The Battle of Rocroi (19 May 1643) is famous for the French victory over the Spanish Tercios.
But Melo\'s army was incomplete: he lacked a large division of his army -.
Melo allowed the French to approach without stopping them: since Fate had sent him a French army, he intended to defeat it in a pitched battle, as at Honnecourt.
When the French discovered Spanish intentions, d\'Enghien moved quickly to the City\'s relief.
Eventually, the aim of the Spanish campaign became clear: to take Rocroi.
In short, a victory that would force the French to abort their actions in Catalonia.
This is the reason the Spanish army entered the campaign with so little artillery and so few supplies, in order to be able move quickly, but also to hide their intentions: to seek either a pitched Battle or a significant siege.
The campaign began with a series of errors, caused by General Melo\'s desperate need to keep his campaign plan secret at all costs.
The campaign of 1643 was initiated by the Spanish, following the success of 1642 which had ended with the great Spanish victory at the Battle of Honnecourt on 26 May. as well as d\'Enghien and Milo\'s chains of command.
The French and Spanish armies are also analyzed in depth, their composition, units, tactics, etc.
This book analyzes the military-political context of the 1643 campaign and the tense relations between France and Spain throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, which led to the armed conflict that began in 1635, when Sweden showed signs of weakness in the Thirty Years\' War, and Richelieu considered that it was necessary to act to prevent the triumph of the Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs.
But, beyond the military defeat of the Spanish army, the question posed in this book is to assess whether, in fact, the Battle of Rocroi was the beginning of the decline of the Spanish hegemony, and of its military tactics and formations; the Tercios, who had fought and been victorious in Europe for more than a century.
Thus, the date of 1643 established a historical milestone, a paradigm shift in military history: the end of Spanish hegemony and the beginning of the rise of France - the Grand Siècle of Louis XIV.
The victory has traditionally been attributed to the military genius of the young Duke, to the superiority of the French cavalry and to the decline of Spanish tactics: the Tercios were no longer invincible.
The Duc d\'Enghien, only 21 years old, defeated a Spanish army commanded by Francisco de Melo.
The Battle of Rocroi (19 May 1643) is famous for the French victory over the Spanish Tercios