Battle of Lansdowne

51°25′53″N 2°24′04″W / 51.4313°N 2.4010°W / 51.4313; -2.4010

Battle of Lansdowne
Part of First English Civil War

The battlefield today
with Sir Bevil Grenville's Monument
Date5 July 1643
Location
Result Royalist victory
Parliamentarian strategic victory
Belligerents
Royalists Kingdom of England Parliamentarians
Commanders and leaders
Lord Hopton +
Sir Bevil Grenville  
Colonel John Giffard[1]
Sir William Waller
Strength
2,000 horse
4,000 foot
300 dragoons
16 guns
2,500 horse
1,500 foot
Unknown number of guns
Casualties and losses
200-300 killed
600–700 wounded
20 killed
60 wounded
Battle of Lansdowne is located in Somerset
Lansdowne
Lansdowne
Somerset and Lansdowne

The First English Civil War battle of Lansdowne, or Lansdown, was fought on 5 July 1643, at Lansdowne Hill, near Bath, Somerset, England. Although the Royalists under Lord Hopton forced the Parliamentarians under Sir William Waller to retreat from their hilltop position, they suffered so many casualties themselves and were left so disordered and short of ammunition that an injured Hopton was forced to retire.

  1. ^ Vivian 1895, p. 400.

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