Battle Of Newburn
The
Battle of Newburn
took place in
1640
during the
Bishops' Wars
.
Scottish
Covenanters
planted guns to protect them while fording the river
Tyne
near
Newburn
in
Northumberland
, after which they defeated the
English
on the
Durham
side of Newburn at
Stellaheugh
, and subsequently occupied
Newcastle upon Tyne
. The name of
Scotswood
, one of the villages between Newburn and Newcastle, commemorates one of the Scottish positions. The Scottish army, under
Alexander Leslie
, comprised some 22,500 men and was opposed by an English force of just over 3,000 commanded by
Lord Conway
. The battle is said to have actually commenced when an English soldier fired at a Scottish officer watering his horse in the river.
Reference
Original text from
1911 Encyclopdia Britannica
see Also
The Wars of the Three Kingdoms
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