King Sigismund III Vasa of the Polish-Lithuanian …

Years: 1629 - 1629
June

King Sigismund III Vasa of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth has received military support of five thousand infantry and reiters from emperor Ferdinand II.

Stanisław Koniecpolski, Field Crown Hetman of Poland, leads the Commonwealth army.

Reinforcements, led by Imperial general Hans Georg von Arnim-Boitzenburg and by Ernst Georg Sparr, had arrived in Prussia in late spring 1629 and set up camp near Graudenz (Grudziądz).

Gustav Adolf had arrived in May.

Several skirmishes (recorded as Scharmuetzel) have occurred, one on June 17, 1629 at Honigfeld(t) or Honigfelde near Sztum, where Gustav Adolph leads his army of total of four thousand cavalry and five thousand infantry from Marienburg (Malbork) against the Imperial and Polish forces.

The Swedish king narrowly escapes capture: wounded several times, Gustavus is at one point was saved by one of his men—Eric Soop.

During the battle, a relatively minor affair in eastern Prussia, the Swedish cavalry suffers serious losses, with about six hundred dead and two hundred captured by the Poles, including many high ranking officers.

The Swedish infantry, however, remain mostly intact, so the balance of forces in the war does not change.

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