RUSSO-JAPANESE WAR
Since the maps included in the encyclopedia article are not sufficient we
have included here the maps on the war from Beskrovni's Atlas of Russian
military history. Also, as a help for the reader we provide a brief
chronology of the main events.
War plans and initial movements.
Organization of the Russian field army
on the eve of the war
Organization of the Japanese field army
Engagement on the Yalu River, 1 Jan 1904
Battle of Nanshan, 26 May 1904
Siege of Port Arthur
Dispositions ar Liao-Yang, 30 Aug 1904
Conclusion of Liao-Yang operation
Sha_Ho operation
Battle at Sandepu, 26 Jan 1905
11th edition, Encyclopedia Britannica, vol 23, pgs 919-930
RUSSO-JAPANESE WAR, The seizure by Russia of the Chinese fortress of Port
Arthur, which she had a few years previously, in concert with other powers,
compelled Japan to relinquish, was from the Russian point of view the logical
outcome of her eastward expansion and her need for an ice-free harbour on the
Pacific. The extension of the Trans-Siberian railway through Manchuria to Port
Arthur and a large measure of influence in Manchuria followed equally
naturally. But the whole course of this expansion had been watched with
suspicion by Japan, from the time of the Saghalien incident of 1875, when the
island power, then barely emerging from the feudal age, had to cede her half of
the island to Russia, to the Shimonoseki treaty of 1895, when the powers
compelled her to forego the profits of her victory over China. The subsequent
occupation of Port Arthur and other Chinese harbours by European powers, and
the evident intention of consolidating Russian influence in Manchuria, were
again and again the subject of Japanese representations at St Petersburg, and
these representations became more vigorous when, in 1903, Russia seemed to be
about to. extend her Manchurian policy into Korea. No less than ten draft
treaties were discussed in vain between August 1903 and February 1904, and
finally negotiations were broken off on February 5th.' Japan had already on the
4th decided to use force, and her military and naval preparations, unlike those
of Russia, kept pace with her diplomacy.
This was in fact an eventuality which had been foreseen and on which the naval
and military policy of Japan had been based for ten years. She too had her
projects of expansion and hegemony, and by the Chino-Japanese War she had
gained a start over her rival. The reply of the Western powers was first to
compel the victor to maintain the territorial integrity of China, and then
within two years to establish themselves in Chinese harbours. From that moment
Japanese policy was directed towards establishing her own hegemony and meeting
the advance of Russia with a fail accompli. But her armaments were not then
adequate to give effect to a strong-handed policy, so that for some years
thereafter the government had both to impose heavy burdens on the people and to
pursue a foreign policy of marking time, and endured the fiercest criticism on
both counts, for the idea of war with Russia was as popular as the taxes
necessary to that object were detested. But as the army and the navy grew year
by year, the tone of Japanese policy became firmer. In 1902 her position was
strengthened by the alliance with England; in 1903 her army, though in the
event it proved almost too small, was considered by the military authorities as
sufficiently numerous and well prepared, and the arguments of the Japanese
diplomatists stiffened with menaces. Russia, on the other hand, was divided in
policy and consequently in military intentions and preparations. In some
quarters the force of the new Japanese army was well understood, and the
estimates of the balance of military power formed by the minister of war,
Kuropatkin, coincided so remarkably with the facts that at the end of the
summer of 1903 he saw that the moment had come when the preponderance was on
the side of the Japanese. He therefore proposed to abandon Russian projects in
southern Manchuria and the Port Arthur region and to restore Port Arthur to
China in return for considerable concessions on the side of Vladivostok. His
plan was accepted, but "a lateral influence suddenly made itself felt, and
the completely unexpected result was war." Large commercial interests were
in fact involved in the forward policy, "the period of heavy capital
expenditure was over, that of profits about to commence," and the power
and intentions of Japan were ignored or misunderstood. Further, Dragomirov, a
higher military authority even than Kuropatkin, declared that "Far Eastern
affairs were decided in Europe." Thus Russia entered upon the war both
unprepared in a military sense, and almost entirely indifferent to its causes
and its objects. To the guards and patrols of the Manchurian railway and the
garrisons of Port Arthur and Vladivostok, 8o,ooo in all, Japan could, in
consequence of her recruiting law of 1896, oppose a first-line army of some
270,000 trained men. Behind these, however, there were scarcely 200,000 trained
men of the older classes, and at the other end of the long Trans-Siberian
railway Russia had almost limitless resources.2
1Belated declarations of war appeared on the 10th.
2 The total Russian army on a peace footing is almost 1,000,000strong.
The strategical problem for Japan was, how to strike a blow sufficiently
decisive to secure her object, before the at present insignificant forces of
the East Siberian army were augmented to the point of being unassailable. It
turned, therefore, principally upon the efficiency of the Trans-Siberian
railway and in calculating this the Japanese made a serious und&estimate.
In consequence, far from applying the "universal service " principle
to its full extent, they trained only one fifth of the annual contingent of men
found fit for service. The quality of the army, thus composed of picked men (a
point which is often forgotten), approximated to that of a professional force;
but this policy had the result that, as there was no adequate second-line army,
parts of the first-line had to be reserved, instead of being employed at the
front. And when for want of these active troops the first great victory proved
indecisive, half-trained elements had to be sent to the front in considerable
numbersindeed the ration strength of the army was actually trebled. The aim of
the war, "limited " in so far that the Japanese never deluded
themselves with dreams of attacking Russia at home, was to win such victories
as would establish the integrity of Japan herself and place her hegemony in the
Far East beyond challenge. Now the integrity of Japan was worth little if the
Russians could hope ultimately to invade her in superior force, and as the Port
Arthur was the station of the fleet that might convoy an invasion, as well as
the symbol of the longed-for hegemony, the fortress was necessarily the army's
first objective, a convincing Sedan was the next. For the navy, which had
materially only a narrow margin of superiority over the Russian Pacific
Squadron, the object was to keep the two halves of that squadron, at Port
Arthur and Vladivostok respectively, separate and to destroy them in detail.
But in February weather these objects could not be pursued simultaneously.
Prior to the break-up of the ice, the army could only disembark at Chemulpo,
far from the objective, or at Dalny under the very eyes of its defenders. The
army could therefore, for the moment, only occupy Korea and try to draw upon
itself hostile forces that would otherwise be available to assist Port Arthur
when the land attack opened. For the navy, instant action was imperative.
On the 8th of February the main battle-fleet, commanded by Vice-Admiral Togo,
was on the way to Port Arthur. During the night his torpedo-boats surprised the
Russian squadron in harbour and inflicted serious losses, and later in the day
the battleships engaged the coast batteries. Repulsed in this attempt, the
Japanese established a stringent blockade, which tried the endurance of the
ships and the men to the utmost. From time to time the torpedo-craft tried to
run in past the batteries, several attempts were made to block the harbour
entrance by sinking vessels in the fairway, and free and deadly use was made by
both sides of submarine mines. But, though not destroyed,- the Port Arthur
squadron was paralyzed by the instantaneous assertion of naval superiority.
Admiral Alexeiev, the tsar's viceroy in the Far East and the evil genius of the
war, was at Port Arthur and forbade the navy to take the risks of proceeding to
sea.3
3.A vivid picture of the state of affairs in the navy at this period is given
in Semenov's Rasplata (Eng. trans.).
For a time, when in place of Admiral Starck (who was held responsible for the
surprise of February), Admiral Makarov, an officer of European reputation,
commanded the fleet, this lethargy was shaken off. The new commander took his
ships to sea every day. But his energetic leadership was soon ended by a
tragedy. A field of electro-mechanical mines was laid by the Japanese in the
night of April 12th13th, and on the following day the Japanese cruisers stood
inshore to tempt the enemy on to the mine-field. Makárov, however,
crossed it without accident, and pursued the cruisers until Togo's battle-fleet
appeared, whereupon he went about and steamed for port. In doing so he
recrossed the mine-field, and this time the mines were effectual. The flagship
"Petropavlovsk" was struck and went down with the admiral and 600
men, and another battleship was seriously injured. Then the advocates of
passivity regained the upper hand and kept the squadron in harbour, and
henceforward for many months the Japanese navy lay unchallenged off Port
Arthur, engaging in minor operations, covering the transport of troops to the
mainland, and watching for the moment when the advance of the army should force
the Russian fleet to come out. Meantime seven Japanese cruisers under
Vice-Admiral Kaimamura went in search of the Russian Vladivostok squadron;
this, however, evaded them for some months, and inflicted some damage on the
Japanese mercantile marine and transports. The Japanese had not waited to gain
command of the sea before beginning the sea transport of that part of their
troops allotted to Korea. The roads of that country were so poor that the
landing had to be made, not on the Straits of Tsushima, but as far north as The
possible. Chemulpo, nearer by 5o m. to Port Arthur than to Japan, was selected.
