Misplaced Pages

Battle of Tistedalen

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Battle of the Swedish–Norwegian War of 1814

Battle of Tistedalen
Part of the Swedish–Norwegian War of 1814

Tistedalen in 1826, by Thomas Fearnley
Date1 August 1814
LocationTistedalen, Norway59°08′N 11°27′E / 59.133°N 11.450°E / 59.133; 11.450
Result Swedish victory
Belligerents
Norway Norway Sweden
Commanders and leaders
Norway Johan Henrik Spørck Pehr Brändström
Strength
400–600 1,500
Casualties and losses
27 killed or wounded
45 captured
3 killed
13 wounded
Swedish–Norwegian War
War of the Sixth Coalition:
Swedish–Norwegian War (1814) About OpenStreetMapsMaps: terms of use 100km
62miles Langnes7Battle of Langnes on 9 August 1814 Rakkestad6Battle of Rakkestad on 6 August 1814 Matrand5Battle of Matrand on 5 August 1814 Fredrikstad4Siege of Fredrikstad on 4 August 1814 Battle of Kjølberg Bridge on 14 August 1814 Lier3Battle of Lier (1814) on 2 August 1814 Tistedalen Hvaler1Invasion of Hvaler on 29 July 1814  The color black indicates the current battle.

The Battle of Tistedalen was a series of skirmishes in the Swedish–Norwegian War of 1814, at Tistedalen, Norway.

Prelude

At July 30, a Swedish army under Hans Henric von Essen crossed the southern Norwegian border (among them the Régiment Royal-Suédois). A small Norwegian force of a couple hundred men, under Johan Henrik Spørck, withdrew to an advantageous position behind the Tista, at Veden, to delay the Swedes long enough for reinforcements to arrive. Essen sent Eberhard von Vegesack to block the Norwegian fortress of Fredriksten, while a smaller force of 1,500 men under Pehr Brändström marched towards Spørck, in an attempt to force the crossing; after receiving some reinforcements, Spørck's army counted between 400 and 600 men.

Battle

At 1 August, Brändström opened up with two cannons to force the Norwegians to retire but without result; instead he ordered a battalion of the Västmanland Regiment to wade over the river opposite the Norwegian left flank, while other units feinted attacks elsewhere. Once across, the Västmanland battalion launched a bayonet attack which, after two hours of fighting, drove the Norwegians away. The Swedes had lost 3 killed and 13 wounded; the Norwegians had over 27 killed and wounded and 45 men captured. Essen reached Torpum the next day and there united his forces with the Swedish Crown Prince Charles John.

Notes

  1. ^ Angell 1914, pp. 264–267.
  2. ^ Götlin 1820, pp. 73–74.
  3. ^ Gravallius 1815, p. 55.

References

  • Götlin, Lars Erik (1820). Anteckningar under Svenska Arméens Fålttåg 1813 och 1814, Volume 3 (in Swedish). Uppsala: Palmblad & C.
  • Gravallius, Daniel Ehrenfried (1815). Kronprinsens af Sverige Carl Johan, fälttåg, åren 1813, 1814 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Direct. och Kongl. Fält-Boktryckaren.
  • Angell, Henrik (1914). Syv-Aars-Krigen for 17. Mai 1807–1814 (in Norwegian). Kristiania: H. Aschehoug & Co.

Further reading

  • Björlin, Gustaf (1893). Kriget i Norge 1814 – efter samtidas vittnesbörd framställdt (in Swedish). Stockholm: P. A. Norstedt & Söners Förlag. pp. 111–114.
Categories: