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Battle of Fleurus (1794)

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The Battle of Fleurus, fought on June 26, 1794 was one of the most decisive battles in the Low Countries during the French Revolutionary Wars.

Both sides had forces numbering in the vicinity of 80,000 men and the French, under Jourdan were able to more effectively concentrate their forces in order to achieve victory against the Austrian army under Saxe-Cobourg.

Prelude

After the Battle of Tourcoing (May 17-18, 1794), Jourdan was given the command of the Army of the Ardennes and four divisions of the Army of the North, about 96,000 men in total. This new group was then named the Army of the Sambre-Meuse. The new army was then given the task of capturing Charleroi.

On June 12, the French army, accompagnied and supervised by a member of the Committee of Public Safety Louis de Saint-Just, had invested the town of Charleroi with about 70,000 men. On June 16, an Austrian-Dutch force of about 43,000 men counterattacked in heavy mist and managed to inflict some 3,000 casualties on the French and drive them back over the Sambre. On June 18, Jourdan attacked again and managed to restore the investment of Charleroi. The city surrendered on June 26, just as a relieving force under Coburg arrived to raise the siege.

Battle of Fleurus

On June 26, Coburg arrived around Charleroi with 52,000 men to raise the French siege. Too late to save the city, which at that time was surrendereing, the Austrian commander split his army in to five colums and attacked the French. A French reconnaissance balloon, "l'Entreprenant", continuously informed Jourdan about Austrian movements. The Austrians managed to break through both French wings but as the center under Lefebvre held and then counterattacked, the Austrian assault petered out. Coburg neglected to press on and, uncertain of the outcome, the Austrian commander lost his nerve and fell back to Braine-l'Alleud and Waterloo, granting the French an unexpected victory.

Consequences

This victory precipitated a full Allied withdrawal from Belgium and allowed French forces to push north into the Netherlands. It saw the first military use of an aircraft, as a reconnaissance balloon on the French side.

The Battle largely invalidated the argument that continuation of the French Revolutionary Reign of Terror was necessary because of the military threat to France's very existence. Consequently, Robespierre's dictatorship was overthrown a month later.

References

 


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