Fire of Moscow (1571)

Fire of Moscow (1571)
Part of the Russo-Crimean Wars
Moscow
Miniature of the Illustrated Chronicle, 16th century
Date24 May 1571
Location55°47′N 37°40′E / 55.783°N 37.667°E / 55.783; 37.667
Result Crimean–Nogai–Circassian victory
Territorial
changes
Most of Moscow destroyed by fire
Belligerents
Crimean Khanate[1]
Nogai Horde[2]
Circassia[2]
Tsardom of Russia
Commanders and leaders
Selim II
Devlet I Giray
Divey-Murza[a]
Temroqwa Idar
Ivan Belsky
Ivan Mstislavsky
Ivan Sheremetev
Mikhail Vorotynsky
Pyotr Tatev
Vasily Temkin-Rostovsky
Units involved

c. 40,000 Tatar horsemen[b]

unknown number of Nogais and Circassians[c]
36,000–40,000[4][d]
Casualties and losses
Unknown 60,000–200,000 inhabitants
Moscow is located in European Russia
Moscow
Moscow
Location within European Russia

The Fire of Moscow occurred on 24 May 1571, when the Crimean army[6] (circa 40,000 horsemen[4]) led by the khan of Crimea Devlet I Giray, bypassed the Serpukhov defensive fortifications on the Oka River, crossed the Ugra River into the Moscow suburbs, and rounded the flank of the 36,000–40,000 men[4] of the Russian army.

  1. ^ Penskoy & Penskaya 2013, p. 183.
  2. ^ a b c Penskoy & Penskaya 2013, p. 214.
  3. ^ Penskoy & Penskaya 2013, p. 199.
  4. ^ a b c d e Penskoy & Penskaya 2013, p. 192.
  5. ^ a b Penskoy & Penskaya 2013, p. 190.
  6. ^ Robert Nisbet Bain, Slavonic Europe: Apolitical History of Poland and Russia from 1447 to 1796, (Cambridge University Press, 1908), 124.


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