Charles XII, after the defeat at Poltava,…
July 1709 CE
Charles XII, after the defeat at Poltava, had intended to lead the Swedish army over the Vorskla River near the village of Byeliki, south of Poltava, and into Tatar territory.
No orders had been given on the morning after the battle, and after the departure from Novo Senshary, the march had continued along the right bank of the Vorskla.
A ford exists across the river near Kishenka, but due to mistakes committed by several officers, the ford is overlooked and the force marches on to Perevolochna five kilometers further away.
At Perevolochna, King Charles is given the chance to dash ahead with an escort of fifteen hundred men to Ottoman territory by General Lewenhaupt and the other senior officers.
Among the reasons why the king wants to cross here is his wish to quickly reach Poland.
According to Charles' own plan, Lewenhaupt would have followed across the Dniepr River with him, but the general requests to stay and command the army.
Charles orders Lewenhaupt to lead the army across the Vorskla into Tatar-controlled territory, and he promises to carry out this order.
General Menshikov approaches from the north on the morning of July 1 with a Russian force of less than nine thousand men, mostly cavalry.
Lewenhaupt does not want to fight the Russians; instead, after conferences and voting among the higher officers, almost the entire surviving Swedish army, amounting to several thousands, capitulates at Perevolochna on June 30, 1709 (O.S.)/ July 1, 1709 (Swedish calendar) / July 11, 1709 (N.S.).
Prisoners will be put to work building the new city of Saint Petersburg.
Lewenhaupt will die in Russian captivity in 1719.
Charles and Mazepa have been allowed to escape with about fifteen hundred men to Bendery, Moldavia, at this time controlled by the Ottoman Empire, where the king will spend five years in exile before he is able to return to Sweden.
The Swedish continental army has ceased to exist, leaving the remaining defenses of the Swedish Empire hopelessly outnumbered.
Strategically, Russia has now taken the offensive, while Sweden will be hard pressed to muster a new army to defend itself.