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Battle of La Marfée

The Battle of La Marfée, also known as the Battle of Sedan, took place on 6 July 1641, during the 1635 to 1659 Franco-Spanish War, a related conflict of the Thirty Years War.

Battle of La Marfée
Part of Franco-Spanish War (1635–59)

French rebel leader Louis de Bourbon, Count of Soissons
Date6 July 1641
Location
Result Imperial-Spanish victory
Belligerents
 France  Holy Roman Empire
Spain
French rebels
Commanders and leaders
Duc de Châtillon
Marquis de Praslin  
Puységur
Marquis de Sourdis [1]
Guillaume de Lamboy
Comte de Soissons  
Duc de Bouillon
Strength
6,000 infantry, 1,400 cavalry [2] 7,000 infantry, 2,500 cavalry [2]
Casualties and losses
200–300 killed or wounded
4,000 captured [1]
Nominal

It was fought near Sedan, France, on 6 July 1641, between a French army led by the Duke of Châtillon, and an Imperial-Spanish army commanded by Guillaume de Lamboy, supported by French rebels led by the Comte de Soissons and Frédéric-Maurice de La Tour d'Auvergne, Duke of Bouillon.

The French army collapsed, but Soissons was killed in the closing moments, allegedly by using a loaded pistol to open his helmet, and the opportunity quickly passed.[3]

Background edit

17th century Europe was dominated by the struggle between the Bourbon kings of France, and their Habsburg rivals in Spain and the Holy Roman Empire. Habsburg possessions bordered France in the Spanish Netherlands, Franche-Comté, Alsace, Roussillon and Lorraine (see Map). France supported Habsburg opponents in the Thirty Years War, the Dutch Revolt, and insurgencies in Portugal, Catalonia and Naples.[4]

For their part, Spain and Austria financed Huguenot rebellions in South-Western France, and the Cévennes, as well as internal conspiracies against the French government, led by Cardinal Richelieu. Although a major rebellion was defeated in 1632, plotting continued, led by a mix of Huguenot exiles, and great feudal lords who resented their loss of power. Backed by Spanish money, some went to London, seeking support from Charles I; English foreign policy was generally pro-Spanish, but his wife was the younger sister of Louis XIII, and the 1638 to 1651 War of the Three Kingdoms intervened.[5]

 
France 1552-1798

Facing French-backed revolts in Catalonia and Portugal, in early 1641 Spanish chief minister Olivares switched focus to the Comte de Soissons and Henri II de Guise. The two men were known as the 'Princes of Peace', since they claimed Richelieu was deliberately continuing the war in order to retain power; since 1637, they had been based in the Principality of Sedan, then part of the Holy Roman Empire.[6] This was held by the duc de Bouillon; like his younger brother, Turenne, Bouillon was brought up as a Protestant, and served with the Dutch army, before converting to Catholicism in 1634 and becoming a French general.[7]

The French Army of Champagne occupied Lorraine in 1634, then Breisach in 1638, but by 1641 it was largely composed of low quality troops. All sides found it increasingly difficult to recruit and support armies on multiple fronts, so even a minor intervention could make a difference. Olivares planned simultaneous uprisings under Soissons in Sedan, with another in the south-western province of Guyenne that never materialised.[8]

Richelieu was advised of the plot well in advance, and in April 1641, he ordered Châtillon to invest Sedan; Châtillon objected, claiming to have less than 6,000 infantry and 1,400 cavalry, when he needed at least 8,000 infantry and 2,500 cavalry, plus a reserve force of 4,000 under Marquis de Sourdis.[2] In response to requests for support from Soissons, Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, supplied him with money to recruit mercenaries, plus 7,000 men under Lamboy.[9]

The battle edit

 
 
Sedan
 
Thionville(1639)
 
Nancy(1634)
 
Raucourt
 
Rethel
 
Strasbourg
 
Rocroi(1643)
 
Breisach(1638)
 
