Gronsfeld intended to hold a defensive position at the
Lech river against the enemy. Yet after receiving a (highly exaggerated) report that the Swedes were fording the river on 26 May, he deemed his forces too weak to push them back. An Imperial-Bavarian war council decided to retreat to
Ingolstadt, only Gronsfeld's second-in-command
Hunolstein objected the decision, anticipating the elector's reaction.
Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria was indeed furious that Gronsfeld had abandoned so much of Bavaria without a fight, and arrested him on 3 June. His interim successor became Feldzeugmeister Hunolstein while the imperials assigned
Ottavio Piccolomini as supreme commander. Their opponents' retreat allowed Wrangel and Turenne to advance across southern Bavaria and to plunder the area between Lech and
Isar where the Swedes took
Freising and
Landshut. Despite the army being shrunk by desertions to at one point only 10,000 men, Hunolstein prevented Wrangel from crossing the fortified and heavily swollen river
Inn in southern Bavaria and reorganized the defense together with Piccolomini. The latter improved his men's morale by bringing 3,100 reinforcements and using his own money to pay the arrears in their wages. Wrangel and Turenne, unable to advance further, started to retire their troops. Piccolomini went on the offensive in July, harassing the enemy without being drawn into a pitched battle. In August,
Johann von Werth arrived from Bohemia with additional 6,000 cavalry whereas the Bavarians put
Adrian von Enkevort in command instead of Hunolstein. Back to 24,000 strength and about equally numbered to Swedes and French, Piccolomini slowly manoeuvred them out of Bavaria, even achieving a minor victory at
Dachau on 6 October and clearing Bavaria from enemy troops between Inn and Lech. 's most distinguished generals. However, the Swedes took advantage of the weakened defences in Bohemia; a second Swedish army under
Königsmarck took the
castle and the
Malá Strana district of Prague by surprise on 25 July. Their following
siege of the Old and the New Town at the other side of the
Vltava river continued even after the final conclusion of the negotiations in Münster and Osnabrück with the
Peace of Westphalia on 24 October. The Swedes failed to capture the larger
Old Town of Prag until news of the peace treaty arrived on 5 November, followed by an imperial relief force sent by Piccolomini. Montecuccoli later became one of the Habsburg Monarchy's most accomplished generals, and he and Turenne met again as opposing commanders in the
Franco-Dutch War, first in the 1673 campaign and then again in 1675. ==References==