Coburg's forty-six thousand-strong army, too late to …
Years: 1794 - 1794
June
Coburg's forty-six thousand-strong army, too late to save Charlerloi, attacks Jourdan's seventy-five thousand French on June 26.
The Battle of Fleurus proves to be a decisive French victory when Coburg calls off his attacks and retreats.
The Allied attacks push back both French flanks, but Jourdan stubbornly fights it out and is saved when Major General François Lefebvre holds his ground in the center.
French use of an observation balloon marks the first participation of an aircraft in battle.
After Fleurus, the Allied position in the Austrian Netherlands collapses; the Austrian army evacuates Belgium; the French army occupies all of Belgium and the Rhineland.
Locations
People
- François Joseph Lefebvre
- François Sebastien Charles Joseph de Croix, Count of Clerfayt
- Jean-Baptiste Jourdan
- Prince Josias of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
- William V, Prince of Orange
Groups
- Austria, Archduchy of
- Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
- Habsburg Monarchy, or Empire
- Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
- Netherlands, Southern (Austrian)
- Sardinia, Kingdom of (Savoy)
- Naples and Sicily, Bourbon Kingdom of
- French First Republic
- Netherlands, Southern (French)
Topics
- French Revolution
- First Coalition, War of the
- French Revolutionary Wars, or “Great French War”
- Vendée, War in the
- French Revolutionary Wars: Campaigns of 1794
