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Battle of Dahlen

Coordinates: 51°8′N 6°22′E / 51.133°N 6.367°E / 51.133; 6.367
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Battle of Dahlen
Part of Eighty Years' War
Date25 April, 1568
Location
Result Spanish victory
Belligerents
Dutch Rebels Spain Spain
Commanders and leaders
Joost de Soete Sancho d'Avila
Strength
3,000[1] 1,600[1]
Casualties and losses
~2,000 killed Very few[N 1]

The Battle of Rheindalen was fought on April 23, 1568.

Joost de Soete, lord of Villers, marched into the region with a haphazard army of Dutch rebels. They tried to conquer Roermond, but when they failed, they retreated to Dalheim, where they were surprised by a Spanish army. The battle was won by the Spanish. This battle is sometimes considered the official start of the Eighty Years' War.

Background

Prelude

Alba organized an improvised army to secure Maastricht and prevent the junction of the rebels from Friesland with his French fellows. He ordered the maestro de campo don Sancho de Londrón to move his tercio from Lier up to Maastricht and its neighborhood. To the captain of his guard, don Sancho Dávila, he ordered to take the command, besides of his own company of lancers, of those of Albanese lancers under captain Nicolò Basta and of horse harquebusiers under Pedro Montañés.

Battle

Excerpt of the manuscript atlas by Christian Sgrothen showing the area in where the battle was fought.

Sancho Dávila go ahead with his cavalry and was informed by his scouts that the rebels were close to the village of Erkelenz. There Villers found his path cut off because a nearby bridge over the Rur river had been demolished. He decided to take the road to Dahlen, a small walled town in the neutral Bishopric of Liège, while Dávila followed him and soon discovered the rebel army on the road between the two towns.

Villers deployed his troops for the battle on a plain with some groves behind and a hollow way covering one of his flanks, and dispatched his baggage towards Dahlen as soon learned of Dávila's nearby presence. To distract the Spanish general, he sent against him some of his cavalry, but Dávila dispersed it and made his way throughout the hollow way.

After a brief reconnaissance, Dávila, together with the Count of Eberstein and the companies under don Alonso de Vargas and Nicolò Basta, charged across the plain and frontally lunged over the rebel squadrons, which they broke. Villers lost most of his cavalry and two flags. He and some 1,300 men retreated in some order with part of the baggage and managed to reach Dahlen, under whose walls they entrenched in order to withstand a second attack.

Villers covered his men behind a ravelin of the wall, which had also a moat, and reinforced his weak flank with some baggage wagons. Sancho Dávila was unable to reach such positions with his cavalry due to the rough groves, so he called Sancho de Londoño to come rapidly with the infantry.

By early afternoon, the 300 German pikemen were detached behind the ravelin to prevent any attempt of flight, while 600 Spaniards, organized in 5 flags and under the personal leadership of Londoño, were ready to make a frontal attack over the fort, which they did. The fight lasted half a hour, after which the Spaniards took the ravelin. Just a few rebels succeded in escaping and sought refuge in Dahlen; the others being butchered.

Aftermath

Joost de Soete was amongst those who escaped inside Dahlen, but was afterwards handed to the Spanish. The count of Hoogstraten and the Lord of Lumey, on the other hand, evaded capture. All their baggage, seven flags, a large number corslets, pikes, harquebuses, other weapons and munitions were seized by the victors. Some 2,000 rebels, most of whom were French, were killed, as opposed to light Spanish casualties.

Once vanquished the Dutch force, the Spanish army was split up. Dávila went to Brussels with the foremost captives to execute them, Eberstein returned to Maastricht with his German pikemen, and Sancho de Londoño lodged his men at Roermond, where he ordered several prisioners natives of the place to be hanged.

Notes

  1. ^ Luis Cabrera de Córdoba mentioned 12 Spaniards killed and nearly 50 wounded;[2] Antonio Carnero put the Spanish loss as 20 killed and 50 wounded. John Lothrop Motley credited the total Spanish loss as 20 men.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b Lothrop Motley, John (1856). The Rise of the Dutch Republic. London: New York and London, Harper & brothers. p. 160.
  2. ^ Cabrera de Córdoba, Luis (1619). Filipe Segundo, Rey de España. Luis Sanchez. p. 484.
  3. ^ Lothrop Motley, John (1856). The Rise of the Dutch Republic. London: New York and London, Harper & brothers. p. 161.


51°8′N 6°22′E / 51.133°N 6.367°E / 51.133; 6.367