Feuquieres had laid siege to
Thionville with 12,000 French troops. An Imperial-Spanish relief force commanded by Piccolomini with 5,000 cavalry and 9,000 infantrymen arrived in early morning of 7 June to lift the siege. This force included a Spanish contingent led by the Luxembourgish baron
Jean de Beck, with the
tercio of Naples and the artillery directed by Ernest de Suys. In the morning, the Imperials attacked the opposing positions, then the battle stopped for a while which allowed the French to line up (11:00), while Piccolomini sent reinforcements inside the fortress. The Imperials returned to the attack (16:00) and conquered the hill on the left side to the French, where Piccolomini placed the artillery. Under Imperial artillery fire, the French cavalry was charged by the Imperial cavalry under the Marquis Camillo Gonzaga. The French cavalry was defeated and persecuted. The garrison sallied out against the French right flank. The Imperials enveloped and defeated the French infantry, capturing all the artillery and numerous materials. The French army lost 6,000 dead and wounded as well as 3,000 prisoners including Feuquieres, who died from his injuries, and Count Pas, commander of the infantry. The victorious Imperial-Spanish army only lost 1,500 men. ==Aftermath==