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Siege of Nuremberg

Coordinates: 49°27′0″N 11°5′0″E / 49.45000°N 11.08333°E / 49.45000; 11.08333
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Siege of Nuremberg
Siege of Nürnberg
Part of Thirty Years' War

Engraving by Matthäus Merian der Ältere. Danckaerts Historis 1642
Date1632
Location
Result Indecisive
Belligerents
 Sweden  Holy Roman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Sweden Gustav II Adolph Holy Roman Empire Albrecht von Wallenstein
Strength
150,000 120,000
Casualties and losses
20,000 20,000

The Siege of Nuremberg or Siege of Nürnberg was a battle campaign that took place in 1632 about the Imperial City of Nuremberg during the Thirty Years' War.

In 1632, rather than face the numerically superior Imperial army under the command of Albrecht von Wallenstein, Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden ordered a tactical retreat into the city of Nuremberg. Wallenstein's army immediately started to invest Nuremberg and laid siege to the city, waiting for hunger and epidemics to cripple the Swedish force.

It proved difficult for the besiegers to maintain the siege because the city was large and needed a large force to man the circumvallation. In Wallenstein's camp, there were 120,000 soldiers, 50,000 horses, 15,000 women, and 15,000 servants. Foraging to supply such a large static besieging force proved to be extremely difficult.

Four Saxon regiments and troops from the Rhine numbering around 50,000 troops with 6,000 cannon reinforced the 70,000 regular troops and 30,000 Nuremberg militia already deployed by Gustavus Adolphus.

With poor sanitation and inadequate supplies, both sides suffered from hunger, typhus and scurvy. To try to break the deadlock, the forces under the command of Gustavus Adolphus attacked the entrenchments of the imperial army's circumvallation in the Battle of the Alte Veste but failed to break through. Eventually, the siege ended after eleven weeks when the Swedes and their allies withdrew. Through a combination of disease, hunger and battle fatalities, about 10,000 inhabitants of Nuremberg and 20,000 Swedish and allied forces died. The Imperial army suffered about 20,000 dead. Austria was saved for the short term, but the engagement was not decisive.

49°27′0″N 11°5′0″E / 49.45000°N 11.08333°E / 49.45000; 11.08333