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Battle of Les Avins

The Battle of Les Avins[a] took place on 20 May 1635, outside the town of Les Avins, near Huy in modern Belgium, then part of the Bishopric of Liège. It was the first major engagement of the 1635 to 1659 Franco-Spanish War, a connected conflict of the Thirty Years' War.

Battle of Les Avins
Part of Franco-Spanish War (1635–59)

Battle site; Spanish forces at left, French below
Date20 May 1635
Location
Les Avins, near Huy, modern Belgium
Result French victory
Belligerents
 France  Spain
Commanders and leaders
Carignano
Bucquoy
Count Feria  (POW)
Strength
c. 27,000 [1] [2] [3] c. 16,000 [2] [1] [4]
Casualties and losses
3,000 dead or wounded[2] 4,000 to 5,000 dead, wounded, or captured [1] [2]

Prior to 1635, France had provided financial and diplomatic support for the Dutch Republic in its war of independence from Spain, but avoided direct involvement. In February 1635, the two countries agreed to divide the Spanish Netherlands, and following a formal declaration of war, a French army of 27,000 entered Liège in May.

Intending to link up with the Dutch at Maastricht and attack Leuven, they ran into a Spanish force of around 16,000 outside Les Avins. The French made a series of frontal assaults and eventually over-ran their positions, forcing the Spanish to retreat.

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. In 1938, historian CV Wedgwood argued the 1618 to 1648 Thirty Years War and the 1568 to 1648 Dutch revolt formed part of a wider, ongoing European struggle, with the Habsburg-Bourbon conflict at its centre. A view now generally accepted by modern historians, this makes the Franco-Spanish War a connected conflict, which is essential to understanding strategic objectives.[5]

Habsburg territories in the Spanish Netherlands, Franche-Comté, and the Pyrenees blocked French expansion, and made it vulnerable to invasion. Occupied by domestic Huguenot rebellions from 1622 to 1630, France looked for opportunities to weaken the Habsburgs, while avoiding direct conflict.[6] This included supporting the Dutch against Spain, and financing Swedish intervention in the Empire, starting in 1630, when Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden invaded Pomerania.[7]

 
Much of the fighting focused on the Spanish Road, a key strategic supply route for Spanish troops in Flanders
Purple: Spanish dependencies
Green: Ruled by Austria
Brown: Ruled by Spain

When fighting restarted at the end of the Twelve Years' Truce in 1621, the Spanish initially won a series of victories but by 1633 were on the retreat. The powerful Amsterdam mercantile lobby saw this as an opportunity to end the war on favourable terms, and although negotiations ended without result, the Dutch peace party grew in strength.[8] At the same time, defeat at Nördlingen in September 1634 forced the Swedes to retreat, while most of their German allies left the war after the 1635 Treaty of Prague.[9]

Concerned by the prospect of the Habsburgs making peace on favourable terms in both the Empire and the Netherlands, Louis XIII and his chief minister Richelieu decided on direct intervention. In February 1635, they signed an alliance with the Dutch, agreeing to divide the Spanish Netherlands, followed in April by the Treaty of Compiègne with Sweden.[10]

Much of the fighting focused on different parts of the Spanish Road, an overland supply route connecting Spanish possessions in Northern Italy to Flanders. After 1601, it was rarely used for moving soldiers, but remained vital for trade, and went through areas essential to French security. At the start of 1635, France had a total of around 100,000 men under arms, including 27,000 men under Urbain de Maillé-Brézé in Picardy and additional armies in Champagne, Lorraine, the Sarre, and the Valtellina.[11] This allowed them to threaten the Road at a number of points, but the 1635 campaign showed their logistics were inadequate to support these numbers, while there was very little co-ordination between the different theatres.[12]

Battle edit

In May, Louis XIII declared war on Spain, claiming to be responding to a request for support from the Elector of Trier, whose territories were an important part of the Road and had been occupied by Spanish troops.[13] The French entered the Prince-Bishopric of Liège, last point in the Road, in two divisions, one led by Maillé-Brézé and the other by Châtillon. Their intention was to link up with Dutch forces based at Maastricht, under Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, and then attack Leuven. Outside Les Avins, they made contact with a Spanish force of around 16,000,[b] commanded by Thomas Francis, Prince of Carignano and his deputies Bucquoy and Count Feria.[c][16]

 
 
