Battle of Newburn

Battle of Newburn
Part of the Second Bishops' War

Monument marking the site of the Battle of Newburn
Date28 August 1640
Location54°59′00″N 01°45′05″W / 54.98333°N 1.75139°W / 54.98333; -1.75139
Result Scottish victory
Belligerents
Royalists Scotland
Commanders and leaders
Viscount Conway
Sir Jacob Astley
Lord Rochester
Thomas Lunsford
Alexander Leslie
Alexander Hamilton
Montrose
Strength
5,000 maximum 20,000
Casualties and losses
300 300

The Battle of Newburn, took place on 28 August 1640, during the Second Bishops' War, near Newburn in northern England. A Scottish Covenanter army of 20,000 under Alexander Leslie defeated an English force of 5,000, led by Viscount Conway.

The only significant military action of the war, victory enabled the Scots to take Newcastle upon Tyne, which provided the bulk of London's coal supplies, and allowed them to put pressure on Charles I of England. The October 1640 Treaty of Ripon required him to recall Parliament to ratify the peace settlement. He did so in November 1640, a key element in the events leading to the outbreak of the First English Civil War in August 1642.