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Anglo-Spanish War (1625–1630)

Anglo-Spanish War (1625–1630)
Part of the Eighty Years' War

The Defence of Cádiz against the English by Francisco de Zurbarán
DateAnglo-Spanish War (1625–1630)
Location
Atlantic Ocean, English Channel, Low Countries, Spain and the Spanish Main
Result

Status quo ante bellum[1][2]

Belligerents
Spain
Commanders and leaders

The 1625 to 1630 Anglo–Spanish War was fought by England, in alliance with the Dutch Republic, and Spain. A related conflict of the Eighty Years' War between the Dutch and Spanish, most of the fighting took place at sea, and was largely indecisive.

Background edit

European policy in this period was dominated by the outbreak of the Thirty Years War within the Holy Roman Empire in 1618, and renewal of the Eighty Years' War between Spain and the Dutch Republic in 1622. Despite popular enthusiasm for the Protestant Dutch, and concern at the success of the Catholic Counter-Reformation, English involvement had been limited to financial support, and provision of volunteers. This was largely due to differences between the English Crown and Parliament over the nature of the problem, and how to resolve it.[3]

The Thirty Years War began when the Protestant Frederick V of the Palatinate accepted the Crown of Bohemia, replacing Ferdinand II, Catholic heir to the Holy Roman Emperor. In 1619, Frederick was ousted from Bohemia, while Spanish troops occupied his hereditary lands of the Electoral Palatinate, in preparation for renewing their war with the Dutch. Since Frederick was the son-in-law of James VI and I, king of Scotland and England

War edit

The 1624 Parliament voted three subsidies and three fifteenths, around £300,000 for the prosecution of the war, with the conditions that it be spent on a naval war. James, ever the pacifist, refused to declare war, and in fact never did. His successor, Charles I, was the one to declare war in 1625.[4]

Siege of Breda edit

In August 1624, the Spanish general Don Ambrosio Spinola ordered his forces to lay siege to the Dutch city of Breda. The city was heavily fortified and defended by a garrison of 7,000 Dutch soldiers. Spinola rapidly gathered his defences and drove off a Dutch relief army under Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange, who was attempting to cut off his supplies. In February 1625, another relief force, consisting of 7,000 English soldiers under Sir Horace Vere and Ernst von Mansfeld, was also defeated.

Finally, Justin of Nassau surrendered Breda to the Spaniards in June 1625 after an eleven-month siege.

Cádiz Expedition edit

 
The Duke of Buckingham by Peter Paul Rubens

By October 1625, approximately 100 ships and a total of 15,000 seamen and soldiers were readied for the Cádiz Expedition. An alliance with the Dutch had also been forged, and the new allies agreed to dispatch an additional 15 warships commanded by William of Nassau, to assist in guarding the English Channel in the absence of the English main fleet. Sir Edward Cecil, a battle-hardened veteran of combat in service with the Dutch, was appointed commander of the expedition by the Duke of Buckingham, a choice that proved to be ill-considered. Cecil was a good soldier, but he had little knowledge of nautical matters.

The planned expedition involved several elements: overtaking Spanish treasure ships returning from the Americas loaded with valuables; and assaulting Spanish towns, with the intention of assailing the Spanish economy by weakening the Spanish supply chain and consequently relieving the military pressure on the Electorate of the Palatinate.

The entire expedition descended into farce. The English forces wasted time in capturing an old fort of little importance, giving Cádiz the time to fully mobilise behind its defences and allowing merchant ships in the bay to make good their escape. The city's modernised defences, a vast improvement on those of Tudor times, proved effective. Meanwhile, a body of English forces landed further down the coast to march on the city also became side-tracked because of poor discipline. Eventually, Sir Edward Cecil, the commander of the English forces, faced with dwindling supplies, decided there was no alternative but to return to England, having captured few goods and having had no impact on Spain. And thus in December, a battered fleet returned home.

