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Battle of Ramillies

Battle of Ramillies
Part of the War of the Spanish Succession

The Battle of Ramillies by Jan van Huchtenburg
Date23 May 1706[1]
Location50°38′19″N 4°54′46″E / 50.63861°N 4.91278°E / 50.63861; 4.91278
Result Grand Alliance victory[2]
Belligerents
 Dutch Republic
 England
 Scotland
 France
 Bavaria
Spain
Commanders and leaders
Duke of Marlborough
Lord Overkirk
Duke of Villeroi
Maximilian of Bavaria
Strength
62,000[3] 60,000
Casualties and losses
3,663-5,000[4][5][6] 13,000[7][5]-15,000[8][9][6]
class=notpageimage|
Location within Belgium

The Battle of Ramillies (/ˈræmɪlz/), fought on 23 May 1706, was a battle of the War of the Spanish Succession. For the Grand Alliance – Austria, England, and the Dutch Republic – the battle had followed an indecisive campaign against the Bourbon armies of King Louis XIV of France in 1705. Although the Allies had captured Barcelona that year, they had been forced to abandon their campaign on the Moselle, had stalled in the Spanish Netherlands and suffered defeat in northern Italy. Yet despite his opponents' setbacks Louis XIV wanted peace, but on reasonable terms. Because of this, as well as to maintain their momentum, the French and their allies took the offensive in 1706.

The campaign began well for Louis XIV's generals: in Italy Marshal Vendôme defeated the Austrians at the Battle of Calcinato in April, while in Alsace Marshal Villars forced the Margrave of Baden back across the Rhine. Encouraged by these early gains Louis XIV urged Marshal Villeroi to go over to the offensive in the Spanish Netherlands and, with victory, gain a 'fair' peace. Accordingly, the French Marshal set off from Leuven (Louvain) at the head of 60,000 men and marched towards Tienen (Tirlemont), as if to threaten Zoutleeuw (Léau). Also determined to fight a major engagement, the Duke of Marlborough, commander-in-chief of Anglo-Dutch forces, assembled his army – some 62,000 men – near Maastricht, and marched past Zoutleeuw. With both sides seeking battle, they soon encountered each other on the dry ground between the rivers Mehaigne and Petite Gette, close to the small village of Ramillies.

In less than four hours Marlborough's Dutch, English, and Danish forces[10] overwhelmed Villeroi's and Max Emanuel's Franco-Spanish-Bavarian army. The Duke's subtle moves and changes in emphasis during the battle – something his opponents failed to realise until it was too late – caught the French in a tactical vice. With their foe broken and routed, the Allies were able to fully exploit their victory. Town after town fell, including Brussels, Bruges and Antwerp; by the end of the campaign Villeroi's army had been driven from most of the Spanish Netherlands. With Prince Eugene's subsequent success at the Battle of Turin in northern Italy, the Allies had imposed the greatest loss of territory and resources that Louis XIV would suffer during the war. Thus, the year 1706 proved, for the Allies, to be an annus mirabilis.

Background Edit

After their disastrous defeat at Blenheim in 1704, the next year brought the French some respite. The Duke of Marlborough had intended the 1705 campaign – an invasion of France through the Moselle valley – to complete the work of Blenheim and persuade King Louis XIV to make peace but the plan had been thwarted by friend and foe alike.[11] The reluctance of his Dutch allies to see their frontiers denuded of troops for another gamble in Germany had denied Marlborough the initiative[11] but of far greater importance was the Margrave of Baden's pronouncement that he could not join the Duke in strength for the coming offensive. This was in part due to the sudden switching of troops from the Rhine to reinforce Prince Eugene in Italy and part due to the deterioration of Baden's health brought on by the re-opening of a severe foot wound he had received at the storming of the Schellenberg the previous year.[12] Marlborough had to cope with the death of Emperor Leopold I in May and the accession of Joseph I, which unavoidably complicated matters for the Grand Alliance.[12]

The resilience of the French King and the efforts of his generals, also added to Marlborough's problems.[13] Marshal Villeroi, exerting considerable pressure on the Dutch commander, Count Overkirk, along the Meuse, took Huy on 10 June before pressing on towards Liège. With Marshal Villars sitting strong on the Moselle, the Allied commander – whose supplies had by now become very short – was forced to call off his campaign on 16 June. "What a disgrace for Marlborough," exulted Villeroi, "to have made false movements without any result!"[14] With Marlborough's departure north, the French transferred troops from the Moselle valley to reinforce Villeroi in Flanders, while Villars marched off to the Rhine.[15]

