Siege of Ath (1697)

Siege of Ath (1697)
Part of the Nine Years' War

Engraved map of the siege of Ath in 1697
DateInvestment:
16 May 1697 – 5 June 1697
(2 weeks and 6 days)
Siege:
22 May 1697 – 5 June 1697
(2 weeks)
Location50°37′01″N 3°46′01″E / 50.617°N 3.767°E / 50.617; 3.767
Result French victory
Belligerents
 France  Holy Roman Empire
 Spain
 Dutch Republic
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of France Marquis de Vauban
Kingdom of France Nicolas Catinat
Holy Roman Empire Comte de Roeux
Holy Roman Empire Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst
Strength
40,000 men
20,000 civilian laborers
34 siege guns
39 other guns
41 smaller artillery pieces
3,850 men
32 artillery pieces
Casualties and losses
200 killed and wounded[1] 3,700 killed, wounded and captured
32 artillery pieces captured[1]

The siege of Ath (15 May 1697 – 5 June 1697) was a siege of the Nine Years' War. The French stockpiled 266,000 French pounds of gunpowder for the siege and used less than half of it. Consumption of other material amounted to 34,000 pounds of lead, 27,050 cannonballs, 3,400 mortar bombs, 950 grenades and 12,000 sandbags. The financial costs were 89,250 French livres. After the garrison's capitulation, 6,000 peasant workers filled up the trenches. Of the 62 French engineers present, two were killed and seven seriously wounded. This demonstration of French military potency, combined with the successful storming of Barcelona the same year, convinced the Allies to come to terms with France in the treaty of Ryswick, thus ending the war.[1][2]

The siege was hailed by contemporaries as Vauban's masterpiece and the most efficient siege ever conducted, owing to its speed, low costs and the modernity of the eight-bastion fortress, which had been designed by Vauban himself 25 years earlier.[3]

  1. ^ a b c Bodart 1908, p. 121.
  2. ^ Ostwald 2006, p. 36.
  3. ^ Ostwald 2006, p. 37.