Battle of Nabe explained

Conflict:Battle of Nabe
Place:Nabe, Agger
Partof:the Dano-Swedish War (1657–1658)
Date:3 October, 1657
Result:Swedish victory
Commander1: Böddeker
Commander2: Niels Lykke
Friedrich Ziegler
Units1: Three cavalry regiments
Units2: Nabe redoubt
Strength1:500–700 cavalry
Strength2:900 peasants
150 cavalry
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:60–280 killed
Everyone else captured

The Battle of Nabe was fought between Danish and Swedish forces at Nabe on October 3 1657. The Swedes attacked the Danish redoubt and successfully captured both Danish commanders and crushed the popular resistance in Jutland as a consequence of the battle.

Background

In October, during the ongoing Siege of Fredriksodde, Carl Gustaf Wrangel was forced to conserve his supplies. He therefore sent three cavalry regiments, amounting to some 500–700 horse under Generalmajor Böddeker, towards northern Jutland, in order to both subjugate it and to gather food and fodder for the Swedish horses.

Battle

On 3 October, the cavalry under Böddeker encountered a Danish redoubt at Nabe in Agger defended by 150 Danish cavalry and around 1,500–2,000 peasant levies, respectively under the Lieutenant Colonels Niels Lykke and Friedrich Ziegler. At the time, Lykke was off visiting relatives, and Ziegler was drunk and possibly also away from the redoubt, while the peasants were unenthusiastic about battle. As a consequence, some 600 peasants deserted immediately before the Swedish attack.

This reduced the Danish strength to, at most, around 150 cavalry and 900 peasants. In the ensuing short but intense battle, the Swedes under Böddeker killed many peasants and soon also managed to capture both Lykke and Ziegler, along with the rest.[1] Many of the peasamts fled north, closely pursued by the Swedes who ruthlessly killed anyone they caught up with.

The exact number of dead is unknown, with some figures stating 80 cavalry and 200 peasants dead, although contemporary church records indicate no more than around 60 killed.

Böddeker believed that the peasants needed to be taught a lesson. However, the captured peasants were quickly released to return home, carrying with them a strict warning to lay down their weapons and instead go back to their labor.

Aftermath

As a consequence of the battle, all popular resistance against the Swedes that still remained in Jutland was shattered, and the Jutland peasants henceforth took no active part in the war.

Legacy

On the 300th anniversary of the battle, a mamorial stone was erected at the battlefield. It was placed in a location where the fleeing Danes and pursuing Swedes must have passed.[2]

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bricka . Carl Frederik . 521 (Dansk biografisk Lexikon / X. Bind. Laale - Løvenørn) . 2024-08-11 . runeberg.org . da.
  2. Web site: Balle . Torsten . NABE og kamppladsen 3. oktober 1657 . arkivthy.dk.