The Anglo-Dutch forces gained minor compensation for the failed Moselle campaign with the success at Elixheim and the crossing of the Lines of Brabant in the Spanish Netherlands (Huy was also retaken on 11 July) but a chance to bring the French to a decisive engagement eluded Marlborough.[16] The year 1705 proved almost entirely barren for the Duke, whose military disappointments were only partly compensated by efforts on the diplomatic front where, at the courts of Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Vienna, Berlin and Hanover, Marlborough sought to bolster support for the Grand Alliance and extract promises of prompt assistance for the following year's campaign.[17]

Prelude Edit

On 11 January 1706 Marlborough finally reached London at the end of his diplomatic tour but he had already been planning his strategy for the coming season. The first option (although it is debatable to what extent the Duke was committed to such an enterprise) was a plan to transfer his forces from the Spanish Netherlands to northern Italy; once there, he intended linking up with Prince Eugene in order to defeat the French and safeguard Savoy from being overrun.[18] Savoy would then serve as a gateway into France by way of the mountain passes or an invasion with naval support along the Mediterranean coast via Nice and Toulon, in connexion with redoubled Allied efforts in Spain.[19] It seems that the Duke's favoured scheme was to return to the Moselle valley (where Marshal Marsin had recently taken command of French forces) and once more attempt an advance into the heart of France.[20] But these decisions soon became academic. Shortly after Marlborough landed in the Dutch Republic on 14 April, news arrived of big Allied setbacks in the wider war.

Determined to show the Grand Alliance that France was still resolute, Louis XIV prepared to launch a double surprise in Alsace and northern Italy.[21] On the latter front Marshal Vendôme defeated the Imperial army at Calcinato on 19 April, pushing the Imperialists back in confusion (French forces were now in a position to prepare for the long-anticipated siege of Turin). In Alsace, Marshal Villars took Baden by surprise and captured Haguenau, driving him back across the Rhine in some disorder, thus creating a threat on Landau.[22] With these reverses, the Dutch refused to contemplate Marlborough's ambitious march to Italy or any plan that denuded their borders of the Duke and their army.[23] In the interest of coalition harmony, Marlborough prepared to campaign in the Low Countries.[23]

On the move Edit

 
Map of the Low Countries during the War of the Spanish Succession. The village of Ramillies lies near the Mehaigne, a tributary of the Meuse.[image reference needed]

The Duke left The Hague on 9 May. "God knows I go with a heavy heart," he wrote six days later to his friend and political ally in England, Lord Godolphin, "for I have no hope of doing anything considerable, unless the French do what I am very confident they will not ..." – in other words, court battle.[24] On 17 May the Duke concentrated his Dutch and English troops at Tongeren, near Maastricht. The Hanoverians, Hessians and Danes, despite earlier undertakings, found, or invented, pressing reasons for withholding their support.[22] Marlborough wrote an appeal to the Duke of Württemberg, the commander of the Danish contingent: "I send you this express to request your Highness to bring forward by a double march your cavalry so as to join us at the earliest moment ..."[25] Additionally, the King in Prussia, Frederick I, had kept his troops in quarters behind the Rhine while his personal disputes with Vienna and the States General at The Hague remained unresolved. Nevertheless, the Duke could think of no circumstances why the French would leave their strong positions and attack his army, even if Villeroi was first reinforced by substantial transfers from Marsin's command.[26] But in this he had miscalculated. Although Louis XIV wanted peace he wanted it on reasonable terms; for that, he needed victory in the field and to convince the Allies that his resources were by no means exhausted.[27]

 
John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722) by Sir Godfrey Kneller

