In the summer of 1595 the crown army of the
Kingdom of Poland, numbering around 5000 cavalry, 2300 infantry, and a few artillery pieces, led by the
Crown Hetman Jan Zamoyski entered into the territory of the
Principality of Moldavia and on the 27th of August took
Chocim and shortly after, on September 3, the capital of the principality,
Iași. Zamoyski then installed
Ieremia Movilă, who was amicably disposed towards the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, as
Hospodar (Prince) of Moldavia. Zamoyski's intent was to create a buffer zone of friendly states around the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, consisting of Moldavia,
Transylvania, and
Wallachia, in order to protect it from
Ottoman Turkey. The Ottomans reacted swiftly, although at the time
Sultan Mehmed III was engaged in a war against
Michael the Brave, the Prince of Wallachia. The Sultan sent the
Crimean Tatars, under
Khan Ğazı II Girej, supported by regular Ottoman troops, altogether numbering around 25,000 soldiers, to meet the Polish army. Upon hearing that the Tatars were approaching, Zamoyski crossed the
Prut river and on September 6 had his troops erect a fortified camp, which was protected on both flanks by the river. The front of the camp in turn was defended by a
rampart studded with thirteen
bastions. The rampart also possessed four
sally ports which could be used for
sorties. The Khan's army arrived on the 18th of September. That day minor fighting took place among individual
skirmishers, during which Prince
Kirill Różyński wounded the khan's nephew with a bow. The main fighting took place the following day when the khan's troops tried to storm the Polish camp. However, because the Tatars had few infantry the attempt was unsuccessful, and the attackers were constantly harried by Polish sallies issuing from the camp. After the struggle went no better for the Tartars on the 20th, Ğazı came to the conclusion that he did not have the means to take the camp and agreed to peace talks. On October 21 a
peace treaty was signed, according to which the Tatars recognized Movilă as Hospodar in Moldavia, and assented to Polish troops being permanently stationed in the Principality. Two days later the Tatar army began its withdrawal. ==References==