Armia króla Władysława Jagiełły w drodze pod Grunwald
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Author:
Grabarczyk, Tadeusz
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 99, Studia Historica 11 (2011), s. [7]-25
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Date: 2011
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For years, the route followed by the Polish-Lithuanian army on its way to Grunwald in 1410
has been arousing controversy as the sources do not allow for its clear-cut determination.
From the moment when Jagiello’s army crossed the Vistula river at Czerwińsk (3rd July) until
it reached the fields of Grunwald only some of its halting-places are known. The passage
from Dąbrówno to the battlefield covered on the 15th of July is given special attention in the
historians’ discussion. S. Ekdahl claims that the Polish-Lithuanian army pitched a camp to
the north of Dąbrówno and stormed the town from that direction. Other historians incline
towards the opinion that the army’s camp was situated to the south of Dabrówno, near the
village Kalbornia. As a consequence they assume that the town was also attacked from the
south. A few routes of the march from Dąbrówno to the site where the battle was supposed
to take place were suggested in the present literature. According to S. Ekdahl, Jagiello’s army
moved from the camp situated to the north of Dąbrówno to the east through Samin to stop
near Grunwald. In the newest monograph of the 1409-1411 war it was stated that Jagiello’s
army got to Grunwald by a route running through previously captured Dąbrówno and later
on through Samin to Grunwald. The author of a different variant, S. Kuczyński believes that
Jagiello’s army, after breaking up its camp at Kolbornia, moved east to turn north after a few
kilometres and continue its march through Osiekowo, Łodgowo. A. Nadolski did not agree
with those assumptions as he believed that from the camp in Dąbrówno the army headed for
Turowo and then marched north towards Mielno circumventing the Ulnowo Lake from the
east. The author of the article propounds a hypothesis that Jagiello’s army could act both to
the north and south of Dąbrówno where the main camp of the Polish-Lithuanian forces was
situated. He also considers that the conception of S. Kuczyński criticised by A. Nadolski and
S. Ekdahl concerning the final phase of the march should still be taken into consideration as
very probable. The author believes that there was no serious discussion on the Grunwald
campaign during the last twenty years in Poland. Both the last monograph of the 1409–1411
war and this article show that a new view on that topic is still possible.