8 August 1640: The Irishman Colonel Owen
Roe O'Neill, defending the City of Arras against the French Army of Louis XIV
ordered a sortie against the besiegers. The Irish Leader knew that the French
had been resupplied and that the attack on the eastern section of the town's
fortifications was dangerously close to being launched. It was in this
desperate fight that the famous playwright and duellist Cyrano de Bergerac was
injured by a sword-cut to the neck.
The Siege had begun when the French had
invested Arras on June 13th with a vast force of 23,000 infantry and 9,000
cavalry. Maréchal de Châtillon and Maréchal de La Meilleraye commanded them.
The French dug extensive lines around the town, including a number of forts
and a large fortified camp to the south.
The besiegers were hampered by the nature
of the ground surrounding the fortress – one of numerous waterways which made
communication difficult.
The siege was very important to both sides
as Arras represented one of the most important fortified places under Spanish
rule in Artois - King Louis XIII himself
joined the besieging army and Cardinal Richelieu had written to the marshals
that:
You
will answer with your heads if you do not take Arras.
But the French pressed ahead and beat off
Spanish attempts to cut their supply lines. The trenches drew ever closer to
the fortress. Despite taking the French by surprise O’Neill’s attack was at length beaten back within the walls.
O’Neill had done all that was required of him and he had held a vastly superior
force at bay for far longer than was expected. The following day he asked for
terms. His epic defence won the admiration of friend and foe alike. The
following year he returned home to partake in an uprising against English Rule.
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