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Siege of Groningen (1672): Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 53°13′07″N 6°34′02″E / 53.2186°N 6.5672°E / 53.2186; 6.5672
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Berend van Galen is Dutch version of his name; he didn't bother to make an etching of his own defeat;-)
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Image:Mallinckrodt.jpg|[[Bernhard von Galen]] (1606–1678)
Image:Mallinckrodt.jpg|[[Bernhard von Galen]] (1606–1678)
Image:Christoph Bernard von Galen on Horse by Wolfgang Heimbach.jpg|[[Bernhard von Galen]] (1606–1678)
Image:Christoph Bernard von Galen on Horse by Wolfgang Heimbach.jpg|[[Bernhard von Galen]] (1606–1678)
Image:Beleg van Groningen - Siege of Groningen by Bernhard von Galen (1672).jpg|''The Siege of Groningen'', by Jacobus Harrewijn (1683)
Image:Beleg van Groningen - Siege of Groningen by Bernhard von Galen (1672).jpg|''The Siege of Groningen'', by [[Jacobus Harrewijn]] (1683)
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Revision as of 22:31, 2 May 2016

Siege of Groningen
Part of Franco-Dutch War

The siege of Groningen in 1672,
by Folkert Bock (?-1696)
Date9 July 1672 – 17 August 1672
Location
Result Dutch victory
Belligerents
Bishopric of Münster Dutch Republic
Commanders and leaders
Bernhard von Galen Carl von Rabenhaupt
Strength
24,000 Few
Casualties and losses
12,000 dead Unknown

The Siege of Groningen was a battle that took place in 1672 during the Franco-Dutch war. It was a Dutch victory that ended all hope of the Bishop of Münster to push deeper into the Netherlands. The Münster army was so weakened by the defeat that the Dutch army successfully reconquered much of the land that Münster had conquered just weeks earlier. Every year, the city of Groningen celebrates its victory as a local holiday on August 28.

Further reading

  • Israel, Jonathan (1995), The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall 1477-1806, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ISBN 0-19-873072-1

53°13′07″N 6°34′02″E / 53.2186°N 6.5672°E / 53.2186; 6.5672