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Итог: Победа японской армии

4.2a On English

"Lüda"

"Lüshunkou District" (also known as Port Arthur, Port Artur, Порт-Артур)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lüshunkou_District

Lüshunkou District / Lushunkou District / Lyushunkou District in China

also known as

Lüshun Port / Lushun Port / Lyushun Port

also known as

Port Arthur / Port Artur / Порт-Артур (on Russian) / Порт Артур (on Russian)

also known as

Ryojun (from Japan)

also known as

"Lüda" (Luda, Lyuda, Louda), Dalian

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lüshunkou_District

4.2b on English

"Siege of Port Arthur"

Date August 1, 1904 - January 2, 1905

(5 months and 1 day)

Location Modern Lüshunkou District, China

Result Japanese victory

from Wikipedia

"The Siege of Port Arthur

(Japanese: Ryojun Kōisen;

Russian: Оборона Порт-Артура, Oborona Port-Artura),

(August 1, 1904 - January 2, 1905),

the deep-water port and Russian naval base at the tip of the Liaodong Peninsula in Manchuria, was the longest and most violent land battle of the Russo-Japanese War.

Port Arthur was widely regarded as one of the most strongly fortified positions in the world at the time.

However, during the First Sino-Japanese War,

General Nogi Maresuke

had taken the city from the forces of Qing China in only a few days.

The ease of his victory during that previous conflict, and overconfidence by the Japanese General Staff in Japan's ability to overcome improved fortifications made by the Russians, led to a much longer campaign, with much heavier losses than expected.

The Siege of Port Arthur

saw the introduction of much technology

used in subsequent wars of the 20th century (particularly in World War I)

including

massive 28 cm howitzers capable of hurling 217-kilogram (478-pound) shells over 8 kilometers (5.0 miles),

as well as

rapid-firing light howitzers,

Maxim machine guns,

bolt-action magazine rifles,

barbed wire entanglements,

electric fences,

arc lamp searchlights,

tactical radio signalling

(and, in response, the first military use of radio jamming),

hand grenades,

extensive trench warfare,

and the use of modified naval mines as land weapons." (from Wikipedia)

"The Russian forces

manning the defenses of Port Arthur

under

Major-General Baron Anatoly Stoessel

consisted of almost 50,000 men and 506 guns

(including the crews of the Russian warships in port).

He also had the option of removing the guns from the fleet to bolster the land defenses.

The total population of

Port Arthur

at the time [August 1, 1904 ]

was

around 87,000,

which meant that a very high proportion of the population

were combatants." (from Wikipedia)

"The outer defense perimeter of Port Arthur

consisted of

a line of hills, including

Hsiaokushan and Takushan near the Ta-ho River in the east, and

Namakoyama, Akasakayama,

174-Meter Hill, 203-Meter Hill and

False Hill in the west.

All of these hills were heavily fortified.

Approximately 1.5 kilometers (0.93 miles) behind this defensive line was the original stone Chinese wall, which encircled the Old Town of Lushun from the south to the Lun-ho River at the northwest.

The Russians

had continued the line of the Chinese wall

to the west and south, enclosing the approaches to the harbor and

the New Town of Port Arthur

with concrete forts, machine gun emplacements, and connecting trenches.

General

Stoessel

withdrew to Port Arthur

on July 30, 1904.

Facing the Russians was

the Japanese Third Army,

about 150,000 strong, backed by 474 artillery guns, under the command of

General Baron

Nogi Maresuke." (from Wikipedia)

The battles

"Battle of the Orphan Hills

(600-foot (180 m) high Takushan (Big Orphan Hill)

and

the smaller Hsuaokushan (Little Orphan Hill,

Ta River).

Gaining these two hills cost the Japanese 1,280 killed and wounded.

The loss of the two hills."

"Battle of 174 Meter Hill

(the Wolf Hills, 174 Meter Hill)

The Russian defensive positions on 174 Meter Hill itself were held by the 5th and 13th East Siberian Regiments, reinforced by sailors, under the command of Colonel Tretyakov, a veteran of the Battle of Nanshan.

With more than half of his men killed or wounded and with his command disintegrating as small groups of men fell back in confusion, Tretyakov had no choice but to withdraw, and 174 Meter Hill was thus overrun by the Japanese. The assault on 174 Meter Hill alone had cost the Japanese some 1,800 killed and wounded and the Russians over 1,000.

The assaults on the other sections of the Russian line had also cost the Japanese heavily, but with no results and no ground gained.

When Nogi finally called off his attempt to penetrate the Wantai Ravine on August 24, 1904, he had only 174 Meter Hill and the West and East Pan-lung to show for

his loss of more than 16,000 men.

With all other positions remaining firmly under Russian control, Nogi at last decided to abandon frontal assaults in favor of a protracted siege.

On August 25, 1904, the day after Nogi"s last assault had failed, Marshal Oyama Iwao engaged the Russians under General Aleksey Kuropatkin at the Battle of Liaoyang."

The siege

"Nogi had also been reinforced by additional artillery and 16,000 more troops from Japan, which partially compensated for the casualties sustained in his first assaults.

While the Japanese set to work in the sapping campaign,

General Stoessel continued to spend most of his time writing complaining letters to the Tsar about lack of cooperation from his fellow officers in the navy.

The garrison in Port Arthur was starting to experience serious outbreaks of scurvy and dysentery due to the lack of fresh food.

Nogi nor Stoessel seem to have realized the strategic importance of

203 Meter Hill:

the hill was the key to the whole Russian defense.

Mid-September 1905,

General Nogi abandoned the attempt,

he had lost over 3500 men.

Nogi attempted yet another mass "human wave" assault on 203 Meter Hill

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