For the Want of a King TL: Prussia loses the War of Austrian Succession

Hello everyone, as you may have guessed this is reboot of my The Eagle Never Fails TL which was based on the same POD but failed to really get going.
In this TL I have changed things that were criticised and also done my best to make the whole thing more realistic.
Hope you all enjoy,
Ankh

Any advice or constructive criticism is welcome.

For the Want of a King TL: Prussia loses the War of Austrian Succession
Part 1: The War of Austrian Succession 1740-1742:
The War of Austrian Succession began in 1740 as Prussia objected to the Pragmatic Sanction and the succession of Maria Theresa. Austria was supported by the naval powers of Great Britain and the Dutch Republic. The first action of the war was the Prussian invasion of Silesia.
The Prussian forces swiftly advanced across Silesia and by winter had occupied the majority of the Silesian fortresses. The Austrian counter-offensive under General Wilhelm Reinhard von Neipperg relieved the siege of Neisse and marched on Brieg threatening to encircle the Prussians and cut them off from their homeland. On the 10th April 1741 the Prussian forces under Frederick II met the Austrians at the snow covered fields of Mollwitz. However, all did not go as planned. The Austrians had succeeded in capturing some of Prussia’s scouts, who gave away the Prussian position. This allowed Neipperg to draw up the Austrian forces to fight the Prussians head on. The Austrian cavalry charge decimated their Prussian counterparts and captured Frederick II. Unaware of his King’s capture General von Schwerin attempted to hold the Prussian infantry line against the General Rommer’s cavalry. They succeeded in driving the cavalry back, but suffered heavy losses which were increased by the Austrian artillery. Neipperg then ordered the Austrian infantry to advance, the Prussian infantry surrounded by the Austrians and suffering heavy losses surrendered after Schwerin was killed by an Austrian shell. The Battle of Mollwitz had ended in a resounding Austrian victory. The capture of Frederick II and death of the Prussian Chief of Staff von Schwerin would result in the defeat of the Prussian Silesia Campaign.

The Austrian forces have suffered 5300 men dead, but had destroyed the Prussian army and captured their king. After reinforcements arrived from Bohemia (freed up by the lack of France forces in Bavaria unlike OTL) Neipperg mopped up the remaining Prussian garrisons who were heavily demoralised by the capture of their king. Augustus William I had been appointed regent, but did not inspire confidence among the troops in their current state. Thus 2 of the garrisons surrendered without a fight.
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Prussian infantry charge at Mollwitz

Under the Treaty of Vienna:
1. The Prussian territories in western Germany are partitioned between Austria, Hanover and the Palatine. Austria received Prussian Guelders, the Palatinate received Cleves and Mark and Hanover received Ravensburg and Minden. (In exchange for Cleves and Mark, the Palatine agrees to vote for Maria Theresa/ her husband in the upcoming imperial election.)
2. Saxony awarded a strip of land to connect Saxony with Poland.
3. Prussia forced to vote for Maria Theresa/husband in the imperial election.

France was left pondering its decision to join Prussia against Austria, Germany was now dominated by Austria, who were also allied with a long time French enemy the British. What would happen next? Only time would tell.

Interlude 1: Military and Economic Reform 1742-1750:
Following the Treaty of Vienna Maria Theresa was left with a victorious but vulnerable empire. Since 1733 Austria had lost all its Italian possessions (except Lombardy and Tuscany), and all land south of the Danube (including the fortresses of Orsova and Belgrade) had been ceded to the Ottomans and Silesia had almost been lost to a minor power. This series of losses and the near loss of the nation'd most economically advanced province spurred Maria Theresa into action.. She needed to create an adequate economic basis to underpin her nation's status as a great power. Her Secretary of the State Conference Bartenstein realized that the key issue was the unwillingness and inability of the Estates to provide adequately for the payment and supplies of the army. This was due to the Estates being principally concerned with minimizing the burden on their province. In response Maria Theresa decided to raise the subsidy demanded from each province to the level required to support a standing army of 108,000. This additional burden was to be met by taxing seigniorial land, which had previously been exempt from taxation. This plan was met with resistance from the nobility, particularly the Supreme Chancellor Count Friedrich Harrach, who attempted to get the power of the Estates increased in return for the demanded subsidy. However, such plans were rejected.