Charles I, to protect his own dignity and Buckingham, who had failed to ensure the invasion fleet was well supplied, made no effort to inquire as to the cause of the failure of the Cádiz Expedition. Charles turned a blind eye to the debacle, instead preoccupying himself with the plight of the French Huguenots of La Rochelle. But the House of Commons proved less forgiving. The parliament of 1626 initiated the process of impeachment against the Duke of Buckingham, prompting Charles I to choose to dissolve parliament rather than risk a successful impeachment.

The failure of the attack had severe consequences for England. In addition to the economic and human loss, it damaged the reputation of the English Crown, creating a serious political and financial crisis in the country.

1627–1628 edit

The Duke of Buckingham then negotiated with the French regent, Cardinal Richelieu, for English ships to aid Richelieu in his fight against the French Huguenots, in exchange for French aid against the Spanish occupying the Electorate of the Palatinate, but the Parliament of England was disgusted and horrified at the thought of English Protestants fighting French Protestants. The plan only fuelled their fears of crypto-Catholicism at court. Buckingham himself, believing that the failure of his enterprise was the result of treachery by Richelieu, formulated an alliance among Cardinal Richelieu's many enemies, a policy that included support for the very Huguenots whom he had recently attacked.

The English force, commanded by the Duke of Buckingham, was defeated by the French Royal troops at the Siege of Saint-Martin-de-Ré and at the Siege of La Rochelle. In this campaign the English lost more than 4,000 men of a force of 7,000 men. On 23 August, while organising a second campaign in Portsmouth, England in 1628, Buckingham was stabbed to death at the Greyhound Pub by John Felton, an army officer who had been wounded at the Siege of La Rochelle.

Dutch Revolt of 1626–1629 edit

 
The siege of 's-Hertogenbosch in 1629, by Pieter Snayers

After the surrender of Breda, the States gave orders for recruiting their army which consisted of 61,670 infantry and 5,853 cavalry; nearly 20,000 of whom were English and Scottish. Of these four were English regiments that King Charles had raised and sent to Holland. A part of this force was sent to the Spanish held city of Oldenzaal which was captured after a ten-day bombardment in the summer of 1626. The following year the English were under the command of Edward Cecil and contributed to the siege of the city of Groenlo. A Spanish relief force led by Hendrik van den Bergh failed to get through and as a result the city surrendered to the Dutch commander Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange.[5] In 1629, the important Spanish stronghold of 's-Hertogenbosch was besieged and captured by Frederick Henry's army of 28,000 men which included a number of English and Scottish regiments all commanded by Horace Vere.[6]

St. Kitts and Nevis edit

In 1629, a Spanish naval expedition, commanded by Admiral Don Fadrique de Toledo, was sent to deal with the recently established Anglo-French colonies on the Caribbean islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis. The territories were regarded by the Spanish Empire as its own since the islands were discovered by the Spanish in 1498 and the English and French colonies had grown sufficiently to be considered a threat to the Spanish West Indies. In the Battle of St. Kitts, the heavily armed settlements on both islands were destroyed and the Spanish seized the islands.

Aftermath edit

England altered its involvement in the Thirty Years War by negotiating a peace treaty with France in 1629. Thereafter expeditions were undertaken by the Duke of Hamilton and Earl of Craven to the Holy Roman Empire in support of the thousands of Scottish and English mercenaries already serving under the King of Sweden in that conflict. Hamilton's levy was raised despite the end of the Anglo-Spanish War. In addition English troops would constitute a large part of the States army but in their pay after 1630. In the following years under Frederick Henry and Horace Vere the cities of Maastricht and Rheinberg were recaptured.[7] Breda was recaptured in 1637, with English troops led by Colonel Charles Morgan.

