Siege of Leuven

The siege of Leuven (24 June – 4 July 1635) was an important siege in the Thirty Years' War in which a Franco-Dutch army under Frederick Henry of Orange and the French Marshals Urbain de Maillé-Brezé and Gaspard III de Coligny, who had invaded the Spanish Netherlands from two sides, laid siege to the city of Leuven, defended by a force of 4,000 comprising local citizen and student militias with Walloons, Germans, Spanish and Irish of the Army of Flanders under Anthonie Schetz, Baron of Grobbendonck. Poor organization and logistics and the spread of sickness among the French, along with the appearance of an Imperial-Spanish relief army of 11,000 under Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand and Ottavio Piccolomini, forced the invading army to lift the siege. This failure allowed the Spanish forces to take the initiative and soon the invaders were forced into a headlong retreat.

Siege of Leuven
Part of the Eighty Years' War, the Thirty Years' War and the Franco-Spanish War (1635-1659)

Relief of Louvain. Oil on canvas by Peter Snayers.
Date24 June – 4 July 1635
Location50°53′N 4°42′E
Result

Imperial-Spanish victory

  • Franco-Dutch invasion of the Spanish Netherlands defeated
Belligerents
 Spain
 Holy Roman Empire
 United Provinces
 Kingdom of France
Commanders and leaders
Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand
Anthonie Schetz
Ottavio Piccolomini
Prince Frederick Henry
Marquis de Brézé
Maréchal de Châtillon
Strength
Garrison: 4,000
Relief force: 11,000

50,000


30,000 Dutch
20,000 French
Casualties and losses
700 At least 12,000 casualties
Leuven
Location within Belgium
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