Following the successes in Italy and along the Rhine, Louis XIV was now hopeful of similar results in Flanders. Far from standing on the defensive therefore – and unbeknown to Marlborough – Louis XIV was persistently goading his marshal into action. "[Villeroi] began to imagine," wrote St Simon, "that the King doubted his courage, and resolved to stake all at once in an effort to vindicate himself."[28] Accordingly, on 18 May, Villeroi set off from Leuven at the head of 70 battalions, 132 squadrons and 62 cannon – comprising an overall force of some 60,000 troops – and crossed the river Dyle to seek battle with the enemy. Spurred on by his growing confidence in his ability to out-general his opponent, and by Versailles’ determination to avenge Blenheim, Villeroi and his generals anticipated success.[29]

Neither opponent expected the clash at the exact moment or place where it occurred.[30] The French moved first to Tienen, (as if to threaten Zoutleeuw, abandoned by the French in October 1705), before turning southwards, heading for Jodoigne – this line of march took Villeroi's army towards the narrow aperture of dry ground between the rivers Mehaigne and Petite Gette close to the small villages of Ramillies and Taviers; but neither commander quite appreciated how far his opponent had travelled. Villeroi still believed (on 22 May) the Allies were a full day's march away when in fact they had camped near Corswaren waiting for the Danish squadrons to catch up; for his part, Marlborough deemed Villeroi still at Jodoigne when in reality he was now approaching the plateau of Mont St. André with the intention of pitching camp near Ramillies (see map at right).[30] However, the Prussian infantry was not there. Marlborough wrote to Lord Raby, the English resident at Berlin: "If it should please God to give us victory over the enemy, the Allies will be little obliged to the King [Frederick] for the success."[31]

The following day, at 01:00, Marlborough dispatched Cadogan, his Quartermaster-General, with an advanced guard to reconnoitre the same dry ground that Villeroi's army was now heading toward, country that was well known to the Duke from previous campaigns. Two hours later the Duke followed with the main body: 74 battalions, 123 squadrons, 90 pieces of artillery and 20 mortars, totalling 62,000 troops.[32] About 08:00, after Cadogan had just passed Merdorp, his force made brief contact with a party of French hussars gathering forage on the edge of the plateau of Jandrenouille. After a brief exchange of shots the French retired and Cadogan's dragoons pressed forward. With a short lift in the mist, Cadogan soon discovered the smartly ordered lines of Villeroi's advance guard some 6 kilometres (4 miles) off; a galloper hastened back to warn Marlborough. Two hours later the Duke, accompanied by the Dutch field commander Field Marshal Overkirk, General Daniël van Dopff, and the Allied staff, rode up to Cadogan where on the horizon to the westward he could discern the massed ranks of the French army deploying for battle along the 6 km (4 mi) front.[32] Marlborough later told Bishop Burnet: "The French army looked the best of any he had ever seen."[33]

Battle Edit

Battlefield Edit

The battlefield of Ramillies is very similar to that of Blenheim, for here too there is an immense area of arable land unimpeded by woods or hedges.[34] Villeroi's right rested on the villages of Franquenée and Taviers, with the river Mehaigne protecting his flank. A large open plain, about 2 km (1 mi) wide, lay between Taviers and Ramillies, but unlike Blenheim, there was no stream to hinder the cavalry. His centre was secured by Ramillies itself, lying on a slight eminence which gave distant views to the north and east. The French left flank was protected by broken country, and by a stream, the Petite Gheete, which runs deep between steep and slippery slopes. On the French side of the stream the ground rises to Offus, the village which, together with Autre-Eglise farther north, anchored Villeroi's left flank. To the west of the Petite Gheete rises the plateau of Mont St. André; a second plain, the plateau of Jandrenouille – upon which the Anglo-Dutch army amassed – rises to the east.[34]

Initial dispositions Edit

 
Initial attack at the Battle of Ramillies, 23 May 1706. To the south, between Taviers and Ramillies, both commanders positioned the bulk of their cavalry. It was here that Marlborough made his breakthrough.