Les Avins
 
Tienen
 
Brussels
 
Leuven
 
Maastricht
class=notpageimage|
1635 campaign in Northern France and the Spanish Netherlands (modern borders shown)

The Spanish had been ordered to simply act as a blocking force but Carignano allowed himself to be drawn into battle with a larger army.[1] Although inferior in numbers, his troops were more experienced and held a strong position, with the infantry placed behind a series of hedges and artillery covering the approaches. The French commanders debated whether to attack, before deciding retreat would be more dangerous. Their artillery commander, Charles de La Porte, positioned his guns to provide covering fire; Châtillon and Maillé-Brézé drew up their troops in standard formation, infantry in the centre and cavalry on the wings, before launching a frontal assault.[16]

On the right, Maillé-Brézé was initially repulsed with heavy losses, before rallying and attacking again. On the left and centre, Châtillon attacked the Spanish artillery with 4,000 men and eventually over-ran their positions by weight of numbers. Seeing this, the French reserve of 5,000 came up and assuming this to be a new army, Carignano ordered a general retreat.[17] Most of the Spanish casualties occurred in this phase of the battle; estimates range from a total of 4,000,[1] to 5,000 including prisoners, among them Charles of Austria, nephew of Emperor Ferdinand and Feria.[17] French losses were around 3,000, mostly incurred in their assault.[17]

Aftermath edit

 
Urbain de Maillé-Brezé (1597–1650); French commander

News of the victory was received in Paris with elation, and led to unrealistic optimism about the rest of the campaign. It also caused friction between the French commanders, with Châtillon claiming he had been sidelined to ensure Maillé-Brézé won the glory.[18]

After linking up with the Dutch, their combined force totalled around 45,000 men, but Fredrick Henry insisted on taking Tienen, a place of limited strategic value. Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria, governor of the Spanish Netherlands, withdrew to Leuven, leaving a garrison of 1,200 at Tienen. When captured on 10 June, the town was sacked, over 200 civilians killed and many buildings damaged, including Catholic churches and monasteries. This atrocity undermined efforts to win over the predominately Catholic population of the Southern Netherlands and was particularly embarrassing for Richelieu, a Cardinal in the Catholic church.[19]

Until the advent of railways in the 19th century, water was the primary means of bulk transportation; Leuven's position on the River Dyle made its capture essential for an offensive into Brabant. By the time the Franco-Dutch army began the siege on 24 June, desertion due to lack of food or pay had reduced the French army to under 17,000. When a Spanish force advanced on Leuven in early July, the siege was abandoned; on 28 July, the loss of the Dutch fortress of Schenkenschans prompted Frederick Henry to withdraw from the Spanish Netherlands and march to its relief.[20]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also referred to as Avein
  2. ^ A contemporary Spanish source suggests 7,000 infantry and 2,500 cavalry [14]
  3. ^ Not to be confused with the Duke of Feria, who died of dysentery in 1634; the Count was described by a colleague as a "pumpkin", who retained his position only because he was Spanish[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Guthrie 2003, p. 190.
  2. ^ a b c d Bodart 1908, p. 59.
  3. ^ Périni 1896, p. 175.
  4. ^ Périni 1896, p. 176.
  5. ^ Sutherland 1992, pp. 588–595.
  6. ^ Hayden 1973, pp. 1–23.
  7. ^ Wedgwood 1938, pp. 385–386.
  8. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 521–523.
  9. ^ Knox 2017, pp. 182–183.
  10. ^ Poot 2013, pp. 120–122.
  11. ^ Thion 2013, p. 20.
  12. ^ Wilson 1976, p. 259.
  13. ^ Forsberg 2016, p. 73.
  14. ^ del Valle 1911, p. 59.
  15. ^ León 2009, p. 257.
  16. ^ a b Périni 1896, p. 177.
  17. ^ a b c Périni 1896, p. 178.
  18. ^ Parrott 2001, p. 113.
  19. ^ Lasaffer 2006, pp. 3–4.
  20. ^ Asbach & Schröder 2014, pp. 169–170.

