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Lost Burgundy - The Battle of Nancy Sunday 5th January 1477- By Pierre the Shy Despite the disasters of 1476 Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, remained confident that 1477 would bring an upturn in the fortunes of his beloved Burgundy. From the accounts of the siege of Nancy it is obvious that not all his followers shared such optimism, as it is recorded that one Burgundian noble was hanged for treason after suggesting that the Duke should be loaded into a bombard and fired into Nancy.
By late December Rene had gathered some 10-12,000 men from Lorraine, and the Lower Union (of the Rhine) as well as 10,000 Confederation Swiss mercenaries to his banner. He began his advance on Nancy early in January 1477, moving cautiously through the snow-covered landscape until they reached Nancy early on the morning of the 5th January. Charles finally learnt that Rene's army was indeed close by and drew up the bulk of his army in a strong defensive position south of Nancy on a heavily wooded slope behind a stream at the narrowest part of the valley he knew the Swiss would have to advance down. The exact numbers available to Charles are hard to judge, but contemporary observers put the numbers between 4,000 and 8,000, though even his household troops were by this stage well below strength, while most of the Ordonnance companies were at best at 50% of their theoretical strength. Charles as usual deployed his troops to a precise battle plan despite the short notice he received of the approach of Rene's forces. The infantry companies and dismounted gendarmes formed up in a large square formation with some 30 field guns in front at the top of the slope, while on either flank were mounted knights and coustilliers. If Charles suffered from a lack of scouting (which had cost him so dearly at Murten six months earlier) the same could not be said for the Allied army. Despite the driving snow cutting visibility to a few yards the Allied scouts soon recognised that a frontal assault on the Burgundian position would be disastrous, so the largely Swiss Vorhut (Vanguard) of 7,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry was instructed to attack from the right while the principal thrust would come from the 8,000 infantry and 1,300 cavalry of the Gewalthut (Centre) which was dispatched on a difficult circuitous march round the left flank over thickly wooded snow covered slopes out of view of the waiting Burgundians. The small Nachhut (Rearguard) of 800 handgunners acted as a reserve.
Determined to the last, Charles and his staff tried in vain to
rally the broken army, but without success. His small band was
carried with the flight until eventually surrounded by a party of
Swiss. A halberdier quickly swung at the Duke's head and
landed a deadly blow directly on his helm. He was seen to fall
but the battle flowed on around him. It was three days till the
Duke's disfigured body was finally found and positively
identified amongst the detritus of the slaughter. So passed the
last of the Valois Dukes of Burgundy…but at least on the
tabletop the OTA lives on!
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