Siege of Namur (1792)
Siege of Namur | |||||||
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Part of theFlanders campaignin theWar of the First Coalition | |||||||
Capture of the castles of Namur, 2 December 1792 byClément Boulanger,1836–1837 | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
France | Holy Roman Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Count of Valence | Johann von Moitelle[1] | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
35,000 men | 2,300 men |
TheSiege of Namurtook place from 21 November to 2 December 1792, during theFlanders campaignof theWar of the First Coalition.The FrenchArmy of the Ardennesunder theCount of Valencecaptured the city which was then part of theAustrian Netherlands.
Background[edit]
After theBattle of Jemappes,the Count of Valence divided his forces and sent 35,000 men towards theMeuse.A detachment entered Liège on November 28 under the acclamations of the inhabitants; the rest was sent to undertake the siege of Namur.
Due to the proximity of the Austrian army underJohann Peter Beaulieu,Valence devoted this operation to theArmy of the Ardenneswhich would be reinforced by the Harville division. Beaulieu, avoiding battle with the Army of the Ardennes, fell back towards the Aische Forest. Three French brigades encamped around the citadel of Namur awaiting the arrival of their artillery from theFortress of CharlemontnearGivet.The strategistAntoine-Henri Jominipointed out that by advancing more quickly, Valence could have trapped the entire Austrian army which he did not, allowing Beaulieu and his force to escape.[2]
Battle[edit]
On 21 November, the main town opened its doors and surrendered; however the Austrians still held the citadel with 2,300 well-supplied men. The trench was opened on November 27 and the bombardment began using the artillery that arrived from Givet. Under heavy French bombardment, the citadel capitulated on December 2 and Valence took the garrison prisoner.[2]
References[edit]
Literature[edit]
- Jomini, Antoine de (1820).Histoire critique et militaire des guerres de la Révolution: Campagne de 1792(in French). Paris..
External links[edit]
- Media related toSiege of Namur (1792)at Wikimedia Commons
Preceded by Battle of Jemappes |
French Revolution: Revolutionary campaigns Siege of Namur |
Succeeded by War of the First Coalition |