At 11:00 the Duke ordered the army to take standard battle formation. On the far right, towards Foulz, the British battalions and squadrons took up their posts in a double line near the Jeuche stream. The centre was formed by the mass of Dutch, German, Protestant Swiss and Scottish infantry – perhaps 30,000 men – facing Offus and Ramillies. Also facing Ramillies Marlborough placed a powerful battery of thirty 24-pounders, dragged into position by a team of oxen; further batteries were positioned overlooking the Petite Gheete. On their left, on the broad plain between Taviers and Ramillies – and where Marlborough thought the decisive encounter must take place[35] – Overkirk drew the 69 squadrons of the Dutch and Danish horse, supported by 19 battalions of Dutch infantry and two artillery pieces.[36]

 
Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria, (1662–1726) by Joseph Vivien

Meanwhile, Villeroi deployed his forces. In Taviers on his right, he placed two battalions of the Greder Suisse Régiment, with a smaller force forward in Franquenée; the whole position was protected by the boggy ground of the river Mehaigne, thus preventing an Allied flanking movement.[37] In the open country between Taviers and Ramillies, he placed 82 squadrons under General de Guiscard supported by several interleaved brigades of French, Swiss and Bavarian infantry. Along the Ramillies–Offus–Autre Eglise ridge-line, Villeroi positioned Walloon and Bavarian infantry, supported by the Elector of Bavaria's 50 squadrons of Bavarian and Walloon cavalry placed behind on the plateau of Mont St. André. Ramillies, Offus and Autre-Eglise were all packed with troops and put in a state of defence, with alleys barricaded and walls loop-holed for muskets.[38] Villeroi also positioned powerful batteries near Ramillies. These guns (some of which were of the three barrelled kind first seen at Elixheim the previous year) enjoyed good arcs of fire, able to fully cover the approaches of the plateau of Jandrenouille over which the Allied infantry would have to pass.

Marlborough, however, noticed several important weaknesses in the French dispositions.[39] Tactically, it was imperative for Villeroi to occupy Taviers on his right and Autre-Eglise on his left, but by adopting this posture he had been forced to over-extend his forces.[40] Moreover, this disposition – concave in relation to the Allied army – gave Marlborough the opportunity to form a more compact line, drawn up in a shorter front between the 'horns' of the French crescent; when the Allied blow came it would be more concentrated and carry more weight. Additionally, the Duke's disposition facilitated the transfer of troops across his front far more easily than his foe, a tactical advantage that would grow in importance as the events of the afternoon unfolded.[40] Although Villeroi had the option of enveloping the flanks of the Allied army as they deployed on the plateau of Jandrenouille – threatening to encircle their army – the Duke correctly gauged that the characteristically cautious French commander was intent on a defensive battle along the ridge-line.[41]

Taviers Edit

At 13:00 the batteries went into action; a little later two Allied columns set out from the extremities of their line and attacked the flanks of the Franco-Bavarian army.[42] To the south, 4 battalions,[a] under the command of Colonel Wertmüller, came forward with their two field guns to seize the hamlet of Franquenée. The small Swiss garrison in the village, shaken by the sudden onslaught and unsupported by the battalions to their rear, were soon compelled back towards the village of Taviers. Taviers was of particular importance to the Franco-Bavarian position: it protected the otherwise unsupported flank of General de Guiscard's cavalry on the open plain, while at the same time, it allowed the French infantry to pose a threat to the flanks of the Dutch and Danish squadrons as they came forward into position.[43] But hardly had the retreating Swiss rejoined their comrades in that village when the Dutch Guards renewed their attack. The fighting amongst the alleys and cottages soon deteriorated into a fierce bayonet and clubbing mêlée, but the superiority in Dutch firepower soon told. The accomplished French officer, Colonel de la Colonie, standing on the plain nearby remembered: "This village was the opening of the engagement, and the fighting there was almost as murderous as the rest of the battle put together."[44] By about 15:00 the Swiss had been pushed out of the village into the marshes beyond.

 
François de Neufville, Duke of Villeroi, Marshal of France, (1644–1730) by Alexandre-François Caminade. The Battle of Ramillies was Villeroi's last command.

Villeroi's right flank fell into chaos and was now open and vulnerable.[45] Alerted to the situation de Guiscard ordered an immediate attack with 14 squadrons of French dragoons currently stationed in the rear. Two other battalions of the Greder Suisse Régiment were also sent, but the attack was poorly co-ordinated and consequently went in piecemeal. The Anglo-Dutch commanders now sent dismounted Dutch dragoons into Taviers, which, together with the Guards and their field guns, poured concentrated musketry- and canister-fire into the advancing French troops. Colonel d’Aubigni, leading his regiment, fell mortally wounded.[46]

