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2nd Spanish Armada

2nd Spanish Armada
Part of the Anglo-Spanish War

Philip II of Spain in his old age, ordered the Armada of 1596 in revenge for the English attack on Cadiz
Date24 October – 1 November 1596
Location
Result

Spanish failure[1][2][3]

  • Armada shattered by storm[4][5]
  • Huge naval & economic losses for Spain[6][7]
  • Postponement of invasion[8][9]
Belligerents
Spain England
Commanders and leaders
Philip II
Martín de Padilla
Diego Brochero
Sancho Martínez de Leyva
Carlos de Arellano
Elizabeth I
Robert Devereux
Charles Howard
Walter Raleigh
Strength
Fleet
24 galleons
53 armed merchant ships[10]
Total
126[11] - 140 ships
19,500 men (approx.)[5]
Various shore defences
13 galleons
74 armed merchant vessels
12,000 men[12]
Casualties and losses
1 Flyboat captured[13]
Storms/Disease:
5 galleons sunk[14]
38 other ships sunk or scuttled[5]
5,000 dead[15][16]
Unknown

The 2nd Spanish Armada also known as the Spanish Armada of 1596[9][17] was a naval operation that took place during the Anglo–Spanish War. Another invasion of England or Ireland was attempted in the autumn of 1596 by King Philip II of Spain.[14][18] In an attempt at revenge for the English sack of Cadiz in 1596, Philip immediately ordered a counter strike in the hope of assisting the Irish rebels in rebellion against the English crown.[5] The strategy was to open a new front in the war, forcing English troops away from France and the Netherlands, where they were also fighting.[12][19]

The Armada under the command of the Adelantado, Martín de Padilla was gathered at Lisbon, Vigo and Seville and set off in October.[4] Before it had left Spanish waters, storms struck the fleet off Cape Finisterre.[6] The storms shattered the Armada causing much damage and forcing the ships to return to their home ports.[7] Nearly 5,000 men died either from the storm or disease and 38 ships were lost, which was enough for a long-term postponement of the Irish enterprise.[7] The material and financial losses added to the bankruptcy of the Spanish kingdom, during the autumn of 1596.[1][12]

Background edit

Spain and England had been at war for nearly twelve years with neither side gaining the upper hand.[20] The result of the intervention of Philip II in the religious war in France in support of the Catholic League, meant that Spanish forces had established coastal garrisons along the French and Flemish coast by the late 1580s.[21] These bases had a huge strategic value because they allowed England to be threatened by the Spanish fleet and troops. England on the other hand had also intervened in France, but in support of King Henry IV of France, as a result of the Treaty of Greenwich in 1591.[22] The Spanish had captured Calais in 1596 which meant that a strike against England was potentially more achievable.[23] After desperate French demands to keep her from signing peace with Spain, the English signed the Triple Alliance with the Dutch republic and France.[24]

England had sent an armada under Robert Devereux and Charles Howard to Cadiz, which was captured, sacked and held for two weeks in the summer of 1596.[25] Philip soon after took into consideration the defence of the peninsula but most of all sought revenge even if it meant selling everything he had.[26]

The leading English Jesuit exile in Spain, Robert Persons, went to an audience with Philip hoping to take advantage of the situation in trying to get the King to act.[27] Persons argued for a winter attack when the Queen would least expect it.[5] This meant an army of moderate size rather than a vast Armada that would give away the element of surprise in which Persons referenced the failed armada in 1588.[28]

Persons noted that the point of entry for the Spanish would have been from Scotland, Kent, or Milford Haven in Wales, citing that Henry VII had successfully invaded from there in 1485.[28] Here it was believed the Spaniards would find a vast reservoir of Catholic support.[27] Detailed charts on the ports of England and Wales had been drawn up, and other plans suggested occupying the Isle of Wight.[28][29] A number of the King's advisers however saw an invasion of Ireland as a better way to destabilize England.[19] The use of Ireland as a springboard for a new invasion was nothing new; Marquis of Santa Cruz, the first commander of the Spanish Armada, had advocated landing in Cork or Wexford in 1586.[27] The plan was only scrapped because of the delays caused by Drake's raid on Cadiz the following year.[6]