Philipsburg (1644)
 
Reims
 
La Marfée(1641)
class=notpageimage|
Eastern France, 1634 to 1644 (major battles indicated by dates)

On 25 June, the French occupied positions opposite Sedan on the eastern bank of the Meuse, but they were dislodged by cannon fire from the town. Châtillon moved further up the Meuse, to Remilly-Aillicourt, with Lamboy's troops on the opposite bank at Bazeilles. Here he waited for promised reinforcements from Charles of Lorraine, which never arrived.[10]

Soissons and Bouillon left Sedan on 5 July with 3,000 French volunteers and Walloon mercenaries, taking position around the village of La Marfée, where they were joined by Lamboy. The Spanish infantry deployed in a nearby wood under Lamboy, with Bouillon's cavalry on flat ground to their left, and Soissons with the reserve.[11]

The morning of 6 July began with heavy rain, which delayed the French until after 10:00; they formed two columns, reaching La Marfée an hour later. On arrival, Châtillon found his artillery, which consisted of four light guns, was in the rear, and so rather than waiting, sent his infantry into the woods.[12]

The Spanish initially gave ground, before the French ran into point blank artillery fire, and fell back. As they did so, Bouillon charged the French right; their commander, the Marquis de Praslin, was killed and his troops dissolved in panic, riding over their own infantry, who also broke. The cavalry on the left held their ground and retired in good order, but the battle was over in less than 45 minutes. The French lost 4,000 prisoners, plus their artillery and baggage train.[1]

Aftermath edit

 
Duc de Bouillon

Châtillon, several of his senior officers, and 200 cavalry stopped at Rethel, where they rallied the fugitives. Charles of Lorraine now joined Lamboy, who stopped to capture Donchery, north of Sedan; this held them up until 14 July, allowing Châtillon and his remnants to reach Reims. Here they met Louis XIII, and a small force under Maillé-Brézé.[1]

Soissons died at the end of the action, apparently when a loaded pistol he was using to raise his helmet visor went off. Although his death ended the conspiracy, La Marfée prevented Châtillon's army supporting the French offensive in Flanders as intended.[9] After La Meilleraye captured Aire-sur-la-Lys on 27 July, Lamboy was sent north, where he joined the Cardinal-Infante; they re-captured Lillers, then besieged Aire.[13] In an attempt to relieve the town, the French took Lens, La Bassée and Bapaume, but Aire surrendered on 7 December.[14]

Plots against Richelieu continued until his death in December 1642, the most serious being that known as 'Cinq Mars' in June 1642. This featured many of those involved with Soissons, including Gaston of Orléans, and the Marquis de Cinq-Mars, who was executed. Shortly before the French victory at Rocroi in May 1643, Louis XIII died, and was succeeded by his five year old son, Louis XIV, a Regency Council ruling in his name. This resulted in a power struggle between the Queen Mother, supported by Cardinal Mazarin, and Condé, victor of Rocroi, a member of the royal family, and effective ruler of large parts of eastern France.[15]

When Condé was arrested during the 1648 to 1653 Fronde, Bouillon and Turenne joined forces to demand his release. Both switched sides in 1650, and in return for ceding Sedan and Raucourt, Bouillon received the duchies of Albret and Château-Thierry, plus the counties of Auvergne and Évreux. He died at Pontoise on 9 August 1652.[16]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d De Périni 1898, p. 300.
  2. ^ a b c Parrott 2001, p. 214.
  3. ^ Elliott 1989, p. 614.
  4. ^ Jensen 1985, pp. 451–470.
  5. ^ Wilson 2009, p. 663.
  6. ^ Elliott 1984, p. 146.
  7. ^ Huberty, Giraud & Magdelaine 1985, pp. 73, 88.
  8. ^ Wilson 2009, p. 664.
  9. ^ a b Parrott 2001, p. 148.
  10. ^ De Périni 1898, p. 297.
  11. ^ Peyran 1826, pp. 82–83.
  12. ^ Puységur 1690, p. 203.
  13. ^ Thion 2013, pp. 27–28.
  14. ^ Parrott 2001, p. 150.
  15. ^ Monter 1999, p. 118.
  16. ^ Bissell 1997, p. 47.

