Renaissance · Europe · War
1631
Sack of Magdeburg
May 20, 1631
After a six-month siege, imperial Catholic troops under Tilly stormed the Protestant city of Magdeburg and unleashed a three-day massacre. Twenty thousand civilians died; the city burned until only the cathedral and a few houses remained. The atrocity shocked Europe into a bitter new understanding of religious war and drove Protestant princes who had hesitated into the arms of Sweden.