations were
        mediated by French diplomats, who sought to prevent a complete collapse of
        Sweden's position on the southern Baltic coast and assured that Sweden was to
        retain Wismar and northern Swedish Pomerania. Hanover gained
        Swedish Bremen-Verden, while Brandenburg-Prussia incorporated southern
        Swedish Pomerania.[80] Britain would briefly switch sides and supported
        Sweden before leaving the war. In addition to the rivalries in the anti-Swedish
        coalition, there was an inner-Swedish rivalry between Charles Frederick,
        Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, and Frederick I of Hesse-Cassel for the
        Swedish throne. The Gottorp party succumbed and Ulrike Eleonora, wife of
        Frederick I, transferred power to her husband in May 1720. When peace was
        concluded with Denmark, the anti-Swedish coalition had already fallen apart,
        and Denmark was not in a military position to negotiate a return of its former
        eastern provinces across the sound. Frederick I was, however, willing to
        cede Swedish support for his rival in Holstein-Gottorp, which came under Danish
        control with its northern part annexed, and furthermore cede the Swedish
        privilege of exemption from the Sound Dues. A respective treaty
        was concluded in Frederiksborg in June 1720.
         Timeline of each main participant in the
        war When Sweden finally was at peace with Hanover, Great Britain,
        Brandenburg-Prussia and Denmark–Norway, it hoped that the anti-Russian
        sentiments of the Vienna parties and France would culminate in an alliance that
        would restore its Russian-occupied eastern provinces. Yet, primarily due to
        internal conflicts in Great Britain and France, that did not happen. Therefore,
        the war was finally concluded by the Treaty of Nystad between Russia
        and Sweden in Uusikaupunki (Nystad) on 30
        August 1721 (OS). Finland was returned to Sweden, while the majority of
        Russia's conquests (Swedish Estonia, Livonia, Ingria, Kexholm and a portion of Karelia) were ceded to
        the tsardom. Sweden's dissatisfaction with the result led to fruitless
        attempts at recovering the lost territories in the course of the following
        century, such as the Russo-Swedish War of 1741–1743, and
        the Russo-Swedish War of 1788–1790.
         Saxe-Poland-Lithuania and Sweden did not
        conclude a formal peace treaty; instead, they renewed the Peace of
        Oliva that had ended the Second Northern War in 1660.
         Sweden had lost almost all of its
        "overseas" holdings gained in the 17th century and ceased to be a
        major power. Russia gained its Baltic territories and became one of the great
        powers of Europe.
         
         
 
 |