With the advent of the War of the Mantuan Succession Spain sought peace with England in 1629 and so arranged a suspension of arms and an exchange of ambassadors.[8] On 15 November the Treaty of Madrid was signed which ended the war and thus restored the 'Status quo'.[2][9] It had proven a costly fiasco for England, whose merchants lost the profitable Flemish cloth markets to heavy custom duties after the war.[10] The unsuccessful and unpopular outcome of the conflict[11] fuelled the disputes between the Monarchy and Parliament, to the point that the first charge of grievance was made against Charles I in the Grand Remonstrance ten years after the conflict had ended.[12][page needed]

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ Davenport p. 307.
  2. ^ a b Ashley p. 125
  3. ^ Adams 1983, pp. 79–80.
  4. ^ Richard, Cust (2007). Charles I: a political life. Harlow, England: Longman/Pearson. ISBN 9781405859035. OCLC 154888234.
  5. ^ Knight, Charles Raleigh (1905). Historical records of The Buffs, East Kent Regiment (3rd Foot) formerly designated the Holland Regiment and Prince George of Denmark's Regiment. Vol I. London: Gale & Polden. pp. 68–70.
  6. ^ Markham pp. 435–438
  7. ^ Knight pp. 72-74
  8. ^ Davenport p. 305
  9. ^ Durston p. 171
  10. ^ O'Neill, Patrick Ignacio (2014). Charles I and the Spanish Plot: Anglo-Habsburg Relations and the Outbreak of the War of Three Kingdoms, 1630-1641 (PDF). Riverside: University of California. pp. 29–43.
  11. ^ O'Neill (2014), p. 25
  12. ^ Yerby, George (2019). The Economic Causes of the English Civil War: Freedom of Trade and the English Revolution. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-51764-4.

Sources edit

  • Adams, Simon (1983). Spain or the Netherlands? The Dilemmas of Early Stuart Foreign Policy in Before the English Civil War. Springer. ISBN 978-0-333-30899-8.

Further reading edit

  • Ashley, Maurice (1987). Charles I and Oliver Cromwell: A Study in Contrasts and Comparisons. Methuen Limited. ISBN 9780413162700.
  • Davenport, Frances Gardiner; Paullin, Charles Oscar, eds. (2004). European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies: Issue 254. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. ISBN 9781584774228.
  • Duffy, Christopher (1996). Siege Warfare: The fortress in the early modern world, 1494-1660. New York, USA: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-14649-4.
  • Durston, Christopher (2015). Charles I. Routledge. ISBN 9781135099244.
  • Israel, Jonathan Irvine (1998). The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness and Fall, 1477-1806 Oxford history of early modern Europe. Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198207344.
  • Manning, Roger Burrow (2006). An apprenticeship in arms: the origins of the British Army 1585-1702. London, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-926149-9.
  • Markham, C. R (2007). The Fighting Veres: Lives Of Sir Francis Vere And Sir Horace Vere. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1432549053.
  • Robert L. Brenner. Merchants and Revolution: Commercial Change, Political Conflict, and London's Overseas Traders, 1550-1653, Verso (2003) ISBN 1-85984-333-6
  • John H. Elliot. Empires of the Atlantic World: Britain and Spain in America 1492-1830 Yale University Press ISBN 0-300-11431-1
  • Robert F. Marx. Shipwrecks in the Americas, New York (1971) ISBN 0-486-25514-X
  • Robert L. Paquette and Stanley L. Engerman. The Lesser Antilles in the Age of European Expansion, University Press of Florida (1996), ISBN 0-8130-1428-X
  • Richard B. Sheridan. Sugar and Slavery; An Economic History Of The British West Indies, 1623-1775 The Johns Hopkins University Press (April 1, 1974) ISBN 0-8018-1580-0
  • Timothy R. Walton. The Spanish Treasure Fleets by Pineapple Press, (1994) ISBN 1-56164-049-2
  • David Marley. Wars of the Americas: a chronology of armed conflict in the New World, 1492 to the present, ABC-CLIO (1998), ISBN 978-0-87436-837-6
  • Roger Lockyer. Buckingham, the Life and Political Career of George Villiers, First Duke of Buckingham, 1592–1628 (Longman, 1981).
  • Paul Bloomfield. Uncommon People. A Study of England's Elite (London: Hamilton, 1955).
  • "Buckingham, George Villiers, 1st Duke of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 722–724.