Philip began by ordering Martín de Padilla, the Count of Santa Gadea, the Adelantado to assemble a new fleet intending to land on Ireland in the hope of increasing the rebellion under Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone.[19] As early as 1595 O'Neill and Hugh Roe O'Donnell wrote to Philip for help and offered to be his vassals.[27] He also proposed that his cousin Archduke Albert be made Prince of Ireland, but nothing came of this.[30] Philip replied encouraging them in January 1596 to keep their faith in their Catholic religion, Spanish intervention and not to make peace with Elizabeth.[31] For the Spanish the strategy was simple – the war in Ireland would create a new front, hoping to draw English troops away from the fighting in the United Provinces, and from which the English would have to fight.[5] In Spain's eyes, the English fighting on this new front was one they could not afford to do.[26]

Armada edit

 
Hugh Ó Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone

Philip II placed great hope in the new Grand Armada that was being organised in Lisbon.[32] There were fifteen galleons from Castile and nine from Portugal, 53 Flemish and German boats which had been impounded, six pinnaces and one caravel, with 10,790 men.[28] From Seville 2,500 troops would depart in 30 flyboats to join the fleet in Lisbon.[33] In the north, at Vigo, a further 41 vessels of various tonnage were waiting, with around 6,000 men.[32] The Adelantado's total force consisted of 11,000 badly furnished and sick infantry and 3,000 cavalry, in addition to the sailors which numbered 5,500.[28]

Besides the Adelantado the principal leaders were Carlos de Arellano, Major-general Sancho Martínez de Leyva and General Admiral Diego Brochero.[28] Rumours were rife and long before its actual departure, reports were reaching the Spanish authorities of the disembarkation of their troops in O'Neill's territory.[32] In Lisbon Cornelius O'Mulrian followed with intense interest the preparations of the new armada.[27] According to the reports the nuncio was sending to Rome, the invasion of Ireland was imminent.[33] He wished to dispatch O'Mulrian, together with many Jesuits and other priests to organise the Catholic restoration in Ireland.[31]

In July, the Earl of Essex had been fed reports from spies and merchants that there were forty-six ships in Lisbon and that new warships were being built at many places on the Biscay coast.[26] This information was conveyed to Queen Elizabeth but she was informed that it would not strike because of the expected autumn storms.[14] Nevertheless, preparations were made and the Navy was put on alert; reinforcements arrived to protect the Isle of Wight, Falmouth and even the mouth of the Medway where at Chatham the English fleet lay in dock.[33] The English field commander Lord Willoughby's main anxiety however was for Ireland, Scotland, and the English held Dutch Cautionary Towns such as Flushing.[29]

 
Location of Cape Finisterre

At the beginning of October, the Armada was still in no shape to depart. Lack of food and money as well as potential mutiny forcibly delayed the expedition which infuriated Philip.[14] The Adelantado had preparation for the Armada as his main priority but soon asked to be relieved of his command to defend himself, which Philip refused.[32] Philip instead abruptly cancelled the Irish enterprise altogether; the relenting weather, lateness of the season and disease amongst ships crews being the reasons.[15] The Adelantado instead was to sail to La Coruna, where he was to be given orders to seize the French Port of Brest which they had briefly held in 1594 only to be defeated by Anglo French troops who took the fort there.[34] Brest was chosen simply because it was closer to Spain but also could be used as a base to attack England and also to help the Irish rebels.[14]

Execution edit

The weather finally relented on the morning of 24 October permitting the Armada, numbering eighty-one ships, to depart the harbour of Lisbon.[32] The fleet along with the army set sail from Lisbon on 25 October, heading towards La Coruña and sailed in safety as far as Viana do Castelo where they had to anchor and wait for a wind.[33] When the wind came they neared Cape Finisterre, the land's end at the north-west of the Spanish peninsula.[31] It was to be their furthest point and almost immediately they encountered an unexpected storm.[12] The rest of the ships that succeeded in weathering the Cape were scattered into the ports of the Bay of Biscay, many battered beyond repair.[4] The whole Spanish force had ceased to exist as an effective fighting fleet.[29] Forty battered vessels managed to turn back and enter the port of Ferrol, including the Adelantado in the flagship San Pablo.[14]