Count Friedrich Haugwitz, along with Bartenstein and the Cabinet Secretary Koch, was the chief architect of the reforms and almost single-handedly steered them through the State Conference and the Estates. His principal argument was that the ease that Prussia had occupied Silesia, showed that any of the old enemies of Austria could do the same and not be driven out again. He demonstrated the need to tax seigniorial land by reference to the 'self-evident' inability of the peasantry to pay any more than they were already paying. He also reinforced these arguments with the invocation of a general principle of equity. "As it is self-evident that the resources of the peasants do not suffice without the addition of the seigniorial land, which is normally exempt from taxation, to defray the cost of the defence required for the security of the Crown and of the privileges of the Estates, both God-pleasing justice and natural equity demand that the nobility should contribute to this necessary defence in proportion to the full extent of their resources."
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Count Freidrich Haugwitz

Interlude 2: Changes in Prussia 1742-1750:
Under a changed Frederick II the Kingdom of Prussia underwent dramatic changes. The nation’s aim shifted once more, this time reverting back to the arts. Frederick II slashed the military budget, preferring to spend money providing patronage to composers, architects and more. Prussia would become a shining light in Europe for the arts. The city of Berlin grew dramatically between the end of the War of Austrian Succession and the War of Sardinian Succession, as Frederick II brought in leading architects from across Europe to build grand new projects in the city. His aim was for Berlin to stand alongside the great capitals of Europe as a city of learning and beauty. The Frederick II University of Berlin was established in 1746 to rival the famed universities of Vienna, Paris and Britain. All of this came at a cost. Between 1742 and 1750 the Prussian army stagnated. The crushing defeat by Austria and the slashing of the budget sent the army’s standard’s into a nose dive, made even worse by the decision in 1747 to further cut the army’s budget and invest in strengthening the navy. Most historians agree that Frederick William II’s ultimate aim was a nation like Holland, a nation with a strong navy, a nation that tended to keep out of major land conflicts and had an over-seas ‘empire’. By 1750 a new era in Prussian history was beginning, the Naval Era. For years to come the Prussians would remain involved in European conflict on land but there focus was always on the sea, however their position in Europe, surrounded by potential enemies, necessitated a serious army and thus the Prussians maintained a standing army capable of defending the nation, but far smaller than the army before the War of Austrian Succession.

(EDIT: OOC: Please note that the Prussian king post-War of Austrian Succession has been changed since the original posting, this is in accordance with discussion below.)
 
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Don Quijote

Banned
Minor query - wasn't Britain a Prussian ally against Austria in both the War of Austrian Succession and the Seven Years' War?
 
Minor query - wasn't Britain a Prussian ally against Austria in both the War of Austrian Succession and the Seven Years' War?

No Britain was allied first to Austria in the war of Austrian Succession and then in the 7 yrs war allied with Prussia
 
Impressive first chapter...My issue is, what ports does Prussia have?
Thanks! :D
I believe they have Kolberg, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ko%C5%82obrzeg, though I'm not entirely sure if that's a big enough port. They also have Kongisberg, obviously.
Minor query - wasn't Britain a Prussian ally against Austria in both the War of Austrian Succession and the Seven Years' War?
Nope, it was an Austrian ally in the War of Austrian Succession:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_the_Austrian_Succession
As Germania09 has now said.

So how is it Germania09?
 
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Frederick William II was like 2 at your POD. He is not going to be regent of anything.

I would guess it would be FW's father Augustus William. And what did the Habsburgs do here? Chop off Frederick's head?

Once peace is made they would let him go presumably. He is still King of Prussia and holding him forever seems awfully medieval to me.
 
Frederick William II was like 2 at your POD. He is not going to be regent of anything.

I would guess it would be FW's father Augustus William. And what did the Habsburgs do here? Chop off Frederick's head?

Once peace is made they would let him go presumably. He is still King of Prussia and holding him forever seems awfully medieval to me.

