Battle of the Great Redan

Battle of the Great Redan
Part of the siege of Sevastopol (Crimean War)

The Attack on the Redan
by Robert Alexander Hillingford
Date8 September 1855
Location44°35′51.03″N 33°32′24.71″E / 44.5975083°N 33.5401972°E / 44.5975083; 33.5401972
Result Russian victory
Belligerents
 British Empire  Russian Empire
Commanders and leaders
James Simpson
General John Campbell 
Colonel Lord West
Colonel Lacy Yea 
Mikhail Gorchakov
Strength
11,000 7,500
Casualties and losses
2,620 to 4,179 dead, wounded or missing Unknown

The Battle of the Great Redan (or the Storming of the Third Bastion; Russian: Оборона Третьего бастиона, Штурм третьего бастиона) was a major battle during the Crimean War, fought between British forces against Russia on 18 June and 8 September 1855 as a part of the Siege of Sevastopol. The French army successfully stormed the Malakoff redoubt, whereas a simultaneous British attack on the Great Redan to the south of the Malakoff was repulsed. Contemporary commentators have suggested that, although the Redan became so important to the Victorians, it was probably not vital to the taking of Sevastopol. The fort at Malakhov was much more important and it was in the French sphere of influence. When the French stormed it after an eleven-month siege that the final, the British attack on the Redan became somewhat unnecessary.