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Battle of Öland

The Battle of Öland was a naval battle between an allied Danish-Dutch fleet and the Swedish navy in the Baltic Sea, off the east coast of Öland on 1 June 1676.[1] The battle was a part of the Scanian War (1675–79) fought for supremacy over the southern Baltic. Sweden was in urgent need of reinforcements for its north German possessions; Denmark sought to ferry an army to Scania in southern Sweden to open a front on Swedish soil.

Battle of Öland
Part of the Scanian War

Battle of Öland by Claus Møinichen
Date1 June 1676
Location
East coast of Öland, western Baltic Sea
56°26′58″N 16°40′20″E / 56.44944°N 16.67222°E / 56.44944; 16.67222
Result Dano-Dutch victory
Belligerents
Denmark-Norway
 Dutch Republic
Swedish Empire
Commanders and leaders
Cornelis Tromp
Niels Juel
Philips van Almonde
Lorentz Creutz 
Claes Uggla 
Johan Bär
Strength
42 warships, including 25 ships of the line 57 warships, including 27 ships of the line
c. 12,000 men
Casualties and losses
1 fireship
at least 100 dead
5 ships sunk
6 ships captured
at least 1,400 dead

Just as the battle began, the Swedish flagship Kronan sank, taking with it almost the entire crew, including the Admiral of the Realm and commander of the Swedish navy, Lorentz Creutz. The allied force under the leadership of the Dutch admiral Cornelis Tromp took full advantage of the ensuing disorder on the Swedish side. The acting commander after Creutz's sudden demise, Admiral Claes Uggla, was surrounded and his flagship Svärdet battered in a drawn-out artillery duel, then set ablaze by a fire ship. Uggla drowned while escaping the burning ship, and with the loss of a second supreme commander, the rest of the Swedish fleet fled in disorder.

The battle resulted in Danish naval supremacy, which was upheld throughout the war. The Danish King Christian V was able to ship troops over to the Swedish side of the Sound, and on 29 June a force of 14,500 men landed at Råå, just south of Helsingborg in southernmost Sweden. Scania became the main battleground of the war, culminating with the bloody battles of Lund, Halmstad and Landskrona. Danish and Dutch naval forces were left free to raze Öland and the Swedish east coast all the way up to Stockholm. The Swedish failure at Öland also prompted King Charles XI to order a commission to investigate the fiasco, but in the end no one was found responsible.

Background edit

 
A map of Sweden's territorial gains and losses 1560–1815. After 1660, Sweden was at its peak as a Baltic Sea power, holding the coast along the entire northern Baltic and strategic possessions in the southwest.

In the 1660s, Sweden reached its height as a European great power. It had recently defeated Denmark, one of its main competitors for hegemony in the Baltic, in the Torstenson War (1643–45) and the Dano-Swedish War (1657–58). At the Treaties of Brömsebro (1645) and Roskilde (1658), Denmark was forced to cede the islands of Gotland and Ösel, all of its eastern territories on the Scandinavian Peninsula, and parts of Norway. In a third war, from 1658 to 1660, King Charles X of Sweden attempted to finish off Denmark for good. The move was in part due to bold royal ambition, but also a result of Sweden's being a highly militarized society geared for almost constant warfare, a fiscal-military state.[2] Disbanding the Swedish forces meant settling outstanding pay, so there was an underlying incentive to keep hostilities alive and let soldiers live off enemy lands and plunder.[3] In the end, the renewed attack failed with interventions by the leading naval powers of England and the Dutch Republic. Charles' plans to subdue Denmark were thwarted and Trøndelag and Bornholm were returned to Denmark in the Treaty of Copenhagen in 1660 while Sweden was allowed to keep the rest of its recent conquests.[4]

Charles X died in February 1660 and was succeeded by a regency council—led by the queen mother Hedvig Eleonora—that ruled in the name of Charles XI who was only four at the time of his father's death. Sweden had come close to almost complete control over trade in the Baltic, but the war revealed the need to work against the formation of anti-Swedish alliances that included Denmark, especially with France, the most powerful state in Europe at the time. There were some successes in foreign policy with the anti-French 1668 Triple Alliance of England, Sweden, and the Dutch Republic.[5]

While the Swedish policy was to avoid war and to consolidate its gains, Danish policy after 1660 was to seek an opportunity to regain its losses. Under the Oldenburg King Frederick III, the foreign policy was aimed at isolating Sweden while setting itself up in a favorable position in future wars. Denmark attempted to position itself in the alliances among the 17th century Europe great powers. Bourbon France and the Habsburg-dominated Holy Roman Empire competed for continental domination while the Dutch Republic and England fought several wars over naval hegemony. At the same time, Denmark sought to rid itself of the generous toll treaties it was forced to grant Dutch merchants after the Republic's assistance in the wars against Sweden. Attempts were made to ally with both England and France, but without success. In the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665–66) Denmark had to side with the Dutch at the Battle of Vågen, souring its relations with England. In 1670 France allied with England against the Republic. Sweden's relations with France had improved greatly and in 1672 it joined the Anglo-French coalition, pushing Denmark into the Dutch camp.[6]

In 1672, French King Louis XIV launched an attack on the Dutch Republic, igniting the Franco-Dutch War. The attack was opposed by the Holy Roman Empire led by Leopold I. In 1674, Sweden was pressured into joining the war by attacking the Republic's northern German allies. France promised to pay Sweden desperately needed war subsidies only on the condition that it moved in force on Brandenburg. A Swedish army of around 22,000 men under Carl Gustaf Wrangel advanced into Brandenburg in December 1674 and suffered a minor tactical defeat at the Battle of Fehrbellin in June 1675. Though not militarily significant, the defeat tarnished the reputation of near-invincibility that Sweden had enjoyed since the Thirty Years' War and emboldened its enemies. By September 1675, Denmark, the Dutch Republic, the Holy Roman Empire and Spain were all joined in war against Sweden and its ally France.[5]

Scanian War edit

 
Sailing order for the Swedish fleet in late 1675. The illustration shows that the Swedish navy had not adapted to the realities of the line of battle. It still followed the patterns of "melee tactics" where small groups of ships acted individually, aiming for close combat and boarding.[7]

With the declaration of war against Sweden on 2 September 1675, Denmark saw a chance to regain its recently lost eastern provinces. The southern Baltic became an important strategic theatre for both Denmark and Sweden. Denmark needed the sea lanes to invade Scania, and Sweden needed to reinforce Swedish Pomerania on the Baltic coast; both stood to gain by taking control of the Baltic trade routes.[8] As war broke out between Denmark and Sweden a strong naval presence also became essential for Sweden to secure its interests at home and overseas.[5]

In October 1675 the Swedish fleet under Gustaf Otto Stenbock put to sea, but sailed no further than Stora Karlsö off Gotland before it had to turn back to Stockholm after less than two weeks, beset by cold and stormy weather, disease, and the loss of vital equipment. Stenbock, held personally responsible for the failure by King Charles XI, was forced to pay for the campaign out of his own pocket. During the winter of 1675–76 the Swedish fleet was placed under the command of Lorentz Creutz, who attempted to put to sea in January to February 1676, but was iced in by exceptionally cold weather.[8]

State of the fleets edit

The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652–54) saw the development of the line of battle, a tactic where ships formed a continuous line to fire broadsides at an enemy. Previously, decisive action in naval engagements had been achieved through boarding and melee, but after the middle of the 17th century tactical doctrine focused more on disabling or sinking an opponent through superior firepower from a distance. This entailed major changes in military doctrines, shipbuilding, and professionalism in European navies from the 1650s onwards.[9] The line of battle favored very large ships that could hold the line in the face of heavy fire, later known as ships of the line. The new tactics also depended on the ability of strong, centralized governments to maintain large, permanent fleets led by a professional officer corps. The increased power of the state at the expense of individual landowners led to the expansion of armies and navies, and in the late 1660s Sweden embarked on an expansive shipbuilding program.[10]

 
Detail of engraving of Stockholm from Suecia antiqua et hodierna by Erik Dahlberg and Willem Swidde, printed in 1693. The view shows the Swedish capital as a bustling port, and in the foreground the peak of Kastellholmen next to the royal shipyards on Skeppsholmen.

