Battle of Puiflijk

Battle of Puiflijk
Part of the War of the First Coalition
Flanders campaign
Date19 October 1794
Location
Result French victory
Belligerents

 French First Republic

Kingdom of Great Britain Great Britain

Armée des Émigrés
Commanders and leaders
Jean-Charles Pichegru Duke of York
Prince of Rohan

The Battle of Puiflijk occurred on 19 October 1794 in the Land van Maas en Waal region of the Netherlands during the Flanders campaign of the War of the First Coalition against Revolutionary France.

The battle took place in three different locations between French troops under the command of general Jean-Charles Pichegru and Coalition forces. The latter, the Allies, consisted of troops from Great Britain and a French Armée des émigrés force under the Prince of Rohan. They were led by the British commander-in-chief, Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany.

The Allies had fortified themselves in outposts behind the Oude Wetering canal and the dykes of the Maas and Waal rivers. On 18 October 1794, the French crossed the Maas from Teeffelen (near Lithoijen) to Alphen.[1] On 19 October, they attacked the Coalition outposts in three locations: near Appeltern (Blauwe Sluis), Altforst and the Waal dyke near Druten (Puiflijk).

At Blauwe Sluis, the forces of Rohan were pushed back after heavy fighting. In this action, 19 Emigrants were captured. They were brought before a French military court in Ravenstein 21 October 1794, where they were condemned to death and executed for 'treason'. The English forces were driven back in great disorder; in the action on the Waal dyke, the standard of the 37th English infantry regiment was captured by the Sans-culottes.

  1. ^ Jan van Hulst, Evert K. Kam (1996). "Dagboek van Nijmegen 1794-1795". Mark van Loon/Stichting Noviomagus. Retrieved 27 January 2020.

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