By 1 November what remained of the fleet had returned and the cost was counted; the Adelantado informed the court of the disaster much to Philip's sadness.[35]

Meanwhile, reports of the Armada having sailed began to filter in England but also that a rumour from Ireland that one thousand five hundred Spanish had landed, with the whole island in revolt.[36] Charles Howard sent out a powerful fleet which included thirteen galleons, to find the dismembered remainders of the armada but found only floating wreckage and bodies.[37] A Spanish flyboat however was captured along with 200 of her crew and from this the knowledge and extent of the armada was then discovered.[33][35]

None of the Spanish ships ever made it to the English Channel and as a result Brest, Ireland and England had been spared a major assault.[12][14]

Aftermath edit

At first the damage appeared to be minimal and Philip hoped that once the Adelantado had reassembled the ships, he could continue his voyage but as time passed the enormity of the disaster became apparent.[1] Losses to the Armada at El Ferrol were significant; there was general confusion and sadness at the disaster.[15] In mid-November the nuncio sent a sorrowful summary of the facts: thirty vessels were missing, thirteen had crashed into the reefs and there were many dead from the Portuguese upper class.[14] Eighteen of the sunken ships were embargoed hulks, whose loss could easily be replaced but five of the King's principal ships known as the Apostles had perished, the worst loss being the 900-ton galleon Santiago, which had carried 330 soldiers as well as sailors, of whom only twenty-three survived.[1] Disease had ravaged the ships ever since they had been at port.[31] These could not be replaced so easily and there were few survivors in others.[7] In all nearly 5,000 men either perished to shipwrecks or were dead or sick to disease.[12][15]

As the magnitude of the disaster became more fully known, Philip reluctantly cancelled the enterprise on 13 November.[7] The disaster was ruinous in terms of finance as the ships La Capitana de Levante and Santiago, each transporting the paychests of 30,000 ducats, were lost.[6] The Armada was to winter in Spain and to depart the following spring, without further diversions or postponements.[9] A great fear then gripped Galicia in January 1597 that the English navy would possibly show up at any moment, a situation similar to that in 1589.[7] The Armada was rebuilt in El Ferrol with the help of replacement artillery and monies recovered from the shipwrecks.[31] The Spanish authorities were more concerned with defending the peninsula.[6]

The shock of the disaster reverberated into every corner of Philip's dominions, loosening everywhere the frayed bonds of his system and threatened to complete what Essex's successful Cadiz campaign had left undone.[29] After the defeat at Cadiz, bankruptcy had stared the King of Spain in the face and in the aftermath of the Armada, he was forced to suspend payment to creditors.[6] Philip had declared the third major bankruptcy of his reign.[2] The King desperately wanted only a postponement of the Armada not an abandonment and was obliged to borrow more money but this time from his Italian holdings.[38]

The Irish leaders in exile continued to believe that the Armada was bound for Ireland.[27] A year later another attempt would be made but this time after so many changes in strategy, it was on England, with the addition of destroying the English fleet returning from the failed Islands Voyage.[6] The Armada of 1597 in the autumn was executed and despite encountering a storm which scattered the fleet, some managed to reach and in some cases land troops in Cornwall and Wales.[39] With the majority of the fleet scattered and little cohesion between ships, the Adelantado ordered the fleet to retreat to Spain, losing a number of ships to the returning English fleet they had failed to destroy.[40]