In 1675, the Swedish fleet was numerically superior to its Danish counterpart (18 ships of the line against 16 and 21 frigates against 11), but it was older and of poorer quality than the Danish fleet, which had replaced a larger proportion of its vessels. The Swedes had problems with routine maintenance, and both rigging and sails were generally in poor condition. Swedish crews lacked the professionalism of Danish and Norwegian sailors, who commonly had valuable experience from service in the Dutch merchant navy, and the Swedish navy also lacked a core of professional officers. The Danish had seasoned veterans like Cort Adeler and Niels Juel. The Danish fleet was also reinforced with Dutch units under the command Philip van Almonde and Cornelis Tromp, the latter an experienced officer who had served under Michiel de Ruyter, famous for his skilled command during the Anglo-Dutch Wars.[11]

Prelude edit

A Danish fleet of 20 ships under Admiral Niels Juel put to sea in March 1676, and on 29 April his forces landed on Gotland, which surrendered.[12] The Swedish fleet was ordered out on 4 May with 23 warships of over 50 guns, 21 of less than 50 and 16 minor supporting vessels manned by about 12,000 men,[13] but encountered adverse winds and was delayed until 19 May. Juel had by then left Visby, the main port on Gotland, to join up with a smaller Danish-Dutch force at Bornholm, between the southern tip of Sweden and the northern coast of Germany. Together they intended to cruise between Scania and the island of Rügen to stop Swedish troops from landing on the island and reinforcing Swedish Pomerania.[14] On 25–26 May the two fleets fought the indecisive battle at Bornholm. The Swedish force was superior in numbers but was unable to inflict any serious losses,[15] and two of the fleet's fireships were captured, one by the allies and the other by a Brandenburg squadron headed for Copenhagen.[16]

 
Cornelis Tromp in 1675

Several Swedish accounts say that Creutz argued with his officers after Bornholm. Major Taube of the Mars testified that after the battle, the officers had been "scolded like boys"[17] and that Creutz, "without regard for guilt or innocence, accused them almost all alike".[18] The army captain Rosenberg told a later inquiry that Creutz "almost had a paroxysm in the night" over the conduct of Johan Bär (one of his flag officers) at Bornholm, and that he swore "never to go to serve at sea with such rascals".[19] Maritime archaeologist Lars Einarsson has concluded that the relationship between Creutz and his subordinates had hit rock bottom before the battle.[20]

After the unsuccessful action the Swedish fleet anchored off Trelleborg, where King Charles was waiting with new orders to recapture Gotland. The fleet was to refuse combat with the allies at least until they reached the northern tip of Öland, where they could fight in friendly waters. After the Swedish fleet left Trelleborg on 30 May, the allied fleet soon came in contact with it and began pursuing the Swedes. By this time the allies had been reinforced by a small squadron and now totaled 42 vessels, with 25 large or medium ships of the line. The reinforcements also brought with them a new commander, Admiral General Cornelis Tromp, one of the ablest naval tacticians of his time. Tromp, who also was a Lieutenant-Admiral in the Dutch navy, was made Admiral-General of the Danish navy on 8 May 1676. The two fleets sailed north and on 1 June passed the southern tip of Öland in a strong gale. The rough winds were hard on the Swedish ships. Many lost masts and spars. The Swedes, forming a barely cohesive battle line, tried to sail ahead of Tromp's ships, hoping to get between them and the shore, thus putting themselves on the allied fleet's windward side and gaining the tactical advantage of holding the weather gage. The Dutch ships of the allied fleet managed to sail closer to the wind and faster than the rest of the force, and slipped between the Swedes and the coast, snatching the weather gage. Later that morning the two fleets closed on each other, and were soon within firing range.[21]

Battle edit

Around noon, as a result of poor coordination and signaling, the Swedish line unexpectedly turned toward the allied fleet. When the flagship Kronan came about in the maneuver it suddenly heeled over and began to take in water. According to master gunner Anders Gyllenspak, the sails were not reefed and the ship leaned over so hard that water flooded in through the lower gunports. As the ship was leaning over, a gust of wind pushed the ship on her side, bringing her masts and sails down in line with the surface of the sea. Shortly afterwards, the gunpowder store exploded and ripped the forward section of the starboard side apart. Kronan quickly lost buoyancy and sank, taking most of her 850-man crew with her.[22]

 
A contemporary depiction that divides the battle into three phases: (1) the two fleets sailing northwards along the coast of Öland, just passing the southern tip of Öland, (2) Kronan exploding and Svärdet surrounded, and (3) the Swedish fleet fleeing in disorder, pursued by allied ships. Copper engraving by Romeyn de Hooghe, 1676.

The sudden loss of the flagship and the fleet admiral threw the already scattered Swedish line into confusion and sapped morale. Four ships from Creutz's and Uggla's squadrons immediately fled when they saw that the flagship was lost.[23] Claes Uggla was next in command after Creutz and became the acting commander of the Swedish fleet. When the line came about, Uggla and his ship Svärdet came on a collision course with the still floating wreckage of Kronan, and were forced to jibe (turn the stern into the wind direction) to avoid it. Svärdet's second turn was interpreted by many ships as a signal to turn again; others interpreted it as the beginning of a general retreat, leading to major disorder. Uggla reduced speed in an attempt to gather his forces, but instead was separated from his squadron.[24]

Tromp on Christianus Quintus, Vice Admiral Jens Rodsten on Tre Løver and Niels Juel on Churprindsen took advantage of the chaos. They quickly surrounded Svärdet and three supporting ships (Hieronymus, Neptunus and Järnvågen, an armed merchantman) and began to hammer them into submission. Several other Swedish vessels attempted to assist Uggla, but they were in a lee position and could not provide effective support. After about an hour-and-a-half to two hours of hard fighting Svärdet's mainmast went overboard and Uggla had to surrender to Tromp. Despite this, Svärdet was ignited by accident or misunderstanding by the Dutch fireship 't Hoen. The second largest Swedish ship after Kronan sank in the blaze and took with it 600 out of a crew of 650, including Admiral Uggla himself.[25] Only Hieronymus escaped the assault by the allied admirals, though badly damaged, and the others were captured by Juel on Churprindsen together with one of his lieutenants on Anna Sophia.[26]

