Battle of Guinegate

Battle of Guinegate

Battle of Guinegate may refer to:

* Battle of Guinegate (1479)
* Battle of Guinegate (1513)


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  • Battle of Guinegate (1513) — Infobox Military Conflict caption= partof=the War of the League of Cambrai conflict=Battle of Guinegate date=August 16, 1513 place=Guinegate, France result=Decisive English victory combatant1=France combatant2=Kingdom of England… …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of Guinegate (1479) — The First Battle of Guinegate took place on August 7, 1479. French troops under Louis XI were defeated by the Burgundians of Maximilian of Austria …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of Marignano — Part of the War of the League of Cambrai Contemporary depiction of the battle, attributed to the Maître à la Ratière …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of Saint-Mathieu — Part of the War of the League of Cambrai Contemporary picture of the Breton flagship Marie la Cordelière (or …   Wikipedia

  • BATTLE OF THE SPURS —    (a) an engagement at Courtrai in 1302 where the burghers of the town beat the knighthood of France, and the spurs of 4000 knights were collected after the battle; (b) an engagement at Guinegate, 1513, in which Henry VIII. made the French… …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • GUINEGATE —    a village in Hainault, SW. of Belgium, where Henry VIII. defeated the French in 1513 in the BATTLE OF THE SPURS (q.v.) …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Hofkirche, Innsbruck — The Hofkirche (Court Church) Innsbruck, Austria, is a Gothic church built 1553 ndash;1563 by Ferdinand I as a memorial to his grandfather Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor (1459 ndash;1519), [ [http://www.hofkirche.at/en/hofkirche/ Hofkirche… …   Wikipedia

  • Germany — • History divided by time periods, beginning with before 1556 Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Germany     Germany     † …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Maximilian I — 1459 1519, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1493 1519. * * * I born April 17, 1573, Munich died Sept. 27, 1651, Ingolstadt, Bavaria Duke of Bavaria (1597–1651) and elector from 1623. Succeeding his father as duke, he restored the duchy to… …   Universalium

  • Jacques de la Palice — (or la Palisse) (1470 – 24 February 1525) was a French nobleman and military officer. His full name and titles are Jacques II de Chabannes, Lord of La Palice, of Pacy, of Chauverothe, of Bort le Comte and of Héron. In 1511, he received the title… …   Wikipedia

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