See also edit

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ a b c d Morgan pp. 56–58
  2. ^ a b Richardson & Doran p. 37
  3. ^ Childs p. 9
  4. ^ a b c Fernández Duro, Cesáreo: Armada española desde la unión de los reinos de Castilla y de Aragón. Vol. III. Instituto de Historia y Cultura Naval, p. 130 (Spanish)
  5. ^ a b c d e f Bicheno pp. 289–290
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Kamen pp. 308–309
  7. ^ a b c d e f Tenace, Edward (2003). "A Strategy of Reaction: The Armadas of 1596 and 1597 and the Spanish Struggle for European Hegemony". English Historical Review. Oxford Journals. 118 (478): 867–868. doi:10.1093/ehr/118.478.855.
  8. ^ McCoog p. 389
  9. ^ a b c Wernham pp. 139–140
  10. ^ Tenace pp. 856–857
  11. ^ Clodfelter, Micheal (9 May 2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015, 4th ed. ISBN 978-0786474707.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Leathes, Stanley (1907). The Cambridge Modern History, Volume 3. CUP Archive. p. 529.
  13. ^ Roberts, R A, ed. (1895). Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House, Volume 6, November 1596, 16–30. HMSO. pp. 479–499.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Tenace pp. 864–866
  15. ^ a b c d Hume p. 229
  16. ^ Ungerer p. 207
  17. ^ Simpson p. 37
  18. ^ McCoog p. 400
  19. ^ a b c Morgan pp. 45–50
  20. ^ Tenace pp. 857–860
  21. ^ Innes p 380
  22. ^ Kingsford, Charles Lethbridge (1925). Report on the Manuscripts of Lord de L'Isle & Dudley Volume 77. H. M. Stationery Office. p. xlvi.
  23. ^ Duerloo pp. 44–45
  24. ^ McCoog p. 276
  25. ^ Watson, Robert (1839). The history of the reign of Philip the Second, king of Spain. Lyon Public Library: Tegg. pp. 521–523.
  26. ^ a b c Wernham pp. 130–133
  27. ^ a b c d e f McCoog pp. 387–388
  28. ^ a b c d e f Tenace pp. 861–863
  29. ^ a b c d Corbett, Julian S. (1900). The Successors of Drake (1596–1603). Longmans. pp. 145–152.
  30. ^ Certificate given by Captain Alonso Cobos to the Irish Catholics, 15 May 1596 (Cal. S. P. Spain, 1587–1603, p. 169); O'Neill and O'Donnell to Philip II, 16 May 1596 (ibid, p. 620)
  31. ^ a b c d e Hammer pp. 306–308
  32. ^ a b c d e Morgan pp. 52–54
  33. ^ a b c d e Wernham pp. 136–138
  34. ^ MacCaffrey p. 193
  35. ^ a b Morgan pp. 54–56
  36. ^ Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House, Volume 6: 1596, 26–31 (Cecil Papers ed.). 1899. pp. 536–575.
  37. ^ Archivo General de Simancas Padilla to the Council of State, Lisbon, 22 October 1596
  38. ^ Watson (1839) p. 527
  39. ^ Graham pp. 213–214
  40. ^ Wernham p. 189

Bibliography edit

  • Bicheno, Hugh (2012). Elizabeth's Sea Dogs: How England's Mariners Became the Scourge of the Seas. Conway. ISBN 978-1844861743.
  • Childs, David (2009). Tudor Sea Power: The Foundation of Greatness. Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1473819924.
  • Hammer, Paul E. J. (2003). Elizabeth's Wars: War, Government and Society in Tudor England, 1544–1604. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1137173386.
  • Hume, Martin (2004). Treason and Plot: Struggles for Catholic Supremacy in the Last Years of Queen Elizabeth. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1417947133.
  • Kamen, Henry (1997). Philip of Spain. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300078008.
  • Mattingly, Garrett (2000). The Defeat of the Spanish Armada. Pimlico (3rd Ed). ISBN 978-0712666275.
  • MacCaffrey, Wallace T (1994). Elizabeth I: War and Politics, 1588–1603. Princeton Paperbacks Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691036519.
  • McCoog, Thomas M (2012). The Society of Jesus in Ireland, Scotland, and England, 1589–1597: Building the Faith of Saint Peter Upon the King of Spain's Monarchy. Ashgate & Institutum Historicum Societatis Iesu. ISBN 978-1409437727.
  • Morgan, Hiram (2004). The Battle of Kinsale. Wordwell Ltd. ISBN 1869857704.
  • Richardson, Glenn; Doran, Susan, eds. (2005). Tudor England and its Neighbours. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1137155337.
  • Simpson, William (2001). The Reign of Elizabeth Heinemann advanced history. Heinemann. ISBN 978-0435327354.
  • Wernham, R.B. (1994). The Return of the Armadas: The Last Years of the Elizabethan Wars Against Spain 1595–1603. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0198204435.

