- Dutch–Swedish War
The Dutch-Swedish War (1658–1660), was a Dutch intervention in the
Northern Wars , in whichSweden tried to extend its control over theBaltic Sea . To the Dutch, the Baltic trade was vital, both in quantity and quality. They had always been able to convinceDenmark by threat of force to keep the Sound tolls at a low level but they feared a strong Swedish empire might not be so complying.When
Charles X of Sweden had been unable to continue his hold onPoland – partly because the Dutch fleet relieved the besieged city ofDanzig in 1656 – he turned his attention onDenmark , invading that country from what is nowGermany . He broke theTreaty of Roskilde withFrederick III of Denmark and laid siege toCopenhagen . In 1658, the Dutch sent an expedition fleet of 75 ships, 3,000 cannon and 15,000 troops; in theBattle of the Sound it defeated the Swedish fleet and relieved Copenhagen. In 1659, the Dutch liberated the other Danish isles, once more guaranteeing the essential supply of grain, wood, and iron from the Baltic region.
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