External links edit

  • European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United ..., Issue 254,Volume 2, Frances Gardiner Davenport

anglo, spanish, 1625, 1630, other, conflicts, anglo, spanish, part, eighty, years, warthe, defence, cádiz, against, english, francisco, zurbarándatelocationatlantic, ocean, english, channel, countries, spain, spanish, mainresultstatus, ante, bellum, treaty, ma. For other conflicts see Anglo Spanish War Anglo Spanish War 1625 1630 Part of the Eighty Years WarThe Defence of Cadiz against the English by Francisco de ZurbaranDateAnglo Spanish War 1625 1630 LocationAtlantic Ocean English Channel Low Countries Spain and the Spanish MainResultStatus quo ante bellum 1 2 Treaty of Madrid Increased division between the English Monarchy and ParliamentBelligerentsSpain England Dutch RepublicCommanders and leadersPhilip IV Count Duke of Olivares Ambrosio Spinola Fadrique de Toledo Antonio de Oquendo Duke of Medina SidoniaCharles I Duke of Buckingham Edward Cecil Robert Devereux Horace Vere Maurice of Nassau William of Nassau The 1625 to 1630 Anglo Spanish War was fought by England in alliance with the Dutch Republic and Spain A related conflict of the Eighty Years War between the Dutch and Spanish most of the fighting took place at sea and was largely indecisive Contents 1 Background 2 War 2 1 Siege of Breda 2 2 Cadiz Expedition 2 3 1627 1628 2 4 Dutch Revolt of 1626 1629 2 5 St Kitts and Nevis 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editEuropean policy in this period was dominated by the outbreak of the Thirty Years War within the Holy Roman Empire in 1618 and renewal of the Eighty Years War between Spain and the Dutch Republic in 1622 Despite popular enthusiasm for the Protestant Dutch and concern at the success of the Catholic Counter Reformation English involvement had been limited to financial support and provision of volunteers This was largely due to differences between the English Crown and Parliament over the nature of the problem and how to resolve it 3 The Thirty Years War began when the Protestant Frederick V of the Palatinate accepted the Crown of Bohemia replacing Ferdinand II Catholic heir to the Holy Roman Emperor In 1619 Frederick was ousted from Bohemia while Spanish troops occupied his hereditary lands of the Electoral Palatinate in preparation for renewing their war with the Dutch Since Frederick was the son in law of James VI and I king of Scotland and EnglandWar editThe 1624 Parliament voted three subsidies and three fifteenths around 300 000 for the prosecution of the war with the conditions that it be spent on a naval war James ever the pacifist refused to declare war and in fact never did His successor Charles I was the one to declare war in 1625 4 Siege of Breda edit Main article Siege of Breda 1624 In August 1624 the Spanish general Don Ambrosio Spinola ordered his forces to lay siege to the Dutch city of Breda The city was heavily fortified and defended by a garrison of 7 000 Dutch soldiers Spinola rapidly gathered his defences and drove off a Dutch relief army under Maurice of Nassau Prince of Orange who was attempting to cut off his supplies In February 1625 another relief force consisting of 7 000 English soldiers under Sir Horace Vere and Ernst von Mansfeld was also defeated Finally Justin of Nassau surrendered Breda to the Spaniards in June 1625 after an eleven month siege Cadiz Expedition edit nbsp The Duke of Buckingham by Peter Paul RubensBy October 1625 approximately 100 ships and a total of 15 000 seamen and soldiers were readied for the Cadiz Expedition An alliance with the Dutch had also been forged and the new allies agreed to dispatch an additional 15 warships commanded by William of Nassau to assist in guarding the English Channel in the absence of the English main fleet Sir Edward Cecil a battle hardened veteran of combat in service with the Dutch was appointed commander of the expedition by the Duke of Buckingham a choice that proved to be ill considered Cecil was a good soldier but he had little knowledge of nautical matters The planned expedition involved several elements overtaking Spanish treasure ships returning from the Americas loaded with valuables and assaulting Spanish towns with the intention of assailing the Spanish economy by weakening the Spanish supply chain and consequently relieving the military pressure on the Electorate of the Palatinate The entire expedition descended into farce The English forces wasted time in capturing an old fort of little importance giving