Siege of Neuss
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| Siege of Neuss | |||||||
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| Part of the Burgundian Wars | |||||||
The Siege of Neuss, from Geschichte Peter Hagenbachs und der Burgunderkriege (1477) by Konrad Pfettisheim | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
| Burgundian StateElectorate of CologneElectorate of the PalatinateDuchy of GueldersDuchy of Cleves–MarkDuchy of Jülich-BergSavoyard mercenariesEnglish archers | Imperial City of CologneaImperial army | ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Charles the Bold, Duke of BurgundyFrederick I, Elector PalatineGerhard VII, Duke of Jülich-Berg |
Herman of Hesse, Administrator of CologneFrederick III, Holy Roman Emperor | ||||||
| a: Cologne had been effectively independent of the Archbishopric-Electorate since the Battle of Worringen in 1288, but did not become de jure independent until granted Imperial immediacy in the aftermath of this siege. | |||||||
The siege of Neuss, from 1474–75,[1] was linked to the Cologne Diocesan Feud and part of the Burgundian Wars. The siege, led by Charles the Bold against the Imperial City of Neuss, was unsuccessful. Charles was compelled by the approach of a powerful Imperial army to raise the siege.
Under Charles's father, Philip the Good, Burgundy had allied itself to the cause of the newly-elected Archbishop of Cologne, Ruprecht. Ruprecht proved immensely unpopular, and by 1471, several major towns in the archbishopric, as well as the Kölners themselves, were on the verge of revolt. Attempts by the Emperor Frederick III to mediate the conflict failed, and in 1474 Charles the Bold signed a treaty with Ruprecht which stipulated that Charles would subdue the rebels and serve as Ruprecht's lifelong protector in return for 200,000 florins a year. To secure his western border, Charles concluded a treaty with Louis XI of France and then prepared to march into the Rhine valley; contemporaries suspected his real motive was the eventual reconquest of all of Alsace.