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Battle of Thann | |||||||||
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Part of the Thirty Years' War | |||||||||
Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine and Bar Duke of Lorraine and Bar and the commander of the Imperial Army Bernard of Saxe-Weimar Duke of Saxe-Weimar and commander of the Franco-Weimaran Army | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
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Units involved | |||||||||
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Strength | |||||||||
4,800 | 4,000 [1] | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
Insignificant | 400 killed 44 Colors baggage train All the Artillery Many officers and soldiers captured |
The Battle of Thann (1638) was fought between the Weimar Army in the Service of the French, under Bernard of Saxe-Weimar and an Imperial-Lorraine-Spanish Army .Charles de Lorraine-Bar. The battle was won by the Weimarans and the Imperials retreated back to the Franche-Comte, this was the first of many attempts to Relieve Breisach which under siege by the Weimarans.
The battle was one of Bernard's victories and was a part of Bernard's Upper Rhine campaign, Thann was the last Alsatian stronghold of Charles and he was reduced to the Franche-Comte and Thionville. This victory also fully cemented France's control of Alsace. [1] The site of the battle lies in Alsace between the towns of Thann, Haut-Rhin and Sennen, Haut-Rhin, present-day Cernay, Haut-Rhin.
Following the Swedish defeat at the Battle of Nördlingen in 1634, Bernhard's mercenary army had come under the pay of France. Having been pushed to the west bank of the Rhine by the Imperial advance, Bernhard's army had settled in Alsace during 1635 and had done little except help repulse the Imperial invasion of France under the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand and Matthias Gallas in 1636.
The army of general Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar, mostly German mercenaries formerly in service of Sweden, now financed by France, had established itself in the southwest of the empire on the Upper Rhine. In early in February 1638, having been prodded by the French government, Bernhard advanced his army of 6,000 men and 14 guns [2] to the Rhine in order to find a crossing. Arriving at an important crossing point at the town of Rheinfelden, Bernhard prepared to invest the town from the south. Meanwhile, he would use the ferry at Beuggen to throw troops across the river in order to complete the investment from the north. Since May 19th, this army had besieged the Imperial fortress Breisach and was supported by French troops, commanded by the later Marshal Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne, vicomte de Turenne.
The besieged Breisach Fortress suffered from a severe lack of food soon after the siege began and attempts to provide relief and supplies to the fortress were therefore urgently needed. The first attempt by an Imperial Bavarian army came three months after the siege began under the leadership of the generals Federigo Savelli and Johann von Götzen.
Early in February 1638, having been prodded by the French government, Bernhard advanced his army of 6,000 men and 14 guns [2] to the Rhine in order to find a crossing. Arriving at an important crossing point at the town of Rheinfelden, Bernhard prepared to invest the town from the south. Meanwhile, he would use the ferry at Beuggen to throw troops across the river in order to complete the investment from the north. The attack on the town was to be made on 1 March.The French-funded army Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar had already occupied parts of Baden during 1638 and defeated the armies of the Habsburg Emperor and his allies in several battles. Since May 1638, the Weimar army had besieged the imperial fortress of Breisach, the most important and strongest fortress in the southwest of the empire, which could not be defeated militarily but only through a lack of supplies.
On August 9, an attempt to relieve and supply the fortress by an Imperial-Bavarian army of 18,000 men under Savelli and Götz had already failed completely in the Battle of Wittenweiher. When, in October, after a five-month siege, the supply situation of the besieged fortress of Breisach had become very precarious, Duke Charles of Lorraine and Bar wanted to try again to bring a supply train to the fortress.
The Franco-Weimaran Army was set up outside of south of Thann. His army numbered around 4,800, the Franco-Weimaran Army was under overall command of Bernard of Saxe-Weimar and other commanders such as Reinhold von Rosen, Wilhelm Otto von Nassau-Siegen, Johann Ludwig von Erlach, Sigismund Erlach, and Johann Bernard Ohm.