By six o'clock in the evening the Swedes had lost two flagships along with two fleet admirals, including the supreme commander of the navy. The entire force now began a disorderly retreat: the smaller ships Enhorn, Ekorren, Gripen and Sjöhästen were outsailed and captured and the rest of the ships sought shelter in friendly harbors. Most set course for Dalarö, north of Stockholm; others tried for Kalmar Strait, between Öland and the Swedish mainland.[27] The allied fleet tried to capitalize further on its victory by giving chase, but the dash up the coast had scattered its forces and there was disagreement among the Danish commanders on how far they should pursue the Swedish ships.[28]

Aftermath edit

 
Charles XI pointing to the spot of the new main naval base of the Swedish navy, what would later become the town of Karlskrona; painting by Pehr Hilleström

The Swedish fleet had suffered a major blow by losing its two largest ships, its commander-in-chief and one of its most experienced admirals. Even after the battle, the misfortunes continued. Äpplet came off its moorings at Dalarö, went aground and sank. Around fifty survivors were picked up by pursuing Danish ships and taken as prisoners to Copenhagen.[29] The battle gave Denmark undisputed naval supremacy and the Swedish fleet did not dare to venture out for the rest of the year. The army that had been amassed in Denmark could now be shipped to Scania to take the war to Swedish soil and on 29 June 1676, 14,500 troops were landed at Råå south of Helsingborg.[30] The Battle of Öland was the first major Swedish defeat at sea to Denmark and was followed by further Swedish defeats at Møn and Køge Bay in 1677. The latter was a resounding success for Admiral Niels Juel and has become the most celebrated victory in Danish naval history.[31]

The Battle of Öland was the first of several major Swedish defeats at sea that ended in complete Danish dominance over the southern Baltic for the duration of the Scanian War. That the main naval base in Stockholm was locked in ice during the winter of 1675–76 showed the necessity of an ice-free harbor that was closer to Danish home waters. In 1679, King Charles personally chose the site for a new base at what would later become Karlskrona.[31] The lessons from the war also led to improvements in Swedish naval organization under the guidance of Hans Wachtmeister (1641–1714) which included better funding and maintenance, increased readiness for mobilization in the southern Baltic and permanent recruitment of skilled personnel through the allotment system.[32]

Swedish commission edit

Within a week, the news of the failure at Bornholm and the major defeat at Öland reached King Charles, who immediately ordered that a commission be set up to investigate what had happened. Charles wanted to see if Bär and other officers were guilty of cowardice or incompetence. On 13 June, the King wrote "some of our sea officers have shown such cowardly and careless behavior" that they have "placed the safety, welfare and defense of the kingdom at great peril", and that "such a serious crime should be severely punished".[33]

The commission began its work on 7 June 1676. At the hearings, strong criticism surfaced and was directed against individual officers as well as Swedish conduct in general. Anders Homman, one of the officers on Svärdet, was among those who chastised his colleagues the hardest. In his testimony he said that Admiral Uggla had exclaimed "look how those dog cunts run"[34] when he was surrounded, fighting the allied flagships. Homman himself described the actions of his colleagues as those of "chickens running about the yard, each in his own direction", and added that he "had been in seven battles, but had never seen our people fight so poorly".[35]

The commission did not find anyone guilty of negligence or misconduct, but Lieutenant Admiral Bär, commander of Nyckeln, and Lieutenant Admiral Christer Boije, who had run aground on Äpplet, were never again given a command in the navy. Lieutenant Admiral Hans Clerck, commander of Solen, went through the process unscathed, and was promoted to full Admiral by the King before the commission even presented its verdict. Creutz has quite consistently been blamed for the loss of his ship by historians, and has been described as an incompetent sea officer and sailor who more or less single-handedly brought about the sinking through lack of naval experience.[36] Military historians Lars Ericson Wolke and Olof Sjöblom have attempted to nuance the picture by pointing out that Creutz's task was akin to that of an administrator rather than a military commander. The practical issues of ship maneuvering should have been the responsibility of his subordinates, who had experience in naval matters.[37]

Disputes among the allied officers edit

Despite the victories, several allied officers were displeased with the conduct of their forces. Naval historian Jørgen Barfod explains that the battle was fought "in a disorganized manner from beginning to end" since Tromp had given the order for each commander to attack the enemy ship closest to him.[38] Most of the Danish fleet was unable to keep pace with the faster Dutch ships, so the race for an advantageous position along the coast had contributed to the scattering of the allied fleet. Juel later complained in a letter to the Danish Admiral of the Realm that the Dutch had not assisted him in pursuing the fleeing Swedes. He claimed that if he had received proper support, they could have "brought [the Swedes] such a fever on their throats that it would take years for all the doctors in Stockholm to cure it".[39] When Tromp sent a report of the battle to the Danish King he reproached his subordinates, but not by name, and asked that no punishment be dealt out.[40]

The captain of 't Hoen, the fireship that had set Svärdet ablaze after she had surrendered, was arrested and incarcerated directly after the battle, and was subjected to such harsh treatment that he died within a few days. Tromp later reported that his ship Delft, which had seen some of the roughest fighting, had lost around 100 men and that most of its officers were wounded.[41]

Forces edit

Below is a list of the ships that participated in the battle. The figures in parentheses indicate the number of guns for each ship.[42]

Allied fleet edit

First squadron

Flagship: Churprindsen (68), Niels Juel
  • Christianus IV (58)
  • Gyldenløve (56)
  • Anna Sophia (62)
  • Delmenhorst (44)
  • Nellebladet (54)
  • Lindormen (46)
  • København (36)
  • Hommeren (32)
  • Anthonette (26)
  • Caritas (34)
  • Fire Kronede Lillier (4)
  • Stokfisken, Abrahams Offer (fireships)

Second squadron

Flagship: Christianus V (80), Cornelis Tromp
  • Tre Løver (64)
  • Oostergoo (60)
  • Charlotta Amalie (64)
  • Enighed (66)
  • Fridericus III (64)
  • Campen (44)
  • Havmanden (36)
  • Havfruen (26)
  • Spraglede Falk (18)
  • Louys, 't Hoen (fireships)

Third squadron

Flagship: Delft (62), Philips van Almonde
  • Waesdorp (68)
  • Dordrecht (46)
  • Ackerboom (60)
  • Gideon (60)
  • Justina (64)
  • Noortholland (44)
  • Caleb (40)
  • Utrecht (38)
  • Hvide Falk (26)
  • Delft (28)
  • Perlen (8)
  • Leonora (fireship)

Swedish fleet edit

First squadron

Flagship: Kronan (124), Lorentz Creutz
  • Solen (74)
  • Wrangel (60)
  • Draken (66)
  • Herkules (56)
  • Neptunus (44)
  • Maria (44)
  • Fenix (36)
  • Sundsvall (32)
  • Enhorn (16)
  • Pärlan (28, armed merchantman)
  • Tre Bröder (12)
  • Mjöhund (10)
  • Sjöhästen (8)
  • Jakob, Svan (fireships)

Second squadron

Flagship: Svärdet (94), Claes Uggla
  • Mars (72)
  • Merkurius (64)
  • Hieronymus (64)
  • Svenska Lejonet (48)
  • Göteborg (48)
  • Fredrika Amalia (34)
  • Uttern (24)
  • Flygande Vargen (44, armed merchantman)
  • Järnvågen (24, armed merchantman)
  • Ekorren (8)
  • Posthornet (8)
  • Råbocken (8)
  • Rödkritan, Duvan (fireships)