On the first day of hostilities Rear-Admiral Uriu disembarked troops at
Chemulpo under the eyes of the Russian cruiser "Variag," and next day
he attacked and destroyed the "Variag" and some smaller war-vessels
in the harbour, and the rest of the 1st Army (General Kuroki) was gradually
brought over during February and March, in spite of an unbeaten and, under
Makârov's régime, an enterprising hostile navy. But owing to the
thaw and the subsequent break-up of the miserable Korean roads, six weeks
passed before the columns of the army (Guard, 2nd and 12th divisions), strung
out along the "Mandarin road" to a total depth of six days' march,
closed upon the head at Wiju, the frontier town on the Yalu. Opposite to them
they found a large Russian force of all arms.
The Russian commanders, at this stage at least, had not and could not have any
definite objective. Both by sea and by land their policy was to mass their
resources, repulsing meantime the attacks of the Japanese with as much damage
to the enemy and as little to themselves as possible. Their strategy was to
gain time without immobilizing themselves so far that the Japanese could impose
a decisive action at the moment that suited them best. Both by sea and by land,
such strategy was an exceedingly difficult game to play. But afloat, had
Makârov survived, it would have been played to the end, and Togo's fleet
would have been steadily used up. One day, indeed (May 15th), two of Japan's
largest battleships, the "Hatsume" and the "Yashima," came
in contact with free mines and were sunk. One of them went to the bottom with
five hundred souls. But the admiral was not on board. The Russian sailors said,
when Makárov's fate was made known, "It is not the loss of a
battleship. The Japanese are welcome to two of them. It is he." Not only
the skill, but the force of character required for playing with fire, was
wanting to Makarov's successors.
It was much the same on land. Kuropatkin, who had taken command of the army,
saw from the first that he would have to gain three months, and disposed his
forces as they came on the scene, unit by unit, in perfect accord with the
necessities of the case. His expressed intention was to fight no battle until
superiority in numbers was on his side. He could have gained his respite by
concentrating at Harbin or even at Mukden or at Liao-Yang. But he had to reckon
with the fleet 1 at Port Arthur. He knew that the defences of that place were
defective, and that if the fleet were destroyed whilst that of Togo kept the
sea, there would be no Russian offensive. He therefore chose Liao-Yang as the
point of concentration, and having thus to gain time by force instead of by
distance, he pushed out a strong covering detachment towards the Yalu.
But little by little he succumbed to his milieu, the atmosphere of false
confidence and passivity created around him by Alexeiev. After he had minutely
arranged the Eastern Detachment in a series of rearguard positions, so that
each fraction of it could contribute a little to the game of delaying the enemy
before retiring on the positions next in rear, the commander of the detachment,
Zasulich, told him that "it was not the custom of a knight of the order of
St George to retreat," and Kuropatkin did not use his authority to recall
the general, who, whether competent or not, obviously misunderstood his
mission. Thus, whilst the detachment was still disposed as a series of
rearguards, the foremost fractions of it stood to fight on the Yalu, against
odds of four to one.
1.Not, as is often assumed, the fortress itself.
The Japanese 1st Army was carefully concealed about Wiju until it was ready to
strike. Determined that in this first battle against a white nation they would
show their mettle, the Japanese lavished both time and forethought on the
minutest preparations. Forethought was still busy when, in accordance with
instructions from Tokio, Kuroki on the 30th of April ordered the attack to
begin at daybreak on the 1st of May. For several miles above Antung the rivers
Yalu and Aiho are parallel and connected by numerous channels. The majority of
the islands thus formed were held and had been bridged by the Japanese. The
points of passage were commanded by high ground a little farther up where the
valleys definitely diverge, and beyond the flank of the ill-concealed positions
of the defence. The first task of the right division (12th) was to cross the
upper Yalu and seize this. To the Guard and 2nd divisions was .assigned the
frontal attack on the Chiuliencheng position, where the Russians had about
one-half of their forces under Major- General Kashtalinski. On the 30th of
April Inouye's 12th division accomplished its task of clearing the high ground
up to the Aiho. The Russians, though well aware that the force in their front
was an army, neither retired nor concentrated. Zasulich's medieval generalship
had been modified so far that he intended to retreat when he had taught the
Japanese a lesson, and therefore Kuropatkin's original arrangements were not
sensibly modified. So it came about that the combined attack of the 2nd and
Guard divisions against the front, and Inouye on the left flank and rear, found
Kashtalinski without support. After a rather ineffective artillery bombardment
the Japanese advanced in full force, without hesitation or finesse, and
plunging into the river, stormed forward under a heavy fire. A few moments
afterwards Zasulich ordered the retreat. But the pressure was far too close
now. Broken up by superior numbers the Russian line parted into groups, each of
which, after resisting bravely for a time, was driven back. Then the frontal
attack stopped and both divisions abandoned themselves to the intoxication of
victory. Meanwhile, the right attack (12th division) encountering no very
serious resistance, crossed the Aiho and began to move on the left rear of the
Russians. On the side of the defence, each colonel had been left to retire as
best he could, and thus certain fractions of the retreating Russians
encountered Inouye's advancing troops and were destroyed after a most gallant
resistance. The rearguard itself, at Hamatan, was almost entirely sacrificed,
owing to the wrong direction taken in retreating by its left flankguard. Fresh
attempts were made by subordinates to form rearguards, but Zasulich made no
stand even at Fenghwang-cheng, and the Japanese occupied that town unopposed on
the 5th of May. The Japanese losses were 1100 out of over 40,000 present, the
Russian (chiefly in the retreat) at least 2500 out of some 7000 engaged.
The Yalu, like Valmy, was a moment in the world's history. It mattered little
that the Russians had escaped or that they had been in inferior numbers. The
serious fact was that they had been beaten.
The general distribution of the Russian forces was now as follows: The main
army under Kuropatkin was forming, by successive brigades, in two groups I.
Siberian Corps (Stakelberg), Niu-chwang and Kaiping; II. Siberian Corps,
Liao-Yang ~ Zasulich (III. Corps and various other units) had still 21,000. In
the Port Arthur "fortified rayon," under Lieut.-General Stoessel (IV.
Corps), were 27,000 men, and General Linievich around Vladivostok had 23,000.
These are, however, paper strengths only, and the actual number for duty cannot
have been higher than 110,000 in all. The Trans-Siberian railway was the only
line of communication with Europe and western Siberia, and its calculated
output of men was 40,000 a month in the summer. In October 1904, therefore,
supposing the Japanese to have used part of their forces against Port Arthur.
and setting this off against the absence of Linievich and Stoessel, Kuropatkin
could expect to have a sufficient superiority in numbers to take the offensive.
His policy was still, "No battle before we are in superior force."
For the moment it was equally Japan's interest to mark time in Manchuria. Still
intent upon the Russian Port Arthur squadron, she had embarked her 2nd Army
(General Oku, 1st, 3rd, 4th and 5th divisions) during April, and sent it to of
the Chinampo whence, as soon as the ice melted and Kuroki's victory cleared the
air, it sailed to the selected landing-place near Pitszewo. Here, under the
protection of a continuous chain of war-vessels between the Elliot Islands and
the mainland, Oku began to disembark on the 5th of May. But the difficulties of
the coast were such that it took three weeks to disembark the whole and to
extend across the peninsula to Port Adams. Oku then, leaving the 5th division
behind, moved down with the rest towards Kinchow, and after storming that place
found himself face to face with a position of enormous strength, Nanshan Hill,
at the narrowest part of the peninsula, where part of a Russian division (3000
only out of 12,000 were actually engaged) had fortified itself with extreme
care. On the 26th of May took place the battle of
Nanshan. The Japanese attack was convergent, but there was no room for
envelopment; the Russian position moreover was "all-round" and
presented no flanks, and except for the enfliade fire of the Japanese and
Russian gunboats in the shallow bays on either side the battle was locally at
every point a frontal attack and defence. The first rush of the assailants
carried them up to the wire and other obstacles, but they were for many hours
unable to advance a step farther. But the resolute Oku attacked time after
time, and at last the 4th division on his right, assisted by its gunboats,
forced its way into the Russian position. The Russians had just begun to
retreat, in accordance with orders from higher authorities. But it was a second
undeniable victory. It was, moreover, a preface to those furious assaults on
Port Arthur which, because they were the expression of a need that every
soldier felt, and not merely of a tactical method, transcend all cool-blooded
criticism. The Japanese losses were 4500 out of 30,000 engaged. The victors
captured many guns, but were too exhausted to pursue the Russians, whose
retirement was not made in the best order.