spanish, armada, part, anglo, spanish, warphilip, spain, ordered, armada, 1596, revenge, english, attack, cadizdate24, october, november, 1596locationcape, finisterre, atlanticresultspanish, failure, armada, shattered, storm, huge, naval, economic, losses, spa. 2nd Spanish ArmadaPart of the Anglo Spanish WarPhilip II of Spain in his old age ordered the Armada of 1596 in revenge for the English attack on CadizDate24 October 1 November 1596LocationCape Finisterre AtlanticResultSpanish failure 1 2 3 Armada shattered by storm 4 5 Huge naval amp economic losses for Spain 6 7 Postponement of invasion 8 9 BelligerentsSpainEnglandCommanders and leadersPhilip II Martin de Padilla Diego Brochero Sancho Martinez de Leyva Carlos de ArellanoElizabeth I Robert Devereux Charles Howard Walter RaleighStrengthFleet24 galleons53 armed merchant ships 10 Total126 11 140 ships19 500 men approx 5 Various shore defences13 galleons74 armed merchant vessels12 000 men 12 Casualties and losses1 Flyboat captured 13 Storms Disease 5 galleons sunk 14 38 other ships sunk or scuttled 5 5 000 dead 15 16 Unknown The 2nd Spanish Armada also known as the Spanish Armada of 1596 9 17 was a naval operation that took place during the Anglo Spanish War Another invasion of England or Ireland was attempted in the autumn of 1596 by King Philip II of Spain 14 18 In an attempt at revenge for the English sack of Cadiz in 1596 Philip immediately ordered a counter strike in the hope of assisting the Irish rebels in rebellion against the English crown 5 The strategy was to open a new front in the war forcing English troops away from France and the Netherlands where they were also fighting 12 19 The Armada under the command of the Adelantado Martin de Padilla was gathered at Lisbon Vigo and Seville and set off in October 4 Before it had left Spanish waters storms struck the fleet off Cape Finisterre 6 The storms shattered the Armada causing much damage and forcing the ships to return to their home ports 7 Nearly 5 000 men died either from the storm or disease and 38 ships were lost which was enough for a long term postponement of the Irish enterprise 7 The material and financial losses added to the bankruptcy of the Spanish kingdom during the autumn of 1596 1 12 Contents 1 Background 2 Armada 2 1 Execution 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 References 6 BibliographyBackground editSpain and England had been at war for nearly twelve years with neither side gaining the upper hand 20 The result of the intervention of Philip II in the religious war in France in support of the Catholic League meant that Spanish forces had established coastal garrisons along the French and Flemish coast by the late 1580s 21 These bases had a huge strategic value because they allowed England to be threatened by the Spanish fleet and troops England on the other hand had also intervened in France but in support of King Henry IV of France as a result of the Treaty of Greenwich in 1591 22 The Spanish had captured Calais in 1596 which meant that a strike against England was potentially more achievable 23 After desperate French demands to keep her from signing peace with Spain the English signed the Triple Alliance with the Dutch republic and France 24 England had sent an armada under Robert Devereux and Charles Howard to Cadiz which was captured sacked and held for two weeks in the summer of 1596 25 Philip soon after took into consideration the defence of the peninsula but most of all sought revenge even if it meant selling everything he had 26 The leading English Jesuit exile in Spain Robert Persons went to an audience with Philip hoping to take advantage of the situation in trying to get the King to act 27 Persons argued for a winter attack when the Queen would least expect it 5 This meant an army of moderate size rather than a vast Armada that would give away the element of surprise in which Persons referenced the failed armada in 1588 28 Persons noted that the point of entry for the Spanish would have been from Scotland Kent or Milford Haven in Wales citing that Henry VII had successfully invaded from there in 1485 28 Here it was believed the Spaniards would find a vast reservoir of Catholic support 27 Detailed charts on the ports of England and Wales had been drawn up and