The Allied army was set up North of Thann. There Army was under the command of the exiled Duke of Charles IV of Lorraine and Bar and was composed of the exiled Lorraine and Bar troops along with Bavarian and Imperial troops, with a contingent of Spanish and Burgundian troops.
When the advancing army under Charles of Lorraine, numbering 4,000 men and its accompanying supply train with numerous supply wagons, entered the town of Thann, news of the army's arrival soon reached Colonel Reinhold von Rosen, who, as commander of a Weimar branch of the army, was conducting the siege of the fortress of Château de Landskron, about 50 km from Thann. With a request for reinforcements, General Rosen immediately sent the news of the army's arrival to Commander-in-Chief Bernhard von Weimar in Colmar. Although he was ill with fever, Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar immediately moved from Colmar to La Croix-aux-Mines, about 70 km south, where reserve troops were stationed under the command of William Otto of Nassau-Siegen.
With these troops and several hundred musketeers, reinforced by French troops and eight regimental guns, the two generals moved north again to Ensisheim, about 60 km away, 20 km east of the town of Thann, where the Lorraine relief army, led by Charles de Lorraine-Bar and its supply train, had initially been reported, but then moved on.
Since a reconnaissance party sent by Bernhard got lost while searching for the enemy army, his troops were initially to seek a waiting position in a forest. When the Lorraine relief army under Duke Charles and its supply train were discovered on October 15, 1638, on the Ochsenfeld between the towns of Thann and Cernay, the two armies unexpectedly clashed.The left wing of Charles's troops was fiercely attacked by Bernard's cavalry and threatened to be completely dispersed if the Lorraine right wing had not simultaneously successfully defeated Bernard's left wing and even captured its artillery. Only through his personal efforts was Bernard able to regroup the troops of the left wing and lead them into a counterattack. The counterattack was so successful that the Weimar troops not only recaptured their own artillery but also captured the Lorraine artillery. The Lorraine cavalry and Duke Charles himself then turned to flight. The infantry managed to hold out for another two hours, but after the explosion of two powder wagons, they also turned to flight. Duke Charles, who had lost his horse, narrowly escaped on foot to Thann. The Duke of Weimar's booty included all the artillery, baggage, 44 colors, and, above all, all the grain intended for Breisach. In addition, there were numerous captured officers and soldiers. Bernards's cavalry showed superior discipline, returning to the field having broken Charles's cavalry and assisted their infantry crush Charles's infantry, who fought for two hours before breaking and retreating back.
The fleeing Lorraine troops were not pursued any further, as another attempt to relieve the fortress of Breisach by a Bavarian army under Johann von Götzen had already been reported and Bernhard had to immediately hurry back to Breisach with the troops. Eventually the survivors of Breisach would surrender, this allowed Bernard to fully control Alsace and the Breisgau and his armies rampaged south overrunning many of the Franche-Comté fortresses but he would die in Breisach.
In addition, there were numerous captured officers and soldiers. On the Lorraine side, Field Marshal Anne-François de Bassompierre [a] , Colonel Vernier, and Lieutenant Colonel Fleckenstein were taken prisoner. The Weimar troops lost Colonel Ludwig von Wietersheim [3] ; the Count of Nassau and the Count of Wittgenstein were wounded. The Duke of Weimar's booty included all the artillery, baggage, 44 colors, and, above all, all the grain intended for Breisach. In addition, there were numerous captured officers and soldiers.
· Friedrich Rudolf von Rothenburg: Schlachten, Belagerungen und Gefechte in Deutschland und den angrenzenden Ländern. (Digitalisat in der Google-Buchsuche). · Theatrum Europaeum. Band 3, S. 935–936, urn:nbn:de:bvb:384-uba000238-6. · Gaston Bodart, Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618-1905),S. 63 · Wilson, Peter H. (2009). Europe's Tragedy: A History of the Thirty Years War. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-9592-3.