Yeah I just saw that myself. Unless he's KIA as a result of the battle Maria is going to have to release him since he is a monarch of the HRE
 
Frederick William II was like 2 at your POD. He is not going to be regent of anything.

I would guess it would be FW's father Augustus William. And what did the Habsburgs do here? Chop off Frederick's head?

Once peace is made they would let him go presumably. He is still King of Prussia and holding him forever seems awfully medieval to me.
Damn it. It's supposed to be Augustus William, it must be a typo. Sorry!
Yeah I just saw that myself. Unless he's KIA as a result of the battle Maria is going to have to release him since he is a monarch of the HRE
IMHO they wouldn't let Frederick II return to the throne as he would remain an irritation to the north, given that it as his idea to invade Silesia, and rather send him back to be a minor noble. Would this not happen?
 
Sorry for the double post.
Here's the next part:

Interlude 3: The Ohio Valley Indian War 1742-1746:
In 1742 British and French colonial tensions flared up in the Americas. A Native American attack on a British outpost had gone badly and several Indians were captured, as they were searched French made gear was found on them. The British Governor (OOC: not sure if there were governors at this point, please point out if there weren’t) accused the French of arming the Native Americans and inciting them to attack British outposts. Understandably the French were not happy and denied all accusations. However Native American attacks continued and more French-made gear was discovered. Anti-French and Anti-Native American sentiment grew among colonials and some began to attack Native Americans within the French claims in the Ohio River Valley. As tensions escalated, Britain began a guerrilla campaign using their Native American allies. They clearly hadn’t learnt from France’s attempt at this and armed the Native Americans with British guns. Just like the British had done before hand, the French discovered British guns on Native American attacks. This obvious anti-French move further antagonised the French and on 2nd November 1742. France declared war on Britain, officially over the Ohio River Valley dispute. Because of this the war was sorely fought in the Americas. Britain’s first move was to invade New France and attempt to capture Loiusbourg and Quebec. The French meanwhile were gathering a force to invade the Thirteen Colonies and seize Halifax, Boston and the rest of the colony. The British army, under the command of General Forbes, entered New France, defeating a small French army on the border and marching towards Louisbourg. The French army seized British outposts in Ohio and assumed total control of the Ohio valley area. By this point, however, each nation had realised that that they were being invaded. The French army (which was smaller, 14 000 men, compared to 20 000 men in the British force) continued its invasion in an attempt to gain more than the British and hold a stronger negotiating positon, whilst the British army split into 2 armies numbering 10 000 each. One under Forbes pressed on towards Louisbourg, the other turned around and marched back where they had come from to fight the French. Despite this the British army reached and besieged the fort of Louisbourg, before capturing it on the 22nd December, before famously holding a Christmas banquet in the courtyard that would become known as the Louisbourg Christmas. The French forces captured Fort Necessity and were marching north to Philadelphia. The British army of 10 000 met the French army of 12 000 (2 000 men having been lost or assigned to garrison captured forts). The British were routed following several mistakes by their in-experienced commander, but managed to inflict massive losses on the French army, leaving a French army of 7 000 and a tiny British force of 2 500. The city surrendered 3 days later on the 12th January. Britain offered a status quo ante bellum peace treaty to the French, but it was rejected the French counter-offered with a treaty which would end British claims over the Ohio River Valley. Britain rejected this treaty, however, and the war eventually just ended with a white peace on the 3rd April 1745. The war didn’t officially end until May 1746 when the various Native American tribes that were being influenced by France and Britain finally agreed to a truce.

