. . . . "The contemporary author Gallus Anonymus in his Gesta principum Polonorum, written between 1112 and 1118, mentioned several armed encounters with the Imperial forces led by King Henry V of Germany. After Boles\u0142aw had invaded the Bohemian territory of Duke Svatopluk, the German king in turn started a campaign to Poland and laid siege to the towns of Bytom Odrza\u0144ski and G\u0142og\u00F3w, before he moved further down the Oder River and marched against Wroc\u0142aw, though to no avail. According to Wincenty Kad\u0142ubek, the Germans were ambushed by the Polish forces and the result was a complete victory of Boles\u0142aw, whereafter King Henry withdrew from Poland. Because of the many corpses left by the battle, he remarked that the \"dogs which, devouring so many corpses [of the fallen], fell into a mad ferocity, so that no one dared venture there.\" The site became known as \"dogs' field\" (, ) and the battle a part of the collective memory of the Polish nation. Kad\u0142ubek's relation is however unsubstantiated; it was already questioned in the late 19th century Encyklopedia Powszechna by Samuel Orgelbrand. Present-day historians claim this \"great battle\" was rather an unimportant skirmish, and the Chronica, written at the court of Boles\u0142aw's son Casimir II the Just almost hundred years after this incident, in this topic is not reliable. The site is now part of the Psie Pole district of modern Wroc\u0142aw. The name was also given by general Stanislaw Maczek soldier to the area where over a mile long column of the German armored unit was destroyed at Hill 262."@en . "The contemporary author Gallus Anonymus in his Gesta principum Polonorum, written between 1112 and 1118, mentioned several armed encounters with the Imperial forces led by King Henry V of Germany. After Boles\u0142aw had invaded the Bohemian territory of Duke Svatopluk, the German king in turn started a campaign to Poland and laid siege to the towns of Bytom Odrza\u0144ski and G\u0142og\u00F3w, before he moved further down the Oder River and marched against Wroc\u0142aw, though to no avail. The site is now part of the Psie Pole district of modern Wroc\u0142aw."@en . . "20"^^ . . "Polish victory"@en . "1109-08-24"^^ . "Battle of Hundsfeld"@en . "Woodcut from Kronika Polska by Marcin Bielski, 1597"@en . . . . . "Hundsfeld near Wroc\u0142aw in Silesia, Poland"@en . . "Battle of Hundsfeld"@en . . . .