Capture of Breda (1581) by Claude de Berlaymont, lord of Castle Haultepenne (no real siege, but an urban fight, also known as "The Haultepenne Fury")
Capture of Breda (1590) by Maurice of Orange (no real siege, but an urban fight)
Siege of Breda (1624) by Ambrogio Spinola (painted by Velázquez in The Surrender of Breda)
Siege of Breda (1637) by Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange
Siege of Breda (1793) by François Joseph Westermann during the War of the First Coalition
Siege of Breda (1813) by François Roguet and Charles Lefebvre-Desnouettes
Topics referred to by the same term
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Siege of Breda. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Breda (/ˈbreɪdə/ BRAY-də, also UK: /ˈbriːdə/ BREE-də, US: /breɪˈdɑː/ bray-DAH, Dutch: [breːˈdaː] ) is a city and municipality in the southern part of...
Spanish Army and fight in the war against Dutch rebels, in particular the siegeofBreda. El oro del Rey (The King's Gold, 2000): Seville, 1626. After their...
victory of his career, the capture ofBreda. Success came after a long siege (28 August 1624 – 5 June 1625), in spite of the objections of Philip IV of Spain...
declaration by Charles II of England paving the way for the English Restoration SiegeofBreda (disambiguation) The Surrender ofBreda, a painting by Diego...
of King James VI and I and Anne of Denmark. Maurice was present with his elder brother, Rupert, at the siegeofBreda in 1637. He then accompanied Rupert...
conclusion of the campaign he joined the ranks of the Holy Roman army, departing for the Netherlands where he participated in Spinola's SiegeofBreda in 1624...
Mansfeld and his army of "raw and poor rascals" sailed from Dover to the Netherlands before failing to relieve the siegeofBreda. Later in the year, the...
He travelled through territories of today's Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, where he admired the siegeofBreda by Spanish forces, France, Switzerland...
1621 onwards, finally retaking Breda after a famous siege in 1624. The cost of this siege, however, was far in excess of Spain's resources, and the Army...
he led the SiegeofBreda, also known as the Haultepenne's Fury. Breda had been in the hands of William of Orange since the Pacification of Ghent in 1576...