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  2. Siege of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Soissons

    Soissons had already fallen to the Prussians in 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars. [5] After the Battle of Sedan, the Maas Group of Germany has continued on in its way to Paris, and the money infantry of Corps No. IV of Prussia, a portion of the general Army Group, this came before the siege of the fortress Soissons on September 11, 1870.

  3. Battle of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Soissons

    Battle of Soissons (718), between the Neustrians with the Aquitainians against the Austrasians; Battle of Soissons (923), between Carolingians and Robertians during a succession war; Battle of Soissons (1814), Napoleonic Wars; Siege of Soissons (1870), Franco-Prussian War; Battle of Soissons (1918), World War I, between French-American and ...

  4. List of Hundred Years' War battles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hundred_Years'_War...

    1415 Siege of Harfleur: England 1415 Battle of Agincourt: England 25 October, English longbowmen under Henry V defeat French under Charles I d'Albret. 6000 French died. 400 English died. 1418–1419 Siege of Rouen: England 31 July - 19 January 1419, Henry V of England re-gains a foothold in Normandy. 1419 Battle of La Rochelle: Castille

  5. Counts of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counts_of_Soissons

    This is a list of those who bore the title Count of Soissons (French: Comte de Soissons) and ruled Soissons and its civitas or diocese as a county in the Middle Ages. The title continued in use into modern times , but without ties to the actual Soissonnais.

  6. Siege of Compiègne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Compiègne

    The siege is perhaps best known for Joan of Arc's capture by Burgundian troops while accompanying an Armagnac force during a skirmish outside the town on 23 May 1430. Although this was otherwise a minor siege, both politically and militarily, and ultimately ended in a defeat for the Burgundians, the capture of Joan of Arc was an important event ...

  7. Kingdom of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Soissons

    The Kingdom or Domain of Soissons is the historiographical name [2] for the de facto independent Roman [3] remnant of the Diocese of Gaul, which existed during late antiquity as a rump state of the Western Roman Empire until its conquest by the Franks in AD 486. Its capital was at Noviodunum, today the town of Soissons in France.

  8. Hundred Years' War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hundred_Years'_War

    The Siege of Orléans (1429) made English aspirations for conquest all but infeasible. Despite Joan's capture by the Burgundians and her subsequent execution (1431), a series of crushing French victories concluded the siege, favoring the Valois dynasty. Notably, Patay (1429), Formigny (1450), and Castillon (1453) proved decisive in ending the war.

  9. Battle of La Marfée - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_La_Marfée

    Soissons and Bouillon left Sedan on 5 July with 3,000 French volunteers and Walloon mercenaries, taking position around the village of La Marfée, where they were joined by Lamboy. The Spanish infantry deployed in a nearby wood under Lamboy, with Bouillon's cavalry on flat ground to their left, and Soissons with the reserve. [11]