Sources edit

  • Asbach, Olaf; Schröder, Peter (2014). The Dutch-French Invasion, 1635–1646 in The Ashgate Research Companion to the Thirty Years' War. Ashgate. ISBN 978-1409406297.
  • Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618–1905). Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  • del Valle, José León Sancho Rayón (1911). Varias relaciones de los estados de Flandes, 1631 á 1656 (in Spanish). Libos españoles raros y curiosos (1631–1656).
  • Forsberg, Anna Maria (2016). Story of War: Church & Propaganda in France & Sweden in 1610–1710. Nordic Academic Press. ISBN 978-9188168665.
  • Guthrie, William (2003). The Later Thirty Years War: From the Battle of Wittstock to the Treaty of Westphalia. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-32408-5.
  • Hayden, J Michael (1973). "Continuity in the France of Henry IV and Louis XIII: French Foreign Policy, 1598-1615". The Journal of Modern History. 45 (1): 1–23. doi:10.1086/240888. JSTOR 1877591. S2CID 144914347.
  • Israel, Jonathan (1995). Spain in the Low Countries, (1635-1643) in Spain, Europe and the Atlantic: Essays in Honour of John H. Elliott. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521470452.
  • Knox, Bill (2017). "The 1635 Treaty of Prague; a failed settlement?". In Tucker, Spencer (ed.). Enduring Controversies in Military History, Volume I: Critical Analyses and Context. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-1440841194.
  • Lasaffer, Randall (2006). "Siege Warfare and the Early Modern Laws of War". Tilburg Working Paper Series on Jurisprudence and Legal History. 06 (1).
  • León, Fernando González de (2009). The Road to Rocroi: Class, Culture and Command in the Spanish Army of Flanders, 1567-1659. Brill. ISBN 978-9004170827.
  • Parrott, David (2001). Richelieu's Army: War, Government and Society in France, 1624–1642. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521792097.
  • Périni, Hardÿ de (1896). Batailles françaises, Volume III (in French). Ernest Flammarion.
  • Poot, Anton (2013). Crucial years in Anglo-Dutch relations (1625–1642): the political and diplomatic contacts. Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN 978-9087043803.
  • Sutherland, NM (1992). "The Origins of the Thirty Years War and the Structure of European Politics". English Historical Review. 107 (424).
  • Thion, Stephane (2013). French Armies of the Thirty Years War (Soldiers of the Past). Histoire et Collections. ISBN 978-2917747018.
  • Wedgwood, CV (1938). The Thirty Years War (2005 ed.). New York Review of Books. ISBN 978-1590171462.
  • Wilson, Charles (1976). Transformation of Europe, 1558-1648. Littlehampton Book Services. ISBN 978-0297770152.

