Siege of Plzeň
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Siege of Plzeň | |||||||
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Part of Thirty Years' War Bohemian Revolt | |||||||
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Combatants | |||||||
Protestant Bohemia Electoral Palatinate |
Holy Roman Empire | ||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Ernst von Mansfeld | Unknown | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
20,000 | Burghers 158 cavalry |
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Casualties | |||||||
Unknown | Unknown |
Thirty Years' War |
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Plzeň – Záblati – Dolní Věstonice – White Mountain – Wiesloch – Wimpfen – Höchst – Fleurus – Stadtlohn – Dessau Bridge – Lutter am Barenberge – Stralsund – Wolgast – Frankfurt – Magdeburg – Werben – 1st Breitenfeld – Rain – Fürth – Alte Veste – Lützen – Oldendorf – Nördlingen – Wittstock – Rheinfelden – Breisach – Chemnitz – Honnecourt – 2nd Breitenfeld – Rocroi – Tuttlingen – Freiburg – Jüterbog – Jankov – Mergentheim – 2nd Nördlingen – Zusmarshausen – Lens – Prague |
The Siege of Plzeň or Battle of Pilsen was a siege of the fortified city of Plzeň in Bohemia carried out by the forces of the Bohemian Protestants led by Ernst von Mansfeld. It was the first major battle of the Thirty Years' War. The Protestant victory and subsequent capture of the city sparked the Bohemian Revolt.
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[edit] Eve of the battle
On May 23, 1618, the Protestant nobles overthrew the rule of King Ferdinand II and threw the Catholic governors of Bohemia from their office at Prague Castle in the Defenestration of Prague. The new government formed of Protestant nobility and gentry gave Ernst von Mansfeld the command over all of its forces. Meanwhile, Catholic nobles and priests started fleeing the country. Some of the monasteries as well as unfortified manors were evacuated and the Catholic refugees headed for the city of Plzeň, where they thought that a successful defence could be organised. The city was well-prepared for a lengthy siege, but the defences were undermanned and the defenders lacked enough gunpowder for their artillery. Mansfeld decided to capture the city before the Catholics were able to gain support from the outside.
[edit] Siege
On September 19, 1618, Mansfeld's army reached the outskirts of the city. The defenders blocked two city gates and the third one was reinforced with additional guards. The Protestant army was too weak to start an all-out assault on the castle, so Mansfeld decided to take the city by hunger. On October 2 the Protestant artillery arrived, but the calibre and number of the cannons was small and the bombardment of the city walls brought little effect. The siege continued, with the Protestants receiving new supplies and recruits on a daily basis, while the defenders lacked food and munitions. Also, the main city well was destroyed and the deposits of potable water soon depleted.
Finally, on November 21 cracks were made in the walls and the Protestant soldiers poured into the city. After several hours of close hand-to-hand combat all of the town was in Mansfeld's hands.
[edit] Aftermath
After capturing the city, Mansfeld demanded 120,000 golden guldens as war reparations and an additional 47,000 florins for sparing the city and not burning it to the ground. However, soon the Holy Roman Empire led by Bavaria gathered enough forces and crossed the border with Bohemia, heading towards Plzeň and Prague.
The newly-elected Bohemian king, Frederick V of the Palatinate was aware of the huge superiority of his enemies' forces and ordered his own army to regroup and attack each of the advancing armies separately. However, he was abandoned by most of his allies and his armies dispersed in the dense forests between Plzeň and Prague, which resulted in a tragic defeat in the Battle of White Mountain.