Assembling the convoy '', by
David von Krafft On 5 March 1708, Lewenhaupt received orders from Charles XII to assemble a convoy with as much men as possible without leaving Swedish Livonia exposed. For further planning, he visited the king's
winter quarters at
Radashkovichy from 4 April to 17 May, arriving at Riga seven days later. The convoy would rendezvous with Charles at
Mogilev in the first weeks of August, but its assembling was complicated by the war-torn and crop-failing region. When royal orders arrived on 13 June to start campaigning, it was nowhere ready to leave. Charles struck camp three days later, while Lewenhaupt ordered his troops in Livonia and
Courland to move no sooner than 6 July. Some 6,000 men were concurrently being raised to act as a reserve in Livonia by late summer. Lewenhaupt's convoy included, apart from three-months' worth of provisions for its own troops, about six-weeks' worth of ammunition and other materiel for the main army. It could potentially feed their combined armies for two to four weeks in an emergency, which was inadequate for a joint invasion deep into Russia. Hence, it is suggested that its role was more independent; perhaps to secure the route along the
Daugava (Düna), to pave the way for more supplies and reserves to reach the envisioned Swedish winter quarters at
Smolensk. The convoy included anything from 10,914 to 13,000 soldiers, of which 1,950–4,950 were used to drive the wagons and cattle. Konovaltjuk and Lyth estimates that it had at least 4,500 wagons, some 13,000–18,000
livestock, 16,500–18,000
draught horses, 7,000
riding horses and 1,000
pack horses, as well as 4,100–7,100 civilian coachmen and officers' servants.
On the march '', by Johan David Schwartz Reports soon arrived of a Russian force under
Rudolph Felix Bauer that was ravaging Swedish Livonia. This compelled Lewenhaupt, who was reluctant of leaving an enemy in his rear, to stall the marching pace in expectance of a counter-order from Charles. Once having reached at least into Lithuania, Lewenhaupt was informed that Bauer had withdrawn. Subsequently, he received confirmation of previous orders, to continue over Berezino in the
Vitebsk region to the
operating base at Mogilev. The convoy marched from
Anykščiai on 11 August, whereas Lewenhaupt's
column stayed at
Dawhinava from 26 August to 10 September for repairs and supplies; continuous torrential rain, which turned the roads into mud and flooded the streams, was especially damaging to the wagons. The convoy crossed the
Berezina at Berezino, before halting at Chereya from 18 to 25 September where Lewenhaupt learnt that the Russians had recently burned Mogilev. Following the
Battle of Holowczyn, Charles quit Mogilev on 15 August and commenced a demonstrative march southeast to draw the enemy's attention away from the convoy whilst collecting supplies. He turned north at
Cherikov, reaching Tatarsk (in the
Smolensk Oblast) on 21 September where he stopped to await Lewenhaupt. On 25 September, as supplies were running dangerously low and with no words heard from the general, Charles deviated from his plans of attacking
Moscow via Smolensk. Instead, he marched south to establish a base of operation in
Severia to exploit its rich granary; incorrect reports falsely informed him that the convoy had already crossed the
Dnieper river at Mogilev, thus being relatively safe. In reality, it was still about west of the Dnieper and from him at the time. Peter left
Boris Sheremetev in command of the main army to shadow Charles, while he assembled an army, including a flying corps, to intercept the convoy at the Dnieper. Lewenhaupt reached
Talachyn on 26 September and Vorontsevichi the following day, where he received instructions from Charles to rendezvous at
Starodub in Severia. Reports informed him that Russian forces were gathering about east of the river. He beat the Tsar to the Dnieper at
Shklov, of which crossing between 2 and 3 October has been considered a "military masterpiece" in retrospect. But with the Swedish main army gone east over the next major natural barrier, the
Sozh river, the convoy was left isolated between the two rivers. The Russians made contact with it in the following days as it had turned south, now heading for
Propoysk (Slawharad) on the Sozh via Belitsa and the marshy
Dolgii Mokh. The Swedes had to march in defencive formation as the number of shadowing Russians steadily grew.
Belitsa and Dolgii Mokh '', by
Paul Delaroche Some 4,000 Russian
dragoons along with
irregular light cavalry under Gebhard von Pflug approached the Swedish rear at Belitsa on 7 October. The road network forced the convoy into a single column, resulting in
bottlenecks. Lewenhaupt prepared an ambush for them with 60–70% of his army drawn up in
battle formation. The Russians, discouraged from attacking, were driven off when 4,000 Swedish cavalry counter-attacked, killing 40 Russians and capturing three to eleven, to only four wounded Swedes. The Swedish
vanguard reached the small village of Lesnaya (Lyasnaya), about south of Belitsa, that same day and began setting up camp for the army. Early on 8 October, the Russians launched a two-front attack on the Swedish rear as it was crossing the
Rasta at Dolgii Mokh; von Pflug with up to 5,000 men confronted
Berndt Otto Stackelberg from the west, who was protecting the crossing with two or three regiments of infantry, while
Mikhail Golitsyn and
Alexander Menshikov sought to ford the stream further up north with several thousand men. Lewenhaupt arrived in time with a contingent to block them. The two sides exchanged musket- and cannon fire from 12:00 to 16:00 before the Russians gave up their efforts. The whole convoy arrived at Lesnaya later that night, situated a day's march from Propoysk – behind which both Lewenhaupt and the Tsar expected it to reach the protection of the Swedish main army. But Peter's flying corps was closing in from the north, and two Russian divisions under Nikolai Grigorovitj von Werden and Bauer approached from the northeast and east, respectively. A small detachment was also sent to block the Swedes at Propoysk in the south. ==Battlefield==