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British infantry on the attack in New France

Part 2: War of Sardinian Succession 1750-1756:
The War of Sardinian Succession, known as The Empress’ War in Austria, the Italian War in Italy, the European War in the Americas and as the Franco-British War in India, began with the invasion of Genoa by Sardinia. Most modern historians agree that it would have remained a regional conflict had it not been for the death of Charles Emmanuel III in battle near Voltri, Genoa and Maria Theresa’s subsequent power play. Following Charles Emmanuel III’s death he was succeeded by his son Victor Amadeus III, who was viewed by many as a weak man. Maria Theresa attempted to take advantage of this and have his younger brother Prince Benedetto, who was betrothed to Maria Anna (note: This marriage occurred because she was rejected as a potential wife by most kings because of a spine deformity, it also did not happen IOTL). Some members of the Savoyard nobility supported this idea in the hope of an alliance with Austria, but the king did not. The French then offered their support for Victor Amadeus III if he rejected Maria Theresa’s demands. Low and behold he swiftly did so, in response Austria declared war on Sardinia and sent an army under Field-Marshal Ludwig Khevenhüller to invade Sardinia. France then declared war on Austria, who promptly called the Grand Alliance into action (a recently signed treaty between Britain, Prussia and Austria) bringing the might of two great powers and one minor power on France. France roped Spain into the war on their side shortly afterwards. A British army under General James Wolfe marched from Hanover to assist in the defence of the Austrian Netherlands. Meanwhile in North America another British army under General John Forbes marched towards Louisbourg and another invaded Spanish Florida. France, then agreed an alliance with Saxony-Poland who then invaded Austria. For the next 2 years (from 1751-1753) France and her allies would dominate the war, occupying Hanover, British Canada, the Austrian Netherlands and East Prussia. Bavaria was forced/convinced to enter the war in 1752 on the French side. However a decisive battle at Leuthen, following the Saxon-Polish-Lithuanian (but the force is predominately made up of Saxon forces) invasion of Silesia resulted in the crushing defeat of the Saxon army. A dual-pronged Austrian counter-attack, wiped out the Bavarians at the Battle of Munich and the Saxons at the Battle of Dresden. A Prussian attack then smashed through West Prussia and recaptured East Prussia following the Battle of Konigsberg.

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Prussian infantry at the Battle of Konigsberg

Saxony-Poland and Bavaria surrendered on the 3rd March 1755 allowing Austria to turn on France. However, in North America the French had defeated the British invasion at Louisbourg and had now invaded the 13 Colonies and British Canada. British Canada was swiftly occupied, but the 13 Colonies put up more of a fight. Even capturing Spanish Florida had been occupied. In India, meanwhile the French-backed Hyderabadi forces were scoring victory after victory against the British-backed Maratha Empire and a French force was massing to invade Bombay from the south. This brought Austria and Britain to the negotiating table and France was happy to agree to a peace. The Treaty of Voltri was as follows:

1. Austria renounces all claims on Sardinian throne and allows creation of North Italian League (including Genoa, Parma, Modena and Lucca).
2. Britain gains Spanish Florida.
3. France gains British Canada.
4. Territory in south of the Maratha Empire ceded to Hyderabad.
5. British control in North India confirmed as is French control in the south.
6. All other borders reverted to pre-war borders.

Despite their gains the French were unhappy with the Treaty of Voltri and it was clear that another great war was brewing, a war of French aggression.

Interlude 3: The Great Movement 1757-1759:
Following the French ‘defeat’ of sorts (they were angry at their small gains), in the War of Sardinian Succession unrest began to grow in France, they had been fought to a standstill in America in 1745 and had now lost (largely) the war in Europe. The gains in the Americas and of their allies in India did next to nothing to improve the public mood. Thus in 1757 riots broke out in Paris, Toulouse and other cities across the nation, aggravated in part by the great French thinkers, such as François-Marie Arouet (known by his pen name Voltaire) and Gui-Jean-Baptiste Target. However the riots were swiftly crushed the army. The riots, however, had a lasting effect on the country. Louis XV, further restricted free speech and implemented total censorship on written works. This lead to, what became known as, the Great Movement. Many of the French thinkers and writers left the country, some such as Voltaire moved to Louisiana, others moved to New Spain and some more moved to Austria.

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François-Marie Arouet (Voltaire)
 
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Damn it. It's supposed to be Augustus William, it must be a typo. Sorry!

IMHO they wouldn't let Frederick II return to the throne as he would remain an irritation to the north, given that it as his idea to invade Silesia, and rather send him back to be a minor noble. Would this not happen?