As the French ranks wavered, the leading squadrons of Württemberg's Danish horse – now unhampered by enemy fire from either village – were also sent into the attack and fell upon the exposed flank of the Franco-Swiss infantry and dragoons.[47] De la Colonie, with his Grenadiers Rouge regiment, together with the Cologne Guards who were brigaded with them, was now ordered forward from his post south of Ramillies to support the faltering counter-attack on the village. But on his arrival, all was chaos: "Scarcely had my troops got over when the dragoons and Swiss who had preceded us, came tumbling down upon my battalions in full flight ... My own fellows turned about and fled along with them."[46] De La Colonie managed to rally some of his grenadiers, together with the remnants of the French dragoons and Greder Suisse battalions, but it was an entirely peripheral operation, offering only fragile support for Villeroi's right flank.[48]

Offus and Autre-Eglise Edit

 
Field Marshal George Hamilton 1666–1737 Earl of Orkney, by Martin Maingaud

While the attack on Taviers went on the Earl of Orkney launched his first line of English across the Petite Gheete in a determined attack against the barricaded villages of Offus and Autre-Eglise on the Allied right. Villeroi, posting himself near Offus, watched anxiously the redcoats' advance, mindful of the counsel he had received on 6 May from Louis XIV: "Have particular care to that part of the line which will endure the first shock of the English troops."[42] Heeding this advice the French commander began to transfer battalions from his centre to reinforce the left, drawing more foot from the already weakened right to replace them.[47]

As the English battalions descended the gentle slope of the Petite Gheete valley, struggling through the boggy stream, they were met by Major General de la Guiche's disciplined Walloon infantry sent forward from around Offus. After concentrated volleys, exacting heavy casualties on the redcoats, the Walloons reformed back to the ridgeline in good order. The English took some time to reform their ranks on the dry ground beyond the stream and press on up the slope towards the cottages and barricades on the ridge.[49] The vigour of the English assault, however, was such that they threatened to break through the line of the villages and out onto the open plateau of Mont St André beyond. This was potentially dangerous for the Allied infantry who would then be at the mercy of the Elector's Bavarian and Walloon squadrons patiently waiting on the plateau for the order to move.[50]

Although Henry Lumley's English cavalry had managed to cross the marshy ground around the Petite Gheete, it was soon evident to Marlborough that sufficient cavalry support would not be practicable and that the battle could not be won on the Allied right.[51] The Duke, therefore, called off the attack against Offus and Autre-Eglise. To make sure that Orkney obeyed his order to withdraw, Marlborough sent his Quartermaster-General in person with the command. Despite Orkney's protestations, Cadogan insisted on compliance and, reluctantly, Orkney gave the word for his troops to fall back to their original positions on the edge of the plateau of Jandrenouille. It is still not clear how far Orkney's advance was planned only as a feint; according to historian David Chandler it is probably more accurate to surmise that Marlborough launched Orkney in a serious probe with a view to sounding out the possibilities of the sector.[47] Nevertheless, the attack had served its purpose. Villeroi had given his personal attention to that wing and strengthened it with large bodies of horse and foot that ought to have been taking part in the decisive struggle south of Ramillies.[52]

Ramillies Edit

 
King's Horse at Ramillies, 1706. Unknown author.

Meanwhile, the Dutch assault on Ramillies was gaining pace. Marlborough's younger brother, General of Infantry, Charles Churchill, ordered four brigades of foot to attack the village. The assault consisted of 12 battalions of Dutch infantry commanded by Major Generals Schultz and Spaar; two brigades of Saxons under Count Schulenburg; a Scottish brigade in Dutch service led by the 2nd Duke of Argyle; and a small brigade of Protestant Swiss.[53] The 20 French and Bavarian battalions in Ramillies, supported by the Irish who had left Ireland in the Flight of the Wild Geese to join Clare's Dragoons who fought as infantry and captured a colour from the British 3rd Regiment of Foot and a small brigade of Cologne and Bavarian Guards under the Marquis de Maffei, put up a determined defence, initially driving back the attackers with severe losses[54] as commemorated in the song Clare's Dragoons.

