Siege of Toul | |||||||
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Part of the Franco-Prussian War | |||||||
Monuments aux morts in Toul for the dead of the 1870 conflict. French monument, designed by Jules Adeline, inaugurated in 1875. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Bavaria Württemberg |
French Republic | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Frederick Francis II Gustav von Alvensleben | Major Huck | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
up to 13,000 soldiers 104 guns and howitzers[1] |
2,375 men 71 fortress guns | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
232 men
|
2,375 men
20 civilians wounded 71 fortress guns captured 3 barracks destroyed Stores and supplies captured |
The siege of Toul was the siege of the fortified French town of Toul from 16 August to 23 September 1870 by Prussian, Bavarian and Württemberg forces during the Franco-Prussian War. Toul controlled a railway line leading to Germany and it was vital for the Germans to secure it to resupply and reinforce their armies in northern France.
An attempt to seize the fortress on 16 August failed with heavy losses for the Germans. After a blockade of 37 days, the German siege artillery opened fire with 62 guns and howitzers at 0530 on 23 September and the fortress surrendered at 1530. The Germans captured 2,349 French soldiers and 71 fortress guns along with considerable stores of supplies and pushed the German railway terminus in France closer to the German forces besieging Paris.