Battle of Lahti

Battle of Lahti
Part of the Finnish Civil War in the Eastern Front of World War I

Colonel von Brandenstein and Major Kalm greeting each other in the main street
Date19 April – 1 May 1918
(1 week and 5 days)
Location
Result Decisive White Victory
Belligerents
 German Empire
Finnish Whites
Finnish Reds
Commanders and leaders
German Empire Otto von Brandenstein
Hans Kalm
Nestor Linnanen
Teodor Huurre
Strength
800 Germans
3,000 Whites
800 members of the Lahti Red Guard
~10,000 armed refugees
Casualties and losses
64 Germans killed
~20 Whites killed
at least 200 killed
~30,000 captured[1]
Red artillery in the Radiomäki Hill

Battle of Lahti was a 1918 Finnish Civil War battle, fought from 19 April to 1 May between the German troops and Finnish Whites against the Finnish Reds in Lahti, Finland. Together with the Battle of Viipuri, from 24 to 29 April, it was the last major battle of the war.

The German unit Detachment Brandenstein, commanded by colonel Otto von Brandenstein, attacked Lahti on 19 April, taking the town by the next evening. At the same time, a column of tens of thousands of Red refugees was approaching Lahti from the west. On 22 April, the Reds launched a counterattack in order to break through the German lines and clear the way for the fleeing people. The attempt failed and the Reds finally surrendered on 1 May. As a result, the Whites and Germans captured about 30,000 Reds and their family members who were placed in a concentration camp in the outskirts of Lahti.

  1. ^ Järvelin, Antti (1998). "Valkoisten voitto varmistui lopullisesti" (in Finnish). University of Tampere. Archived from the original on 2 May 2016. Retrieved 23 December 2016.

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