The siege of Konotop, instead of being…
June 1659 CE
The siege of Konotop, instead of being a quick campaign, has dragged on for seventy days and given Vyhovsky the much-needed time to prepare for the battle with the Russian army.
The hetman has not only managed to organize his own troops, but secured support of his allies — the Crimean Tatars and the Poles.
By agreement with the Tatars, the Khan Mehmed IV Giray, at the head of his thirty thousand-strong army, makes his way towards Konotop in early summer of 1659, as does the four thousand-man Polish detachment with the support of Serbian, Moldavian and German mercenaries.