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Topic: Neerwinden, Battle of (1793)

Neerwinden, Battle of (1793)

Years: 1793 - 1793

The Second Battle of Neerwinden (March 18, 1793) sees a Republican French army led by Charles François Dumouriez attack a Coalition army commanded by Prince Josias of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld.

The Coalition army's Habsburg Austrians, together with a small contingent of allied Dutch Republic troops, repulse all French assaults after bitter fighting and Dumouriez concedes defeat, withdrawing from the field.

The French position in the Austrian Netherlands swiftly collapses, ending the threat to the Dutch Republic and allowing Austria to regain control of her lost province.

The War of the First Coalition engagement is fought at Neerwinden, located fifty-seven kilometers (thirty-five miles) east of Brussels in present-day Belgium.

After Dumouriez's victory at Jemappes in November 1792, the French armies had rapidly overrun most of the Austrian Netherlands.

Rather than driving the Austrians to the west bank of the Rhine River, Dumouriez and the French government have become preoccupied with a war with the Dutch Republic.

During the breathing space offered by her enemy, Austria assembles an army under the Prince of Coburg and strikes back.

After a French covering force is routed by Coburg at Aldenhoven, Dumouriez begins gathering his army for a counterstroke.

Coburg takes up a defensive position at Neerwinden and awaits the confident Dumouriez's attack.

The Coalition army is outnumbered in infantry but possesses a two-to-one superiority in cavalry.

After intense fighting, Coburg's troops repulse  the attacks of the French center and right wing.

When Dumouriez finds that his left wing is driven off the battlefield, he begins retreating.

The defeat leads to mass desertions from the discouraged French volunteers.

In the face of the military collapse, Dumouriez negotiates a free withdrawal of French troops in return for the surrender of Belgium and Dutch territory.

Soon, Dumouriez is plotting against his own government and when his plans fail, he defects to the Austrians, leaving the French army in chaos.

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“The lack of a sense of history is the damnation of the modern world.”

― Robert Penn Warren, quoted by Chris Maser (1999)