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词条 Battle of Breitenfeld (1642)
释义

  1. The battle

  2. Aftermath

  3. Notes

  4. References

  5. External links

{{about||a related battle earlier in the same war|Battle of Breitenfeld (1631)|the Battle of the Nations during the Napoleonic Wars|Battle of Leipzig}}{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict =Battle of Breitenfeld
|partof =the Thirty Years' War
| image = Slaget vid Leipzig 1642 SP244.jpg
| image_size = 300
|caption =Contemporary engraving depicting the battle
|date =23 October 1642
|place =Breitenfeld, Saxony (present-day Germany)
|coordinates =
|map_type =
|latitude =
|longitude =
|map_size =
|map_marksize =
|map_caption =
|map_label =
|territory =
|result = Decisive Swedish victory
|status =
|combatant1 = Sweden
|combatant2 ={{flag|Holy Roman Empire|23px}}
|commander1 = Lennart Torstensson
|commander2 ={{flagicon|Holy Roman Empire}} Archduke Leopold Wilhelm
{{flagicon|Holy Roman Empire}} Ottavio Piccolomini
|units1 =
|units2 =
|units3 =
|strength1 =20,000 men
  • 10,000 infantry
  • 10,000 cavalry

70 guns


|strength2 =26,000 men
  • 10,000 infantry
  • 16,000 cavalry

46 guns


|casualties1 =4,000 men
  • 2,000 killed
  • 2,000 wounded

|casualties2 =9,500 men
  • 5,000 dead or wounded
  • 4,500 captured

46 guns


|notes =
|campaignbox ={{Campaignbox Thirty Years' War Swedish-French Intervention}}
}}

The Second Battle of Breitenfeld, also known as the First Battle of Leipzig, took place on 23 October 1642 at Breitenfeld, some {{convert|7.5|km|mi}} north-east of Leipzig, Germany, during the Thirty Years' War. The battle was a decisive victory for the Swedish army under the command of Field Marshal Lennart Torstenson over an Imperial Army of the Holy Roman Empire under the command of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria and his deputy, Prince-General Ottavio Piccolomini, Duke of Amalfi.[1]

The battle

In this second clash between ideologies for the prized Saxon city of Leipzig, the Protestant allied forces, led by Torstensson, defeated an army of the Holy Roman Empire, led by Leopold and his deputy, Prince-General Piccolomini. The Imperials had 26,000 men and 46 guns, the Swedes 20,000 men and 70 guns.{{sfn|Wilson|2011|p=636}}

Like the first battle, the second was a decisive victory for Swedish-led forces who had intervened in the Thirty Years' War on behalf of various Protestant princes of the generally small German states against the German Catholic League formed to resist Protestant expansion in Central Europe.

The Imperial army suffered 9,500 casualties, including 4,500 taken prisoner.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=41}} The victors captured 46 guns. Killed or wounded were 4,000 Swedes; among them, General Torsten Stålhandske, who led the Finnish Hakkapeliitta Cavalry, received a serious wound.

Aftermath

The battle, following a brief mop-up campaign ending with the Battle of Klingenthal, enabled Sweden to occupy Saxony. His defeat made Emperor Ferdinand III more willing to negotiate peace, and renounce the Preliminary{{Clarify|date=June 2016}} of Hamburg.

During the battle, Colonel Madlon's cavalry regiment was the first that fled without fighting. Archduke Leopold Wilhelm assembled a court-martial in Prague which sentenced the Madlon regiment to exemplary punishment. Six regiments which had signalized{{Clarify|date=June 2016}} themselves in the battle, was drawn up under arms, and surrounded Madlon's regiment, which was severely rebuked for its cowardice and misconduct, and ordered to lay down its arms at the feet of general Piccolomini. When they had obeyed this command, their ensigns were torn in pieces; and the general, having mentioned the causes of their degradation, and erased them from the register of the imperial troops, pronounced the sentence which had been agreed in the council of war, condemning the colonel, captains and lieutenants to be beheaded and soldiers to be decimated.[2] Ninety men (chosen by rolling dice) were executed in Rokycany, western Bohemia (now in the Czech Republic) on 14 December 1642 by Jan Mydlář (junior), the son of Jan Mydlář, the famous executioner from Prague. On the first day of the execution the regiment's cords{{Clarify|date=June 2016}} were broken by the executioner. On the second day, officers were beheaded and selected men hanged on the trees on the road from Rokycany to Litohlavy. Another version said that soldiers were shot, and their bodies hanged on the trees. Their mass grave is said to be on the Black Mound in Rokycany, which commemorates the decimation to this day.

Notes

1. ^The second battle was 11 years after the first battle at the crossroads village had unbottled the Swedish forces under Gustavus II Adolphus wherein he{{Clarify|date=June 2016}} had handed Field Marshal Count Tilly his first major defeat in fifty years of soldiering on the same plain.
2. ^{{cite book|last1=Compiled from Original Writers.|title=The Modern Part of an Universal History: From the Earliest Account of Time.|date=1761|location=London|page=260|edition=VOL. XXX.}}

References

{{refimprove|date=June 2013}}
  • {{cite book |last=Clodfelter |first=M. |title=Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 |publisher=McFarland |location=Jefferson, North Carolina |year=2017 |edition=4th |isbn=978-0786474707 |ref=harv }}
  • {{Cite ADB|22|339|340|Mortaigne de Potelles, Kaspar Kornelius|Bernhard von Poten|ADB:Mortaigne de Potelles, Kaspar Kornelius|ref=CITEREFPoten1885}}
  • {{cite book |last=Wilson |first=P. |title=The Thirty Years War: Europe's Tragedy |publisher=Belknap Press |year=2011 |isbn=978-0674062313 |ref=harv }}

External links

  • Preliminaries of Hamburg
{{coord|51.3403|N|12.3748|E|source:wikidata|display=title}}

9 : 1642 in Europe|Conflicts in 1642|Battles of the Thirty Years' War|Battles involving the Holy Roman Empire|Battles involving Sweden|1642 in the Holy Roman Empire|17th century in Saxony|Battles in Saxony|History of Leipzig

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