Henri IV battle After
Amiens was invaded and taken by
Spanish Netherlanders on 11 March 1597,
Henri IV besieged the town with a considerable army. On 29 August he was notified of the approach of a significant Spanish force (four companies of
arquebuse-men and 300 mounted soldiers), protecting a supplies convoy. The King sallied from his camp north of Amiens, accompanied by Biron, de Lagrange-Montigny, the count of Auvergne, and headed toward the enemy train. Leading an escort of 50 soldiers, he spotted Spanish scouts emerging from the Querrieu forest. He charged them at full gallop, with his escorts close behind. The startled Spanish group assumed they were being attacked by a large force, and beat a hasty retreat. The King pursued his adversaries, who abandoned two sous-lieutenants, 200 horsemen and numerous prisoners. Image:Henri IV devant Amiens.JPG|King Henri IV in front of Amiens fortifications, April 1597 Image:Combat de Henri I V.JPG|1597 battlefield location Image:Arquebuzer in Malaga.jpg|Spanish arquebus-man
Franco-Prussian War 1870–1871 During the
Franco-Prussian War, the town and fortress of Amiens were occupied by the
Prussian Army in November 1870. On 16 December the
French Northern Army, led by General
Faidherbe, took a position on the hills bordering the left side of the river Hallue.
Skirmish on Querrieu General
Manteuffel took command of the Prussian Army on 20 December, and that same day launched a
troop and a battalion, about two thousand men, toward Querrieu. On the eastern skirts of the wood, two kilometres in front of the village, they encountered French outposts and engaged in battle. Three companies of French
line infantry, coming from Bussy-lès-Daours, counter-attacked the right flank of the Prussian force, which retreated to Amiens. In this confrontation the Prussian losses were 3 officers and 69 men killed or wounded; the French losses were 7 killed and 20 wounded. File:Louis_Léon_César_Faidherbe_portrait.jpg|Général Faidherbe, 1860 portrait File:General von Manteuffel.jpg|Général Manteuffel
Battle of Hallue On 23 December 23 the Prussian General (Manteuffel) led an offensive toward the river
Hallue, along a line of twelve kilometres from
Contay to
Daours, on a snow-covered earth in an icy temperature, worsened by a northern wind. By midmorning the Prussians had possession of the wood and the village of Querrieu. Prussian field batteries on the heights of the village along the main road, fired on French positions at
Pont-Noyelles. The French guns responded, and several shells hit houses in Querrieu. In the afternoon, forty-two Prussian guns are in battery between Querrieu and Bussy-lès-Daours. At about 3:30 p.m. the Prussians launch a mass attack. They make headway into Pont-Noyelles but are stopped at the eastern border of the village. A counter-attack push them back into Querrieu where they establish their bivouac for the night. During this night, the French Northern Army start off a movement towards
Albert and
Bapaume. In the communal cemetery of Querrieu, mortal remains of French and Prussian soldiers were gathered in two collective graves. File:Querrieu, ossuaire prussien, 1870.JPG File:Ossuaire français de Querrieu 1870.JPG
World War I Battle of the Somme, 1916 In 1916, the Headquarters of the 4th British army, led by General
Rawlinson, was set up in the castle of Querrieu.
On 1 July 1916,
General Haig, commander of the
British Forces in France, is poised to attack. After a heavy artillery barrage the British troops advance from their trenches toward the German line. However, the barrage failed to destroy the distant German artillery, which then opened return fire on the advancing troops. Thus began the British infantry's
most murderous battle of the war. During that summer several notables came through the area, including
General Foch, and
Arthur Balfour, former British Prime minister. On 10 August the entire Headquarters staff gathered around British King
George V, who presented decorations to French Generals
Fayolle and Balfourier. The Sovereign was accompanied by his son, the young
Prince of Wales, future king Edward VIII, then
Duke of Windsor after less than a year of reign. File:Général Douglas Haig.jpg|General Douglas Haig File:General Sir Henry S Rawlinson.jpg|General Rawlinson in front of Querrieu castle, 1916 File:18pounderCrewDescriptions.jpg|18 pounder in action File:Vickers machine gun in the Battle of Passchendaele - September 1917.jpg|Vickers machine gun in action, Somme 1916 File:Royal Irish Rifles ration party Somme July 1916.jpg|Royal Irish Rifles ration party, July 1916 Somme
German offensive, Spring 1918 On 21 March 1918, the German launched a
major offensive along the
Western Front. After a few days, their advance began to falter. Fresh British and Australian units were moved to the vital rail center of
Amiens. Numerous British units were stationed in and around Querrieu, in a
military concentration area. On 31 May On May 31, General
John Monash assumed command of the
Australian Corps and set his Headquarters in the castle of
Saint-Gratien, four kilometres north of Querrieu. In May 1918, in the lower part of the village, the living space of a
brewery near the Hallue river was occupied by several Australian
war correspondents, among them
Charles W. W. Bean, who would write the "Official History of Australia in the war 1914–1918". Outbuildings on the grounds were occupied by a company of the 21st Australian infantry battalion, who take the name of "
Querrieu brewery company". One of the war correspondents (C. W. W. Bean himself ?) described the events taking place during a day for all men of the company. (Full text in: Official History of Australia in the war 1914–1918, volume VI, chapter I, pp. 8–18) On 4 July General Monash launched a combined attack of artillery, tanks, infantry and air forces toward
Le Hamel, a position overlooking the German forces in
Villers-Bretonneux. The 21st battalion gained possession of three German trenches. During this attack, the
Querrieu brewery company formed the left wing of the battalion. On 20 July, in front of the castle of Querrieu, General Monash awarded commendations and medals to the
4th infantry Division which distinguished itself during the battle of
Le Hamel, with the loss of 24 officers and 240 men. A British
siege battery, set north of the village, launched a barrage on the German positions of
Villers-Bretonneux. The German artillery responded, destroying houses and farms, and severely damaged the church. On 27 March 1918, the
2nd Australian Tunneling Company was billeted at Querrieu. One of its first actions was the creation of a cemetery, in which eight of its men will be buried from 9 April to 13 June. This cemetery was closed in August; 103 Australian and British soldiers are buried there. ==Population==