He is King until death or abdication. And the HRE didn't have the power to remove titles from electors i don't think. Trying is going to alarm Bavaria, Hannover, Saxony, basically every major noble in Germany

And keeping him locked up or executing him makes Prussia a permanent enemy of Austria, at least for the next generation or so.
 
Yes, the HRE did have the legal power to deprive one elector of his elecotoral quality.

Frederick V of Palatinate was deprived of his electoral quality in 1623 and it was transfered to the Bavarian branch of the Wittelsbach and the princess of Palatinate had to wait for 25 years before being made elector again.
 
That is true, i had forgotten about the winter king, but i don't think they had the power to remove landed titles arbitrarily. It could be part of a peace settlement, but what do they do when Frederick goes home and says FU, i am still King of Prussia.
 
Under the Treaty of Vienna:
1. The Prussian territories in western Germany are partitioned between Austria, Hanover and the Palatine. Austria received Prussian Guelders, the Palatinate received Cleves and Mark and Hanover received Ravensburg and Minden. (In exchange for Cleves and Mark, the Palatine agrees to vote for Maria Theresa/ her husband in the upcoming imperial election.)
2. Saxony awarded a strip of land to connect Saxony with Poland.
3. Prussia forced to vote for Maria Theresa/husband in the imperial election.

France was left pondering its decision to join Prussia against Austria, Germany was now dominated by Austria, who were also allied with a long time French enemy the British. What would happen next? Only time would tell.

Interlude 1: Military and Economic Reform 1742-1750:
Following the Treaty of Vienna Maria Theresa was left with a victorious but vulnerable empire. Since 1733 Austria had lost all its Italian possessions (except Lombardy and Tuscany), and all land south of the Danube (including the fortresses of Orsova and Belgrade) had been ceded to the Ottomans and Silesia had almost been lost to a minor power.





Didn't Austria Keep Silesia?
 
He is King until death or abdication. And the HRE didn't have the power to remove titles from electors i don't think. Trying is going to alarm Bavaria, Hannover, Saxony, basically every major noble in Germany

And keeping him locked up or executing him makes Prussia a permanent enemy of Austria, at least for the next generation or so.

Yes, the HRE did have the legal power to deprive one elector of his elecotoral quality.

Frederick V of Palatinate was deprived of his electoral quality in 1623 and it was transfered to the Bavarian branch of the Wittelsbach and the princess of Palatinate had to wait for 25 years before being made elector again.

That is true, i had forgotten about the winter king, but i don't think they had the power to remove landed titles arbitrarily. It could be part of a peace settlement, but what do they do when Frederick goes home and says FU, i am still King of Prussia.
Thanks for the advice guys. I'll correct that shortly.
Under the Treaty of Vienna:
1. The Prussian territories in western Germany are partitioned between Austria, Hanover and the Palatine. Austria received Prussian Guelders, the Palatinate received Cleves and Mark and Hanover received Ravensburg and Minden. (In exchange for Cleves and Mark, the Palatine agrees to vote for Maria Theresa/ her husband in the upcoming imperial election.)
2. Saxony awarded a strip of land to connect Saxony with Poland.
3. Prussia forced to vote for Maria Theresa/husband in the imperial election.

France was left pondering its decision to join Prussia against Austria, Germany was now dominated by Austria, who were also allied with a long time French enemy the British. What would happen next? Only time would tell.

Interlude 1: Military and Economic Reform 1742-1750:
Following the Treaty of Vienna Maria Theresa was left with a victorious but vulnerable empire. Since 1733 Austria had lost all its Italian possessions (except Lombardy and Tuscany), and all land south of the Danube (including the fortresses of Orsova and Belgrade) had been ceded to the Ottomans and Silesia had almost been lost to a minor power.





