Battle of Höchstädt (1800)

The Battle of Höchstädt was fought on 19 June 1800 on the north bank of the Danube near Höchstädt, and resulted in a French victory under General Jean Victor Marie Moreau against the Austrians under Baron Pál Kray. The Austrians were subsequently forced back into the fortress town of Ulm. Instead of attacking the heavily fortified, walled city, which would result in massive losses of personnel and time, Moreau dislodged Kray's supporting forces defending the Danube passage further east. As a line of retreat eastward disappeared, Kray quickly abandoned Ulm, and withdrew into Bavaria. This opened the Danube pathway toward Vienna.

Battle of Höchstädt
Part of the War of the Second Coalition

Battle of Höchstädt by Hippolyte Lecomte, 1838
Date19 June 1800
Location
Höchstädt, and surrounding villages of Blindheim, Dillingen, and Donauwörth, in present day Germany
48°36′0″N 10°33′0″E
Result French victory
Belligerents
France Austria
Commanders and leaders
Jean Victor Marie Moreau Pál Kray
Strength
60,000 30,000
Casualties and losses
approximately 2,000 5,000 dead, wounded and captured
War of the Second Coalition:
Austria
200km
125miles
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
Zurich
6
5
4
3
2
1
The color black indicates the current battle.

The Danube passage connecting Ulm, Donauwörth, Ingolstadt and Regensburg had strategic importance in the ongoing competition for European hegemony between France and the Holy Roman Empire; the army that commanded the Danube, especially its passage through Württemberg and Bavaria, could command access to the important cities of Munich and the seat of Habsburg authority: Vienna. The result of the battle was the opposite of what had occurred on those same fields in 1704 during the War of the Spanish Succession, when the Second Battle of Höchstädt had ensured the safety of Vienna and opened the pathway into France for the allied English and Austrian forces.

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