Battle of the Narew River

The Battle of the Narew River was fought on 13 October 1282 between the armies of the Duke of Krakow Leszek the Black and the allied armies of the Lithuanians and the Yotvingians. The battle ended with a Polish victory

The Battle
In the autumn of 1282, a combined force of Lithunians and Yotvingians, claimed to number 14,000 armed men, invaded Lubelszczyzna. The invading forces were divided into three divisions. After ravaging the Lublin region, they retreated with large booty. While retreating, the Lithuanian-Yotvingian army clashed with the pursuing Polish army led by Leszek the Black at an unknown location between Narew and Niemen. The battle is believed to have occurred:

A Polish army of 6,000 men split the opposing forces and, after the Lithuanians had fled, crushed the army of the Yotvingians. After the victory, the Polish army went on to plunder the Bialystok Highlands. It is believed that the military strength of the Yotvingians was shattered during this battle, and the invasion in 1283 was the last raiding attack of this fierce tribe on Poland.
 * near Brańsk, on the rivers Nurek and Branka,
 * on the Narew River near Długosiodło,
 * near Wasilkow on the Supraśl River,
 * on the fields of the villages Łopiennik and Krzywe,
 * on the estuary of the Czarna Hańcza River to the Niemen River, near the village of Jatwieź Duża.