Mutiny of Hoogstraten

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Date1 September 1602 – 18 May 1604
Coordinates51°23′59″N 4°46′00″E / 51.3997°N 4.7667°E / 51.3997; 4.7667
Also known asthe Union of Hoogstraten
Mutiny of Hoogstraten
Date1 September 1602 – 18 May 1604
LocationHoogstraten, Habsburg Netherlands
Coordinates51°23′59″N 4°46′00″E / 51.3997°N 4.7667°E / 51.3997; 4.7667
Also known asthe Union of Hoogstraten
Causearrears of pay
Participantssoldiers of the Army of Flanders

The Mutiny of Hoogstraten (1 September 1602 – 18 May 1604) was the longest mutiny by soldiers of the Army of Flanders during the Eighty Years' War.[1] Frederick Van den Berg's attempt to end the mutiny by force, with a siege to recapture the town, ended in defeat at the hands of an Anglo-Dutch army under of Maurice of Nassau. After a period of nearly three years the mutineers were able either to join Maurice's army or rejoin the Spanish army after a pardon had been ratified.[2]

Maurice of Nassau had been actively campaigning against the Habsburg armies in the Southern Netherlands and took full advantage of Archduke Albert of Austria's preoccupation with the Siege of Ostend to capture several towns with royal garrisons in the Northern Netherlands.[3]

Maurice in his first objective successfully besieged and retook Rheinberg in July 1601. Between July and September 1602 the Spanish-held town of Grave was besieged and captured by the Dutch and English army led by Maurice and Francis Vere respectively.[4]

Mutiny and siege

Aftermath

References

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