Siege of Mons (1691)
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| Siege of Mons (1691) | |||||||
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| Part of the Nine Years' War | |||||||
King Louis XIV at the Siege of Mons (1691) Engraving: "soldier killed by a cannon shot behind the king." |
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| Belligerents | |||||||
| Kingdom of France | Dutch Republic, Kingdom of Spain, Holy Roman Empire |
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| Commanders | |||||||
| King Louis XIV, Marquis de Vauban Duc de Boufflers |
King William III | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 92,000[1] 90 guns |
~4,800[2] | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| No data | ~4,800, mostly prisoners | ||||||
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The Siege of Mons, 15 March–10 April 1691, was a major operation fought during the Nine Years' War. Mons was the main French objective for the 1691 campaign in the Spanish Netherlands, and was besieged and captured before the normal commencement of the campaigning season; but in a period of the conflict dominated by siege warfare, neither the French army of King Louis XIV, nor the forces of the Grand Alliance under King William III, could bring about a decisive battle.
After the siege the duc de Boufflers bombarded the neutral city of Liege. The duc de Luxembourg, meanwhile, captured Halle, and scored a minor victory against the Prince of Waldeck at the Battle of Leuze in September. Strategically, however, little had changed in the war, and both combatants returned to winter quarters at the end of the campaigning season.
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[edit] Background
French forces had secured considerable success in 1690. In July Luxembourg fought and won his tactical masterpiece at the Battle of Fleurus, nullifying any Allied hopes of invading France, whilst at sea, Admiral Tourville defeated an Anglo-Dutch fleet off Beachy Head. In August Catinat had triumphed at the Battle of Staffarda in northern Italy (although his force was too small to gain any strategic advantage). The only bright spot for the Grand Alliance in 1690 was King William’s victory over James II in Ireland at the Battle of the Boyne.[3] But despite the battlefield successes, French forces in 1690 had failed to break the coalition ranged against the ambitions of King Louis.
The main theatre of the war in 1691 was again the Spanish Netherlands where Louis’ war minister, Louvois, had striven to bring together an even larger army than had been assembled the year before.[4] French plans prepared for a double strike: the siege of Nice in northern Italy, and the siege of Mons in Flanders. Furthermore, these attacks were planned for very early in the campaign season, illustrating Vauban’s dictum that "It is a very favourable circumstance to be able to attack before the enemy takes the field in strength … "[5]
The war in Ireland continued into 1691, but William now felt secure enough on his new throne in the British Isles to return to the war on the Continent. William entered The Hague on 5 February to organise his army for the coming campaign. After securing forces totalling 220,000 men, the Stadtholder-King retired to his country home. In mid-March, surrounded by representatives of the Grand Alliance, he received news that Mons was under siege.[6]
[edit] Siege
Louvois engineered the considerable preparations for the siege throughout the preceding winter: stores were filled with supplies in Namur, Philippeville, Dinant and Givet, and no less than 21,000 labourers were gathered for the construction of the lines of circumvallation.[7]
Louis, accompanied by members of his court, joined his army in the Spanish Netherlands to take control of the armies in theatre, arriving at the front on 21 March. The King’s besieging army of 46,000 (under the direction of his great engineer, Vauban) surrounded the town and its garrison of some 4,800 men. The Allies had formed an army of 38,000 under William to relieve the city, but Luxembourg’s army of observation, also 46,000 strong, denied the Allies any possibility of disrupting the operation.[8]
Marshal Boufflers began the investment on 15 March; the trenches were opened ten days later. In one of the most intense attacks of all King Louis’ wars, two batteries, each consisting of 12 mortars, bombarded the city in preparation for the assault; by 30 March, the French had fired 7,000 cannonballs and 3,000 mortar shells.[9] Inevitably, at 17:00 on 8 April, the besieged inhabitants beat the chamade; conditions were settled, and the remaining men of the garrison marched out two days later.[9]
[edit] Aftermath
The siege had begun and ended before the normal commencement of campaigning. Louis returned to Versailles on 12 April, whilst William, after distributing his troops to various garrisons, returned to The Hague.[9] The French now prepared for the rest of the 1691 campaign season with the creation of five large armies bound for five major fronts: Flanders, the Moselle, the Rhine, Piedmont, and Roussillon. The largest of these forces, 49 battalions and 140 squadrons under the command Luxembourg, took station in Flanders,[9] but little was accomplished after the siege by the either the French or the Grand Alliance. Luxembourg devastated Halle at the end of May, whilst Boufflers bombarded neutral Liege in early June, but these aggressive acts had no political results.[10] Louis’ personal military advisor and expert in the art of war, the Marquis de Chamlay, argued that these victories should be followed by a field battle that would destroy the Allied army and force a conclusion to the conflict. Louvois, however, suggested a bombardment of Brussels would force the issue, but was opposed by Luxembourg and Vauban.[10]
William, meanwhile, arrived at Anderlecht on 2 June to take command of the Allied army of 63 battalions and 180 squadrons, totalling 56,000 men.[9] Luxembourg successfully manoeuvred to prevent William besieging Dinant, but subsequent manoeuvres produced little action. After William left his troops in the command of the Prince of Waldeck, Luxembourg’s cavalry routed part of the Allied army at Leuze on 19 September, before all combatants returned to winter quarters.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Chandler: The Art of Warfare in the Age of Marlborough, p.308. All statistics taken from Chandler.
- ^ Lynn states 6,000
- ^ Wolf: The Emergence of the Great Powers: 1685-1715, p.44
- ^ Wolf: Louis XIV, p.562
- ^ Chandler: The Art of Warfare in the Age of Marlborough, p.241
- ^ Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, p.216
- ^ Chandler: The Art of Warfare in the Age of Marlborough, p.224
- ^ Wolf: Louis XIV, p.563
- ^ a b c d e Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, p.218
- ^ a b Wolf: Louis XIV, p.564
[edit] References
- Chandler, David. The Art of Warfare in the Age of Marlborough. Spellmount Limited, (1990). ISBN 0-946771-42-1
- Lynn, John A. The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714. Longman, (1999). ISBN 0-582-05629-2
- Wolf, John B. The Emergence of the Great Powers: 1685–1715. Harper & Row, (1962). ISBN 0-061-39750-4
- Wolf, John B. Louis XIV. Panther Books, (1970). ISBN 0-586-03332-7