Third squadron

Flagship: Nyckeln (84), Johan Bär
  • Äpplet (86)
  • Saturnus (64)
  • Caesar (60)
  • Wismar (54)
  • Riga (54)
  • Hjorten (36)
  • Solen (54, armed merchantman)
  • Salvator (30)
  • Gripen (8)
  • Sjöman (8)
  • Postiljon (fireship)

Fourth squadron[43]

  • Victoria (80)
  • Venus (64)
  • Jupiter (70)
  • Carolus (60)
  • Spes (48)
  • Abraham (44)
  • Nordstjärnan (28)
  • Trumslagaren (34, armed merchantman)
  • Konung David (32, armed merchantman)
  • Elisabeth (12, armed merchantman)
  • Fortuna (12)
  • Måsen (8)
  • Jägaren (fireship)

Notes edit

  1. ^ 11 June by the Gregorian calendar; Denmark-Norway and Sweden still used the Julian calendar while the Dutch Republic had switched to Gregorian in 1582–83.
  2. ^ See Jan Glete (2002) War and the State in Early Modern Europe: Spain, the Dutch Republic and Sweden as Fiscal-Military States, 1500–1600. Routledge, London. ISBN 0-415-22645-7 for an in-depth study.
  3. ^ Göran Rystad "Skånska kriget och kampen om hegemonin i Norden" in Rystad (2005), p. 18.
  4. ^ Göran Rystad "Skånska kriget och kampen om hegemonin i Norden" in Rystad (2005), pp. 18–19.
  5. ^ a b c Göran Rystad "Skånska kriget och kampen om hegemonin i Norden" in Rystad (2005), pp. 20–21.
  6. ^ Dyrvik (1998) pp. 193–197.
  7. ^ Glete (2005).
  8. ^ a b Finn Askgaard, "Kampen till sjöss" in Rystad (2005), p. 171.
  9. ^ Glete (1993), pp. 173–178.
  10. ^ Glete (1993), p. 176.
  11. ^ Finn Askgaard, "Kampen till sjöss" in Rystad (2005), p. 172.
  12. ^ Barfod (1997), pp. 45–48.
  13. ^ Barfod (1997), p. 49.
  14. ^ Gunnar Grandin, "Gotland invaderas" and "Flottan löper ut" in Johansson (1985), pp. 114–115, 118–119.
  15. ^ Sjöblom (2003), pp. 225–226.
  16. ^ Barfod (1997), pp. 49–50.
  17. ^ Original quote: "utbannade som pojkar"; Lundgren (2001), p. 23.
  18. ^ Original quote: "aktat varken skyldig eller oskyldig, utan skärt dem nästan alla över en kam"; Lundgren (2001), p. 45.
  19. ^ Original quote: "så nära om natten fått slag", "aldrig mer gå på flottan med sådana skälmar"; Lundgren (2001), p. 50.
  20. ^ Einarsson (2001), p. 8.
  21. ^ Sjöblom (2003), p. 226.
  22. ^ Lundgren (2001), pp. 235–236.
  23. ^ Zettersten (1903), p. 480.
  24. ^ Unger (1909), pp. 235–236.
  25. ^ Sjöblom (2003), p. 228.
  26. ^ Zettersten (1903), pp. 479–480.
  27. ^ Zettersten (1903), pp. 480–481.
  28. ^ Barfod (1997), pp. 54–55.
  29. ^ Ericson Wolke (2009), p. 115.
  30. ^ Finn Askgaard, "Kampen till sjöss" in Rystad (2005), p. 176.
  31. ^ a b Ericson Wolke (2009), p. 121.
  32. ^ Glete (2010), pp. 197–200, 603–605.
  33. ^ Original quote: en del av våra sjöofficerare sig så lachement förhållit [att de] riksens säkerhet, välfärd och försvar ... ställt uti den högsta hazard", "ett så stort crimen strängeligen bör straffas"; Lundgren (2001), pp. 5–6. The protocols of the commission have been transcribed and published in partially modernized form in Lundgren (1997).
  34. ^ Original quote: "se hur de hundsfottarna löpa och ränna"; Lundgren (1997), p. 94. Homman repeated Uggla's accusation several times during the hearings and was backed up by Captain Olof Nortman, see pp. 93, 99, 107. A literal translation of the Swedish term hundsfott is used here. The word was a common, strongly derogatory term against male individuals that was in widespread use until the 19th century; see Svenska Akademiens Ordbok, H1425 28 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine.
  35. ^ Original quote: "De andra löpte som hönsen omkring gården, var på sitt håll. Och har jag varit med i 7 bataljer, men aldrig sett våra fäkta så illa som den andra gången."; Lundgren (1997), p. 94.
  36. ^ For example: Gyllengranat (1840); Zettersten (1903), p. 478; Unger (1909), p. 234; Isacson (2000), pp. 11–12; Björlin (1885).
  37. ^ Einarsson (2001), p. 13; Ericson Wolke (2009), p. 115; Sjöblom (2003), p. 227.
  38. ^ Original quote: "under helt uordnade former fra først til sidst"; Barfod (1997), p. 54.
  39. ^ Original quote: "de svenske en sådan feber på deres hals, at alle de doctores i Stockholm ikke skulle have været gode for at kurere dem i år og dag igen"; Barfod (1997), p. 54.
  40. ^ Barfod (1997), p. 54.
  41. ^ Gunnar Grandin, "En förtvivlad kamp" i Johansson (1985), pp. 140–141.
  42. ^ Danish forces according to Barfod (1997), pp. 50–51; Swedish forces according to Zettersten (1903), pp. 472–474.
  43. ^ The fourth squadron was divided up among the other three squadrons after Bornholm following the death of its commander from disease; Zettersten (1903), pp. 472–474.

References edit

  • Barfod, Jørgen H. (1997) Niels Juels flåde. Gyldendal, Copenhagen. ISBN 87-00-30226-0 (in Danish)
  • Bjerg, Hans Christian (editor, 1977) Slaget i Køge bugt 1. juli 1677: forudsætninger, forløb og følger. Søe-lieutenant-selskabet, Copenhagen. OCLC 462839232 (in Danish)
  • Björlin, Gustaf (1885) Kriget mot Danmark 1675–1679: läsning för ung och gammal. Norstedt, Stockholm. (in Swedish)
  • Dyrvik, Ståle (1998) Danmark-Norge 1380–1814. Bd 3, Truede tvillingriker 1648–1720. Universitetsforlaget, Oslo. ISBN 82-00-12676-5 (in Norwegian)
  • Einarsson, Lars (2001) Kronan. Kalmar läns museum, Kalmar. ISBN 91-85926-48-5 (in Swedish)
  • Ericson Wolke, Lars (2009) "En helt ny flotta – sjökrigen under 1600-talets sista årtionden" in Ericson Wolke & Hårdstedt, Svenska sjöslag. Medströms förlag, Stockholm. ISBN 978-91-7329-030-2 (in Swedish)
  • Glete, Jan (2005) "Svenska flottans seglingsordning" in Björn Asker (editor) Stormakten som sjömakt: marina bilder från karolinsk tid. Historiska media, Lund. ISBN 91-85057-43-6; pp. 104–105 (in Swedish)
  • Glete, Jan (2010) Swedish Naval Administration, 1521–1721: Resource Flows and Organisational Capabilities. Brill, Leiden. ISBN 978-90-04-17916-5
  • Johansson, Björn Axel (editor, 1985) Regalskeppet Kronan. Trevi, Stockholm. ISBN 91-7160-740-4 (in Swedish)
  • Lundgren, Kurt (2001) Sjöslaget vid Öland. Vittnesmål – dokument 1676–1677. Lingstad Bok & Bild, Kalmar. ISBN 91-631-1292-2 (in Swedish)
  • Rodger, Nicholas A. M. (2004) The Command of the Ocean. A Naval History of Britain 1649–1815. Allen Lane, London. ISBN 0-7139-9411-8
  • Rystad, Göran (editor, 2005) Kampen om Skåne Historiska media, Lund. ISBN 91-85057-05-3 (in Swedish)
  • Sjöblom, Olof (2003) "Slaget vid Öland 1676: Kronan går under" in Ericson [Wolke], Hårdstedt, Iko, Sjöblom & Åselius (editors), Svenska slagfält. Wahlström & Widstrand, Stockholm. ISBN 91-46-20225-0 (in Swedish)
  • Zettersten, Axel (1903) Svenska flottans historia åren 1635–1680. Norrtälje tidnings boktryckeri, Norrtälje. OCLC 185674845 (in Swedish)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Battle of Öland at Wikimedia Commons

