Siege of Lincoln

53°14′04″N 0°32′19″W / 53.2344°N 0.5386°W / 53.2344; -0.5386

Siege of Lincoln
Part of the First English Civil War

Royalist garrison commander, Sir Francis Fane
Date3 - 6 May 1644
Location
Result Parliamentarian victory
Belligerents
Royalists Kingdom of England Parliamentarians
Commanders and leaders
Sir Francis Fane  Surrendered
Charles Dallison  Surrendered
Earl of Manchester
Oliver Cromwell
Strength
2,000 foot 6,000 foot and horse
Casualties and losses
50 killed
750-900 captured
8 killed
40 wounded

The siege of Lincoln took place from 3 to 6 May 1644 during the First English Civil War, when the important town of Lincoln was besieged by Parliamentarian forces under the Earl of Manchester. On the first day, the Parliamentarians took the lower town. The Royalist defenders retreated into the stronger fortifications of the upper town, which encompassed and incorporated Lincoln Castle and Lincoln Cathedral. The siege ended four days later when the Parliamentarian soldiers stormed the castle, taking prisoner the Royalist governor, Sir Francis Fane, and what remained of his garrison.


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