Sources edit

  • Bissell, Gerhard (1997). Pierre le Gros, 1666-1719 (in German). ISBN 0-9529925-0-7.
  • De Périni, Hardÿ (1898). Batailles françaises, 1621 to 1643 Volume III (in French). Paris: Ernest Flammarion.
  • Elliott, JH (1989). The Count-Duke of Olivares: The Statesman in an Age of Decline. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300044997.
  • Elliott, JH (1984). Richelieu and Olivares (Cambridge Studies in Early Modern History). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521262057.
  • Huberty, Michel; Giraud, Alain; Magdelaine, F (1985). L'Allemagne Dynastique, Tome IV -- Wittelsbach (in French). Laballery. ISBN 2-901138-04-7.
  • Jensen, De Lamar (1985). "The Ottoman Turks in Sixteenth Century French Diplomacy". The Sixteenth Century Journal. 16 (4): 451–470. doi:10.2307/2541220. JSTOR 2541220.
  • Monter, William (1999). Cultural Exchange in Early Modern Europe 1400–1700. Vol. 2. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521845472.
  • Parrott, David (2001). Richelieu's Army: War, Government and Society in France, 1624–1642. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521792097.
  • Peyran, Jacques (1826). Histoire de l'ancienne principauté de Sedan, jusqu'à la fin du dix-huitième siècle, Volume II (in French). Sedan: Servier, Hennuy.
  • Puységur, Jacques de Chastenet (1690). Les Mémoires de Jacques de Chastenet, Seigneur de Puysegur Volume I (in French). Amsterdam: Abraham Wolfgang.
  • Thion, Stephane (2013). French Armies of the Thirty Years War (Soldiers of the Past). Histoire et Collections. ISBN 978-2917747018.
  • Wilson, Peter (2009). Europe's Tragedy: A History of the Thirty Years War. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0713995923.