battle, öland, 1789, battle, 1789, naval, battle, between, allied, danish, dutch, fleet, swedish, navy, baltic, east, coast, öland, june, 1676, battle, part, scanian, 1675, fought, supremacy, over, southern, baltic, sweden, urgent, need, reinforcements, north,. For the 1789 battle see Battle of Oland 1789 The Battle of Oland was a naval battle between an allied Danish Dutch fleet and the Swedish navy in the Baltic Sea off the east coast of Oland on 1 June 1676 1 The battle was a part of the Scanian War 1675 79 fought for supremacy over the southern Baltic Sweden was in urgent need of reinforcements for its north German possessions Denmark sought to ferry an army to Scania in southern Sweden to open a front on Swedish soil Battle of OlandPart of the Scanian WarBattle of Oland by Claus MoinichenDate1 June 1676LocationEast coast of Oland western Baltic Sea56 26 58 N 16 40 20 E 56 44944 N 16 67222 E 56 44944 16 67222ResultDano Dutch victoryBelligerentsDenmark Norway Dutch RepublicSwedish EmpireCommanders and leadersCornelis Tromp Niels Juel Philips van AlmondeLorentz Creutz Claes Uggla Johan BarStrength42 warships including 25 ships of the line57 warships including 27 ships of the line c 12 000 menCasualties and losses1 fireshipat least 100 dead5 ships sunk6 ships capturedat least 1 400 dead Just as the battle began the Swedish flagship Kronan sank taking with it almost the entire crew including the Admiral of the Realm and commander of the Swedish navy Lorentz Creutz The allied force under the leadership of the Dutch admiral Cornelis Tromp took full advantage of the ensuing disorder on the Swedish side The acting commander after Creutz s sudden demise Admiral Claes Uggla was surrounded and his flagship Svardet battered in a drawn out artillery duel then set ablaze by a fire ship Uggla drowned while escaping the burning ship and with the loss of a second supreme commander the rest of the Swedish fleet fled in disorder The battle resulted in Danish naval supremacy which was upheld throughout the war The Danish King Christian V was able to ship troops over to the Swedish side of the Sound and on 29 June a force of 14 500 men landed at Raa just south of Helsingborg in southernmost Sweden Scania became the main battleground of the war culminating with the bloody battles of Lund Halmstad and Landskrona Danish and Dutch naval forces were left free to raze Oland and the Swedish east coast all the way up to Stockholm The Swedish failure at Oland also prompted King Charles XI to order a commission to investigate the fiasco but in the end no one was found responsible Contents 1 Background 1 1 Scanian War 2 State of the fleets 3 Prelude 4 Battle 5 Aftermath 5 1 Swedish commission 5 2 Disputes among the allied officers 6 Forces 6 1 Allied fleet 6 2 Swedish fleet 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksBackground editMain articles Denmark Norway and Swedish Empire nbsp A map of Sweden s territorial gains and losses 1560 1815 After 1660 Sweden was at its peak as a Baltic Sea power holding the coast along the entire northern Baltic and strategic possessions in the southwest In the 1660s Sweden reached its height as a European great power It had recently defeated Denmark one of its main competitors for hegemony in the Baltic in the Torstenson War 1643 45 and the Dano Swedish War 1657 58 At the Treaties of Bromsebro 1645 and Roskilde 1658 Denmark was forced to cede the islands of Gotland and Osel all of its eastern territories on the Scandinavian Peninsula and parts of Norway In a third war from 1658 to 1660 King Charles X of Sweden attempted to finish off Denmark for good The move was in part due to bold royal ambition but also a result of Sweden s being a highly militarized society geared for almost constant warfare a fiscal military state 2 Disbanding the Swedish forces meant settling outstanding pay so there was an underlying incentive to keep hostilities alive and let soldiers live off enemy lands and plunder 3 In the end the renewed attack failed with interventions by the leading naval powers of England and the Dutch Republic Charles plans to subdue Denmark were thwarted and Trondelag and Bornholm were returned to Denmark in the Treaty of Copenhagen in 1660 while Sweden was allowed to keep the rest of its recent conquests 4 Charles X died in February 1660 and was succeeded by a regency council led by the queen mother Hedvig Eleonora that ruled in the name of Charles XI who was only four at the time of his father s death Sweden had come close to almost complete control over trade in the Baltic but the war revealed the need to work against the formation of anti Swedish alliances that included Denmark especially with France the most powerful state in Europe at the time There were some successes in foreign policy with the anti French 1668 Triple Alliance of England Sweden and the Dutch Republic 5 While the Swedish policy was to avoid war and to consolidate its gains Danish policy after 1660 was to seek an opportunity to regain its losses Under the Oldenburg King Frederick III the foreign policy was aimed at isolating Sweden while setting itself up in a favorable position in future wars Denmark attempted to position itself in the alliances among the 17th century Europe great powers Bourbon France and the Habsburg dominated Holy Roman Empire competed for continental domination while the Dutch Republic and England fought several wars over naval hegemony At the same time Denmark sought to rid itself of the generous toll treaties it was forced to grant Dutch merchants after the Republic s assistance in the wars against Sweden Attempts were made to ally with both England and France but without success In the Second Anglo Dutch War 1665 66 Denmark had to side with the Dutch at the Battle of Vagen souring its relations with England In 1670 France allied with England against the Republic Sweden s relations with France had improved greatly and in 1672 it joined the Anglo French coalition pushing Denmark into the Dutch camp 6 In 1672 French King Louis XIV launched an attack on the Dutch Republic igniting the Franco Dutch War The attack was opposed by the Holy Roman Empire led by Leopold I In 1674 Sweden was pressured into joining the war by attacking the Republic s northern German allies France promised to pay Sweden desperately needed war subsidies only on the condition that it moved in force on Brandenburg A Swedish army of around 22 000 men under Carl Gustaf Wrangel advanced into Brandenburg in December 1674 and suffered a minor tactical defeat at the Battle of Fehrbellin in June 1675 Though not militarily significant the defeat tarnished the reputation of near invincibility that Sweden had enjoyed since the Thirty Years War and emboldened its enemies By September 1675 Denmark the Dutch Republic the Holy Roman Empire and Spain were all joined in war against Sweden and its ally France 5 Scanian War edit Main article Scanian War nbsp Sailing order for the Swedish fleet in late 1675 The illustration shows that the Swedish navy had not adapted to the realities of the line of battle It still followed the patterns of melee tactics where small groups of ships acted individually aiming for close combat and boarding 7 With the declaration of war against Sweden on 2 September 1675 Denmark saw a chance to regain its recently lost eastern provinces The southern Baltic became an important strategic theatre for both Denmark and Sweden Denmark