50°24′00″N 5°16′59″E / 50.4000°N 5.2830°E / 50.4000; 5.2830

battle, avins, took, place, 1635, outside, town, avins, near, modern, belgium, then, part, bishopric, liège, first, major, engagement, 1635, 1659, franco, spanish, connected, conflict, thirty, years, part, franco, spanish, 1635, battle, site, spanish, forces, . The Battle of Les Avins a took place on 20 May 1635 outside the town of Les Avins near Huy in modern Belgium then part of the Bishopric of Liege It was the first major engagement of the 1635 to 1659 Franco Spanish War a connected conflict of the Thirty Years War Battle of Les AvinsPart of Franco Spanish War 1635 59 Battle site Spanish forces at left French belowDate20 May 1635LocationLes Avins near Huy modern BelgiumResultFrench victoryBelligerents France SpainCommanders and leadersUrbain de Maille Breze Chatillon Charles de La Porte Mothe HoudancourtCarignano Bucquoy Count Feria POW Strengthc 27 000 1 2 3 c 16 000 2 1 4 Casualties and losses3 000 dead or wounded 2 4 000 to 5 000 dead wounded or captured 1 2 Prior to 1635 France had provided financial and diplomatic support for the Dutch Republic in its war of independence from Spain but avoided direct involvement In February 1635 the two countries agreed to divide the Spanish Netherlands and following a formal declaration of war a French army of 27 000 entered Liege in May Intending to link up with the Dutch at Maastricht and attack Leuven they ran into a Spanish force of around 16 000 outside Les Avins The French made a series of frontal assaults and eventually over ran their positions forcing the Spanish to retreat Contents 1 Background 2 Battle 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 References 6 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 In 1938 historian CV Wedgwood argued the 1618 to 1648 Thirty Years War and the 1568 to 1648 Dutch revolt formed part of a wider ongoing European struggle with the Habsburg Bourbon conflict at its centre A view now generally accepted by modern historians this makes the Franco Spanish War a connected conflict which is essential to understanding strategic objectives 5 Habsburg territories in the Spanish Netherlands Franche Comte and the Pyrenees blocked French expansion and made it vulnerable to invasion Occupied by domestic Huguenot rebellions from 1622 to 1630 France looked for opportunities to weaken the Habsburgs while avoiding direct conflict 6 This included supporting the Dutch against Spain and financing Swedish intervention in the Empire starting in 1630 when Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden invaded Pomerania 7 nbsp Much of the fighting focused on the Spanish Road a key strategic supply route for Spanish troops in Flanders Purple Spanish dependencies Green Ruled by Austria Brown Ruled by SpainWhen fighting restarted at the end of the Twelve Years Truce in 1621 the Spanish initially won a series of victories but by 1633 were on the retreat The powerful Amsterdam mercantile lobby saw this as an opportunity to end the war on favourable terms and although negotiations ended without result the Dutch peace party grew in strength 8 At the same time defeat at Nordlingen in September 1634 forced the Swedes to retreat while most of their German allies left the war after the 1635 Treaty of Prague 9 Concerned by the prospect of the Habsburgs making peace on favourable terms in both the Empire and the Netherlands Louis XIII and his chief minister Richelieu decided on direct intervention In February 1635 they signed an alliance with the Dutch agreeing to divide the Spanish Netherlands followed in April by the Treaty of Compiegne with Sweden 10 Much of the fighting focused on different parts of the Spanish Road an overland supply route connecting Spanish possessions in Northern Italy to Flanders After 1601 it was rarely used for moving soldiers but remained vital for trade and went through areas essential to French security At the start of 1635 France had a total of around 100 000 men under arms including 27 000 men under Urbain de Maille Breze in Picardy and additional armies in Champagne Lorraine the Sarre and the Valtellina 11 This allowed them to threaten the Road at a number of points but the 1635 campaign showed their logistics were inadequate to support these numbers while there was very little co ordination between the different theatres 12 Battle editIn May Louis XIII declared war on Spain claiming to be responding to a request for support from the Elector of Trier whose territories were an important part of the Road and had been occupied by Spanish troops 13 The French entered the Prince Bishopric of Liege last point in the Road in two divisions one led by Maille Breze and the other by Chatillon Their intention was to link up with Dutch forces based at Maastricht under Frederick Henry Prince of Orange and then attack Leuven Outside Les Avins they made contact with a Spanish force of around 16 000 b commanded by Thomas Francis Prince of Carignano and his deputies Bucquoy and Count Feria c 16 nbsp nbsp Les Avins nbsp Tienen nbsp Brussels nbsp Leuven nbsp Maastrichtclass notpageimage 1635 campaign in Northern France and the Spanish Netherlands modern borders shown The Spanish had been ordered to simply act as a blocking force but Carignano allowed himself to be drawn into battle with a larger army 1 Although inferior in numbers his troops were more experienced and held a strong position with the infantry placed behind a series of hedges and artillery covering the approaches The French commanders debated whether to attack before deciding retreat would be more dangerous Their artillery commander Charles de La Porte positioned his guns to provide covering