other plans suggested occupying the Isle of Wight 28 29 A number of the King s advisers however saw an invasion of Ireland as a better way to destabilize England 19 The use of Ireland as a springboard for a new invasion was nothing new Marquis of Santa Cruz the first commander of the Spanish Armada had advocated landing in Cork or Wexford in 1586 27 The plan was only scrapped because of the delays caused by Drake s raid on Cadiz the following year 6 Philip began by ordering Martin de Padilla the Count of Santa Gadea the Adelantado to assemble a new fleet intending to land on Ireland in the hope of increasing the rebellion under Hugh O Neill Earl of Tyrone 19 As early as 1595 O Neill and Hugh Roe O Donnell wrote to Philip for help and offered to be his vassals 27 He also proposed that his cousin Archduke Albert be made Prince of Ireland but nothing came of this 30 Philip replied encouraging them in January 1596 to keep their faith in their Catholic religion Spanish intervention and not to make peace with Elizabeth 31 For the Spanish the strategy was simple the war in Ireland would create a new front hoping to draw English troops away from the fighting in the United Provinces and from which the English would have to fight 5 In Spain s eyes the English fighting on this new front was one they could not afford to do 26 Armada edit nbsp Hugh o Neill 2nd Earl of TyronePhilip II placed great hope in the new Grand Armada that was being organised in Lisbon 32 There were fifteen galleons from Castile and nine from Portugal 53 Flemish and German boats which had been impounded six pinnaces and one caravel with 10 790 men 28 From Seville 2 500 troops would depart in 30 flyboats to join the fleet in Lisbon 33 In the north at Vigo a further 41 vessels of various tonnage were waiting with around 6 000 men 32 The Adelantado s total force consisted of 11 000 badly furnished and sick infantry and 3 000 cavalry in addition to the sailors which numbered 5 500 28 Besides the Adelantado the principal leaders were Carlos de Arellano Major general Sancho Martinez de Leyva and General Admiral Diego Brochero 28 Rumours were rife and long before its actual departure reports were reaching the Spanish authorities of the disembarkation of their troops in O Neill s territory 32 In Lisbon Cornelius O Mulrian followed with intense interest the preparations of the new armada 27 According to the reports the nuncio was sending to Rome the invasion of Ireland was imminent 33 He wished to dispatch O Mulrian together with many Jesuits and other priests to organise the Catholic restoration in Ireland 31 In July the Earl of Essex had been fed reports from spies and merchants that there were forty six ships in Lisbon and that new warships were being built at many places on the Biscay coast 26 This information was conveyed to Queen Elizabeth but she was informed that it would not strike because of the expected autumn storms 14 Nevertheless preparations were made and the Navy was put on alert reinforcements arrived to protect the Isle of Wight Falmouth and even the mouth of the Medway where at Chatham the English fleet lay in dock 33 The English field commander Lord Willoughby s main anxiety however was for Ireland Scotland and the English held Dutch Cautionary Towns such as Flushing 29 nbsp Location of Cape FinisterreAt the beginning of October the Armada was still in no shape to depart Lack of food and money as well as potential mutiny forcibly delayed the expedition which infuriated Philip 14 The Adelantado had preparation for the Armada as his main priority but soon asked to be relieved of his command to defend himself which Philip refused 32 Philip instead abruptly cancelled the Irish enterprise altogether the relenting weather lateness of the season and disease amongst ships crews being the reasons 15 The Adelantado instead was to sail to La Coruna where he was to be given orders to seize the French Port of Brest which they had briefly held in 1594 only to be defeated by Anglo French troops who took the fort there 34 Brest was chosen simply because it was closer to Spain but also could be used as a base to attack England and also to help the Irish rebels 14 Execution edit The weather finally relented on the morning of 24 October permitting the Armada