Battle of Pleichfeld

Battle of Pleichfeld in 1086. was the last major battle of the Great Saxon Revolt (1077-1088), a nobles' rebellion against the emperor Henry IV in the Holy Roman Empire. The battle was a victory for the rebel forces.[1]

Battle of Pleichfeld
Part of the Great Saxon Revolt

Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor.
DateAugust 11, 1086.
Location
Result Rebel victory
Territorial
changes
Fall of Würzburg to the rebels.
Belligerents
Holy Roman Empire County of Luxemburg
Bavaria
Commanders and leaders
Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor Herman of Luxembourg
Welf I, Duke of Bavaria
Strength
20.000 10.000

Prelude

In their rebellion against the central imperial authority, Herman of Luxembourg and Welf I, Duke of Bavaria laid siege to the imperial city of Würzburg in summer of 1086. In an effort to destroy the center of rebellion and to maintain the unity of the Empire, emperor Henry IV attempted to lift the siege.[2][3]

Battle

Imperial army, numbering about 20.000 (according to unverifiable contemporary accounts), was largely composed of armed peasants and town militia, while rebel forces, numbering some 10.000, had a larger proportion of mounted knights.[1]

Armies met on August 11, 1086. at Pleichfeld, a village 3 km north of Würzburg. Rebel knights dismounted, and charged the enemy on foot. Loyalist army, composed mostly of untrained peasants and armed citizens, broke and fled after the first charge. Their swift defeat was attributed by chroniclers to treason amongst the Emperor's own knights, who accepted a bribery and changed sides in the thick of battle.[1][4]

References

  1. Nikola Gažević, Vojna enciklopedija (knjiga 6), Vojnoizdavački zavod, Beograd (1973), p.699
  2. "Battle of Pleichfeld". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 2020-12-23.
  3. Rogers, Clifford J. (2010). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533403-6.
  4. Robinson, I. S. (2003-12-04). Henry IV of Germany 1056-1106. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-54590-7.

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