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Battle of Prague (1741)

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Siege of Prague
Part of theWar of the Austrian Succession
Date25–26 November 1741
Location
Result Franco-Bavarian-Saxon victory
Belligerents
Austria France
Bavaria
Saxony
Commanders and leaders
Habsburg monarchyUnknown Kingdom of FranceMaurice de Saxe
Casualties and losses
Entire garrison surrenders Light

Thebattle of Prague(1741) was a successful French capture of the Austrian cityPrague.

Background

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In continuance of the policy of his father,Charles of Bavariaaspired to an even higher rank. As son-in-law ofJoseph I, Holy Roman Emperor,Charles rejected thePragmatic Sanction of 1713and claimed the German territories of the Habsburg dynasty after the death of emperorCharles VIin 1740. By theTreaty of Nymphenburg,which was concluded in July 1741, Charles became allied with France and Spain against Austria.[1]

During theWar of the Austrian Succession,Charles invadedUpper Austriain 1741 and planned to conquerVienna,but his allied French troops under theDuc de Belle-Islewere instead redirected toBohemia.

Battle

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Maurice de Saxe, an experienced commander renowned for his intellectual grasp of the principles of war, discreetly went forward to reconnoiter the walled city's defenses in person and launched a surprise operation. With help of Colonel François de Chevert, he outlined a plan for a body of grenadiers to assault the walls by night. In order to avoid alerting the small Prague garrison, the assault would be made without firing muskets; only bayonets were used to dispatch the soldiers on guard duty. On the night of 25 to 26 November, the Franco-Bavarian-Saxon climbed onto the parapet of a poorly defended section of the walls and had taken possession before the garrison realized what was afoot. The city gate was opened, and Saxe's cavalry rode in, leaving Prague's defenders no choice but to surrender.

Aftermath

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Charles Albert was crownedKing of Bohemiathe following day and later also briefly held the title ofHoly Roman Emperor.Despite the capture of Prague, the strategic decision didn't change. In December 1741 Austrian generalLudwig Andreas von Khevenhüllerlaunched a winter counter-offensive, reversing most of the enemy's gains. Prague would beliberatedby the Austrians again in December 1742.[2]

References

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  1. ^Simon Winder (2014).Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe.Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 177–.ISBN978-0-374-71161-0.
  2. ^Grant, R.G."Battle of Prague".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)