Siege of Salses

1639–40 battle of the Franco-Spanish War

Siege of Salses
Part of the Thirty Years' War and the
Franco-Spanish War (1635–59)
Date9 June 1639 – 6 January 1640
Location
Salses, Northern Catalonia, Spanish Empire (present-day France)
Result Spanish victory
Belligerents
 France  Spain
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of France Henri, Prince of Condé Spain Filippo Spinola
Strength
16,000 men (first siege)
22,000 men (second siege)
40,000 men (second siege)
Casualties and losses
3,000+ casualties Unknown
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Thirty Years' War
Bohemian Revolt (1618–1620)
Palatinate campaign (1620–1623)
Transylvanian invasions of Hungary (1619–1621, 1623–1624, 1626)
Danish intervention (1625–1629)
Swedish intervention (1630–1635)
Swedish-French Period (1635–1648)
Naval battles
Treaties
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Franco-Spanish War
(1635–1659)
Flanders and Northern France
Northern Spain and Southern France
  • Leucate
  • Fuenterrabía
  • 1st Salses
  • Ille-sur-Têt
  • Montjuïc
  • 1st Tarragona
  • Almenar
  • Montmeló
  • La Granada
  • Monzón
  • Collioure
  • 1st Tortosa
  • Perpignan
  • 1st Roses
  • 2nd Salses
  • 1st Lleida
  • Miravet
  • Monzón
  • 2nd Lleida
  • 4th Tarragona
  • 2nd Roses
  • San Lorenzo de Mongay
  • Balaguer
  • 3rd Lleida
  • 4th Lleida
  • 2nd Tortosa
  • Montblanc
  • 3rd Tortosa
  • 2nd Barcelona
  • Castelló d'Empúries
  • Girona
  • Villefranche-de-Conflent
  • Cadaqués
  • Solsona
  • Berga
  • Castellfollit
  • Camprodon
Italy
  • 1st Valenza
  • Morbegno
  • Tornavento
  • Marbegno
  • Breme
  • Vercelli
  • Chieri
  • Casale [zh]
  • Turin
  • 2nd Valenza
  • 1st Cremona
  • Proh
  • Naples
  • 2nd Cremona
  • Pavia
  • 3rd Valenza
France hinterland
Franche-Comté and Germany
  • Dole
  • Martignat
  • Savigny
  • Arbent
  • Cornod
  • Saint-Amour
  • Sainte-Agnès
  • Lons-le-Saunier
  • Bletterans
  • 1st Poligny
  • 2nd Poligny
  • Pontarlier
  • Jonvelle
  • Maynal
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Caribbean
Naval battles
  • 1st Lérins Islands
  • Sardinia
  • 2nd Lérins Islands
  • 3rd Lérins Islands
  • Genoa
  • Getaria
  • Laredo · Santoña
  • Île de Ré
  • Cádiz
  • 2nd Tarragona
  • 3rd Tarragona
  • 1st Barcelona
  • Cartagena
  • Orbetello
  • Castellammare
  • Piombino · Porto Longone
  • Cambrils
  • Formentera
  • Sant Feliu
  • Bordeaux
  • 3rd Barcelona

The siege of Salses (1639–1640) was a double siege during the Franco-Spanish War (1635–1659), starting with a French success, but ending with a Spanish victory.

Siege

On 9 June 1639, a French army of 16,000 men under Henri, Prince of Condé, besieged the castle of Salses held by 600 Spanish, taking it on 19 June.[1] Six weeks later a large Spanish army of 40,000 men,[1] under Filippo Spinola and Francesc de Tamarit appeared and now besieged the French garrison of 2,000 men.

Condé sent an army of 22,000 men to lift the siege, but suffering from very bad weather, they were defeated in battle by the Spanish on 2 November, with the loss of 3,000 men. Now Salses was alone and hunger forced the French to surrender on 6 January 1640.[1] By then only 800 Frenchmen, of whom 300 were sick, were left. The Spanish army had also lost 10,000 men to disease and desertions.[1]

Consequences

The presence of a large number of troops in Catalonia contributed to the outbreak of the Catalan Revolt a few months later and the murder of Dalmau de Queralt, Count of Santa Coloma, second in command at the siege of Salses. Salses was retaken by the French after the Fall of Perpignan in September 1642.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Duffy 2013, p. 126.

Sources

  • Duffy, Christopher (2013). Siege Warfare: The Fortress in the Early Modern World 1494-1660. Taylor & Francis.

External links

  • Spanish army at Salses 1639–40

42°50′01″N 2°55′11″E / 42.8336°N 2.9197°E / 42.8336; 2.9197