Cadiz the time to fully mobilise behind its defences and allowing merchant ships in the bay to make good their escape The city s modernised defences a vast improvement on those of Tudor times proved effective Meanwhile a body of English forces landed further down the coast to march on the city also became side tracked because of poor discipline Eventually Sir Edward Cecil the commander of the English forces faced with dwindling supplies decided there was no alternative but to return to England having captured few goods and having had no impact on Spain And thus in December a battered fleet returned home Charles I to protect his own dignity and Buckingham who had failed to ensure the invasion fleet was well supplied made no effort to inquire as to the cause of the failure of the Cadiz Expedition Charles turned a blind eye to the debacle instead preoccupying himself with the plight of the French Huguenots of La Rochelle But the House of Commons proved less forgiving The parliament of 1626 initiated the process of impeachment against the Duke of Buckingham prompting Charles I to choose to dissolve parliament rather than risk a successful impeachment The failure of the attack had severe consequences for England In addition to the economic and human loss it damaged the reputation of the English Crown creating a serious political and financial crisis in the country 1627 1628 edit The Duke of Buckingham then negotiated with the French regent Cardinal Richelieu for English ships to aid Richelieu in his fight against the French Huguenots in exchange for French aid against the Spanish occupying the Electorate of the Palatinate but the Parliament of England was disgusted and horrified at the thought of English Protestants fighting French Protestants The plan only fuelled their fears of crypto Catholicism at court Buckingham himself believing that the failure of his enterprise was the result of treachery by Richelieu formulated an alliance among Cardinal Richelieu s many enemies a policy that included support for the very Huguenots whom he had recently attacked The English force commanded by the Duke of Buckingham was defeated by the French Royal troops at the Siege of Saint Martin de Re and at the Siege of La Rochelle In this campaign the English lost more than 4 000 men of a force of 7 000 men On 23 August while organising a second campaign in Portsmouth England in 1628 Buckingham was stabbed to death at the Greyhound Pub by John Felton an army officer who had been wounded at the Siege of La Rochelle Dutch Revolt of 1626 1629 edit nbsp The siege of s Hertogenbosch in 1629 by Pieter SnayersAfter the surrender of Breda the States gave orders for recruiting their army which consisted of 61 670 infantry and 5 853 cavalry nearly 20 000 of whom were English and Scottish Of these four were English regiments that King Charles had raised and sent to Holland A part of this force was sent to the Spanish held city of Oldenzaal which was captured after a ten day bombardment in the summer of 1626 The following year the English were under the command of Edward Cecil and contributed to the siege of the city of Groenlo A Spanish relief force led by Hendrik van den Bergh failed to get through and as a result the city surrendered to the Dutch commander Frederick Henry Prince of Orange 5 In 1629 the important Spanish stronghold of s Hertogenbosch was besieged and captured by Frederick Henry s army of 28 000 men which included a number of English and Scottish regiments all commanded by Horace Vere 6 St Kitts and Nevis edit In 1629 a Spanish naval expedition commanded by Admiral Don Fadrique de Toledo was sent to deal with the recently established Anglo French colonies on the Caribbean islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis The territories were regarded by the Spanish Empire as its own since the islands were discovered by the Spanish in 1498 and the English and French colonies had grown sufficiently to be considered a threat to the Spanish West Indies In the Battle of St Kitts the heavily armed settlements on both islands were destroyed and the Spanish seized the islands Aftermath editEngland altered its involvement in the Thirty Years War by negotiating a peace treaty with France in 1629 Thereafter expeditions were undertaken by the Duke of Hamilton and Earl of Craven to the Holy Roman Empire in support of the thousands of Scottish and English mercenaries already serving under the King of Sweden in that conflict Hamilton s levy was raised despite the end of the Anglo Spanish War