Battle of Rocquencourt

Battle of Rocquencourt
Part of the Napoleonic Wars (Seventh Coalition 1815)

Combats de Rocquencourt
Date1 July 1815
Location48°49′16″N 2°07′52″E / 48.8211°N 2.1311°E / 48.8211; 2.1311
Result French victory
Belligerents
First French Empire French Empire Kingdom of Prussia Kingdom of Prussia
Commanders and leaders
First French Empire Louis-Nicolas Davout
First French Empire Rémi Joseph Isidore Exelmans
Kingdom of Prussia Eston von Sohr (POW)
Strength
3,000 blocking cavalry
1 cavalry division
three infantry battalions(from the 33rd Regiment)[1]
600–700 officers and light cavalry troopers[2]
Casualties and losses
Unknown 10 officers and 400–500 troopers[2]

The Battle of Rocquencourt was a cavalry skirmish fought on 1 July 1815 in and around the villages of Rocquencourt and Le Chesnay. French dragoons supported by infantry and commanded by General Exelmans destroyed a Prussian brigade of hussars under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Eston von Sohr (who was severely wounded and taken prisoner during the skirmish).

Prussian cavalry detachment under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Sohr ventured too far in advance of the main body of the Prussian army with the intention of reaching the Orléans road from Paris; where his detachment was to interrupt traffic on the road, and increase the confusion already produced in that quarter by the fugitives from the capital. However, when the Prussian detachment was in the vicinity of Rocquencourt it was ambushed by a superior French force. Under attack the Prussians retreated from Versailles and headed east, but were blocked by the French at Vélizy. They failed to re-enter Versailles and headed for Saint-Germain-en-Laye. Their first squadron came under fire at the entrance of Rocquencourt and attempted to escape through the fields. They were forced into a small, narrow street in Le Chesnay and killed or captured. Just before nightfall the same day, the advanced guard of the Prussian III Corps, having heard of the destruction of Sohr's detachment, succeeded in recapturing Rocquencourt and bivouacked there.

  1. ^ Siborne 1848, pp. 741–742.
  2. ^ a b Siborne 1848, p. 744.

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