The village of Erquelinnes (shown in 2009) was the scene of fighting on 21 and 24 May 1794.
Date
24 May 1794
Location
Erquelinnes, Belgium
Result
Austro-Dutch victory
Belligerents
Habsburg Austria Dutch Republic
First French Republic
Commanders and leaders
Graf von Kaunitz
Jacques Desjardin Louis Charbonnier
Strength
24,000
30,000–50,000
Casualties and losses
611–650
3,000–5,400, 25–32 guns 40 wagons, 3 colors
v
t
e
Flanders campaign
Jemappes
1st Limburg
Anderlecht
Namur
1st Maastricht
Breda
1st Aldenhoven
Neerwinden
1st Condé
Raismes
Famars
1st Valenciennes
Caesar's Camp
Lincelles
Dunkirk
1st Le Quesnoy
Hondschoote
Avesnes-le-Sec
Menin
1st Courtrai
Maubeuge
Wattignies
Cysoing (1793)
Marchiennes (1793)
Le Cateau
Battle of Vaux (1794)
1st Landrecies
Villers-en-Cauchies
Beaumont
Mouscron
Willems
2nd Courtrai
Grandreng
Tourcoing
Tournay
Erquelinnes
Gosselies
Ypres
Lambusart
Fleurus
2nd Landrecies [fr]
2nd Le Quesnoy [fr]
2nd Valenciennes [fr]
2nd Condé [fr]
Boxtel
Sprimont
2nd Maastricht
2nd Aldenhoven
Puiflijk
Nijmegen
Luxembourg
Geldermalsen
Amsterdam
Den Helder
v
t
e
War of the First Coalition (List)
Porrentruy
Quiévrain
Marquain
Tuileries
Verdun
Thionville
Valmy
Lille
Mainz
Jemappes
Sardinia
Martinique
Guadeloupe
Den Helder
Siegburg
Altenkirchen
Wetzlar
Kircheib
1st Kehl
Malsch
Neresheim
Amberg
Newfoundland
Würzburg
Limburg
2nd Kehl
Biberach
Ireland
Fishguard
Neuwied
Diersheim
Flanders campaign
Chouannerie
Mediterranean campaign
War in the Vendée
War of the Pyrenees
Italian campaigns
East Indies Theatre
Rhine campaign of 1793–94
Atlantic campaign
Rhine campaign of 1795
Rhine campaign of 1796
Anglo-Spanish War
Jacques DesjardinFranz von Kaunitz
The Battle of Erquelinnes or Battle of Péchant[1] (24 May 1794) was part of the Flanders Campaign during the War of the First Coalition, and saw a Republican French army jointly led by Jacques Desjardin and Louis Charbonnier try to defend a bridgehead on the north bank of the Sambre River against a combined Habsburg Austrian and Dutch army led by Franz Wenzel, Graf von Kaunitz-Rietberg. The French crossed the Sambre on the 20th and held their positions for a few days. On the 24th Kaunitz launched an early-morning surprise attack that routed the French. The War of the First Coalition combat represented the second of five French attempts to gain a foothold on the north bank of the Sambre. Erquelinnes is a village in Belgium directly on the border with France. It is situated about 30 kilometres (19 mi) southwest of Charleroi.
Jean-Charles Pichegru, the top French military commander in the north formed a mass of 60,000 troops by joining Desjardin's three-division right wing of the Army of the North to Charbonnier's two-division Army of the Ardennes. Without a single leader to control the force, Desjardin's troops were beaten by Kaunitz at Grand-Reng on 13 May while Charbonnier's men stood idle nearby. On the 20th, the combined force recrossed the Sambre and repelled Kaunitz's attempt to dislodge them on the 21st. Again there were command problems when Desjardin missed an opportunity because he could not issue orders to one of Charbonnier's divisions. After two days of hesitation, the French sent 15,000 men under Jean Baptiste Kléber north on a raid to seize Nivelles. Kaunitz's sudden assault on 24 May overwhelmed his foes' defenses and the French were saved from catastrophic losses when Kléber turned back and marched to the rescue. Desjardin and Charbonnier would try again but suffer a third defeat at Gosselies on 3 June. After that a new general would try a fourth time at Lambusart on 16 June before achieving success at Fleurus on 26 June.
^Smith, Digby (1998). The Napoleonic Wars Data Book. London: Greenhill. p. 81. ISBN 1-85367-276-9. This source gave the two names of the battle.
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