Amiens War (Merveilles des Morte)

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Amiens War
File:War of Affirmation (Sacred Accord).jpg
Charles IV rallies the French army at Lens, a Romantic
19th century work by Alexandre-Évariste Fragonard
(Galerie des Batailles, Palace of Versailles)
Date25 February 1547 - 5 June 1551
Location
Lotharingia, Lorraine, Rhineland
Result

French Victory

  • Outbreak of French-Burgundian War and Foix's Rebellion in France
  • Habsburg dominance over Alsace League
  • Beginning of Imperial Civil War
Territorial
changes
Amiens, Artois, Barrois annexed to France; Lorraine annexed to Metz and Arles
Belligerents

Pavillon royal de la France.svg France

Supported by:
Flag of Bohemia.svg Bohemia


Dkpq27b2wwf31.png Arles-Burgundy
Metz flag.svg Messin Republic
Flag of Austria.svg Habsburg
File:800px-Flag of Alsace historical.png Alsace League (-1550)
Flag of England.svg Trier (-1550)

Flag of Franche-Comté.svg Palatine of Burgundy

File:Flag Brabant-Lotharingia V1.2.png Lotharingia
Royal Standard of England (1406-1603).svg Kingdom of England
Banner of the Palatinate.svg Palatine of the Rhine
File:800px-Flag of Alsace historical.png Alsace League (1550-)
Flag of England.svg Trier (1550-)
Metz flag.svg Messin Republic (1550-)

Supported by:

Flag of Crown of Aragon.png Spain
Commanders and leaders

Pavillon royal de la France.svg Charles IV
Pavillon royal de la France.svg Raphael Hytholoday
Pavillon royal de la France.svg Duke of Sully
Pavillon royal de la France.svg Jean Parisot de Valette
Dkpq27b2wwf31.png Louis II
Dkpq27b2wwf31.png Hugh the Fearless
Flag of Austria.svg Leopold II

Flag of Austria.svg Frederick von Habsburg

File:Flag Brabant-Lotharingia V1.2.png Godfried II
File:Flag Brabant-Lotharingia V1.2.png Paul Dekremer
File:Flag Brabant-Lotharingia V1.2.png Ambrosius Bosschaert
File:Flag Brabant-Lotharingia V1.2.png Maarten Tromp
File:Flag Brabant-Lotharingia V1.2.png Adriaen Banckert

Flag of England.svg Philip von Wied

The Amiens War, also known as the Franco-Lotharingian War, or sometimes the Alsace War, refers to multiple concurrent conflicts around the disputed city of Amiens and other border territories in northeast France. Prior to the war the city of Amiens had been claimed by Lotharingia since the 1489 Treaty of Kales, however, this was disputed by France as well as the Kingdom of Arles-Burgundy. After negotiations failed, in 1547 Arles invaded southern Lotharingia, and was joined by the Duchy of Habsburg and the Messin Republic. As a third claimant to Amiens, France under Charles IV invaded Lotharingia the following year, creating a second theatre to the conflict around Artois.

Although both invasions proved initially successful, capturing their intended goals and more, both France and Arles would experience several setbacks over the course of the war. Infighting with Arles' alliance and careful diplomacy from Lotharingia managed to turn the largely Jungist Alsace League, led by the Archbishopric of Trier, away from the leadership of the Catholic Habsburgs. France would become plagued with sectarian violence in the south of the nation, at the instigation of Spain, while Lotharingian and English fleets controlled the seas around France. As both Arles and France sought the territory occupied, conflict between the two co-belligerents proved inevitable.

Despite this, France managed to hold southern Artois against Lotharingian counterattack, negotiating a favorable peace by June 1551. The former allies in the Lorraine region would soon become embroiled in a conflict along religious and political lines, which eventually developed into an imperial civil war in the Holy Roman Empire. The support to France by the French king's brother, Emperor Henry X, as well as his support for an antipope in Zephyrinus II, would be major factors in the election of an antiking in Leopold II, one of the indisputable leaders and beneficiaries of the Amiens War. The war would end with a brief conflict between Arles and France, which ultimately saw Arles retake the territory it captured from Lotharingia, but lose its claim to Amiens, as well as other territories, to the French.

 This article is part of Merveilles des Morte.