numbering eighty one ships to depart the harbour of Lisbon 32 The fleet along with the army set sail from Lisbon on 25 October heading towards La Coruna and sailed in safety as far as Viana do Castelo where they had to anchor and wait for a wind 33 When the wind came they neared Cape Finisterre the land s end at the north west of the Spanish peninsula 31 It was to be their furthest point and almost immediately they encountered an unexpected storm 12 The rest of the ships that succeeded in weathering the Cape were scattered into the ports of the Bay of Biscay many battered beyond repair 4 The whole Spanish force had ceased to exist as an effective fighting fleet 29 Forty battered vessels managed to turn back and enter the port of Ferrol including the Adelantado in the flagship San Pablo 14 By 1 November what remained of the fleet had returned and the cost was counted the Adelantado informed the court of the disaster much to Philip s sadness 35 Meanwhile reports of the Armada having sailed began to filter in England but also that a rumour from Ireland that one thousand five hundred Spanish had landed with the whole island in revolt 36 Charles Howard sent out a powerful fleet which included thirteen galleons to find the dismembered remainders of the armada but found only floating wreckage and bodies 37 A Spanish flyboat however was captured along with 200 of her crew and from this the knowledge and extent of the armada was then discovered 33 35 None of the Spanish ships ever made it to the English Channel and as a result Brest Ireland and England had been spared a major assault 12 14 Aftermath editAt first the damage appeared to be minimal and Philip hoped that once the Adelantado had reassembled the ships he could continue his voyage but as time passed the enormity of the disaster became apparent 1 Losses to the Armada at El Ferrol were significant there was general confusion and sadness at the disaster 15 In mid November the nuncio sent a sorrowful summary of the facts thirty vessels were missing thirteen had crashed into the reefs and there were many dead from the Portuguese upper class 14 Eighteen of the sunken ships were embargoed hulks whose loss could easily be replaced but five of the King s principal ships known as the Apostles had perished the worst loss being the 900 ton galleon Santiago which had carried 330 soldiers as well as sailors of whom only twenty three survived 1 Disease had ravaged the ships ever since they had been at port 31 These could not be replaced so easily and there were few survivors in others 7 In all nearly 5 000 men either perished to shipwrecks or were dead or sick to disease 12 15 As the magnitude of the disaster became more fully known Philip reluctantly cancelled the enterprise on 13 November 7 The disaster was ruinous in terms of finance as the ships La Capitana de Levante and Santiago each transporting the paychests of 30 000 ducats were lost 6 The Armada was to winter in Spain and to depart the following spring without further diversions or postponements 9 A great fear then gripped Galicia in January 1597 that the English navy would possibly show up at any moment a situation similar to that in 1589 7 The Armada was rebuilt in El Ferrol with the help of replacement artillery and monies recovered from the shipwrecks 31 The Spanish authorities were more concerned with defending the peninsula 6 The shock of the disaster reverberated into every corner of Philip s dominions loosening everywhere the frayed bonds of his system and threatened to complete what Essex s successful Cadiz campaign had left undone 29 After the defeat at Cadiz bankruptcy had stared the King of Spain in the face and in the aftermath of the Armada he was forced to suspend payment to creditors 6 Philip had declared the third major bankruptcy of his reign 2 The King desperately wanted only a postponement of the Armada not an abandonment and was obliged to borrow more money but this time from his Italian holdings 38 The Irish leaders in exile continued to believe that the Armada was bound for Ireland 27 A year later another attempt would be made but this time after so many changes in strategy it was on England with the addition of destroying the English fleet returning from the failed Islands Voyage 6 The Armada of 