Dobruja Campaign
Part of the Romanian Campaign (1916)

Map of the Romanian campaign of 1916.
Date2 September – 25 October 1916
Location
Result Central Powers victory
Belligerents
Allied Powers:
 Romania
 Russia
Central Powers:
 Bulgaria
 Germany
 Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of Romania Alexandru Averescu
Kingdom of Romania Mihail Aslan
Kingdom of Romania Constantin Teodorescu
Russian Empire Andrei Zayonchkovski
Kingdom of Bulgaria Stefan Toshev
Kingdom of Bulgaria Todor Kantardzhiev
Kingdom of Bulgaria Ivan Kolev
Kingdom of Bulgaria Panteley Kiselov
German Empire August von Mackensen
Ottoman Empire Mustafa Hilmi Pasha
Strength
Battle of Turtucaia:
19 battalions (initially):
39,000
36 battalions (end phase)
4 river monitors
8 gunboats
Battle of Bazargic:
46 battalions
17 artillery batteries
19 cavalry squadrons
First Battle of Cobadin:
70+ battalions and 41 squadrons:
4 river monitors
Second Battle of Cobadin:
116 battalions and 40 squadrons
Battle of Turtucaia:
31 battalions:
55,000
Battle of Bazargic:
23 battalions
10 artillery batteries
17 cavalry squadrons
First Battle of Cobadin:
62 battalions and 27 squadrons
Second Battle of Cobadin:
96 battalions and 28 squadrons:
71,581+ riflemen
Casualties and losses
25,000+ 20,000 – 40,000

The Dobruja Campaign was a major operation during the Romanian Campaign of World War I. It took place between 2 September and 25 October 1916 between a joint BulgarianGermanOttoman force, consisting mainly of the Bulgarian Third Army, and a RomanianRussian force. The battle was part of the Romanian campaign towards the end of 1916. It ended with a Central Powers victory.

Background

By August 1916 the Central Powers found themselves in an increasingly difficult military situation – in the West the German offensive at Verdun had turned into a costly battle of attrition, in the East the Brusilov Offensive was crippling the Austro-Hungarian Army, and in the South the Italian Army was increasing the pressure on the Austro-Hungarians, while General Maurice Sarrail's Allied expeditionary force in northern Greece seemed poised for a major offensive against the Bulgarian Army.

The Romanian government asserted that the moment was right for it to fulfill the country's national ambitions by aligning itself with the Entente, and declared war on the Austro-Hungarian Empire on 27 August 1916. Three Romanian armies invaded Transylvania through the Carpathian Mountains, pushing back the much smaller Austro-Hungarian First Army. In a short time the Romanian forces occupied Orșova, Petroșani, and Brașov, and reached Sibiu on their way to the river Mureș, the main objective of the offensive.

In response the German Empire declared war on the Kingdom of Romania on 27 August, with the Kingdom of Bulgaria following suit on 1 September. On the next day the Bulgarian Third Army initiated the Central Powers' first major offensive of the campaign by invading Southern Dobruja.

Battle

Turtucaia

The Battle of Turtucaia was very important due to its consequences. As for the southern front (on the Romanian–Bulgarian border), it allowed the Bulgarian-German troops to attack Dobrogea (which they later occupied). Much more serious was the fact that on the northern front (from Transylvania) the offensive carried out by the Romanian troops against the German and Austro-Hungarian troops was stopped, seven divisions being taken from this sector and transferred to the southern front. Even if later six of them returned to the northern front, the halting of the offensive in Transylvania allowed, on the one hand, the concentration of German and Austro-Hungarian troops, which were able to launch an offensive that resulted in pushing the Romanian troops to the Carpathian line, and, on the other hand, later allowed the invasion of Muntenia.

Bazargic

Romanian cavalry charge during the battle of Bazargic

Simultaneously with the assault of the fortress of Turtucaia, the Bulgarian Third Army defeated the Romanian-Russian force, including the First Serbian Volunteer Division, at the Battle of Bazargic, despite their numerical superiority.[1] The outnumbered forces of the Central Powers managed to push the Romanians and the Russians north, while the Serbian Volunteer division suffered heavy casualties with 8,539 dead and wounded.[2]

On 7 September after intense fighting the defeated Russian general ordered a withdrawal.[3]

Cobadin I

The Romanian river monitors at Rasova

The First Battle of Cobadin was a battle fought from 17 to 19 of September 1916 between the Bulgarian Third Army and the RomanianRussian Army of the Dobruja. The battle ended in Entente tactical victory and forced the Central Powers to hold their offensive and assume a defensive stance till the middle of October.

The right flank of the Allied forces was supported by the Romanian Navy's Danube Flotilla, consisting mainly of four Brătianu-class river monitors. These warships blocked with mines the river sectors of Silistra, Ostrov, and Gura Borcea, protected the 8 September evacuation of Silistra, attacked enemy land convoys, and destroyed enemy batteries.[4]

Cobadin II

The Second Battle of Cobadin was a battle fought from 19 to 25 October 1916 between the Central Powers, chiefly the Bulgarian Third Army, and the Entente, represented by the RussoRomanian Dobruja Army. The battle ended in a decisive victory for the Central Powers; it resulted in the occupation of the strategic port of Constanța and the capture of the railway between that city and Cernavodă.

Aftermath

Despite the loss of most of Dobruja to the Central Powers, the Romanian defensive victory at Tulcea in January 1917, combined with the actions of the Romanian cruiser Elisabeta at the mouths of the Danube, ensured Romanian control over the entire Danube Delta throughout the rest of the War.[5]

References

  1. Симеонов, Радослав, Величка Михайлова и Донка Василева. Добричката епопея. Историко-библиографски справочник, Добрич 2006
  2. Ivo Banac 2015, p. 121–123.
  3. Richard C. Hall 2010, p. 70-71.
  4. Romanian Review, Volume 51, Issues 327-332, p. 139
  5. Mihai Giurescu, Warship International, Volume 21 , p. 166

Sources

  • Ivo Banac (2015). The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-0193-1.
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