49°42′09″N 4°56′28″E / 49.7025°N 4.9411°E / 49.7025; 4.9411

battle, marfée, also, known, battle, sedan, took, place, july, 1641, during, 1635, 1659, franco, spanish, related, conflict, thirty, years, part, franco, spanish, 1635, french, rebel, leader, louis, bourbon, count, soissonsdate6, july, 1641locationla, marfée, . The Battle of La Marfee also known as the Battle of Sedan took place on 6 July 1641 during the 1635 to 1659 Franco Spanish War a related conflict of the Thirty Years War Battle of La MarfeePart of Franco Spanish War 1635 59 French rebel leader Louis de Bourbon Count of SoissonsDate6 July 1641LocationLa Marfee near SedanResultImperial Spanish victoryBelligerents France Holy Roman Empire Spain French rebelsCommanders and leadersDuc de Chatillon Marquis de Praslin Puysegur Marquis de Sourdis 1 Guillaume de Lamboy Comte de Soissons Duc de BouillonStrength6 000 infantry 1 400 cavalry 2 7 000 infantry 2 500 cavalry 2 Casualties and losses200 300 killed or wounded 4 000 captured 1 Nominal It was fought near Sedan France on 6 July 1641 between a French army led by the Duke of Chatillon and an Imperial Spanish army commanded by Guillaume de Lamboy supported by French rebels led by the Comte de Soissons and Frederic Maurice de La Tour d Auvergne Duke of Bouillon The French army collapsed but Soissons was killed in the closing moments allegedly by using a loaded pistol to open his helmet and the opportunity quickly passed 3 Contents 1 Background 2 The battle 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 SourcesBackground edit17th century Europe was dominated by the struggle between the Bourbon kings of France and their Habsburg rivals in Spain and the Holy Roman Empire Habsburg possessions bordered France in the Spanish Netherlands Franche Comte Alsace Roussillon and Lorraine see Map France supported Habsburg opponents in the Thirty Years War the Dutch Revolt and insurgencies in Portugal Catalonia and Naples 4 For their part Spain and Austria financed Huguenot rebellions in South Western France and the Cevennes as well as internal conspiracies against the French government led by Cardinal Richelieu Although a major rebellion was defeated in 1632 plotting continued led by a mix of Huguenot exiles and great feudal lords who resented their loss of power Backed by Spanish money some went to London seeking support from Charles I English foreign policy was generally pro Spanish but his wife was the younger sister of Louis XIII and the 1638 to 1651 War of the Three Kingdoms intervened 5 nbsp France 1552 1798 Facing French backed revolts in Catalonia and Portugal in early 1641 Spanish chief minister Olivares switched focus to the Comte de Soissons and Henri II de Guise The two men were known as the Princes of Peace since they claimed Richelieu was deliberately continuing the war in order to retain power since 1637 they had been based in the Principality of Sedan then part of the Holy Roman Empire 6 This was held by the duc de Bouillon like his younger brother Turenne Bouillon was brought up as a Protestant and served with the Dutch army before converting to Catholicism in 1634 and becoming a French general 7 The French Army of Champagne occupied Lorraine in 1634 then Breisach in 1638 but by 1641 it was largely composed of low quality troops All sides found it increasingly difficult to recruit and support armies on multiple fronts so even a minor intervention could make a difference Olivares planned simultaneous uprisings under Soissons in Sedan with another in the south western province of Guyenne that never materialised 8 Richelieu was advised of the plot well in advance and in April 1641 he ordered Chatillon to invest Sedan Chatillon objected claiming to have less than 6 000 infantry and 1 400 cavalry when he needed at least 8 000 infantry and 2 500 cavalry plus a reserve force of 4 000 under Marquis de Sourdis 2 In response to requests for support from Soissons Cardinal Infante Ferdinand of Austria Governor of the Spanish Netherlands supplied him with money to recruit mercenaries plus 7 000 men under Lamboy 9 The battle edit nbsp nbsp Sedan nbsp Thionville 1639 nbsp Nancy 1634 nbsp Raucourt nbsp Rethel nbsp Strasbourg nbsp Rocroi 1643 nbsp Breisach 1638 nbsp Philipsburg 1644 nbsp Reims nbsp La Marfee 1641 class notpageimage Eastern France 1634 to 1644 major battles indicated by dates On 25 June the French occupied positions opposite Sedan on the eastern bank of the Meuse but they were dislodged by cannon fire from the town Chatillon moved further up the Meuse to Remilly Aillicourt with Lamboy s troops on the opposite bank at Bazeilles Here he waited for promised reinforcements from Charles of Lorraine which never arrived 10 Soissons and Bouillon left Sedan on 5 July with 3 000 French volunteers and Walloon mercenaries taking position around the village of La Marfee where they were joined by Lamboy The Spanish