Battle of Copenhagen (1807)

Battle of Copenhagen 1807
Part of the Gunboat War and the Napoleonic Wars

A painting of the British bombardment by Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg
Date15 August – 7 September 1807
Location55°40′46″N 12°34′22″E / 55.67944°N 12.57278°E / 55.67944; 12.57278
Result

British victory

  • Danish navy surrendered to the United Kingdom
Belligerents
 United Kingdom Danish Realm Denmark–Norway
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland James Gambier
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Lord Cathcart
Danish Realm Ernst Peymann Surrendered
Strength
25,000 10,000
Casualties and losses
42 killed
145 wounded
24 missing[1]
3,000
Entire fleet surrendered[1]
195 civilians killed and 768 wounded

The Second Battle of Copenhagen (or the Bombardment of Copenhagen) (16 August – 7 September 1807) was a British bombardment of the Danish capital, Copenhagen, in order to capture or destroy the Dano-Norwegian fleet during the Napoleonic Wars. The incident led to the outbreak of the Anglo-Russian War of 1807, which ended with the Treaty of Örebro in 1812. The attack on Denmark, a neutral country, was heavily criticized internationally.[2]

Britain's first response to Napoleon's Continental System was to launch a major naval attack on Denmark. Although neutral, Denmark was under French pressure to pledge its fleet to Napoleon. In September 1807, the Royal Navy bombarded Copenhagen, seizing the Danish fleet and assured use of the sea lanes in the North Sea and Baltic Sea for the British merchant fleet. A consequence of the attack was that Denmark did join the Continental System and the war on the side of France, but without a fleet it had little to offer.[3]

The attack gave rise to the term to Copenhagenize.

  1. ^ a b Smith 1998, p. 254.
  2. ^ The Bombardment of Copenhagen in 1807; by Jens Rahbek Rasmussen; translated by David Frost, British Ambassador in Copenhagen
  3. ^ A. N. Ryan, "The Causes of the British Attack upon Copenhagen in 1807." English Historical Review (1953): 37–55. in JSTOR

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