needed the sea lanes to invade Scania and Sweden needed to reinforce Swedish Pomerania on the Baltic coast both stood to gain by taking control of the Baltic trade routes 8 As war broke out between Denmark and Sweden a strong naval presence also became essential for Sweden to secure its interests at home and overseas 5 In October 1675 the Swedish fleet under Gustaf Otto Stenbock put to sea but sailed no further than Stora Karlso off Gotland before it had to turn back to Stockholm after less than two weeks beset by cold and stormy weather disease and the loss of vital equipment Stenbock held personally responsible for the failure by King Charles XI was forced to pay for the campaign out of his own pocket During the winter of 1675 76 the Swedish fleet was placed under the command of Lorentz Creutz who attempted to put to sea in January to February 1676 but was iced in by exceptionally cold weather 8 State of the fleets editThe First Anglo Dutch War 1652 54 saw the development of the line of battle a tactic where ships formed a continuous line to fire broadsides at an enemy Previously decisive action in naval engagements had been achieved through boarding and melee but after the middle of the 17th century tactical doctrine focused more on disabling or sinking an opponent through superior firepower from a distance This entailed major changes in military doctrines shipbuilding and professionalism in European navies from the 1650s onwards 9 The line of battle favored very large ships that could hold the line in the face of heavy fire later known as ships of the line The new tactics also depended on the ability of strong centralized governments to maintain large permanent fleets led by a professional officer corps The increased power of the state at the expense of individual landowners led to the expansion of armies and navies and in the late 1660s Sweden embarked on an expansive shipbuilding program 10 nbsp Detail of engraving of Stockholm from Suecia antiqua et hodierna by Erik Dahlberg and Willem Swidde printed in 1693 The view shows the Swedish capital as a bustling port and in the foreground the peak of Kastellholmen next to the royal shipyards on Skeppsholmen In 1675 the Swedish fleet was numerically superior to its Danish counterpart 18 ships of the line against 16 and 21 frigates against 11 but it was older and of poorer quality than the Danish fleet which had replaced a larger proportion of its vessels The Swedes had problems with routine maintenance and both rigging and sails were generally in poor condition Swedish crews lacked the professionalism of Danish and Norwegian sailors who commonly had valuable experience from service in the Dutch merchant navy and the Swedish navy also lacked a core of professional officers The Danish had seasoned veterans like Cort Adeler and Niels Juel The Danish fleet was also reinforced with Dutch units under the command Philip van Almonde and Cornelis Tromp the latter an experienced officer who had served under Michiel de Ruyter famous for his skilled command during the Anglo Dutch Wars 11 Prelude editMain article Battle of Bornholm 1676 A Danish fleet of 20 ships under Admiral Niels Juel put to sea in March 1676 and on 29 April his forces landed on Gotland which surrendered 12 The Swedish fleet was ordered out on 4 May with 23 warships of over 50 guns 21 of less than 50 and 16 minor supporting vessels manned by about 12 000 men 13 but encountered adverse winds and was delayed until 19 May Juel had by then left Visby the main port on Gotland to join up with a smaller Danish Dutch force at Bornholm between the southern tip of Sweden and the northern coast of Germany Together they intended to cruise between Scania and the island of Rugen to stop Swedish troops from landing on the island and reinforcing Swedish Pomerania 14 On 25 26 May the two fleets fought the indecisive battle at Bornholm The Swedish force was superior in numbers but was unable to inflict any serious losses 15 and two of the fleet s fireships were captured one by the allies and the other by a Brandenburg squadron headed for Copenhagen 16 nbsp Cornelis Tromp in 1675 Several Swedish accounts say that Creutz argued with his officers after Bornholm Major Taube of the Mars testified that after the battle the officers had been scolded like boys 17 and that Creutz without regard for guilt or innocence accused them almost all alike 18 The army captain Rosenberg told a later inquiry that Creutz almost had a paroxysm in the night over the conduct of Johan Bar one of his flag officers at Bornholm and that he swore never to go to serve at sea with such rascals 19 Maritime archaeologist Lars Einarsson has concluded that the relationship between Creutz and his subordinates had hit rock bottom before the battle 20 After the unsuccessful action the Swedish fleet anchored off Trelleborg where King Charles was waiting with new orders to recapture Gotland The fleet was to refuse combat with the allies at least until they reached the northern tip of Oland where they could fight in friendly waters After the Swedish fleet left Trelleborg on 30 May the allied fleet soon came in contact with it and began pursuing the Swedes By this time the allies had been reinforced by a small squadron and now totaled 42 vessels with 25 large or medium ships of the line The reinforcements also brought with them a new commander Admiral General Cornelis Tromp one of the ablest naval tacticians of his time Tromp who also was a Lieutenant Admiral in the Dutch navy was made Admiral General of the Danish navy on 8 May 1676 The two fleets sailed north and on 1 June passed the southern tip of Oland in a strong gale The rough winds were hard on the Swedish ships Many lost masts and spars The Swedes forming a barely cohesive battle line tried to sail ahead of Tromp s ships hoping to get between them and the shore thus putting themselves on the allied fleet s windward side and gaining the tactical advantage of holding the weather gage The Dutch ships of the allied fleet managed to sail closer to the wind and faster than the rest of the force and slipped between the Swedes and the coast snatching the weather gage Later that morning the two fleets closed on each other and were soon within firing range 21 Battle editAround noon as a result of poor coordination and signaling the Swedish line unexpectedly turned toward the allied fleet When the flagship Kronan came about in the maneuver it suddenly heeled over and began to take in water According to master gunner Anders Gyllenspak the sails were not reefed and the ship leaned over so hard that water flooded in through the lower gunports As the ship was leaning over a gust of wind pushed the ship on her side bringing her masts and sails down in line with the surface of the sea Shortly afterwards the gunpowder store exploded and ripped the forward section of the starboard side apart Kronan quickly lost buoyancy and sank taking most of her 850 man crew with her 22 nbsp A contemporary depiction that divides the battle into three phases 1 the two fleets sailing northwards along the coast of Oland just passing the southern tip of Oland 2 Kronan exploding and Svardet surrounded and 3 the Swedish fleet fleeing in disorder pursued by allied ships Copper engraving by Romeyn de Hooghe 1676 The sudden loss of the flagship and the fleet admiral threw the already scattered Swedish line into confusion and sapped morale Four