×
Showing results for wiki/Siege of Mainz(1793)
Search instead for wiki/Siege_of_Mainz_(1793)
In the siege of Mainz (German: Belagerung von Mainz), from 14 April to 23 July 1793, a coalition of Prussia, Austria, and other German states led by the ...
Siege of Mainz (1793), a siege by the armies of the First Coalition, recapture by the French and major destruction to the city architecture; Battle of Mainz, a ...
The siege of Mainz was a short engagement at the beginning of the War of the First Coalition. The victorious French army of Custine seized the town on ...
People also ask
In 1793, the French soldiers captured in the Siege of Mainz were paroled by the Prussians with the promise not to fight against the First Coalition for one year ...
Siege of 1793. The Siege of Mainz may refer to: 952 Liudolf rising: Otto I besieged Liudolf and Conrad in Mainz for 2 months; 25–27 May 1096 Emicho and his ...
Nov 2, 2023 · Wikipedia ; Wikipedia · siege · War of the First Coalition · Mainz, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
1793 siege during the War of the First Coalition.
March – July 1793 ; Status, Client state of France ; Capital, Mainz ; Government, Revolutionary republic ; Historical era, French Revolutionary Wars.
In the siege of Mainz (German: Belagerung von Mainz), from 14 April to 23 July 1793, a coalition of Prussia, Austria, and other German states led by the ...
Mainz is the capital and largest city of the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, and with around 221,000 inhabitants, it is Germany's 35th-largest city.