Didn't Austria Keep Silesia?
Hence the almost. :D
 
Here a new update:

Part 3: Third War of Polish Succession or 6 Year’s War 1765-1771 Section 1:
The Third War of Polish Succession began in 1765 after the death of Augustus III of Poland, but soon spread from Eastern Europe to engulf most of Europe and the Americas. It is known by many, therefore, as the 6 Year’s War. Augustus III of Poland died in 1764, leaving behind an unorganised nation, crippled by internal unrest. Empress Catherine of Russia now made moves towards the annexation/partitioning of Poland. However, Maria Theresa had other plans for Poland. She determined to support Fürst Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski for the position of king of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Fürst Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski went on to win the election with Austrian support in 1765. Russia was not happy and began to stir up a rebellion in Podolia. Adam I called on Austrian aid and in late 1765 Austrian forces entered Podolia to quell the rebellion. The Austrian-Polish army met the Podolian rebels outside Lwow, the battle ended in an Austrian-Polish victory. The poorly armed rebels were routed and the rebellion was subdued. The crisis seemed to be over, until Catherine decided to resort to war. A Russia army under feared general Count Pyotr Alexandrovich Rumyantsev-Zadunaisky marched into Podolia under the pretence of restoring order to the province. This blatant lie allowed Austria to call the Grand Alliance in to action for the second time. Prussian troops marched into Poland to help shore up Polish defences and the British sent naval forces to attack Russian ports in the Black Sea. The Austrian-Polish army met the Russians at Lwow, where they had set up a garrison. The Austrian-Polish forces were routed by the Russians and Podolia and everywhere east of it was occupied by the Russians. At this point the Russians called upon their French allies to occupy the Austrians in Germany, to allow the Russians to crush Poland. The French subsequently invaded the Austrian Netherlands under Louis Philippe d'Orléans and defeated an Austrian army near Brussels. The Austrians retreated into British Hannover, leaving the Netherlands under French control. At the dawn of 1766 the Franco-Russian Alliance was dominant.

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Austrian infantry at the First Battle of Lwow

As 1766 began the Austrians and their allies were facing the first true defeat to face the Austrian nation for many years. South-east Poland was under Russian occupation and the Austrian Netherlands under French occupation. These small gains for the Franco-Russian Detente hid their dominance. In fact, most historians agree that, the Austrians and their allies should have lost the war. The Grand Alliance, however, began 1766 with a counter-attack through Poland. A united Grand Alliance army under Field-Marshal Franz Moritz Von Lacy, containing Austrian, British, Polish and Prussian troops marched from Konigsberg to invade Russia. The Grand Alliance army met the Russians near Tannennberg, the Russians having begun a second invasion of Poland, the army of the Grand Alliance drew up into battle formation and the right cavalry wing, charged the Russian right flank. The Russian right wing was shattered and much of it fled the field. von Lacy then ordered the main body of Grand Alliance force to charge the Russians, with the left cavalry division sweeping behind to block Russian escape. This brutal, arguably accidental, tactic crushed the Russian forces between two pincers and a hammer blow. (This tactic would be refined by generals throughout history and become known as the von Lacy Two-Horned Hammer.) The Russians, with two wings of cavalry smashing into their rear ranks and the bulk of the Grand Alliance force charging their front, were routed and suffered the horrendous losses. The Battle of Tannennberg marked the beginning of Grand Alliance dominance on the Eastern Front. However, the French were still reigned supreme in the West. British attacks on the French Americas and French India did little to deter the French from further advance in Germany.
A British force under General Wolfe had attempted daring invasion of Louisiana and even reached New Orleans, before begin defeated at the Battle of the Mississippi. This Battle fought near New Orleans on the banks of the River Mississippi ended in disaster for the British who were driven, almost, into the Mississippi River itself by the French. This did not happen but the whole British force along with General Wolfe was captured by the French. This allowed the French to invade the 14 Colonies. Under information forced out of Wolfe the French smashed into British Florida, slaughtering the garrisons of several forts and getting within 21 miles of the Atlantic Coast. The French army under Marquis De Montcalm (who was killed at Quebec IOTL) reached Fort King George where they faced a British army under the Duke of Cumberland. The battle lasted 3 days as neither side gave an inch. The British cavalry broke the French right flank, before being driven off by a French cavalry counter-attack. The French infantry charged the British line 5 times through the battle, but was driven off each time. As the battle dragged on the French were looking increasing worse for wear and at noon on the third day British reinforcements arrived from Philadelphia. The arriving cavalry shattered the French rear-guard and the French fled the field of battle retreating back to Louisiana. By April 1766 the position of the Détente was looking significantly less powerful.