ships from Creutz s and Uggla s squadrons immediately fled when they saw that the flagship was lost 23 Claes Uggla was next in command after Creutz and became the acting commander of the Swedish fleet When the line came about Uggla and his ship Svardet came on a collision course with the still floating wreckage of Kronan and were forced to jibe turn the stern into the wind direction to avoid it Svardet s second turn was interpreted by many ships as a signal to turn again others interpreted it as the beginning of a general retreat leading to major disorder Uggla reduced speed in an attempt to gather his forces but instead was separated from his squadron 24 Tromp on Christianus Quintus Vice Admiral Jens Rodsten on Tre Lover and Niels Juel on Churprindsen took advantage of the chaos They quickly surrounded Svardet and three supporting ships Hieronymus Neptunus and Jarnvagen an armed merchantman and began to hammer them into submission Several other Swedish vessels attempted to assist Uggla but they were in a lee position and could not provide effective support After about an hour and a half to two hours of hard fighting Svardet s mainmast went overboard and Uggla had to surrender to Tromp Despite this Svardet was ignited by accident or misunderstanding by the Dutch fireship t Hoen The second largest Swedish ship after Kronan sank in the blaze and took with it 600 out of a crew of 650 including Admiral Uggla himself 25 Only Hieronymus escaped the assault by the allied admirals though badly damaged and the others were captured by Juel on Churprindsen together with one of his lieutenants on Anna Sophia 26 By six o clock in the evening the Swedes had lost two flagships along with two fleet admirals including the supreme commander of the navy The entire force now began a disorderly retreat the smaller ships Enhorn Ekorren Gripen and Sjohasten were outsailed and captured and the rest of the ships sought shelter in friendly harbors Most set course for Dalaro north of Stockholm others tried for Kalmar Strait between Oland and the Swedish mainland 27 The allied fleet tried to capitalize further on its victory by giving chase but the dash up the coast had scattered its forces and there was disagreement among the Danish commanders on how far they should pursue the Swedish ships 28 Aftermath edit nbsp Charles XI pointing to the spot of the new main naval base of the Swedish navy what would later become the town of Karlskrona painting by Pehr Hillestrom The Swedish fleet had suffered a major blow by losing its two largest ships its commander in chief and one of its most experienced admirals Even after the battle the misfortunes continued Applet came off its moorings at Dalaro went aground and sank Around fifty survivors were picked up by pursuing Danish ships and taken as prisoners to Copenhagen 29 The battle gave Denmark undisputed naval supremacy and the Swedish fleet did not dare to venture out for the rest of the year The army that had been amassed in Denmark could now be shipped to Scania to take the war to Swedish soil and on 29 June 1676 14 500 troops were landed at Raa south of Helsingborg 30 The Battle of Oland was the first major Swedish defeat at sea to Denmark and was followed by further Swedish defeats at Mon and Koge Bay in 1677 The latter was a resounding success for Admiral Niels Juel and has become the most celebrated victory in Danish naval history 31 The Battle of Oland was the first of several major Swedish defeats at sea that ended in complete Danish dominance over the southern Baltic for the duration of the Scanian War That the main naval base in Stockholm was locked in ice during the winter of 1675 76 showed the necessity of an ice free harbor that was closer to Danish home waters In 1679 King Charles personally chose the site for a new base at what would later become Karlskrona 31 The lessons from the war also led to improvements in Swedish naval organization under the guidance of Hans Wachtmeister 1641 1714 which included better funding and maintenance increased readiness for mobilization in the southern Baltic and permanent recruitment of skilled personnel through the allotment system 32 Swedish commission edit Within a week the news of the failure at Bornholm and the major defeat at Oland reached King Charles who immediately ordered that a commission be set up to investigate what had happened Charles wanted to see if Bar and other officers were guilty of cowardice or incompetence On 13 June the King wrote some of our sea officers have shown such cowardly and careless behavior that they have placed the safety welfare and defense of the kingdom at great peril and that such a serious crime should be severely punished 33 The commission began its work on 7 June 1676 At the hearings strong criticism surfaced and was directed against individual officers as well as Swedish conduct in general Anders Homman one of the officers on Svardet was among those who chastised his colleagues the hardest In his testimony he said that Admiral Uggla had exclaimed look how those dog cunts run 34 when he was surrounded fighting the allied flagships Homman himself described the actions of his colleagues as those of chickens running about the yard each in his own direction and added that he had been in seven battles but had never seen our people fight so poorly 35 The commission did not find anyone guilty of negligence or misconduct but Lieutenant Admiral Bar commander of Nyckeln and Lieutenant Admiral Christer Boije who had run aground on Applet were never again given a command in the navy Lieutenant Admiral Hans Clerck commander of Solen went through the process unscathed and was promoted to full Admiral by the King before the commission even presented its verdict Creutz has quite consistently been blamed for the loss of his ship by historians and has been described as an incompetent sea officer and sailor who more or less single handedly brought about the sinking through lack of naval experience 36 Military historians Lars Ericson Wolke and Olof Sjoblom have attempted to nuance the picture by pointing out that Creutz s task was akin to that of an administrator rather than a military commander The practical issues of ship maneuvering should have been the responsibility of his subordinates who had experience in naval matters 37 Disputes among the allied officers edit Despite the victories several allied officers were displeased with the conduct of their forces Naval historian Jorgen Barfod explains that the battle was fought in a disorganized manner from beginning to end since Tromp had given the order for each commander to attack the enemy ship closest to him 38 Most of the Danish fleet was unable to keep pace with the faster Dutch ships so the race for an advantageous position along the coast had contributed to the scattering of the allied fleet Juel later complained in a letter to the Danish Admiral of the Realm that the Dutch had not assisted him in pursuing the fleeing Swedes He claimed that if he had received proper support they could have brought the Swedes such a fever on their throats that it would take years for all the doctors in Stockholm to cure it 39 When Tromp sent a report of the battle to the Danish King he reproached his subordinates but not by name and asked that no punishment be dealt out 40 The captain of t Hoen the fireship that had set Svardet ablaze after she had surrendered was arrested and incarcerated