The siege of Fredriksten (Norwegian: Beleiringen av Fredriksten festning) was an attack on the Norwegian fortress of Fredriksten in the city of Fredrikshald (now Halden) by King Charles XII of Sweden. While inspecting his troops' lines, Charles XII was killed by a projectile. The Swedes broke off the siege, and the Norwegians held the fortress.[2] Along with the Treaty of Nystad three years later, the death of Charles XII marked the end of the imperial era in Sweden, and the beginning of the Age of Liberty (Swedish: Frihetstiden) in that country.[3][4]

Siege of Fredriksten
Part of the Great Northern War

Painting “Bringing Home the Body of King Charles XII” by Gustaf Cederström in 1884
Date30 November 1718
Location
Result Dano–Norwegian victory
Belligerents
Denmark–Norway Swedish Empire
Commanders and leaders
Barthold Landsberg Charles XII 
Strength
1,400[1] 35,000
Casualties and losses
9 killed
10 wounded
19 captured
200 killed and wounded

Background

edit
 
Charles XII of Sweden's uniform, the one he wore when he died at Fredriksen. On display at Livrustkammaren in Stockholm.
 
Carl Gustaf Armfeldt

King Charles XII of Sweden made several campaigns into the city during the Great Northern War (Swedish: Stora nordiska kriget) as part of his campaign to capture Norway. At the close of the Great Northern War, the Norwegian Army had been weakened in early 1716 by withdrawal of 5000 of the best troops to Denmark. When rumors reached Christiania (now Oslo) that Charles XII was preparing to invade, all remaining troops in Østerdal and Gudbrandsdal were ordered to the border at Halden and Fredrikstad. The Norwegians expected Swedish forces to invade at Kongsvinger, Basmo and/or Halden. [5]

It was at Basmo Fortress (Basmo festning) where Charles struck, crossing the border on 8 March 1716. The Norwegian scorched earth policy and guerrilla raid interdiction of supply chains by the residents of Bohuslen deprived Charles of supplies, while the fortresses still held by the Norwegians behind his lines threatened his supply chain. Charles took Christiania (now Oslo), but without heavy siege artillery, was unable to take Akershus Fortress.[6]

After a brief occupation, Charles retraced his steps to the Norwegian fortresses in southeastern Norway with the objective of capturing Frederiksten. This would remove the threat at his back, and the fortifications could serve as the base for a renewed offensive later that year. Capturing the harbours at the mouth of the Glomma river would also allow him to land the necessary provisions for a successful siege of Akershus Fortress. [7]

Charles' troops attempted to take Frederiksten by storm on 4 July. His troops took the town after fierce fighting, but the citizens set fire to their own houses, forcing Charles, unable to take the fortress, to retreat and await the arrival of heavy siege guns. Unfortunately for the invading army the entire Swedish transport fleet was captured or destroyed by the Norwegian naval hero Peter Wessel Tordenskjold (1690-1720) at the Battle of Dynekilen (Slaget om Dynekilen) in Bohuslen. Running low on supplies, Charles retreated hastily across the Svinesund and burned the bridges behind him. By 12 July 1716 all Swedish troops had been withdrawn from the area around Fredriksten.[8]

Siege

edit

Charles came again to besiege the fortress in autumn of 1718 with 40,000 men.[9] He did this intending to first capture Fredriksten fortress to be able to sustain a siege of Akershus. By first taking the border areas, Charles wished to avoid a repeat of the fiasco he had suffered two years before. The 1,400-strong garrison of Frederiksten fought ferociously to hold back the invasion, but suffered a severe setback when, on 8 December the forward fortification, Gyldenløve fort, at Fredriksten fell. Encouraged by their very hard-fought success the Swedish army intensified their efforts against the main fort.[citation needed]

The Swedish trenches had almost reached the main fortification walls when on the evening of 11 December (Swedish calendar: 30 November 1718, a projectile (probably a large musket ball or grapeshot) struck Charles XII through the left temple while he inspected the trench-works and killed him. The death of the king effectively ended the attack on Fredriksten and the invasion was called off, leading to the conclusion of the war.[citation needed]

References

edit
  1. ^ McNab, Chris (2017). Famous Battles of the Early Modern Period. p. 58.
  2. ^ "De svenske invasjonene av Norge i 1716 og 1718". University of Oslo. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  3. ^ Peter From. "Karl XII:s död - gåtans lösning". karlxii.se. Archived from the original on April 6, 2005. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
  4. ^ Michael Roberts (1995) Sverige under frihetstiden (Stockholm: Prisma) ISBN 91-518-4106-1. Retrieved November 1, 2018
  5. ^ "Stora Nordiska Kriget". tacitus.nu/svenskhistoria. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
  6. ^ Erlend Hammer. "Akershus slott og festning". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  7. ^ "Norge i den store nordiske krig". University of Oslo. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  8. ^ "1716 - Slaget om Dynekilen". Forsvarets Marinemuseet. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  9. ^ McNab, Chris (2017). Famous Battles of the Early Modern Period. p. 58.

Bibliography

edit
  • Åberg. Alf; Göte Göransson (1976) Karoliner (Stockholm : Bokförl. Trevi) ISBN 9789171602084
  • Bain, R. Nisbet (2015) Charles XII and the Collapse of the Swedish Empire (CreateSpace Independent Publishing) ISBN 978-1514632680
  • Frost, Robert I. (2000) The Northern Wars, 1558-1721 (Longman Harlowd) ISBN 0-582-06429-5
  • Lisk, Jill (1968) The Struggle for Supremacy in the Baltic 1600-1725 (Funk & Wagnalls)
  • Lunde, Henrik O. (2014) A Warrior Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of Sweden as a Military Superpower, 1611-1721 (Casemate) ISBN 978-1612002422
  • Stagg, Frank Noel (1956) East Norway and its Frontier (George Allen & Unwin, Ltd)
  • Stiles, Andrina (1992) Sweden and the Baltic, 1523 - 1721 (Hodder & Stoughton) ISBN 0-340-54644-1

59°07′11″N 11°23′47″E / 59.1198°N 11.3963°E / 59.1198; 11.3963