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British infantry at the Battle of Fort King George

However, things took a turn for the worst the following month, as far as the North American Front was concerned. On the 14th June 1766 open rebellion broke out in the 14 Colonies. The anti-British sentiment had been brewing for years and had been exacerbated by the loss of British Canada ten years previously. The belief that the British homeland was in no position to defend the colonies had become dominant since 1756 and the French drive to Fort King George was the nail in the coffin. Armed riots broke out in Philadelphia, encouraged by the lack of a garrison (it having been sent to aid the British forces at the Battle of Fort King George), Boston, Charleston and Halifax. Despite this, the British looked likely to regain control swiftly, but the ‘Battle’ of Halifax changed all that. The garrison of Halifax attempted to seize back the town but were met by armed rebels in the town square. A ‘warning’ shot from a rebel struck and killed the garrison’s commanding officer and the garrison, panicked and unsure what to do, fired upon the rebels. At this point rebels charged the redcoats and fierce hand-to-hand combat began. The rebels were eventually defeated after loyalist colonials joined the ‘battle’ and the rebels were driven from the town. The British won a military victory, but the rebels a propaganda one. The rebels suffered 43 dead and 76 injured, whilst the British suffered 29 dead and 41 injured, the rebel propaganda machine chirmed out newspaper reports of the Halifax Massacre and by 1767 the rebels were widely supported and in control of most of the major towns and cities of the Thirteen Colonies. Meanwhile in New France a second rebellion broke out in July 1766. Mainly made up of British loyalists and some pro-British tribes, the rebellion centred around the Hudson Bay. The rebels swiftly gathered support and six months after the rebellion broke out had secured the whole of formerly British Canada. These two rebellions greatly distracted the British and French from the war in Europe. The British withdrew from the war entirely, but still allowed the other Grand Alliance members to pass through Hanover, whilst the French merely scaled down their designs on the Rhineland, for now.
The Grand Alliance (obviously minus Britain) carried on the fight against Europe, even gaining the North Italian League as an ally. The Grand Alliance aimed to remove the Russians from Podolia and stir up rebellion among the Cossacks of Ukraine, whilst driving through Italy, taking out Sardinia to ensure France gained no more allies, and into France. The Grand Alliance main army, under von Lacy still, marched down from Tannennberg to meet Count Rumyantsev-Zadunaisky’s army in Podolia and met them at Lwow for the second time. The Third Battle of Lwow, began ordinarily enough as each side attacked each other with cannon and tentative cavalry manoeuvres. Both commanders were legendary and the battle would not remain quiet for long. von Lacy initiated the fighting with his, now trademark, two pronged charge and the Austrian and Prussian cavalry wings swept around into the Russian flanks. The Russian right wing broke, but the left wing held and scattered the Austrian cavalry. Then Count Rumyantsev-Zadunaisky brought his victorious left wing round to encircle the Prussian cavalry and crushing them. The Grand Alliance infantry had advanced by this time and now charged the now out of position Russian army. The two armies, both now largely cavalry-less, met in brutal hand-to-hand combat, however, the winning blow would come from the small detachment of Polish cavalry who charged Count Rumyantsev-Zadunaisky and body guard, capturing the Count. Leaderless the Russian forces fled the field. The Third Battle of Lwow was a truly meaningless victory for the Grand Alliance, yes the main Russian force had been broken and Podolia largely liberated, but the casualties were so great that no attempt press on into Russia could have been considered wise. Thus, the army of the Grand Alliance camped in Lwow awaiting reinforcements. The capture of Count Rumyantsev-Zadunaisky was the only real reward gained by the Third Battle of Lwow, as it stripped Russia of a talented general and allowed the Grand Alliance an insight into the Russian tactics. 1766 ended with a far different situation to that that 1765 had.

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The Russian left cavalry wing charge at the Third Battle of Lwow
 
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