In addition English troops would constitute a large part of the States army but in their pay after 1630 In the following years under Frederick Henry and Horace Vere the cities of Maastricht and Rheinberg were recaptured 7 Breda was recaptured in 1637 with English troops led by Colonel Charles Morgan With the advent of the War of the Mantuan Succession Spain sought peace with England in 1629 and so arranged a suspension of arms and an exchange of ambassadors 8 On 15 November the Treaty of Madrid was signed which ended the war and thus restored the Status quo 2 9 It had proven a costly fiasco for England whose merchants lost the profitable Flemish cloth markets to heavy custom duties after the war 10 The unsuccessful and unpopular outcome of the conflict 11 fuelled the disputes between the Monarchy and Parliament to the point that the first charge of grievance was made against Charles I in the Grand Remonstrance ten years after the conflict had ended 12 page needed Notes editReferences edit Davenport p 307 a b Ashley p 125 Adams 1983 pp 79 80 Richard Cust 2007 Charles I a political life Harlow England Longman Pearson ISBN 9781405859035 OCLC 154888234 Knight Charles Raleigh 1905 Historical records of The Buffs East Kent Regiment 3rd Foot formerly designated the Holland Regiment and Prince George of Denmark s Regiment Vol I London Gale amp Polden pp 68 70 Markham pp 435 438 Knight pp 72 74 Davenport p 305 Durston p 171 O Neill Patrick Ignacio 2014 Charles I and the Spanish Plot Anglo Habsburg Relations and the Outbreak of the War of Three Kingdoms 1630 1641 PDF Riverside University of California pp 29 43 O Neill 2014 p 25 Yerby George 2019 The Economic Causes of the English Civil War Freedom of Trade and the English Revolution Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 51764 4 Sources editAdams Simon 1983 Spain or the Netherlands The Dilemmas of Early Stuart Foreign Policy inBefore the English Civil War Springer ISBN 978 0 333 30899 8 Further reading editAshley Maurice 1987 Charles I and Oliver Cromwell A Study in Contrasts and Comparisons Methuen Limited ISBN 9780413162700 Davenport Frances Gardiner Paullin Charles Oscar eds 2004 European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies Issue 254 The Lawbook Exchange Ltd ISBN 9781584774228 Duffy Christopher 1996 Siege Warfare The fortress in the early modern world 1494 1660 New York USA Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 14649 4 Durston Christopher 2015 Charles I Routledge ISBN 9781135099244 Israel Jonathan Irvine 1998 The Dutch Republic Its Rise Greatness and Fall 1477 1806 Oxford history of early modern Europe Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198207344 Manning Roger Burrow 2006 An apprenticeship in arms the origins of the British Army 1585 1702 London UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926149 9 Markham C R 2007 The Fighting Veres Lives Of Sir Francis Vere And Sir Horace Vere Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1432549053 Robert L Brenner Merchants and Revolution Commercial Change Political Conflict and London s Overseas Traders 1550 1653 Verso 2003 ISBN 1 85984 333 6 John H Elliot Empires of the Atlantic World Britain and Spain in America 1492 1830 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 11431 1 Robert F Marx Shipwrecks in the Americas New York 1971 ISBN 0 486 25514 X Robert L Paquette and Stanley L Engerman The Lesser Antilles in the Age of European Expansion University Press of Florida 1996 ISBN 0 8130 1428 X Richard B Sheridan Sugar and Slavery An Economic History Of The British West Indies 1623 1775 The Johns Hopkins University Press April 1 1974 ISBN 0 8018 1580 0 Timothy R Walton The Spanish Treasure Fleets by Pineapple Press 1994 ISBN 1 56164 049 2 David Marley Wars of the Americas a chronology of armed conflict in the New World 1492 to the present ABC CLIO 1998 ISBN 978 0 87436 837 6 Roger Lockyer Buckingham the Life and Political Career of George Villiers First Duke of Buckingham 1592 1628 Longman 1981 Paul Bloomfield Uncommon People A Study of England s Elite London Hamilton 1955 Buckingham George Villiers 1st Duke of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed 1911 pp 722 724 External links editEuropean Treaties Bearing on the History of the United Issue 254 Volume 2 Frances Gardiner Davenport Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anglo Spanish War 1625 1630 amp oldid 1187848192, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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