Battle of Handschuhsheim

Battle of Handschuhsheim
Part of the War of the First Coalition

Battle of Handschuhsheim, aquatint by Friedrich Rottman (1795)
Date24 September 1795
Location49°25′44″N 8°41′13″E / 49.42889°N 8.68694°E / 49.42889; 8.68694
Result Austrian victory
Belligerents
France French Republic Habsburg monarchy Habsburg Austria
Commanders and leaders
France Georges Dufour  (POW)  (WIA) Habsburg monarchy Peter Quosdanovich
Units involved
France Army of Rhin-et-Moselle, 6th & 7th Divisions Habsburg monarchy Army of Lower Rhine
Strength
12,000 8,000
Casualties and losses
1,500, 8 guns 187

The Battle of Handschuhsheim or Battle of Heidelberg (24 September 1795) saw an 8,000-man force from Habsburg Austria under Peter Vitus von Quosdanovich face 12,000 men from the Republican French army led by Georges Joseph Dufour. Thanks to a devastating cavalry charge, the Austrians routed the French with disproportionate losses. The fight occurred during the War of the First Coalition, part of the French Revolutionary Wars. Handschuhsheim is now a district of Heidelberg, but it was a village north of the city in 1795.

In early 1795 many of France's enemies made peace, leaving only Austria and Great Britain in opposition. In September, the French government ordered the armies of Jean-Charles Pichegru and Jean-Baptiste Jourdan to attack the Austrian armies on the Rhine River. The French scored early successes, capturing two key cities and crossing the river in force. Pichegru sent two divisions to seize the Austrian supply base at Heidelberg, but his troops were bloodily repulsed at Handshuhsheim. Afterward, the Austrian commander François Sébastien Charles Joseph de Croix, Count of Clerfayt turned on Jourdan's army, driving it back across the Rhine. The Austrians later won the battles of Mainz, Pfeddersheim and Mannheim, forcing the French armies back onto the west bank of the Rhine.