The transports weere now conveying the 6th and 11th divisions to Pitszewo;
these were to form the 3rd Army (Nogi) for operations against Port Arthur. Oku
exchanged his 1st division for the 6th. The 2nd Army then turned northward
(3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th divisions). The 10th division, forming the nucleus of
the 4th Army, had begun to land at Takushan on the 19th of May. The 2nd and 4th
Armies were the left wing of a widespread converging movement on Liao-Yang. Oku
had the greatest distance to march, Kuroki the smallest. The latter therefore
had to stand fast in the face of the Russian Eastern Detachment, which was
three days' march at most from Feng-hwang-cheng and could be supported in three
more days by Kuropatkin's main body, whereas the pressure of Oku's advance
would not begin to be felt by the Russian Southern Detachment until the twelfth
day at earliest. It was necessary therefore for the first objective to make a
slight concession to the second. Oku had to start at the earliest possible
moment, even though operations against Port Arthur were thereby delayed for a
week or two. In fact, Oku's march began on June 13th, Kuroki's: on June 24th;
the moves of the intermediate forces at various dates within this time.
Meanwhile Kuropatkin, assembling the main army week by week, was in a difficult
position. His policy of gaining time had received a severe blow in the failure
of his executive officer to realize it, and that officer, though his un-pursued
troops quickly regained their moral, had himself completely lost confidence. On
the news of the battle (coupled with that of a fresh army appearing on the
Korean coast),1 Kuropatkin instantly sent off part of his embryo central mass
to bar the mountain passes of Fenshuiling and Motienling against the imagined
relentless pursuit of the victors, and prepared to shift his centre of
concentration back to Mukden. The subsidiary protective forces on either flank
of Zasulich had promptly abandoned their look-out positions and fallen back to
join him. But the commander-in-chief, soon realizing that the Japanese were not
pursuing, reasserted himself, sent the protective troops back to their posts,
and canceled all orders for the evacuation of LiaoYang. From this time forward,
Kuropatkin allowed his subordinates little or no initiative. A few days later,
Zasulich's persistent requests to be allowed to retreat and the still uncertain
movements of the 2nd Army induced him once more to prepare a concentration on
Mukden. But on the 6th of May he learned that the Japanese 1st Army had again
halted at Fenghwang-cheng and that the 2nd Army was disembarking at Pitszewo,
and he resumed (though less confidently) his original idea. The Eastern
protective detachment, now strengthened and placed under the orders of Count
Keller, was disposed with a view to countering any advance on Liao-Yang from
the east by a combination of manoeuvre and fighting.2 It was at this moment of
doubt that Alexeiev, leaving Port Arthur just in time and profoundly impressed
with the precarious state of affairs in the fleet and the fortress, gave the
order, as commander in-chief by land and sea, for an "active "policy
(19th May). Kuropatkin, thus required to abandon his own plan, had
to choose between attacking the 1st Army and turning upon Oku. He
did not yield at once; a second letter from the viceroy, the news of Nanshan,
and above all a signed order from the tsar himself, "Inform General
Kuropatkin that I impose upon him all the responsibility for the fate of Port
Arthur," were needed to bring him definitely to execute a scheme which in
his heart he knew to be perilous. The path of duty for a general saddled with a
plan which he disapproves is not easily discoverable. Napoleon in like case
refused, at the risk of enforced resignation, but so did Moreau; the generality
of lesser men have obeyed, but so did Suvárov.
1This was the 2nd Army, waiting in the port of Chinampo for the moment to sail
for Pitszewo.
2 One isolated incident which deserves mention took place at this time, the
bold raid of Colonel Madritov and 500 Cossacks against the communications of
the 1st Army. The raid (involving a ride of 240 m. forward and back) was
carried out in entire ignorance of the battle of the Yalu, and on arriving at
Anju Madritov found nothing to attack, the 1st Army having after its victory
adopted a short line of communication from a sea base near the Yalu mouth. This
incident suggests two reflectionsfirst that raids or attacks in rear of the
centre of operations" are valueless, however daring, and second that had
Zasulich, in his determination to be worthy of his knighthood, concentrated for
battle, the presence of the Madritov detachment on the field would have
prevented the lamentable and costly misunderstandings of the retreat on
Hamatan.
Stakelberg's I. Siberian Corps was therefore reinforced towards the end of May
up to a strength of above 35,000. But it remained a detachment only. The
Liao-Yang central mass was still held in hand, for the landing of the 4th
Armyreally only a division at presentat Takushan and the wrong placing of
another Japanese division supposed to be with Kuroki (really intended for Nogi)
had aroused Kuropatkin's fears for the holding capacity of Keller's detachment.
Moreover, disliking the whole enterprise, he was most unwilling to use up his
army in it. The Russians, then, at the beginning of June, were divided into
three groups, the Southern, or offensive group (35,000), in the triangle
Neuchwang-Haicheng-Kaiping; the Eastern or defensive group (30,000), the main
body of it guarding the passes right and left of the Wiju-Liao-Yang road, the
left (Cossacks) in the roadless hills of the upper Aiho and Yalu valleys, the
right (Mishchenko's Cossacks and infantry supports) guarding Fenshuiling pass
and the road from Takushan; the reserve (42,000) with Kuropatkin at Liao-Yang;
the "Ussuri Army " about Vladivostok; and Stessel's two divisions in
the Kwantung peninsula.
On the other side the 1st Army was at Feng-hwang-cheng with one brigade
detached on the roads on either hand, the left being therefore in front of the
Takushan division and facing the Fenshuiling. Oku's 2nd Army (4 divisions or
60,000 combatants) was about Port Adams. This last was the objective of the
attack of Stakelberg's 35,000. Kuropatkin's orders to his subordinate were a
compromise between his own plan and Alexeiev's. Stakelberg was to crush by a
rapid and energetic advance the covering forces of the enemy met with, and his
object was "the capture of the Nanshan position and thereafter an advance
on Port Arthur." Yet another object was given him, to "relieve the
pressure on Port Arthur by drawing upon himself the bulk of the enemy's
forces," and he was not to allow himself to be drawn into a decisive
action against superior numbers. Lastly, on June 7th, while Stakelberg was
proceeding southward on his ill-defined errand, Kuropatkin, imposed upon by the
advance of the Takushan column to Siu-yen, forbade him to concentrate to the
front, only removing the veto when he learned that the 4th Army had halted and
entrenched at Siu-yen.
On the 14th, all his arrangements for supply and transport being at last
complete, Oku moved north. Although he was still short of part of the 6th
division, he was in superior force. He had, moreover, the perfectly definite
purpose of fighting his way north, and at Telissu or Wafangkou on the 14th of
June, as he expected, he came upon Stakelberg's detachment in an entrenched
position. On the 14th and 15th, attacking sharply on the Russian front and
lapping round both its flanks. Oku won an important and handsome victory, at a
cost of 5200 men out of 35,000 engaged, while the Russians, with a loss of at
least 3600 out of about 25,000 engaged, retired in disorder. Thus swiftly and
disastrously ended the southern expedition.
Meantime, except for the movement on Siu-yen already mentioned, 1 and various
reconnaissances in force by Keller's main body and by Rennenkampf's Cossacks
farther inland, all was quiet along the Motienling front. Kuroki entrenched
himself carefully about Feng-hwang-cheng, intending, if attacked by the Russian
main army, to defend to the last extremity the ground and the prestige gained
on the 1st of May.
1.The occupation of Siu-yen was chiefly the work of the brigade pushed out to
his left by Kuroki. Only a portion of the ioth division from Takushan helped to
drive away Mishchenko's Cossacks.
From this point to the culmination of the advance at LiaoYang, the situation of
the Japanese closely resembles that of the Prussians in 1866. Haicheng
represents Munchengratz, Liao-Yang Gitschin. and the passes east of Liao-Yang
Nachod and Trautenau. The concentration of the various Japanese armies on one
battlefield was to be made, not along the circumference of the long arc they
occupied, but towards the centre. Similarly, Kuropatkin was in the position of
Benedek. He possessed the interior lines and the central reserve which enables
interior lines to be utilized, and a stroke of good fortune prolonged the
period in which he could command the situation, for on the 23rd of June an
unexpected sortie of the Russian Port Arthur squadron paralyzed the Japanese
land offensive. In the squadron were seen the battleships damaged in the
February attacks, and the balance of force was now against Togo, who had lost
the "Yashima" and the "Hatsuse." The squadron nevertheless
tamely returned to harbour, Togo resumed the blockade and Nogi began his
advance from Nanshan, but the 2nd and 4th Armies came to a standstill at once
(naval escort for their sea-borne supplies being no longer available), and the
1st Army, whose turn to advance had just arrived, only pushed ahead a few miles
to cover a larger supply area. On the 1st of July the Vladivostok squadron
appeared in the Tsushima Straits, and then vanished to an unknown destination,
and whether this intensified the anxiety of the Japanese or not, it is the fact
that the 2nd Army halted for eleven days at Kaiping, bringing the next on its
right, 4th Army, to a standstill likewise. Its next advance brought it to the
fortified position of Tashichiao, where Kuropatkin had, by drawing heavily upon
his central reserve and even on the Eastern Detachment, massed about two army
corps.
