Siege of Kolberg (1807)

Battle of Kolberg (1807)
Part of the War of the Fourth Coalition

Former battle memorial with statues of Nettelbeck and Gneisenau in Kolberg
Date20 March – 2 July 1807
Location54°10′39″N 15°34′36″E / 54.17750°N 15.57667°E / 54.17750; 15.57667
Result Siege lifted by peace treaty
Belligerents

French Empire

Prussia
Naval support:

Commanders and leaders
Claude Victor-Perrin
Édouard Mortier
Louis Henri Loison
Pietro Teulié 
Filippo Severoli
August von Gneisenau
Ferdinand von Schill
Strength
14,000
41 guns
6,000
230 guns
46 guns on Swedish frigate
Casualties and losses
5,000 killed, wounded or captured 3,000 killed, wounded or captured
170km
106miles
27
Friedland
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
Eylau
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
Berlin
6
5
4
3
Jena–Auerstedt
2
1
 current battle
 Napoleon not in command
 Napoleon in command

The siege of Kolberg (also spelled Colberg or Kołobrzeg) took place from March to 2 July 1807 during the War of the Fourth Coalition, part of the Napoleonic Wars. An army of the First French Empire and several foreign troops (including Polish insurgents) of France besieged the fortified town of Kolberg, the only remaining Prussian-held fortress in the Province of Pomerania. The siege was unsuccessful and was lifted upon the announcement of the Peace of Tilsit.

After Prussia lost the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt in late 1806, French troops marched north into Prussian Pomerania. Fortified Stettin (Szczecin) surrendered without battle, and the province became occupied by the French forces. Kolberg resisted, and the implementation of a French siege was delayed until March 1807 by the freikorps of Ferdinand von Schill operating around the fortress and capturing the assigned French commander of the siege, Victor-Perrin. During these months, the military commander of Kolberg, Lucadou, and the representative of the local populace, Nettelbeck, prepared the fortress's defensive structures.

The French forces commanded by Teulié, mainly troops from Italy, succeeded in encircling Kolberg by mid-March. Napoleon put the siege force under the command of Loison; Frederick William III entrusted Gneisenau with the defense. In early April, the siege forces were for a short time commanded by Mortier, who had marched a large force from besieged Swedish Stralsund to Kolberg but was ordered to return when Stralsund's defenders gained ground. Other reinforcements came from states of the Confederation of the Rhine (Kingdom of Württemberg, Saxon duchies and the Duchy of Nassau), the Kingdom of Holland, and France.

With the western surroundings of Kolberg had thousands of French soldiers attacking the defenders, fighting concentrated on the eastern forefield of the fortress, where Wolfsberg sconce had been constructed on Lucadou's behalf. Aiding the defense from the nearby Baltic Sea were a British and a Swedish vessel. By late June, Napoleon massively reinforced the siege forces to bring about a decision. The siege force then also concentrated on taking the port north of the town. On 2 July, fighting ceased when Prussia had agreed on an unfavourable peace after her ally Russia suffered a decisive defeat at Friedland. Of the twenty Prussian fortresses, Kolberg was one of the few remaining in Prussian hands until the war's end. The battle became a myth in Prussia and was later used by Nazi propaganda efforts. While prior to World War II the city commemorated the defendants, it started to honor the commander of the Polish troops after 1945, when the city became part of a Polish state.