1597 in the autumn was executed and despite encountering a storm which scattered the fleet some managed to reach and in some cases land troops in Cornwall and Wales 39 With the majority of the fleet scattered and little cohesion between ships the Adelantado ordered the fleet to retreat to Spain losing a number of ships to the returning English fleet they had failed to destroy 40 See also edit nbsp Spain portal nbsp England portalSpanish Armada 3rd Spanish Armada English ArmadaReferences editCitations a b c d Morgan pp 56 58 a b Richardson amp Doran p 37 Childs p 9 a b c Fernandez Duro Cesareo Armada espanola desde la union de los reinos de Castilla y de Aragon Vol III Instituto de Historia y Cultura Naval p 130 Spanish a b c d e f Bicheno pp 289 290 a b c d e f g Kamen pp 308 309 a b c d e f Tenace Edward 2003 A Strategy of Reaction The Armadas of 1596 and 1597 and the Spanish Struggle for European Hegemony English Historical Review Oxford Journals 118 478 867 868 doi 10 1093 ehr 118 478 855 McCoog p 389 a b c Wernham pp 139 140 Tenace pp 856 857 Clodfelter Micheal 9 May 2017 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 4th ed ISBN 978 0786474707 a b c d e f Leathes Stanley 1907 The Cambridge Modern History Volume 3 CUP Archive p 529 Roberts R A ed 1895 Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House Volume 6 November 1596 16 30 HMSO pp 479 499 a b c d e f g h Tenace pp 864 866 a b c d Hume p 229 Ungerer p 207 Simpson p 37 McCoog p 400 a b c Morgan pp 45 50 Tenace pp 857 860 Innes p 380 Kingsford Charles Lethbridge 1925 Report on the Manuscripts of Lord de L Isle amp Dudley Volume 77 H M Stationery Office p xlvi Duerloo pp 44 45 McCoog p 276 Watson Robert 1839 The history of the reign of Philip the Second king of Spain Lyon Public Library Tegg pp 521 523 a b c Wernham pp 130 133 a b c d e f McCoog pp 387 388 a b c d e f Tenace pp 861 863 a b c d Corbett Julian S 1900 The Successors of Drake 1596 1603 Longmans pp 145 152 Certificate given by Captain Alonso Cobos to the Irish Catholics 15 May 1596 Cal S P Spain 1587 1603 p 169 O Neill and O Donnell to Philip II 16 May 1596 ibid p 620 a b c d e Hammer pp 306 308 a b c d e Morgan pp 52 54 a b c d e Wernham pp 136 138 MacCaffrey p 193 a b Morgan pp 54 56 Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House Volume 6 1596 26 31 Cecil Papers ed 1899 pp 536 575 Archivo General de Simancas Padilla to the Council of State Lisbon 22 October 1596 Watson 1839 p 527 Graham pp 213 214 Wernham p 189Bibliography editBicheno Hugh 2012 Elizabeth s Sea Dogs How England s Mariners Became the Scourge of the Seas Conway ISBN 978 1844861743 Childs David 2009 Tudor Sea Power The Foundation of Greatness Seaforth Publishing ISBN 978 1473819924 Hammer Paul E J 2003 Elizabeth s Wars War Government and Society in Tudor England 1544 1604 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1137173386 Hume Martin 2004 Treason and Plot Struggles for Catholic Supremacy in the Last Years of Queen Elizabeth Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1417947133 Kamen Henry 1997 Philip of Spain Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300078008 Mattingly Garrett 2000 The Defeat of the Spanish Armada Pimlico 3rd Ed ISBN 978 0712666275 MacCaffrey Wallace T 1994 Elizabeth I War and Politics 1588 1603 Princeton Paperbacks Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691036519 McCoog Thomas M 2012 The Society of Jesus in Ireland Scotland and England 1589 1597 Building the Faith of Saint Peter Upon the King of Spain s Monarchy Ashgate amp Institutum Historicum Societatis Iesu ISBN 978 1409437727 Morgan Hiram 2004 The Battle of Kinsale Wordwell Ltd ISBN 1869857704 Richardson Glenn Doran Susan eds 2005 Tudor England and its Neighbours Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1137155337 Simpson William 2001 The Reign of Elizabeth Heinemann advanced history Heinemann ISBN 978 0435327354 Wernham R B 1994 The Return of the Armadas The Last Years of the Elizabethan Wars Against Spain 1595 1603 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0198204435 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2nd Spanish Armada amp oldid 1182794392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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