On the 24th Oku attacked, but the Russian general, Zarubayev, handled his
troops very skilfully, and the Japanese were repulsed with a loss of 1200 men.
Zarubayev, who had used only about half his forces in the battle, nevertheless
retired in the night, fearing to be cut off by a descent of the approaching 4th
Army on Haicheng, and well content to have broken the spell of defeat. Oku
renewed the attack next day, but found only a rearguard in front of him, and
without following up the retiring Russians he again halted for six days before
proceeding to Haicheng to effect a junction with the 4th Army (Nozu), which
meantime had won a number.of minor actions and forced the passage of the
mountains at Fenshuiling South.1
1. The 5th division of the 2nd Army had been sent to join the 10th as the
latter approached Hsimucheng. The Guard brigade of Kuroki's army which had
served with Nozu in the advance had now returned to Feng-hwang-cheng.
The 1st Army, after its long halt at Feng-hwang-cheng, which was employed in
minutely organizing the supply servicea task of exceptional difficulty in these
roadless mountains reopened the campaign on the 24th of June, but only
tentatively on account of the discouraging news from Port Arthur. A tremendous
rainstorm imposed further delays, for the coolies and the native transport that
had been laboriously collected scattered in all directions. The Motienling
pass, however, had been seized without difficulty, and Keller's power of
counterattack had been reduced to nothing by the despatch of most of his forces
to the concentration at Tashichiao. But Oku's 2nd Army was now at a standstill
at Kaiping, and until he was further advanced the 1st Army could not press
forward. The captured passes were therefore fortified (as Feng-hwang- cheng had
been) for passive resistance. This, and the movements of the 4th Army, which
had set its face towards Haicheng and no longer seemed to be part of a threat
on Liao-Yang, led to the idea being entertained at Kuropatkin's headquarters
that the centre of gravity was shifting to the south. To clear up the situation
Keller's force was augmented and ordered to attack Kuroki. It was repulsed with
a loss of nearly 1000 men in the action at the Motienling (17th July), but it
was at least ascertained that considerable forces were still on the Japanese
right, and upon the arrival of a fresh army corps from Europe Kuropatkin
announced his intention of attacking Kuroki. And in effect he succeeded in
concentrating the equivalent of an army corps, in addition to Keller's force,
opposite to Kuroki's right. But having secured this advantage he stood still
for five days, and Kuroki had ample time to make his arrangements. The Japanese
general occupied some 20 m. of front in two halves, separated by 6 m. of
impassable mountain, and knowing well the danger of
a"cordon"defensive, he met the crisis in another and a bolder
fashion. Calling in the brigade detached to the assistance of Nozu as well as
all other available fractions of his scattered army, he himself attacked on the
31st of July, all along the line. It was little more than an assertion of his
will to conquer, but it was effectual. On his left wing the attacks of the
Guard and 2nd divisions (action of Yang-tzu-ling) on the Russian front and
flank failed, the frontal attack because of the resolute defence, the flank
attack from sheer fatigue of the troops. Count Keller was killed in the
defence. Meantime on the Japanese right the 12th division attacked the large
bodies of troops that Kuropatkin had massed (Yu-shu-ling) equally in vain. But
one marked success was achieved by the Japanese. The Russian 35th, and 36th
regiments (10th European Corps) were caught between two advancing columns, and,
thanks to the initiative of one of the column leaders, Okasaki, destroyed. At
night, discouraged on each wing by the fall of Count Keller and the fate of the
35th and 36th, the whole Russian force retired on Anping, with a loss of 2400,
to the Japanese 1000 men.
This was the only manifestation of the offensive spirit on Kuropatkin's part
during the six months of marking time. It was for defence, sometimes partial
and elastic, sometimes rigid and "at-all-costs," that he had made his
dispositions throughout. His policy now was to retire on Liao-Yang as slowly as
possible and to defend himself in a series of concentric prepared positions. In
his orders for the battle around his stronghold there is no word of
counter-attack, and his central mass, the special weapon of the
commander-in-chief, he gave over to Bilderlirig and to Zarubayev to strengthen
the defence in their respective sections or posted for the protection of his
line of retreat. Nevertheless he had every intention of delivering a heavy and
decisive counterstroke when the right moment should come, and meantime his
defensive tactics would certainly have full play on this prearranged
battlefield with its elaborate redoubts, bombproofs and obstacles, and its
garrison of a strength obviously equal (and in reality superior) to that of the
assailants.
The Japanese, too, had effected their object, and as they converged on their
objective, the inner flanks of the three armies had connected and the supreme
commander Marshal Oyama had taken command of the whole. But, as the event was
to prove, the military policy of Japan had failed to produce the requisite
number of men for the desired Sedan, and so, instead of boldly pushing out the
1st Army to such a distance that it could manoeuvre, as Moltke did in 1866 and
1870, he attached it to the general line of battle. It was not in two or three
powerful groups but in one long chain of seven deployed divisions that the
advance was made.
On the 25th of August the 2nd and 4th Armies from Haicheng and the 1st Army
from the Yin-tsu-ling and Yu-shu-ling began the last stage of their convergent
advance. The Russian first position extended in a semicircle from Anshantien
(on the Liao-Yang-Hai-cheng railway) into the hills at Anping, and thence to
the Taitse river above Liao-Yang; both sides had mixed detachments farther out
on the flanks. The first step in the Japanese plan was the advance of Kuroki's
army to Anping. Throughout the 25th, night of 25th-26th, and 26th of August,
Kuroki advanced, fighting heavily all along the line, until on the night of the
26th the defenders gave up the contested ground at Anping. Hitherto there had
only been skirmishing on a large scale on the side of Hai-cheng. Kuropatkin
having already drawn in his line of defence on the south side towards
Liao-Yang, the 2nd and 4th Japanese Armies delivered what was practically a
blow in the air. But on the 27th there was a marked change in the Japanese
plan. The right of the 1st Army, when about to continue the advance west on
Liao-Yang, was diverted northward by Oyama's orders and ordered to prepare to
cross the Taitszeho. The retirement of the Russian Southern Force into its
entrenchments emboldened the Japanese commander-in-chief to imitate Moltke's
method to the full. On the 28th, however, the 1st Army made scarcely any
progress. The right (12th) division reached the upper Taitszeho, but the
divisions that were to come up on its left were held fast by their opponents.
The 29th was an uneventful day, on which both sides prepared for the next
phase.
The Russians' semicircle, now contracted, rested on the Taitszeho above and
below the town, and their forces were massed most closely on either side of the
"Mandarin" road that the 1st Army had followed. Opposite this portion
of the line, was the Guard and the 4th Army. Oku was astride the railway,
Kuroki extending towards his proposed crossing-points just beyond Kuropatkin's
extreme left (the latter was behind the river). On the 30th the attack was
renewed. The Guard, the 4th Army and the 2nd Army were completely repulsed.
(Map of Liao-Yang)
On the night of the 30th the first Japanese' troops crossed the Taitszeho near
Lien-Tao-Wun, and during the 31st three brigades were deployed north of
Kwan-tun, facing west. The Russian left wing observed the movement all day, and
within its limited local resources made dispositions to meet it. Kuropatkin's
opportunity was now come. The remainder of the 2nd division was following the
12th, leaving a nine-mile gap between Kuroki and Nozu, as well as the river. It
was not into this gap, which had no military significance, but upon the
isolated divisions of the 1st Army that the Russian general proposed to launch
his counterstroke. Reorganizing his southern defences on a shorter front, so as
to regain possession of the reserves that he had so liberally given away to his
subordinates, he began to collect large bodies of troops opposite Kuroki, while
Stakelberg and Zarubayev, before withdrawing silently into the lines or rather
the fortress of Liao-Yang, again repulsed Oku's determined attacks on the south
side. But it was not in confidence of victory that Kuropatkin began the
execution of the new planrather as a desperate expedient to avoid being cut off
by the 1st Army, whose strength he greatly overestimated.
On the morning of the 1st of September the anniversary of Sedan, as the
Japanese officers told their men Oyama, whose intentions the active Kuroki had
somewhat outrun, delivered a last attack with the 2nd and 4th Armies, and the
Guard on the south front, in the hope of keeping the main body of the Russians
occupied and so assisting Kuroki, but the assailants encountered no resistance,
Zarubayev having already retired into the fortress. North of the Taitszeho the
crisis was approaching. Kuroki's left, near the river, vigorously attacked a
hill called Manjuyama which formed part of the line of defence of the XVII.
Corps from Europe. But the right of the 1st Army (12th division) was threatened
by the gathering storm of the counterstroke from the side of Yentai Mines, and
had it not been that the resolute Okasaki continued the attack on Manjuyama
alone, the Japanese offensive would have come to a standstill. Manjuyama,
thanks to the courage of the army commander and of a single brigadier, was at
last carried after nightfall, and the dislodged Russians made two
counter-attacks in the dark before they would acknowledge themselves beaten.
