Battle of Cedynia

Battle of Cedynia

Monument to the Battle of Cedynia
Date24 June 972
Location
Cedynia, present-day Poland
Result Polish victory
Belligerents
Duchy of Poland Saxon Eastern March
Commanders and leaders
Mieszko I of Poland
Prince Czcibor
Odo I, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark
Strength
c. 4,000 c. 3,000 infantrymen
1,000–1,300 cavalrymen
Casualties and losses
Light Heavy

The Battle of Cedynia (also known as the Battle of Zehden) was fought on 24 June 972 near the Oder river, when an army led by Mieszko I of Poland defeated the forces of the Saxon margrave Hodo (or Odo I of Lusatia). Whether the battle actually took place near the modern-day town of Cedynia is disputed in modern scholarship.

Mieszko I, Poland's first documented ruler based in Greater Poland, had successfully campaigned in the Cedynia area, then a West Slavic tribal territory also coveted by Holy Roman Emperor Otto I and German nobles. While Mieszko's differences with Otto I were settled by an alliance and payment of tribute to the latter, the nobles whom Otto I had invested with the former Saxon Eastern March, most notably Odo I, challenged Mieszko's gains. The battle was to determine the possession of the area between Mieszko and Odo. Records of the battle are sparse, it was briefly described by the chronicler Thietmar of Merseburg (975−1018), whose father participated in the battle (Chronicon II.19).