Baner's Bohemian Campaign

Wikipedia

Baner's Bohemian Campaign
Part of the Thirty Years' War

Johan Banér and Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria were the leading commanders of the campaign .
DateApril 1639-March 1640
Location
Result Swedish victory
Territorial
changes
Landsberg, Küstrin, Frankfurt an der Oder, and Steinau an der Oder are captured by the Swedes
large areas of Bohemia are destroyed
Belligerents
Swedish Empire
Kingdom of Bohemia Bohemian Exiles
Holy Roman Empire
Kingdom of Bohemia Bohemia
Electorate of Bavaria Bavaria
Brandenburg
 Saxony
Commanders and leaders
Swedish Empire Johan Banér
Swedish Empire Lennart Torstensson
Swedish Empire Torsten Stålhandske[a][1][page needed]
Swedish Empire Carl Gustaf Wrangel
Swedish Empire Hans Christoff von Königsmarck
Swedish Empire Adam von Pfuel
Swedish Empire Johan Lilliehöök[b][1][page needed]
Holy Roman Empire Kingdom of Bohemia Archduke Leopold Wilhelm
Holy Roman Empire Kingdom of Bohemia Ottavio Piccolomini
Kingdom of Bohemia Holy Roman Empire Melchior von Hatzfeldt
Holy Roman Empire Kingdom of Bohemia Matthias Gallas
Kingdom of Bohemia Raimondo Montecuccoli (POW)
Kingdom of Bohemia Georg Lorenz von Hofkirchen (POW)[1][page needed]
Kingdom of Bohemia Phillip von Mansfeld[a][1][page needed]
Strength
Swedish Empire 18,000 at Melnik
Swedish Empire 16,000 at the end of the campaign
Kingdom of Bohemia 10,000 at Melnik
Holy Roman Empire 30,000 from Leopold Wilhelm
Casualties and losses
Kingdom of Bohemia 38 exiles wounded and 153 killed during the Assault on Pirna[1][page needed]
Swedish Empire 400 killed at Melnik
Swedish Empire 1,000[c]
Kingdom of Bohemia 1,400 at Melnik
Holy Roman Empire several thousand

Baner's Bohemian Campaign was a Swedish campaign in Bohemia under the command of the Swedish general Johan Banér.

Background

In January 1639, Johan Banér began a campaign south through Saxony after regrouping the Swedish army. The Swedes crossed the Elbe River at Lauenburg and then relieved the city of Erfurt and besieged Freiberg. Two armies then came to unite against the Swedes and to prevent this from happening, they quickly marched against one, which was defeated in the Battle of Chemnitz. The other army, 10,000 men under the command of Melchior von Hatzfeldt, then retreated into Bohemia to Prague. Banér then began his campaign into Bohemia by assaulting Pirna.

Campaign

After taking Pirna, Baner pushed, leaving 3,000 men to hold the gorge.[1][page needed] Initially, parts of the Swedish army under the command of Adam von Pfuel, Carl Gustaf Wrangel and Torsten Stålhandske departed to capture strategically important towns on the Elbe and besieged its fortresses. After a short siege, the Swedes also occupied Tetschen and the next day the towns of Aussig and Leitmeritz were captured. From Leitmeritz, Banér issued a manifesto in which he wrote that he had come "as a friend to help the Bohemian kingdom against papist oppression". However, it was soon noticed that Bohemia, which had already lost large supplies during previous campaigns, could not support the Swedish army and as a result the Swedes were required to take the food needed to continue. The result was devastating for the Bohemian population, who had to endure several hardships. He then surged south into a land that was free from war sense 1634. Matthias Gallas massed 10,00 men under Lorenz von Hofkirchen to stop Baner at Melnik he emerged from the mountains on the 29th of May. Against his subordinates advice, Hofkirchen threw away his initial advantage with a premature attack and lost 1,000 killed and 400 captured, including him and Raimondo Montecuccoli.[1][page needed] The imperial position got even worse when Johan Lilliehook took even more Brandenburg garrison and Stålhandske overrun Silesia after defeating Phillip von Mansfeld.[1][page needed] Melchior von Hatzfeldt arrived with his 10,000-strong army in the capital. Banér placed his army in battle formation outside the city and fired on it in an attempt to lure Hatzfeldt into battle, but this did not happen.[2][page needed]

In September, von Hatzfeldt's army was able to cross the Eger River unnoticed and marched to Meissen, but when the Swedish army came to meet him, he turned to Franconia instead. The Swedish army then returned to Bohemia and arrived in Prague on October 11. The city was then shelled and the Swedes captured some fortifications. One of the bullets reached the house in which Commander-in-Chief Leopold Wilhelm was sitting. However, the city could not be captured again, the Swedes abandoned the siege on October 29 and instead departed for southern Bohemia where they burned Tabor and Pilsen while an army under Hans Christoff von Königsmarck marched away towards Franconia. However, now most of the imperial armies were gathering against the Swedes. From the Netherlands, Ottavio Piccolomini marched with an 8,000-strong army while von Hatzfeldt marched from Franconia with an 7,000-strong army. As a result of these circumstances, the Swedish army departed from Bohemia in March 1640 and destroyed the bridge over the Elbe while the imperial army came close behind him.[3]

Aftermath

Johan Banér's Bohemian campaign was one of the most brutal of the Thirty Years' War, marked by plunder, fire, beatings and death. Thousands of villages and homes were burned and the population had to endure constant raids. Johan Banér became known as "The Cruel Arsonist" while perhaps the most feared Swede in Bohemia, Adam von Pfuel, boasted of having burned down over 800 Bohemian villages. After the Swedish army left Bohemia, the war continued in Thuringia.

Notes

  1. 1 2 In Silesia
  2. In Brandenberg
  3. Mainly deserted or deceased

References

Bibliography
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  • Harrison, Dick (2014). Ett stort lidande har kommit över oss: Historien om trettioåriga kriget
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  • Wilson, Peter H (2009). Europe's Tragedy: A History of the Thirty Years War. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-9592-3.