Battle of Copenhagen
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- Date:
- August 15, 1807 - September 7, 1807
- Location:
- Copenhagen
- Denmark
- Participants:
- Denmark
- United Kingdom
- Context:
- Napoleonic Wars
- Key People:
- Arthur Wellesley, 1st duke of Wellington
Battle of Copenhagen, (15 August–7 September 1807), an engagement in the Napoleonic Wars. Fearful that Napoleon’s defeat of Russia and Prussia might lead to French control of Baltic fleets, Britain acted ruthlessly to neutralize the substantial Danish navy allied with Napoleon. The Danish fleet surrendered to Britain after Copenhagen was bombarded.
In early 1807, British leaders suspected that Napoleon might get control of the Russian fleet and then perhaps the Danish and Swedish ones, too—together a strong enough force to pose a new threat to Britain’s naval mastery. Britain also had valuable trading interests in the Baltic, which was a vital source of naval supplies.
Britain prepared a large expedition—29,000 troops and more than 400 warships and transports—and remarkably managed to keeps its destination secret. The force reached Denmark in early August 1807 and demanded that the Danes allow their fleet to be taken into British control. The Danes refused, and hostilities began.
British troops under Wellesley (later the Duke of Wellington) landed near Copenhagen and surrounded the city. When further negotiations failed, the British fleet, under Admiral James Gambier, began a fierce bombardment on 2 September, making much use of Congreve rockets (one of the first times rockets had been employed in European warfare). Soon much of the city was in flames, and the Danes, suffering heavy civilian casualties, were forced to surrender on September 7. The British left with over sixty Danish ships and quantities of naval supplies.
Britain and Denmark remained at war for more than six years. Denmark did manage to capture some British merchant ships, and Britain had to convoy and escort its Baltic trade. There were a few minor clashes at sea but no further land battles.
Losses: Danish, 2,000–3,000 dead, 60 ships captured; British, 200 dead or wounded.