directly after the battle and was subjected to such harsh treatment that he died within a few days Tromp later reported that his ship Delft which had seen some of the roughest fighting had lost around 100 men and that most of its officers were wounded 41 Forces editBelow is a list of the ships that participated in the battle The figures in parentheses indicate the number of guns for each ship 42 Allied fleet edit First squadron Flagship Churprindsen 68 Niels Juel Christianus IV 58 Gyldenlove 56 Anna Sophia 62 Delmenhorst 44 Nellebladet 54 Lindormen 46 Kobenhavn 36 Hommeren 32 Anthonette 26 Caritas 34 Fire Kronede Lillier 4 Stokfisken Abrahams Offer fireships Second squadron Flagship Christianus V 80 Cornelis Tromp Tre Lover 64 Oostergoo 60 Charlotta Amalie 64 Enighed 66 Fridericus III 64 Campen 44 Havmanden 36 Havfruen 26 Spraglede Falk 18 Louys t Hoen fireships Third squadron Flagship Delft 62 Philips van Almonde Waesdorp 68 Dordrecht 46 Ackerboom 60 Gideon 60 Justina 64 Noortholland 44 Caleb 40 Utrecht 38 Hvide Falk 26 Delft 28 Perlen 8 Leonora fireship Swedish fleet edit First squadron Flagship Kronan 124 Lorentz Creutz Solen 74 Wrangel 60 Draken 66 Herkules 56 Neptunus 44 Maria 44 Fenix 36 Sundsvall 32 Enhorn 16 Parlan 28 armed merchantman Tre Broder 12 Mjohund 10 Sjohasten 8 Jakob Svan fireships Second squadron Flagship Svardet 94 Claes Uggla Mars 72 Merkurius 64 Hieronymus 64 Svenska Lejonet 48 Goteborg 48 Fredrika Amalia 34 Uttern 24 Flygande Vargen 44 armed merchantman Jarnvagen 24 armed merchantman Ekorren 8 Posthornet 8 Rabocken 8 Rodkritan Duvan fireships Third squadron Flagship Nyckeln 84 Johan Bar Applet 86 Saturnus 64 Caesar 60 Wismar 54 Riga 54 Hjorten 36 Solen 54 armed merchantman Salvator 30 Gripen 8 Sjoman 8 Postiljon fireship Fourth squadron 43 Victoria 80 Venus 64 Jupiter 70 Carolus 60 Spes 48 Abraham 44 Nordstjarnan 28 Trumslagaren 34 armed merchantman Konung David 32 armed merchantman Elisabeth 12 armed merchantman Fortuna 12 Masen 8 Jagaren fireship Notes edit 11 June by the Gregorian calendar Denmark Norway and Sweden still used the Julian calendar while the Dutch Republic had switched to Gregorian in 1582 83 See Jan Glete 2002 War and the State in Early Modern Europe Spain the Dutch Republic and Sweden as Fiscal Military States 1500 1600 Routledge London ISBN 0 415 22645 7 for an in depth study Goran Rystad Skanska kriget och kampen om hegemonin i Norden in Rystad 2005 p 18 Goran Rystad Skanska kriget och kampen om hegemonin i Norden in Rystad 2005 pp 18 19 a b c Goran Rystad Skanska kriget och kampen om hegemonin i Norden in Rystad 2005 pp 20 21 Dyrvik 1998 pp 193 197 Glete 2005 a b Finn Askgaard Kampen till sjoss in Rystad 2005 p 171 Glete 1993 pp 173 178 Glete 1993 p 176 Finn Askgaard Kampen till sjoss in Rystad 2005 p 172 Barfod 1997 pp 45 48 Barfod 1997 p 49 Gunnar Grandin Gotland invaderas and Flottan loper ut in Johansson 1985 pp 114 115 118 119 Sjoblom 2003 pp 225 226 Barfod 1997 pp 49 50 Original quote utbannade som pojkar Lundgren 2001 p 23 Original quote aktat varken skyldig eller oskyldig utan skart dem nastan alla over en kam Lundgren 2001 p 45 Original quote sa nara om natten fatt slag aldrig mer ga pa flottan med sadana skalmar Lundgren 2001 p 50 Einarsson 2001 p 8 Sjoblom 2003 p 226 Lundgren 2001 pp 235 236 Zettersten 1903 p 480 Unger 1909 pp 235 236 Sjoblom 2003 p 228 Zettersten 1903 pp 479 480 Zettersten 1903 pp 480 481 Barfod 1997 pp 54 55 Ericson Wolke 2009 p 115 Finn Askgaard Kampen till sjoss in Rystad 2005 p 176 a b Ericson Wolke 2009 p 121 Glete 2010 pp 197 200 603 605 Original quote en del av vara sjoofficerare sig sa lachement forhallit att de riksens sakerhet valfard och forsvar stallt uti den hogsta hazard ett sa stort crimen strangeligen bor straffas Lundgren 2001 pp 5 6 The protocols of the commission have been transcribed and published in partially modernized form in Lundgren 1997 Original quote se hur de hundsfottarna lopa och ranna Lundgren 1997 p 94 Homman repeated Uggla s accusation several times during the hearings and was backed up by Captain Olof Nortman see pp 93 99 107 A literal translation of the Swedish term hundsfott is used here The word was a common strongly derogatory term against male individuals that was in widespread use until the 19th century see Svenska Akademiens Ordbok H1425 Archived 28 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Original quote De andra lopte som honsen omkring garden var pa sitt hall Och har jag varit med i 7 bataljer men aldrig sett vara fakta sa illa som den andra gangen Lundgren 1997 p 94 For example Gyllengranat 1840 Zettersten 1903 p 478 Unger 1909 p 234 Isacson 2000 pp 11 12 Bjorlin 1885 Einarsson 2001 p 13 Ericson Wolke 2009 p 115 Sjoblom 2003 p 227 Original quote under helt uordnade former fra forst til sidst Barfod 1997 p 54 Original quote de svenske en sadan feber pa deres hals at alle de doctores i Stockholm ikke skulle have vaeret gode for at kurere dem i ar og dag igen Barfod 1997 p 54 Barfod 1997 p 54 Gunnar Grandin En fortvivlad kamp i Johansson 1985 pp 140 141 Danish forces according to Barfod 1997 pp 50 51 Swedish forces according to Zettersten 1903 pp 472 474 The fourth squadron was divided up among the other three squadrons after Bornholm following the death of its commander from disease Zettersten 1903 pp 472 474 References editBarfod Jorgen H 1997 Niels Juels flade Gyldendal Copenhagen ISBN 87 00 30226 0 in Danish Bjerg Hans Christian editor 1977 Slaget i Koge bugt 1 juli 1677 forudsaetninger forlob og folger Soe lieutenant selskabet Copenhagen OCLC 462839232 in Danish Bjorlin Gustaf 1885 Kriget mot Danmark 1675 1679 lasning for ung och gammal Norstedt Stockholm in Swedish Dyrvik Stale 1998 Danmark Norge 1380 1814 Bd 3 Truede tvillingriker 1648 1720 Universitetsforlaget Oslo ISBN 82 00 12676 5 in Norwegian Einarsson Lars 2001 Kronan Kalmar lans museum Kalmar ISBN 91 85926 48 5 in Swedish Ericson Wolke Lars 2009 En helt ny flotta sjokrigen under 1600 talets sista artionden in Ericson Wolke amp Hardstedt Svenska sjoslag Medstroms forlag Stockholm ISBN 978 91 7329 030 2 in Swedish Glete Jan 2005 Svenska flottans seglingsordning in Bjorn Asker editor Stormakten som sjomakt marina bilder fran karolinsk tid Historiska media Lund ISBN 91 85057 43 6 pp 104 105 in Swedish Glete Jan 2010 Swedish Naval Administration 1521 1721 Resource Flows and Organisational Capabilities Brill Leiden ISBN 978 90 04 17916 5 Johansson Bjorn Axel editor 1985 Regalskeppet Kronan Trevi Stockholm ISBN 91 7160 740 4 in Swedish Lundgren Kurt 2001 Sjoslaget vid Oland Vittnesmal dokument 1676 1677 Lingstad Bok amp Bild Kalmar ISBN 91 631 1292 2 in Swedish Rodger Nicholas A M 2004 The Command of the Ocean A Naval History of Britain 1649 1815 Allen Lane London ISBN 0 7139 9411 8 Rystad Goran editor 2005 Kampen om Skane Historiska media Lund ISBN 91 85057 05 3 in Swedish Sjoblom Olof 2003 Slaget vid Oland 1676 Kronan gar under in Ericson Wolke Hardstedt Iko Sjoblom amp Aselius editors Svenska slagfalt Wahlstrom amp Widstrand Stockholm ISBN 91 46 20225 0 in Swedish Zettersten Axel 1903 Svenska flottans historia aren 1635 1680 Norrtalje tidnings boktryckeri Norrtalje OCLC 185674845 in Swedish External links edit nbsp Media related to Battle of Oland at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Oland amp oldid 1211404375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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