Next morning,, when Kuroki, who had conceived the mistaken idea of a general
retreat of the Russians on Mukden, was preparing to pursue, the storm broke.
Kuropatkin had drawn together seven divisions on the left rear of the XVII
Corps, the strength of the whole being about 90,000. On the extreme left was
Orlov's brigade of all arms at Yentai Mines, then came the I. Siberian Corps
(Stakelberg), then the X. Corps, then the XVII. But Orlov, perplexed by
conflicting instructions and caught in an unfavourable situation by a brigade
of the 12th division which was executing the proposed "pursuit," gave
waypart of his force in actual routand the cavalry that was with him was driven
back by the. Kobi (reserve army) brigade of the Guard. The fugitives of Orlov's
command disordered the on-coming corps of Stakelberg, and the outer flank of
the great counterstroke that was to have rolled up Kuroki's thin line came to
an entire standstill. Meantime the X. Corps furiously attacked Okasaki on the
Manjuyama, and though its first assault drove in a portion of Okasaki's line, a
second and a third, made in the night, failed to shake the constancy of the
15th brigade. Misunderstandings and movements at cross-purposes multiplied on
the Russian side, and at midnight Kuropatkin at last obtained information of
events on the side of Yentai Mines. This was to the effect that Orlov was
routed, Stakelberg's command much shaken, and at the same time Zarubayev in
Liao-Yang, upon whom Oku and Nozu had pressed a last furious attack, reported
that he had only a handful of troops still in reserve. Then Kuropatkin's
resolution collapsed, although about three divisions were still intact, and he
gave the order to retreat on Mukden.
Thus the Japanese had won their great victory with inferior forces, thanks
"in the first instance to the defeat of General Orlov. But at least as
large a share in the ruin of the Russian operations must be attributed to the
steadfast gallantry of the 15th brigade on Manjuyama." The losses of the
Japanese totaled 23,000, those of the Russians 19,000. Coming, as it did, at a
moment when the first attacks on Port Arthur had been repulsed with heavy
losses, this brilliantly successful climax of the four months' campaign more
than restored the balance. But it was not the expected Sedan. Had the two
divisions still kept in Japan been present Kuroki would have had the balance of
force on his side, the Russian retreat would have been confused, if not
actually a rout, and the war would have been ended on Japan's own terms. As it
was, after another day's fighting, Kuropatkin drew off the whole of his forces
in safety, sharply repulsing an attempt at pursuit made by part of the 12th
division on the 4th of September. The railway still delivered 30,000 men a
month at Mukden, and Japan had for a time outrun her resources. At St
Petersburg the talk was not of peace but of victory, and after a period of
reorganization the Russians advanced afresh to a new trial of strength. But the
remainder of the Manchurian campaign, like the second half of the war of 1859,
was nothing more than a series of violent and result-less encounters of huge
armiesarmies far larger than those which had fought out the real struggle for
supremacy at Liao-Yang and Magenta.
At this time the siege of Port Arthur (Map) had only
progressed so far that the besiegers were able to realize the difficulties
before them. Nogi landed on the 1st of June, and his army (1st and 11th
divisions) gradually separated itself from Oku's and got into position for the
advance on Port Arthur. Dalny, the commercial harbour, was seized without
fighting, and a month was spent in preparing a base there. But so far from
retiring within his fort-line Stessel took up a strong position outside.
Dislodged from this on the 26th of June, the Russians checked Nogi's further
advance on July 34 by a fierce, though unsuccessful, counterstroke. Having been
reinforced by the 9th division and two extra brigades of infantry, Nogi
advanced again on the 26th. The Russians, having had a month wherein to
intrench themselves, held out all along the line; but after two days and one
night of fighting amongst rocks and on precipitous hill-sides, the Japanese
broke through on the night of July 2728. Stessel then withdrew in good order
into Port Arthur, which in the two months he had gained by his fighting
manoeuvre had been considerably strengthened. Nogi had already lost 8000 men.
The defences of Port Arthur, as designed by the Russians in 1900, and owing to
the meagre allotment of funds only partially carried out before the war, had
some tincture, but no more, of modern continental ideas. There was a continuous
enceinte of plain trace round the Old Town, at a distance of 1000 to 2000 yds.
from it, which had not and could not have had any influence on the issue of the
siege. The main line of defence followed the outer edge of the amphitheatre of
hills surrounding the harbour. These hills had their, greatest development on
the N.E. side, their outer crests being some 4000 yds. from the Old Town. West
of the Lun river the defensive line offered by the hills is less defined, and
the line adopted for the permanent works was on the north only 3000 yds. from
the harbour and 2000 yds. from the New Town. Running S.W. and S. back to the
coast, it gradually draws in quite close to the S.W. end of the harbour. The
total length of this line from sea to sea is some 12 m. Its most obvious
weakness is that 5000 yds. N.W. of the harbour and New Town the now famous
"203-Metre Hill" overlooks' both. Here it had been intended to
construct permanent works, but considerations of expenditure had caused this to
be deferred.
On this main line of defence some seven or eight permanent works had been
disposed (it is difficult to define with accuracy, as some of the concreted
works were little better than semi-permanent in character). Some of these had
been prepared with interior parapets and platforms of concrete for medium guns.
Fort Erh-Lung was of this character. The general design appears to have been
grounded on the French detached forts of the `seventies (see FORTIFICATION), as
the front parapet was designed for infantry and the interior, 10 ft. higher,
for guns. The ditch, 30 ft. deep, excavated in the rock, was flanked by
counterscarp galleries. The living casemates were under the gorge parapet. A
grave defect in the design was that there was no covered communication between
these casemates and the parapets. Fort Chi-Kuan had no artillery parapet. The
ditch, 12 to 15 ft. deep, was defended by counterscarp galleries. The casemates
in the gorge, partially cut off from the terreplein by a couple of deep sunk
yards or areas, could be defended in the last resort as a keep. In addition to
this the terreplein was retrenched. In both of these forts there was an
apparently meaningless projection at the gorge. It is possible that these were
embryonic "batteries traditores" to flank the intervals. Fort
Sung-Shu was of the same type as Chi-Kuan. These three were the only permanent
forts seriously attacked.
The permanent works were supplemented before the siege began by prodigious
development of semi-permanent works and trenches. Every knoll had its redoubt
or battery, and the trenches were arranged line behind line, to give
supporting, cross and enfilade fire in every direction. Thus on the north
front, from Chi-Kuan battery to Sung-Shu, a distance of about two miles, there
were three permanent forts and seven semi-permanent works and batteries. Behind
these was the "Chinese Wall," and behind that more batteries and
trenches. On the north-west front, "203-Metre Hill", in advance of
the main line, was occupied by strong semi-permanent works, with trenches and
redoubts to either flank; and 174-Metre Hill, 1500 yds. beyond it, was also
held. The Lun-Ho valley where it cut through the line was closed by
entanglements and fougasses, and swept by batteries on each side. In front of
the centre, the Waterworks Redoubt, a semi-permanent work covering the Port
Arthur water supply, and connected by trenches with the four Temple Redoubts a
mile away to the west, formed a strong advanced position. Wire entanglements
were disposed in repeated lines in front of the defences, but they were not of
a strong type. The Russians, with the resources of the fleet at their disposal
(just as at Sevastopol), used great numbers of machine guns and electric
lights, and the available garrison at first was probably, including sailors,
47,000 men.
Such were the defences that the Japanese attacked, with a force at the outset
(30th of July) little more than superior numerically to the defenders, and an
entirely inadequate siege train (18 6-in, howitzers, 66 4.7 in. guns and
howitzers, and about 200 field and mountain guns). They were imperfectly
informed of the strength of the garrison and the nature of the defences.
Recollections of their easy triumph in 1894 and perhaps thoughts of Sevastopol,
German theories of the "brusque attack," the fiery ardour of the
army, and above all the need of rapidly crushing or expelling the squadron in
harbour, combined to suggest a bombardment and general assault. The bombardment
began on the 19th of August and continued for three days, while the infantry
was spreading along the front and gaining ground where it could. The real
assault was made on the night of the 21st on the two Pan-Lung forts
(semi-permanent) on the centre of the north-eastern front. The fighting was of
the utmost severity, and continued through the 22nd; and although
the stormers captured the two forts they were absolutely unable to make any
further progress under the fire of the permanent forts Erh-Lung and Chi-Kuan on
either side of, and the Wan-tai fort behind, Pan-Lung. Every attempt to bring
up supports to the captured positions failed, and the Russians concentrated on
the spot from all quarters. On the night of the 23rd24th, just as the assault
was being renewed, Stessel delivered a fierce counter-attack against the lost
positions, and the result of an all-night battle was that though the forts were
not recaptured, the assault was repulsed with over 5000 casualties, and the
Japanese in Pan-Lung were isolated. This sortie raised the spirits of the
Russians to the highest pitch. They seemed indeed to have broken the spell of
defeat. On the Japanese side 15,000 men had been killed and wounded in three
weeks. The Russians strengthened their works around the captured forts in such
a way as effectually to prevent farther advance, and the Japanese 3rd Army had
now to resign itself to a methodical siege. Small sorties, partial attacks' and
duels between the Japanese guns and the generally more powerful ordnance of the
fortress continued. The siege approaches were first directed against the north
Waterworks group, which was stormed on the 19th and 20th of September. Pan-Lung
was connected with the Japanese lines by covered ways, approaches were begun
towards several of the eastern forts, and on the 20th of September 180-Metre
Hill was stormed, though the crest was untenable under the fire from 203-Metre
Hill. The Japanese were now beginning to pay more attention to the western side
of the fortress, and from the 19th to the 22nd there was hard fighting around
203-Metre Hill, the attack being eventually repulsed with the loss of 2000 men.
