Battle of Limburg

The Battle of Limburg or Second Battle of Altenkirchen (16–19 September 1796) saw a Habsburg Austrian army commanded by Archduke Charles, Duke of Teschen attack a Republican French army led by Jean Baptiste Jourdan in its positions behind the Lahn River. The unexpected collapse of their right flank on the evening of the 16th compelled the French to make a three-day fighting withdrawal. The action occurred during the War of the First Coalition, part of a wider conflict known as the Wars of the French Revolution. Limburg an der Lahn is located in the state of Hesse in Germany about 50 km east of Koblenz.

Two French armies were initially successful in the Rhine Campaign of 1796, penetrating far into southern Germany. However, Archduke Charles defeated Jourdan's army at Amberg and Würzburg in the late summer, forcing the French to retreat to the Lahn. On the 16th, Charles launched an attack at Giessen on Jourdan's left flank, but his main assault was intended to crack the French center at Limburg an der Lahn. Though both Austrian thrusts stalled, Jourdan was forced to withdraw when the French right flank commander panicked and ordered his troops to fall back. During the next three days the French center made a fighting retreat back to Altenkirchen so Jourdan's left flank troops could escape. During the various combats, French division commanders François Séverin Marceau-Desgraviers and Jacques Philippe Bonnaud were fatally wounded. After the battle Jourdan pulled most of his army back to the west bank of the Rhine, ending the campaign in the north. Leaving Franz von Werneck with a reduced army to watch the French, Charles moved south, hoping to cut off the second French army under Jean Victor Marie Moreau.