fire Chatillon and Maille Breze drew up their troops in standard formation infantry in the centre and cavalry on the wings before launching a frontal assault 16 On the right Maille Breze was initially repulsed with heavy losses before rallying and attacking again On the left and centre Chatillon attacked the Spanish artillery with 4 000 men and eventually over ran their positions by weight of numbers Seeing this the French reserve of 5 000 came up and assuming this to be a new army Carignano ordered a general retreat 17 Most of the Spanish casualties occurred in this phase of the battle estimates range from a total of 4 000 1 to 5 000 including prisoners among them Charles of Austria nephew of Emperor Ferdinand and Feria 17 French losses were around 3 000 mostly incurred in their assault 17 Aftermath edit nbsp Urbain de Maille Breze 1597 1650 French commanderNews of the victory was received in Paris with elation and led to unrealistic optimism about the rest of the campaign It also caused friction between the French commanders with Chatillon claiming he had been sidelined to ensure Maille Breze won the glory 18 After linking up with the Dutch their combined force totalled around 45 000 men but Fredrick Henry insisted on taking Tienen a place of limited strategic value Cardinal Infante Ferdinand of Austria governor of the Spanish Netherlands withdrew to Leuven leaving a garrison of 1 200 at Tienen When captured on 10 June the town was sacked over 200 civilians killed and many buildings damaged including Catholic churches and monasteries This atrocity undermined efforts to win over the predominately Catholic population of the Southern Netherlands and was particularly embarrassing for Richelieu a Cardinal in the Catholic church 19 Until the advent of railways in the 19th century water was the primary means of bulk transportation Leuven s position on the River Dyle made its capture essential for an offensive into Brabant By the time the Franco Dutch army began the siege on 24 June desertion due to lack of food or pay had reduced the French army to under 17 000 When a Spanish force advanced on Leuven in early July the siege was abandoned on 28 July the loss of the Dutch fortress of Schenkenschans prompted Frederick Henry to withdraw from the Spanish Netherlands and march to its relief 20 Notes edit Also referred to as Avein A contemporary Spanish source suggests 7 000 infantry and 2 500 cavalry 14 Not to be confused with the Duke of Feria who died of dysentery in 1634 the Count was described by a colleague as a pumpkin who retained his position only because he was Spanish 15 References edit a b c d e Guthrie 2003 p 190 a b c d Bodart 1908 p 59 Perini 1896 p 175 Perini 1896 p 176 Sutherland 1992 pp 588 595 Hayden 1973 pp 1 23 Wedgwood 1938 pp 385 386 Israel 1995 pp 521 523 Knox 2017 pp 182 183 Poot 2013 pp 120 122 Thion 2013 p 20 Wilson 1976 p 259 Forsberg 2016 p 73 del Valle 1911 p 59 Leon 2009 p 257 a b Perini 1896 p 177 a b c Perini 1896 p 178 Parrott 2001 p 113 Lasaffer 2006 pp 3 4 Asbach amp Schroder 2014 pp 169 170 Sources editAsbach Olaf Schroder Peter 2014 The Dutch French Invasion 1635 1646 in The Ashgate Research Companion to the Thirty Years War Ashgate ISBN 978 1409406297 Bodart Gaston 1908 Militar historisches Kriegs Lexikon 1618 1905 Retrieved 3 February 2023 del Valle Jose Leon Sancho Rayon 1911 Varias relaciones de los estados de Flandes 1631 a 1656 in Spanish Libos espanoles raros y curiosos 1631 1656 Forsberg Anna Maria 2016 Story of War Church amp Propaganda in France amp Sweden in 1610 1710 Nordic Academic Press ISBN 978 9188168665 Guthrie William 2003 The Later Thirty Years War From the Battle of Wittstock to the Treaty of Westphalia Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 32408 5 Hayden J Michael 1973 Continuity in the France of Henry IV and Louis XIII French Foreign Policy 1598 1615 The Journal of Modern History 45 1 1 23 doi 10 1086 240888 JSTOR 1877591 S2CID 144914347 Israel Jonathan 1995 Spain in the Low Countries 1635 1643 in Spain Europe and the Atlantic Essays in Honour of John H Elliott Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521470452 Knox Bill 2017 The 1635 Treaty of Prague a failed settlement In Tucker Spencer ed Enduring Controversies in Military History Volume I Critical Analyses and Context Greenwood Press ISBN 978 1440841194 Lasaffer Randall 2006 Siege Warfare and the Early Modern Laws of War Tilburg Working Paper Series on Jurisprudence and Legal History 06 1 Leon Fernando Gonzalez de 2009 The Road to Rocroi Class Culture and Command in the Spanish Army of Flanders 1567 1659 Brill ISBN 978 9004170827 Parrott David 2001 Richelieu s Army War Government and Society in France 1624 1642 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521792097 Perini Hardy de 1896 Batailles francaises Volume III in French Ernest Flammarion Poot Anton 2013 Crucial years in Anglo Dutch relations 1625 1642 the political and diplomatic contacts Uitgeverij Verloren ISBN 978 9087043803 Sutherland NM 1992 The Origins of the Thirty Years War and the Structure of European Politics English Historical Review 107 424 Thion Stephane 2013 French Armies of the Thirty Years War Soldiers of the Past Histoire et Collections ISBN 978 2917747018 Wedgwood CV 1938 The Thirty Years War 2005 ed New York Review of Books ISBN 978 1590171462 Wilson Charles 1976 Transformation of Europe 1558 1648 Littlehampton Book Services ISBN 978 0297770152 50 24 00 N 5 16 59 E 50 4000 N 5 2830 E 50 4000 5 2830 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Les Avins amp oldid 1177812893, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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