Operations in the west were thereupon abandoned for the time being and the
eastern forts remained the principal objective of the attack. Heavier howitzers
had been sent for from Japan, and on the 1st of October the first batteries of
28 centimetre (11 in.) howitzers came into action. They fired a shell weighing
485 lbs with a bursting charge of 17 lb. On the 12th, the Japanese took the
trenches between the Waterworks Redoubt and Erh-Lung, and cut the water supply.
Saps were then pushed on against Erh-Lung, and to help in their progress a
Russian advanced work called "G" was captured on the 16th, by a
skillfully combined attack of infantry and artillery. From this time forward
there was a desperate struggle at the sapheads on the north front.2
`A particular feature of these constant night-fights was the effective use o
the defenders' searchlight, not only to show up the enemy but to blind him.
2 Hand grenades and extemporized trench mortars were used on both sides with
very great effect. The Japanese hand grenades consisted of about 1lb of high
explosive in a tin case; the Russian cases were of all sorts, including old
Chinese shell. The Japanese employed wire-netting screens to stop the Russian
grenades. Various means were tried for the destruction of entanglements.
Eventually it was found that the best plan was to sap through them.
On the 26th of October another assault was made on Chi-Kuan Fort and Battery,
and was continued at intervals, varied by Russian counter-attacks, till the 2nd
of November. By this time the Japanese were becoming disheartened. They had
incurred an additional loss of 13,000 men without substantial gain, except a
lodgment on the counterscarp of Sung-Shu. This prepared the way for mining,
which had already been begun at Erh-Lung. On the 17th of November seven mines
were exploded at Sung-Shu, which blew in the back of the counterscarp
galleries. At Erh-Lung on the 20th of November three mines were exploded, which
half filled the ditch, and the Japanese later on sapped across to the escarp
over the debris. At Chi-Kuan, the counterscarp gallery had been breached by an
ill-managed Russian mine on the 23rd of October and the Japanese got in through
the breach and made a lodgment. They did not, however, get possession of the
whole of the counterscarp galleries before about the middle of November. On the
22nd of November the Japanese assaulted the trench round Chi-Kuan battery. It
was captured and retaken by counter-attack twice between 6 p.m. and 1 a.m. In
this fight each side was using corpses as breastworks.
On the 26th of November another assault was made on the same lines as that of
the 30th of October. By this time the besiegers were sapping under the escarps
of the northern forts, and it would have been better to delay. But the
situation was serious in the extreme. In Manchuria Kuropatkin's army had
reasserted itself. From Europe Rozhestvenski's squadron was just setting sail
for the Far East. Marshal Oyama sent his principal staff officers to stimulate
Nogi to fresh efforts, and some exhausted units of the besieging army were
replaced by fresh troops from Japan. With 100,000 men and this urgent need of
immediate victory, Nogi and the marshal's staff officers felt bound tp make a
third general assault. The siege works had indeed made considerable progress.
The ditches of Sung-Shu and Erh-Lung were partially filled. They held most of
the ditch of Chi-Kuan Fort and were cutting down the escarp, and two parallels
had been made only 30 yds. from the Chinese Wall at ` G" and Pan-Lung.
The general attack was made at 1 p.m. At Sung-Shu the stormers got into the
fort, but suffered much from the artillery on the western side of the Lun-ho
valley, and were beaten out of it again in 20 minutes; 2000 men tried in vain
to get up the Lun-ho valley to take Sung-Shu in rear. At Erh-Lung they could
not get over the outer parapet. At "G" they took a portion of the
Chinese Wall and lost it again, other trenches with a cross fire being behind.
At Pan-Lung the machine guns on the Wall prevented them from leaving the
parallel. At Chi-Kuan Fort the terreplein of the fort had been covered with
entanglements defended by machine guns on the gorge parapets, and the Japanese
could make no way. Briefly, there was a furious fight all along the line, and
nothing gained. On the 27th of November, after losing 12,000 men, the assault
was abandoned. On the north front the Japanese returned to mining.
But so urgent was the necessity of speedy victory that the fighting had to
continue elsewhere. And at last, after every other point had been attempted,
the weight of the attack was directed on 203-Metre Hill. A battery of 11 inch
howitzers was established only one mile away. On the 28th of November assaults
were made and failed. On the 30th of November an attack with fresh troops
failed again. On the 1st of December there was a heavy bombardment by the big
howitzers, which obliged the Russians to take shelter in rear of the ruined
works. On the 2nd of December the Russians tried a counter-attack. During the
next two days the artillery were busy. The engineers sapped up to the ruins of
the western work, saw the shelters on the reverse slope and directed artillery
fire by telephone. Thirty-six guns swept the ground with shrapnel. Finally on
the 5th of December the Japanese attacked successfully. Their losses in the
last ten days at 203Metre Hill had been probably over 10,000. Those of the
Russians were about 5000, chiefly from artillery fire.
This was the turning-point of the siege. At once the 11-inch howitzers,
assisted by telephone from 203-Metre, opened upon the Russian ships; a few days
later these were wholly hors de combat, and at the capitulation only a few
destroyers were in a condition to escape. The siege was now pressed with vigour
by the construction of batteries at and around 203 Metre, by an infantry
advance against the main western defences, and by renewed operations against
the eastern forts. The escarp of Chi-Kuan was blown up, and at the cost of 800
men, General Sameyeda (11th division), personally leading his stormers,
captured the great fort on the 19th of December. The escarp of Ehr-Lung was
also blown up, and the ruins of the fort were stormed by the 9th division on
the 28th of December, though a mere handful of the defenders prolonged the
fighting for eight hours and the assailants lost 1,000 men. Sung-Shu suffered a
worse fate on the 31st, the greater part of the fort and its defenders being
blown up, and on this day the whole defence of the eastern front collapsed. The
Japanese 7th and 1st divisions were now advancing on the western main line; the
soul of the defence, the brave and capable General Kondratenko, had been killed
on the 25th of December, and though the Japanese seem to have anticipated a
further stand, 1 Stessel surrendered on the 2nd of January 1905, with 24,000
effective and slightly wounded and 25,000 wounded and sick men, the remnant of
his original 47,000.
1. As regards food and ammunition, the resources of the defence were not by any
means exhausted, and General Stessel and other senior officers of the defence
were tried by courts-martial, and some of them convicted, on the charge of
premature surrender.
The total losses of the 3rd Japanese Army during the siege were about 92,000
men (58,000 casualties and 34,000 sick).
Meanwhile the Japanese navy had scored two important successes. After months of
blockade and minor fighting, the Russian Port Arthur squadron had been brought
to action on the 10th of August. Admiral Vitheft, Makarov's successor, had put
to sea shortly after the appearance of the 3rd Army on the land front of Port
Arthur. The battle opened about noon, 20 m. south of the harbour; the forces
engaged on each side varied somewhat, but Togo finally had a superiority.
Admiral Vitheft was killed. As the Russians became gradually weaker, the
Japanese closed in to within 3 m. range, and Prince Ukhtomsky (who succeeded to
the command on Vitheft's fall) gave up the struggle at nightfall. The Russians
scattered, some vessels heading southward, the majority with the admiral making
for Port Arthur, whence they did not again emerge. All the rest were either
forced into neutral ports (where they were interned) or destroyed, among the
latter being the third-class cruiser Novik," which had already earned a
brilliant reputation for daring, and now steamed half round Japan before she
was brought to action and run ashore. The victors blockaded Port Arthur, until
near the close of the siege, when, after going ashore and examining the remnant
of the Russian fleet from 203-Metre Hill, Togo concluded that it would be safe
to return to Japan and give his ships a complete refit. Kaimura's squadron,
after various adventures, at last succeeded on the 24th of August in engaging
and defeating the Russian Vladivostok squadron (Admiral Jessen). Thus the
Russian flag disappeared from the Pacific, and thenceforward only the Baltic
fleet could hope seriously to challenge the supremacy of the Japanese navy.