Seeing that Schultz and Spaar were faltering, Marlborough now ordered Orkney's second-line British and Danish battalions (who had not been used in the assault on Offus and Autre-Eglise) to move south towards Ramillies. Shielded as they were from observation by a slight fold in the land, their commander, Brigadier-General Van Pallandt, ordered the regimental colours to be left in place on the edge of the plateau to convince their opponents they were still in their initial position. Therefore, unbeknown to the French who remained oblivious to the Allies' real strength and intentions on the opposite side of the Petite Gheete, Marlborough was throwing his full weight against Ramillies and the open plain to the south. Villeroi meanwhile, was still moving more reserves of infantry in the opposite direction towards his left flank; crucially, it would be some time before the French commander noticed the subtle change in emphasis of the Allied dispositions.[55]

 
Henry of Nassau, Lord of Overkirk

Around 15:30 Overkirk advanced his massed squadrons on the open plain in support of the infantry attack on Ramillies. 48 Dutch squadrons, supported on their left by 21 Danish squadrons, led by Count Tilly and Lieutenants Generals Hompesch, d'Auvergne, Ostfriesland and Dopff – steadily advanced towards the enemy (taking care not to prematurely tire the horses), before breaking into a trot to gain the impetus for their charge.[56][57] The Marquis de Feuquières writing after the battle described the scene: "They advanced in four lines ... As they approached they advanced their second and fourth lines into the intervals of their first and third lines; so that when they made their advance upon us, they formed only one front, without any intermediate spaces."[58] This made it nearly impossible for the French cavalry to perform flanking manoeuvres.[59]

The initial clash favoured the Dutch and Danish squadrons. The disparity of numbers – exacerbated by Villeroi stripping their ranks of infantry to reinforce his left flank – enabled Overkirk's cavalry to throw the first line of French horse back in some disorder towards their second-line squadrons. This line also came under severe pressure and, in turn, was forced back to their third-line of cavalry and the few battalions still remaining on the plain.[60] But these French horsemen were amongst the best in Louis XIV's army – the Maison du Roi,[61] supported by four elite squadrons of Bavarian Cuirassiers. Ably led by de Guiscard, the French cavalry rallied, thrusting back the Allied squadrons in successful local counterattacks.[62] On Overkirk's right flank, close to Ramillies, ten of his squadrons suddenly broke ranks and were scattered, riding headlong to the rear to recover their order, leaving the left flank of the Allied assault on Ramillies dangerously exposed. Notwithstanding the lack of infantry support, de Guiscard threw his cavalry forward in an attempt to split the Allied army in two.

 
The Battle of Ramillies

A crisis threatened the centre, but from his vantage point Marlborough was at once aware of the situation.[51] The Allied commander now summoned the cavalry on the right wing to reinforce his centre, leaving only the English squadrons in support of Orkney. Thanks to a combination of battle-smoke and favourable terrain, his redeployment went unnoticed by Villeroi who made no attempt to transfer any of his own 50 unused squadrons.[51] While he waited for the fresh reinforcements to arrive, Marlborough flung himself into the mêlée, rallying some of the Dutch cavalry who were in confusion. But his personal involvement nearly led to his undoing. A number of French horsemen, recognising the Duke, came surging towards his party. Marlborough's horse tumbled and the Duke was thrown – "Milord Marlborough was rid over," wrote Orkney some time later.[63] It was a critical moment of the battle. "Major-General Murray," recalled one eyewitness: "... seeing him fall, marched up in all haste with two Swiss battalions to save him and stop the enemy who were hewing all down in their way."[64] Fortunately Marlborough's newly appointed aide-de-camp, Richard Molesworth, galloped to the rescue, mounted the Duke on his horse and made good their escape, before Murray's disciplined ranks threw back the pursuing French troopers.[64]

After a brief pause, Marlborough's equerry, Colonel Bringfield (or Bingfield), led up another of the Duke's spare horses; but while assisting him onto his mount, the unfortunate Bringfield was hit by an errant cannonball that sheared off his head. One account has it that the cannonball flew between the Captain-General's legs before hitting the unfortunate colonel, whose torso fell at Marlborough's feet – a moment subsequently depicted in a lurid set of contemporary playing cards.[64] Nevertheless, the danger passed and Overkirk and Tilly restored order among the confused squadrons and ordered them to attack again, enabling the Duke to attend to the positioning of the cavalry reinforcements feeding down from his right flank – a change of which Villeroi remained blissfully unaware.[65][66]

Breakthrough Edit

 
Allied squadrons transferred from north to south gave the Allies a 5–3 advantage on the plain where some 25,000 French and Allied cavalry were heavily engaged.[67]

The time was about 16:30, and the two armies were in close contact across the whole 6 km (4 mi) front, from the skirmishing in the marshes in the south, through the vast cavalry battle on the open plain; to the fierce struggle for Ramillies at the centre, and to the north, where, around the cottages of Offus and Autre-Eglise, Orkney and de la Guiche faced each other across the Petite Gheete ready to renew hostilities.

