Battle of Helsingborg

Battle of Helsingborg
Part of the Great Northern War

German engraving depicting the battle. (Military Archives of Sweden)
Date10 March 1710
Location
Result Swedish victory
Territorial
changes
Denmark evacuates Scania
Belligerents
Swedish Empire Denmark–Norway
Commanders and leaders
Magnus Stenbock Jørgen Rantzau
Strength
14,000[1] 14,000[1]
Casualties and losses
2,995 killed and wounded[1] 5,000 killed and wounded
2,677 captured[1]

The Battle of Helsingborg was the last major engagement of the Great Northern War to take place on Swedish soil. It resulted in a decisive victory of a Swedish force of 14,000 men under the command of Magnus Stenbock against a Danish force of equal strength under the command of Jørgen Rantzau, ensuring that Denmark's final effort to regain the Scanian territories that it had lost to Sweden in 1658 failed. The battle was fought on 10 March 1710 in the province of Scania, just outside the city of Helsingborg, and directly on the Ringstorp heights just north-east of the city.[1][2][3]

Denmark–Norway had been forced out of the Great Northern War by the Treaty of Traventhal in 1700, but had long planned on reopening hostilities with the goal of reconquering the lost provinces of Scania, Halland and Blekinge. After the Swedish defeat at Poltava in 1709, the Danes saw an opportunity and declared war on Sweden the same year. The declaration of war arrived at the Swedish state council on 18 October 1709. The pretext given was that Sweden had been intentionally trying to avoid paying the Sound Dues, and that the population of Scania, Halland, Blekinge and Bohuslän had been mistreated by the Swedish.[1]

In January 1710, the Danish invasion force defeated a smaller Swedish force outside Kristianstad in a small skirmish. On 10 March 1710 the Danish force finally engaged the Swedish army, which had been hastily drafted from the surrounding regions to try to resist the Danes. The Swedish cavalry carried the day during the engagement, with the Danish lines crumbling and retreating under repeated charges. The battle proved to be a total rout for the Danes, with more than half of their force killed, wounded or captured. The battle ended any hopes for the Scanian territories to return to Danish rule, and the territories became a permanent part of Sweden.[1][2][3]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Svenska slagfält, Lars Ericson, Martin Hårdstedt, Per Iko, Ingvar Sjöblom och Gunnar Åselius, Wahlström & Widstrand 2003, ISBN 91-46-21087-3.
  2. ^ a b Marklund (2008), pp. 206−208
  3. ^ a b Eriksson (2007), pp. 205−209