The remainder of the war on land, although it included two battles on a large
scale and numerous minor operations, was principally a test of endurance. After
Liao-Yang there were no extended operations, the area of conflict being
confined to the plain of the coast side of the Hun-ho and the fringe of the
mountains. Japan had partially accomplished her task, but had employed all her
trained men in this partial accomplishment. It was questionable, even in
October 1904, whether she could endure the drain of men and money, if it were
prolonged much further. On the other hand, in Russia opposition to the war;
which had never been popular, gradually became the central feature of a
widespread movement against irresponsible government. Thus while the. armies in
Manchuria faced one another with every appearance of confidence, behind them
the situation was exceedingly grave for both parties. A state of equilibrium
was established, only momentarily disturbed by Kuropatkin's offensive on the
Sha-ho in October, and by the Sandepu incident in the winter, until at last
Oyama fought a battle on a grand scale and won it. Even then, however, the
results fell far short of anticipation, and the armies settled down into
equilibrium again.
After the battle of Liao-Yang Kuropatkin reverted for a moment to the plan of a
concentration to the rear at Tieling. Politically, however, it was important to
hold Mukden, the Manchurian capital, and since the Japanese, as on previous
occasions, reorganized instead of pursuing, he decided to stand his ground, a
resolution which had an excellent effect on his army. Moreover, growing in
strength day by day, and aware that the Japanese had outrun their powers, he
resolved, in spite of the despondency of many of his senior officers, to take
the offensive. He disposed of about 200,000 men, the Japanese had about
170,000. The latter lay entrenched north of Liao-Yang, from a point 9 m. west
of the railway, through Yentqi Station and Yentai Mines, to the hills farther
east.: There had been a good deal of rain, and the ground was heavy.
Kuropatkin's intention was to work round the Japanese right on the hills with
his eastern wing (Stakelberg), to move his western wing (Bilderling) slowly
southwards, entrenching each strip of ground gained, and finally with the
centre i.e. Bilderling's left and Stakelberg, to envelope and crush the 1st
Army, which formed the Japanese right, keeping the 4th Army (Nozu) and -the 2nd
Army (Oku) in countenance by means of Bilderling's main body. The manoeuvre
began on the 5th of October, and by the evening of the 10th, after four days of
fairly heavy advanced-guard fighting, chiefly between Bilderling and Nozu,
Stakelberg was in his assigned position in the mountainous country, facing west
towards Liào-Yang, with his left on the Taitseho. The advance of
Bilderling, however,, necessarily methodical and slow in any case, had taken
more time than was anticipated. Still, Bilderling crossed the Sha-ho and made
some progress towards Yentai, and the demonstration was so far effectual that
Kuroki's warnings were almost disregarded by the Japanese headquarters. The
commander of the 1st Army, however, took his measures well, and Stakelberg
found the greatest trouble in deploying his forces for action in this difficult
country. Oyama became convinced of the truth on the 9th and 10th, and prepared
a great counter-attack'. Kuroki with only a portion of the 1st Army was left to
defend at least 15 m. of front, and the entire 2nd and 4th Armies and the
general reserves were to be thrown upon Bilderling. On the 11th the real battle
opened. Kuroki displayed the greatest skill, but he was of course pressed back
by the four-to-one superiority of the Russians. Still the result of
Stakelberg's attack, for which he was unable to deploy his whole force, was
disappointing, but the main Japanese attack on Bilderling was not much more
satisfactory, for the Russians had entrenched every step of their previous
advance, and fought splendidly. The Russian commander-in-chief states in his
work on `the war that Bilderling became engaged a fond instead of
gradually withdrawing as Kuropatkin intended, and at any rate it is
unquestioned that in consequence of the serious position- of affairs on the
western wing, not only did Stakelberg use his reserves to support Bilderling,
when the 12th division of Kuroki's army was almost at its last gasp and must
have yielded to fresh pressure, but Kuropatkin himself suspended the general
offensive on the 13th of October. In the fighting of the 13th16th of October
the Russians gradually gave back as far as the line of the Sha-ho, the Japanese
following until the armies faced roughly north and south on parallel fronts.
The fighting, irregular but severe, continued. Kuropatkin was so far averse to
retreat that he ordered a new offensive, which was carried out on the 1617th.
Putulov and Novgorod hills, south of the Sha-ho, were stormed by the Russians,
and the Japanese made several efforts to retake these positions without
success. Kuropatkin wished to continue the offensive, but his corps commanders
offered so much opposition to a further offensive that he at last gave up the
idea. The positions of the rival armies from the 18th of October, the close of
the battle of the Sha-ho, to the 26th of January 1905, the opening of the
battle of Sandepu (Heikoutai) a period almost entirely devoid of incidentmay be
described by the old-fashioned term "winter quarters." The total
losses of the Russians are stated as 42,000 men, but this is very considerably
exaggerated; the Japanese acknowledged 20,000 casualties.
In January 1905, apart from Mishchenko's cavalry raid in rear of Oyama's forces
(January 8th16th) the only change in the relative positions of Oyama and
Kuropatkin as they stood after the battle of the Sha-ho was that the Japanese
had extended somewhat westwards towards the Hun-ho. The Russians, 300,000
strong, were now organized in three armies, commanded by Generals.Liniev'ich,
Grippenberg and Kaulbars; the total strength of the Japanese 1st, 2nd and 4th
Armies and reserve was estimated by the Russians at 220,000. Towards the end of
January, Kuropatkin took the offensive. He wished to inflict a severe blow
before the enemy could be reinforced by the late besiegers of Port Arthur, and
sent Grippenberg with seven divisions against Oku's two on the Japanese left.
The battle of Sandepu (Heikoutai), fought in a terrible snowstorm on the 26th
and 27th of January 1905, came near to being a great Russian victory. But the
usual dicousu of Russian operations and their own magnificent
~resistance saved the Japanese, and after two days' severe fighting, although
Grippenberg had not been checked, Kuropatkin, in face of a counter-attack by
Oyama, decided to abandon the attempt. The losses were roughly 8000 Japanese to
over 10,000 Russians. (Map of Mukden)
Both sides stood fast in the old positions up to the verge of the last and
greatest battle. Kuropatkin was reinforced, and appointed Kaulbars to succeed
Grippenberg and Bilderling to the command of the 3rd Army vacated by Kaulbars.
On the other hand, Nogi's 3rd Army, released by the fall of Port Arthur, was
brought up on the Japanese left, and a new army under Kawamura (5th), formed of
one of the Port Arthur and two reserve divisions, was working from the upper
Yalu through the mountains towards the Russian left rear. The Russian line in
front of Mukden from the Hun-ho, through the Putilov and Novgorod hills on the
Sha-ho, to the mountains, was 47 m. long, the armies from right to left being
II. (Kaulbars), III. (Bilderling) and I. (Linievich); a general reserve was at
Mukden. On the other side from left to right, on a line 40 m. long, were Oku
(2nd Army), Nozu (4th), Kuroki (1st) and Kawamura (5th), the general reserve in
rear of the centre at Yentai and the 3rd Army in rear of Oku. Each side had
about 310,000 men present. The entire front of both armies was heavily
entrenched. The Russians had another offensive in contemplation when the
Japanese forestalled them by advancing on the 21st of February. The 5th Army
gradually drove in Kuropatkin's small detachments in the mountains, and came up
in line with Kuroki, threatening to envelop the Russian left. The events on
this side and misleading information induced Kuropatkin to pay particular
attention to his left. The Japanese 1st and 5th Armies were now engaged, (25th
February), and elsewhere all was quiet. But on the 27th the fighting spread to
the centre,, and Nogi (originally behind Oku) was on the march to envelop the
Russian right. He was held under observation throughout by Russian cavalry, but
it seems that little attention was paid to their reports by Kuropatkin, who was
still occupied with Kuroki and Kawamura, and even denuded his right of its
reserves to reinforce his left. With a battle-front exceeding two days' marches
the wrong distribution of reserves by both sides was a grave misfortune.
Kuropatkin was at last convinced, on the 28th of February, of the danger from
the west, and did all in his power to form a solid line of defence on the west
side of Mukden. Nogi's first attack (1st 2nd March) had not much success, and a
heavy counterstroke was delivered on the 2nd. Fighting for localities arid
alterations in the interior distribution of the opposing forces occupied much
time, and by the 3rd, though the battle had become severe, `Kuropatkin had
merely drawn in his right and right centre (now facing W. and S.W.
respectively) a little nearer Mukden. His centre on the Sha-ho held firm,
Kuroki and Kawamura made but slight progress against his left in the mountains.
