Battle of Reinbek

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Battle of Reinbek
Part of the Great Northern War
Nils Gyllenstierna af Fogelvik (M. Mitjens d.a).jpg
The Swedish commander Nils Gyllenstierna
DateMay 19, 1700 (O.S.)
May 20, 1700 (Swedish calendar)
May 30, 1700 (N.S.)
Location
Result Swedish-Lüneburgian victory
Belligerents
Naval Ensign of Sweden.svg  Swedish Empire
Flag of Hanover (1692).svg Brunswick-Lüneburg
Royal Standard of Denmark (1731-1819).svg Denmark–Norway
Commanders and leaders
Naval Ensign of Sweden.svg Nils Gyllenstierna Royal Standard of Denmark (1731-1819).svg Carl Rudolf
Strength
5,000–7,000 men,
4 cannons
2,000 men,
4 cannons
Casualties and losses
~10

The Battle of Reinbek or Skirmish of Reinbek on May 30, 1700 was a small engagement at the river of Bille near Reinbek in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, as a consequence of the Danish invasion of Holstein-Gottorp, earlier that year.

Contents

Background

Combined Swedish-Hanoverian-Lüneburgian forces (guarantors by the treaty of Holstein-Gottorp, along with England and the Netherlands) of 17,500 men, [1] under the supreme command of Nils Gyllenstierna, were ready to march towards the 20,000 strong Danish army under Ferdinand Willem, Duke of Württemberg, to relief the Siege of Tönning. [2] Danish forces of 5,600 men were positioned partly behind the river of Bille, in a 45 kilometer long defensive line, in an attempt to block them. [3]

Battle

Gyllenstierna, approaching with the bulk of his forces from the south—around 11,000 Swedes and Lüneburgians—split these in two; he marched towards 2,000 Danes with four cannons at Reinbek, under Carl Rudolf, Prince of Württemberg (the brother of Willem), with about 5,000-7,000 men of his own. The other section was ordered to go around and attack the Danish positions from the back. After reaching Reinbek, Gyllenstierna sent two Swedish battalions to the bridge, while four cannons were dragged up to the heights, by which a rather insignificant firefight commenced between the two sides. The fighting continued until dawn, when the Prince of Württemberg, fearing he would get outflanked, decided to destroy the bridge and withdraw with all of his forces. [4]

Aftermath

Only a fraction of the two armies had been engaged in the fighting and the losses sustained on both sides had barely reached ten men. [4] The siege was lifted soon thereafter and, [5] after a Swedish landing in Zealand on August 4, [6] the Danish king Frederick IV signed the Peace of Travendal on August 18, 1700. [7]

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References

  1. Generalstaben 1900, p. 323.
  2. Mankell 1865, p. 326.
  3. Generalstaben 1900, p. 327.
  4. 1 2 Generalstaben 1900, pp. 330–331.
  5. Generalstaben 1900, p. 335.
  6. Generalstaben 1900, p. 437.
  7. Generalstaben 1900, p. 463.