*** Welcome to piglix ***

Battle of Colberger Heide

Battle of Colberger (Kolberger) Heide
Part of the Torstenson War
(a theatre of the Thirty Years' War)
Christian IV by Vilhelm Marstrand.png
Christian IV of Denmark, Battle of Kolberg Heath, by Vilhelm Marstrand
Date 1 July 1644
Location Off the coast of Schleswig-Holstein
Result Indecisive, minor Dano-Norwegian success in the subsequent manoeuvers
Belligerents
Denmark Denmark-Norway Sweden Sweden
Commanders and leaders
Jørgen Vind 
Assisted by Grabow and
King Christian IV
Fleming
Assisted by Ulfsparre and
Bjelkenstjerna
Strength
40 ships
924 cannon
4,496 men
43 ships
1,036 cannon
5,818 men
Casualties and losses
37 killed
170 wounded
32 killed
69 wounded

The naval Battle of Colberger Heide (also Kolberger Heide or Colberg Heath) took place on 1 July 1644 during the Torstenson War, off the coast of Schleswig-Holstein. The battle was indecisive, but a minor success for the Dano-Norwegian fleet commanded by Jørgen Vind, assisted by Grabow and King Christian IV, over a Swedish fleet commanded by Klas Fleming, assisted by Ulfsparre and Bjelkenstjerna.

The Dano-Norwegian fleet consisted of 40 ships with about 927 guns, and the Swedish fleet consisted of 34 ships with 1018 guns and 7 fireships.

The Dano-Norwegian fleet, coming from the east, and the Swedish fleet, coming from the west, met just north of the island of Fehmarn (Femern). The Swedes turned and sailed south along the west side of Fehmarn, inshore of a shoal, while the Danes followed a little further offshore. The Swedes turned north and swung around before resuming their westward course alongside the Danes. As the battle progressed the fleets turned before the wind, north and then back east south of the island of Langeland. As they approached the island of Lolland the Swedes turned south and eventually ended up in Kiel Bay while the Danes continued south-east, anchoring to the east of Fehmarn.

Neither side had lost a ship. Dano-Norwegian casualties were 37 killed and 170 wounded, and Swedish casualties were 32 killed and 69 wounded. Among the Dano-Norwegian casualties were commander Jørgen Vind, who died of his wounds soon after the battle, and the king, whose wounds included the loss of an eye.

While the Dano-Norwegian fleet gained a minor success when it subsequently managed to incarcerate the Swedish fleet at the Bay of Kiel, the battle was not decisive: in a subsequent encounter, the Dano-Norwegian navy was utterly defeated off the Fehmarn coast. The significance of the battle lies rather in it being retrospectively perceived as the last Dano-Norwegian victory over her long-time adversary, Sweden, in the two countries' struggle for control of the dominium maris baltici, as well as the heroization of the Dano-Norwegian king's personal commitment during the battle, memorized in the famous Marstrand painting and the first lines of the Danish royal anthym Kong Christian stod ved højen mast.


...
Wikipedia

...