Nogi and Oyama were equally impressed with the strength of the new (west) -
Russian front, and like Grant at Petersburg in 1864, extended farther and
farther to the outer flank, the Russians following suit. The Japanese marshal
now sent up his army reserve, which had been kept far to the rear at Yentai, to
help Nogi. It was not before the evening of the 6th of March that it came up
with the 3rd Army and was placed in position opposite the centre of the Russian
west front. On the rest of the line severe local fighting had continued, but
the Russian positions were quite unshaken, and Kuropatkin's reserveswhich would
have been invaluable in backing up the counter-attack of the 2nd of March had
returned to face Nogi. He had organized another counterstroke for the 6th, to
be led by Kaulbars, but this collapsed unexpectedly after a brief but severe
fight.
Kuropatkin now decided to draw in his centre and left towards Mukden. On the
7th, the various columns executed their movement to the Hun-ho with complete
success, thanks to good staff work. The Japanese followed up only slowly. Nogi
and Kaulbars stood fast, facing each other on the west front; after the arrival
of the general reserve, Nogi was able to prolong his line to the north and
eventually to bend it inwards towards the Russian line of retreat. Bilderling
and Linievich were now close in to Mukden and along the Hun-ho. On the other
side Oku had taken over part of Nogi's line, thus freeing the 3rd Army for
further extension to the north-west, and the rest of the 2nd Army, the 4th, the
1st and the 5th were approaching the Hun-ho from the south (March 8th). On this
day the fighting between Nogi and Kaulbars was very severe, and Kuropatkin now
made up his mind to retreat towards Tieling. On the 9th, by Oyama's orders,
Nogi extended northward instead of further swinging in south-eastward, Oku now
occupied all the original line of the 3rd Army, Nozu alone was left on the
south front, and Kuroki and Kawamura began to engage Linievich seriously. But
Nogi had not yet reached the MukdenTieling railway when, on the night of the
9th, every preparation having been made, Kuropatkin's retreat began. On the
10th, covered by Kaulbars, who held off Nogi, and by strong rearguards at and
east of Mukden, the movement continued, and though it was not executed with
entire precision, and the rearguards suffered very heavily, the Russians
managed to draw off in safety to the northward. On the evening of the 10th,
after all their long and hardly contested enveloping marches, Nogi's left and
Kawamura's right met north of Mukden. The circle was complete, but there were
no Russians in the centre, and a map of the positions of the Japanese on the
evening of the 10th shows the seventeen divisions thoroughly mixed up and
pointing in every direction but that of the enemy. Thus the further pursuit of
the Russians could only be undertaken after an interval of re-organization by
the northernmost troops of the 5th and 3rd Armies. But the material loss
inflicted on the Russians was far heavier than it had ever been before. It is
generally estimated that the Russian losses were no less than 97,000, and the
Japanese between 40,000 and 50,000. Japan had had to put forth her supreme
effort for the battle, while of Russia's whole strength not one-tenth had been
used. But Russia's strength in Europe, with but one line whereby it could be
brought to bear in the Far East, was immaterial, and on the theatre of war a
quarter of the Russian field forces had been killed, wounded or taken.
It remains to narrate briefly the tragic career of the Russian Baltic fleet.
Leaving Libau on the 13th15th of October 1904, the fleet steamed down the North
Sea, expecting every night to be attacked by torpedo-boats. On the 21st, in
their excitement, they opened fire on a fleet of British trawlers, on the
Dogger Bank (q.v.), and several fishermen were killed. This incident provoked
the wildest indignation, and Russia was for some days on the verge of war with
England. A British fleet "shadowed" Rozhestvenski for some time, but
eventually the Russians were allowed to proceed. On reaching Madagascar,
Rozhestvenski heard of the fall of Port Arthur, and the question of returning
to Russia arose. But a reinforcement under Rear Admiral Nebogatov was
despatched from the Baltic via Suez early in March 1905, and the armada
proceeded by the Straits of Malacca, Nebogatov joining at Kamranh Bay in Cochin
China. The united fleet was formidable rather in number than in quality; the
battleships were of very unequal value, and the faster vessels were tied to the
movements of many "lame ducks." Rozhestvenski had, moreover, numerous
store-ships, colliers, &c. Nevertheless, the Japanese viewed his approach
with considerable anxiety, and braced themselves for a final struggle. Of the
various courses open to him, Togo prudently chose that of awaiting
Rozhestvenski in home waters. The Russians left Kamranh on the 14th of May, and
for a time disappeared into the Pacific. It was assumed that they were making
for Vladivostok either via Tsushima strait or by the Pacific. Rozhestvenski
chose the former course, and on the 27th of May the fleets met near Tsushima.
About 1.45 p.m., the Russians, who were still in a close cruising formation,
attempted to open out for battle as the Japanese approached. The Russian
battleships, originally heading N.N.E., swerved to the E. as the Japanese
battle squadron passed across their front. Togo's fire was concentrated first
on the "Osliabia," the leading Russian battleship, and by 2.25 she
was hors de combat. At this time both the battle-fleets were running E.Togo,
concentrating his fire on each ship in succession, and seeking by superior
speed to head off the Russians, now inclined towards the S.E., and the Russians
conformed. At 3, the Russian flagship "Suvarov" had fallen out of the
line, though still firing. Rozhestvenski himself had been wounded, and the
command had devolved on Nebogatov. Shortly afterwards the Russians suddenly
turned N., and sought to pass, across the wake of Togo's battle-fleet, up the
straits. Thereupon the leading Japanese ships promptly turned together, covered
by the rear ships, which ran past them on the original course and then came
round in succession; this manoeuvre was so well executed that the Japanese
again headed off their enemy, who swerved for the second time towards the E.
The Japanese thereupon executed the same manoeuvre as before, and steamed S.E.
again (about 4.40). They were not unscathed, but the Russians were suffering
far more severely. Meanwhile, the cruisers on both sides had been heavily
engaged. The Russian cruisers kept on the right of their battleships, while the
Japanese, very superior in speed, ran S., S.E. and E. across the rear of the
enemy's main squadron, and about 3 ranged up alongside the Russian cruisers.
The latter were slower, and hampered by the crowd of damaged battleships,
store-ships and colliers; before 5 they were in the greatest confusion, which
was presently increased by the battleship squadron, now turned back and heading
W., with Togo in pursuit. The Russians again broke out northward; but some of
the Japanese squadrons hung on to the remnant of the enemy's battle-fleet, and
the others dealt with the numerous Russian vessels that were unable to keep up.
Then Togo called off his ships, and gave the torpedo craft room and the night
in which to act. At daylight the larger ships joined in again, and before long
the whole Russian fleet, with few exceptions, had been captured or sunk.
After the disasters of Mukden and Tsushima, and being threatened with internal
disorder in European Russia, the tsar, early in June, accepted the mediation of
the president of the United States, and pour parlers were set on foot.
The war meanwhile drifted on through May, June and July. Linievich, who
succeeded Kuropatkin shortly after the battle of Mukden, retired slowly
northward, re-organizing his forces and receiving fresh reinforcements from
Europe. A Japanese expedition occupied Saghalien (July 830), and another,
General Hasegawa, advanced through Korea towards Vladivostok. But the fighting
was desultory. The peace negotiations were opened at Portsmouth, New Hampshire,
on the 9th of August, and by the end of the month the belligerents had agreed
as to the main points at issue, that Russia should cede the half of Saghalien,
annexed in 1875, surrender her lease of the Kwangtung peninsula and Port
Arthur, evacuate Manchuria and recognize Japan's sphere of influence in Korea.
The treaty of peace was signed on the 23rd of August 1905.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.The first place in the already numerous works on the war is by the
general consent of military Europe awarded to General Sir I. S. M. Hamilton's
A Staff Officer's Scrap Book, and the second to the reports of the
British attaches (The Russo-Japanese War : British Officers' Reports,
War Office, 1908). Other firsthand narratives of importance are the American
officers' reports (Reports of Military Observers, General Staff,
U.S.A.); Major v. Tettau's 18 Monate beim Heere Russlands; von
Schwarz, Zehn Monate beim Heere Kuropatkin's, and Kuropatkin's own
work (part of which has been translated into English). Of detailed military
histories the principal are the semi-official series of narratives and
monographs produced by the Austrian military journal "Streffleur "
(Einzelschriften fiber den russ.-japanischen Krieg); the volumes of
lectures delivered at the Russian Staff College after the war, French
translation (Conferences sur la guerre russo-japonaise faites a l'Academie
Nicolas); British official History of the Russo-Japanese War
(1907 ); German official Russisch-japanischer Krieg (1906'- ; English
translation by K. von Donat); Löffler, Der Russisch-Japanische Krieg
(Leipzig, 1907; French trans.);L. Gianni Trapani, La Guerra
russo-giapponese (Rome, 1908); E. Bujac, La Guerre
russo-japonaise (1909). Of critical studies the most important are
Cordonnier's "Les Jappnais en Mandchourie" (Revue
d'Infanterie, 1910); and Culmann, Etude sur les caractlres
généraux de la guerre en extreme-orient (Paris, 1909). One
naval narrative of absorbing interest has, however, appeared, Semenov's
Rasplata (English trans.).