Battle of Grahovac
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| Battle of Grahovac | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Montenegrin war flag used in the battle |
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| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders | |||||||
| Mirko Petrović | Hussein Pasha | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 7,500 | 7,000 - 13,000 | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 1,000 dead and wounded | 3,000 dead and wounded | ||||||
Grand Duke Mirko Petrović, elder brother of Knjaz Danilo, led a strong army of 7,500 and won a crucial battle against the Turks (army of between 7,000 to 13,000) at Grahovac between 28 April and 1 May 1858. The Turkish forces were routed. A considerable arsenal of war trophies were left in Montenegrin hands, to come in handy again in the final wars of independence in 1862 and 1875-1878.
On 28 April 1858, Ottoman commander, Hussein Pasha, captured the villages of Vilusi and Grahovo and continued his advance towards Grahovac, a small village located on a plateau elevated slightly above the captured area. The core of Montenegrin resistance was in Grahovac, which was the main bastion of defence of Montenegro according to military plans.
The fighting itself started on 29 April, early in the morning. Ottomans attacked Grahovac while Montenegrins were stubbornly defending, determined not to retreat at any costs. Most of 3,000 Ottoman and 1,000 Montengrin casualties were made on that day. On 30 April, Hussein Pasha offered a truce to Montenegrin Serdar and commander in charge Mirko Petrović refused it, although he allowed for Ottoman casualties to be buried and he did not want to cut off ottoman water supply even, considering it an unhonourable move.
On 1 May, the fighting started again as the Ottomans got military support from Bosnia. But this time, Montenegrins took charge and attacked the Ottomans, forcing them into a successive retreat. The biggest problem for Montenegrins was a well-armed Ottoman artillery, which was constantly bombarding their positions with cannons. Eventually, Montenegrins decided to charge across the battlefield and take over the cannons. After they saw two of the commanders, Serdar Đuro Kusovac and priest Luka Jovović, being killed while charging, the rest of the Montenegrin troops, including the guardsmen, began a rapid advance with a shout: "Forward, to avenge our commanders". The offensive was successful, and by capturing Ottoman cannons, Montenegrins have officially won the battle.
[edit] Aftermath
This major victory had had even more diplomatic significance. The glory of Montenegrin weapons was soon immortalised in the songs and literature of all the South Slavs, in particular the Serbs in Vojvodina, then part of Austria-Hungary. This Montenegrin victory forced the Great Powers to officially demarcate the borders between Montenegro and Ottoman Turkey, de facto recognizing Montenegro's centuries-long independence. Montenegro gained Grahovo, Rudine, Nikšić's Župa, more than half of Drobnjaci, Tušina, Uskoci, Lipovo, Upper Vasojevići, and part of Kuči and Dodoši.

