Battle of the Vistula
Battle of the Vistula - a battle in January 1341 between Polish troops and rebels of Russian rebels supported by Tartars.
On April 7, 1340, the Prince Halicko-Volyn died of poisoning by the boyars, Boleslaw Jerzy Trojdenowicz. After his death, he left his duchy in the fall of Kazimierz the Great. The Polish king acted swiftly, and nine days after Trojdenowicz's death, he undertook an expedition to Russia. However, Tatars with whom a part of the Russian boyars opposed the incorporation of Ruthenian territories into the crown also joined the struggle for the Halice-Volyn Duchy. Kazimierz, in 1340, twice went armed to Rus. The second one encountered strong resistance. Russian tycoons called on the help of the Tartars. Tatyana and Ruthenian meals led by the leader of the boyish opposition opposition Dmitri Detko invaded the Polish lands. The battle with the king of Poland took place in January 1341 on the Vistula River. Polish knights did not allow the invaders to cross the river, and during the fighting, according to the account of Jan of Czarnków, the tattooed arrow of the Sandomierz governor Mikolaj Czelej was pierced. After the failed attempts, the Tatars and Russians retreated to Lublin. Literature
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