Coehoorn, Baron Menno van (1641-1704). Born into a Dutch army family in Friesland, Coehoorn was to become one of the most influential military engineers of his age. He studied mathematics and fortification at the academy of Franeker and entered the army in 1657.
In 1674 he gave his name to a trench mortar, to be used at closer range than previous models. His great work, The New Method of Fortification, was printed in 1685 and advocated the simplification of fortification design to the most geometrically elegant plan. He also made use of the high water table in the Netherlands, most of his works featuring wet ditches. Coehoorn also recommended an aggressive defence to upset the besiegers in their task. In siege operations Coehoorn advocated concentrated fire and storming rather than protracted bombardment and this proved very successful at the sieges of Kaiserwörth and Bonn in 1689, during the League of Augsburg war.
At Namur in 1692, Coehoorn found himself besieged by his great contemporary and rival Vauban. He was wounded by a bomb at the height of the siege and was forced to capitulate. There followed a pointed exchange between the two men, where Coehoorn boasted that he had forced the Frenchman to change the sites of his batteries seven times. Coehoorn then retook the strengthened and now supposedly impregnable fortress in 1695, after a fierce bombardment and a costly storming by Cutts's English infantry; a piqued Vauban commented that the effort had been too crude by half.
Coehoorn became engineer-general of fortifications in 1695, working on the modernization of Bergen op Zoom and other fortresses to his ‘new method’. During the War of the Spanish Succession he proposed a bold bypassing drive into Brabant, but the Allies decided to winkle the French out of the Rhine and Maas forts one by one in the old style. He served as Chief Engineer to Marlborough at the siege of Venlo in 1702, and after very careful preparations stormed the city after a short but very violent cannonade. This was a major victory for, as Louis XIV admitted, Venlo was the key to Gelders and the Rhine fortresses, vital for the defence of France.
Coehoorn died of natural causes in 1704, at the height of the war. In Amsterdam, where he was regarded as something of a lucky charm, stock exchange prices tumbled. He was sorely missed in the field, Eugène of Savoy saying of him, ‘I know that there can be no comparison between his ability and that of the horrible little men we have with us now.’
— Toby McLeod