infantry deployed in a nearby wood under Lamboy with Bouillon s cavalry on flat ground to their left and Soissons with the reserve 11 The morning of 6 July began with heavy rain which delayed the French until after 10 00 they formed two columns reaching La Marfee an hour later On arrival Chatillon found his artillery which consisted of four light guns was in the rear and so rather than waiting sent his infantry into the woods 12 The Spanish initially gave ground before the French ran into point blank artillery fire and fell back As they did so Bouillon charged the French right their commander the Marquis de Praslin was killed and his troops dissolved in panic riding over their own infantry who also broke The cavalry on the left held their ground and retired in good order but the battle was over in less than 45 minutes The French lost 4 000 prisoners plus their artillery and baggage train 1 Aftermath edit nbsp Duc de Bouillon Chatillon several of his senior officers and 200 cavalry stopped at Rethel where they rallied the fugitives Charles of Lorraine now joined Lamboy who stopped to capture Donchery north of Sedan this held them up until 14 July allowing Chatillon and his remnants to reach Reims Here they met Louis XIII and a small force under Maille Breze 1 Soissons died at the end of the action apparently when a loaded pistol he was using to raise his helmet visor went off Although his death ended the conspiracy La Marfee prevented Chatillon s army supporting the French offensive in Flanders as intended 9 After La Meilleraye captured Aire sur la Lys on 27 July Lamboy was sent north where he joined the Cardinal Infante they re captured Lillers then besieged Aire 13 In an attempt to relieve the town the French took Lens La Bassee and Bapaume but Aire surrendered on 7 December 14 Plots against Richelieu continued until his death in December 1642 the most serious being that known as Cinq Mars in June 1642 This featured many of those involved with Soissons including Gaston of Orleans and the Marquis de Cinq Mars who was executed Shortly before the French victory at Rocroi in May 1643 Louis XIII died and was succeeded by his five year old son Louis XIV a Regency Council ruling in his name This resulted in a power struggle between the Queen Mother supported by Cardinal Mazarin and Conde victor of Rocroi a member of the royal family and effective ruler of large parts of eastern France 15 When Conde was arrested during the 1648 to 1653 Fronde Bouillon and Turenne joined forces to demand his release Both switched sides in 1650 and in return for ceding Sedan and Raucourt Bouillon received the duchies of Albret and Chateau Thierry plus the counties of Auvergne and Evreux He died at Pontoise on 9 August 1652 16 Notes edit a b c d De Perini 1898 p 300 a b c Parrott 2001 p 214 Elliott 1989 p 614 Jensen 1985 pp 451 470 Wilson 2009 p 663 Elliott 1984 p 146 Huberty Giraud amp Magdelaine 1985 pp 73 88 Wilson 2009 p 664 a b Parrott 2001 p 148 De Perini 1898 p 297 Peyran 1826 pp 82 83 Puysegur 1690 p 203 Thion 2013 pp 27 28 Parrott 2001 p 150 Monter 1999 p 118 Bissell 1997 p 47 Sources editBissell Gerhard 1997 Pierre le Gros 1666 1719 in German ISBN 0 9529925 0 7 De Perini Hardy 1898 Batailles francaises 1621 to 1643 Volume III in French Paris Ernest Flammarion Elliott JH 1989 The Count Duke of Olivares The Statesman in an Age of Decline Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300044997 Elliott JH 1984 Richelieu and Olivares Cambridge Studies in Early Modern History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521262057 Huberty Michel Giraud Alain Magdelaine F 1985 L Allemagne Dynastique Tome IV Wittelsbach in French Laballery ISBN 2 901138 04 7 Jensen De Lamar 1985 The Ottoman Turks in Sixteenth Century French Diplomacy The Sixteenth Century Journal 16 4 451 470 doi 10 2307 2541220 JSTOR 2541220 Monter William 1999 Cultural Exchange in Early Modern Europe 1400 1700 Vol 2 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521845472 Parrott David 2001 Richelieu s Army War Government and Society in France 1624 1642 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521792097 Peyran Jacques 1826 Histoire de l ancienne principaute de Sedan jusqu a la fin du dix huitieme siecle Volume II in French Sedan Servier Hennuy Puysegur Jacques de Chastenet 1690 Les Memoires de Jacques de Chastenet Seigneur de Puysegur Volume I in French Amsterdam Abraham Wolfgang Thion Stephane 2013 French Armies of the Thirty Years War Soldiers of the Past Histoire et Collections ISBN 978 2917747018 Wilson Peter 2009 Europe s Tragedy A History of the Thirty Years War Allen Lane ISBN 978 0713995923 49 42 09 N 4 56 28 E 49 7025 N 4 9411 E 49 7025 4 9411 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of La Marfee amp oldid 1218826856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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