, 17th century On 12 September, Swedish officer von Schwerin reported to Würtz that Imperial troops had begun marching from their camp at Damm. After receiving confirmation that these troops were heading towards Stettin, von Schwerin employed
scorched earth tactics and razed nearby villages. This was done to make a siege of Stettin more difficult by preventing his enemy from living off of the land. On 16 September, an advanced guard of Austrian cavalry arrived to the south of Stettin and blockaded the roads heading into the city, and on 19 September, de Souches himself approached Stettin with his main force. He occupied and established a camp at the unmanned star redoubt and the old fortifications. The following morning on 20 September, Brandenburgian reinforcements arrived under the command of the Governor of the
Principality of Orange,
Friedrich zu Dohna, who was serving as an officer for the
Electorate of Brandenburg at the time. These reinforcements numbered 1,500–2,000 men in the form of two cavalry regiments and three infantry regiments. in
Brandenburgian service,
Friedrich zu Dohna, by
Gerard van Honthorst, 1649 Stettin was soon issued a request to surrender, which was quickly refused. The loyalty of the city's
burghers surprised de Souche, who had incorrectly believed that they would see the Brandenburgians as liberators and the Swedes as occupiers. The burghers likely feared damage or looting of their property in the immediate aftermath of the city's capture. Consequently, despite lacking in heavy siege guns, de Souche was forced to besiege the city. Over the following month, the Allies began creating siege works around Stettin, despite Swedish bombardment and continuous sorties, and on 29 September, the Allied batteries of field guns began opening fire, though this was to little effect and did not cause notable damage. The Austrians captured the redoubt on Oberwiek Mountain on 7 October, and by mid-October their siege trenches, which were being dug closer and closer towards Stettin, were only some 30–80 paces from the Passauer bastion and the curtain wall going from it to the Holy Spirit bastion. On the night of 18 October, the Swedes launched a powerful sortie through Fruporten, one of the city's gates, against the foremost Allied siege works, managing to destroy them after fierce fighting. The Allied success on the southwestern front with the fall of the redoubt on Oberwiek Mountain worried the Swedes, but the Allies had not yet been able to completely block the waterways, which came from this direction and flowed into the city. On 20 October, the Allies constructed 13 batteries with newly arrived heavy siege artillery, and after another failed request for surrender, they began bombarding Stettin. This bombardment quickly began to damage parts of the city and its defences, but any fires that broke out were promptly quelled by Stettin's newly formed fire brigade, thus preventing catastrophic damage to the city. In late October, the Austrians managed to take control over two points in the wall in front of the Passauer bastion after fierce fighting. At the captured points in front of the Passauer bastion, de Souches established multiple breach batteries to direct concentrated fire on specific parts of the walls to create breaches that could be exploited by his men. The batteries made the situation critical on this front for the Swedes. By this point, the city's garrison had suffered a significant reduction in strength from combat losses and disease. By early October, the city's burghers had become demoralised after the loss of the redoubt on Oberwiek Mountain, and the Allied bombardment only helped to exacerbate this. They told Würtz that they believed the city's only hope was in receiving reinforcements. Würtz initially tried to calm them but eventually permitted a delegation to be sent to the Swedish commander
Carl Gustaf Wrangel, in the Baltic coastal city of
Stralsund, some to the northwest of Stettin, to request reinforcements. On 25 October, the delegation returned with news that Wrangel had agreed to send reinforcements. When the Austrians finally broke through the main fortifications on the southwestern front, the burghers requested that another delegation should be sent to Wrangel to insist on urgency. Würtz once more tried to calm the burghers, as he was acutely aware of the Allies' heavy losses, but permitted another delegation to be sent anyway.
Reinforcements and major sortie Carl Gustaf Wrangel, by
Matthäus Merian the Younger, 1652 On 27 October, Wrangel was finally able to send reinforcements to the city (and would arrive later himself). This was in the form of a squadron under Major Örneklau from the Västgöta-Dal Regiment. By 31 October, 150–160 men from the squadron had already arrived. Würtz took advantage of the morale boost brought by the reinforcements and began preparing for a major
sortie, or as Würtz put it: "I judged it best to strike something significant against the enemy, the sooner the better." Würtz planned a sortie on the trenches and breach batteries in front of the Passauer bastion for 1 November,
Saint Martin's Day, hoping to catch the Allies off-guard while celebrating the holy day. He gathered a force of 600–700 infantry and 130 cavalry for the attack, along with some artillery personnel, 40 burghers and 100 armed peasant volunteers. On 1 November, before sunrise, he ordered two small units to position themselves on either side of the Passauer bastion. The main force (with an infantry unit commanded by von Schwerin) advanced under the command of Würtz and moved along a moat towards the
ravelin between the King's bastion and the Passauer bastion. At around 11:30a.m., the attack was launched. The Austrian troops were taken by surprise, either being killed or captured. The Swedes then advanced towards the Austrian camp to try to buy time for the guns and works to be destroyed, but after the Austrians regrouped, the Swedes were soon forced to withdraw back into Stettin. During the sortie, the Swedes only had enough time to destroy a few of the Austrian guns but also killed 150–200 men and captured 100–130 men, all while suffering minimal casualties themselves and destroying the majority of the Brandenburgian artillery. Despite most of the Austrian guns being left intact, the sortie's other significant achievements meant that it was still declared as successful.
Attacks on Curow and Nieder-Zahlen For some time, Würtz had been aware of a large quantity of Allied siege supplies stored at
Nieder-Zahden and
Curow and planned to either capture or destroy them. He gained more information on these supplies from the prisoners taken during the sortie on 1 November, and he decided to act on this information the following day. However, von Schwerin, who was assigned the mission, was not able to gather the necessary amount of boats, and the attack was delayed until the next day. On the night of 3 November, von Schwerin and a couple hundred infantry boarded around thirty rowing boats and sailed towards Curow, while Captain Gustav Adolf Horn took the remaining troops towards Nieder-Zahlen. Once von Schwerin and his men arrived at Curow, he attacked the redoubt built to protect the supplies, capturing its entire garrison in the process. The supply depot within contained some 300 large barrels of flour and various merchant goods. The Swedes destroyed most of the barrels, greatly reducing the besieging forces' food stores just before winter, and loaded the rest onto their boats before rowing away and back to Stettin. Meanwhile, once Horn and his men arrived at Nieder-Zahlen, 11 boats were spotted along the shore, loaded with gunpowder, fuses, grenades, and some more basic goods. In addition to this, there was a long column of horse-drawn wagons present to bring the supplies and goods back to the besieging Austrian camp. At Nieder-Zahlen, another redoubt had been erected to defend the supplies, but Horn landed his men ashore without the knowledge of the redoubt's garrison and attacked it, disarming its garrison. The Swedes again destroyed several hundred barrels of flour and loaded the remaining cargo onto their boats before leaving for Stettin. Both Schwerin's and Horn's forces arrived back to Stettin successful on 4 November. == Aftermath ==