2,500 men under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax) attacked the encircling (and divided) army of Lord Byron[?], raising the six-week siege of Nantwich.
Nantwich was considered to be strategically significant both by the Parliamentarians and the Royalists since it was a conjunction of several roads. It is seen by some as a watershed in the Civil War since it is thought that if Nantwich had fallen the Royalists would have been clear to march to Scotland to join forces with General Montrose, who was ready to combine with them.
There is an annual re-enactment of the battle by The Sealed Knot; the commemorative day of the battle is celebrated by the local people as Holy Holly Day[?].
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