The arrival of the transferring squadrons now began to tip the balance in favour of the Allies. Tired, and suffering a growing list of casualties, the numerical inferiority of Guiscard's squadrons battling on the plain at last began to tell.[68] After earlier failing to hold or retake Franquenée and Taviers, Guiscard's right flank had become dangerously exposed and a fatal gap had opened on the right of their line. Taking advantage of this breach, Württemberg's Danish cavalry now swept forward, wheeling to penetrate the flank of the Maison du Roi whose attention was almost entirely fixed on holding back the Dutch. Sweeping forwards, virtually without resistance, the 21 Danish squadrons reformed behind the French around the area of the Tomb of Ottomond, facing north across the plateau of Mont St André towards the exposed flank of Villeroi's army.[69]

The final Allied reinforcements for the cavalry contest to the south were at last in position; Marlborough's superiority on the left could no longer be denied, and his fast-moving plan took hold of the battlefield. Now, far too late, Villeroi tried to redeploy his 50 unused squadrons, but a desperate attempt to form line facing south, stretching from Offus to Mont St André, floundered amongst the baggage and tents of the French camp carelessly left there after the initial deployment.[70] The Allied commander ordered his cavalry forward against the now heavily outnumbered French and Bavarian horsemen. De Guiscard's right flank, without proper infantry support, could no longer resist the onslaught and, turning their horses northwards, they broke and fled in complete disorder.[71] Even the squadrons currently being scrambled together by Villeroi behind Ramillies could not withstand the onslaught. "We had not got forty yards on our retreat," remembered Captain Peter Drake, an Irishman serving with the French – "when the words sauve qui peut went through the great part, if not the whole army, and put all to confusion"[72]

In Ramillies the Allied infantry, now reinforced by the English troops brought down from the north, at last broke through. The Régiment de Picardie stood their ground but were caught between Colonel Borthwick's Scots-Dutch regiment and the English reinforcements. Borthwick was killed, as was Charles O’Brien, the Irish Viscount Clare in French service, fighting at the head of his regiment.[73] The Marquis de Maffei attempted one last stand with his Bavarian and Cologne Guards, but it proved in vain. Noticing a rush of horsemen fast approaching from the south, he later recalled: "... I went towards the nearest of these squadrons to instruct their officer, but instead of being listened to [I] was immediately surrounded and called upon to ask for quarter."[74]

Pursuit Edit

The roads leading north and west were choked with fugitives. Orkney now sent his English troops back across the Petite Gheete stream to once again storm Offus where de la Guiche's infantry had begun to drift away in the confusion.[75] To the right of the infantry Lord John Hay's 'Scots Greys' also picked their way across the stream and charged the Régiment du Roi within Autre-Eglise. "Our dragoons," wrote John Deane, "pushing into the village ... made terrible slaughter of the enemy."[75] The Bavarian Horse Grenadiers and the Electoral Guards withdrew and formed a shield about Villeroi and the Elector but were scattered by Lumley's cavalry. Stuck in the mass of fugitives fleeing the battlefield, the French and Bavarian commanders narrowly escaped capture by General Cornelius Wood who, unaware of their identity, had to content himself with the seizure of two Bavarian Lieutenant-Generals.[76] Far to the south, the remnants of de la Colonie's brigade headed in the opposite direction towards the French held fortress of Namur.[77]

The retreat became a rout.[78] Individual Allied commanders drove their troops forward in pursuit, allowing their beaten enemy no chance to recover. Soon the Allied infantry could no longer keep up, but their cavalry were off the leash, heading through the gathering night for the crossings on the river Dyle.[79] At last, however, Marlborough called a halt to the pursuit shortly after midnight near Meldert, 19 km (12 mi) from the field.[79] "It was indeed a truly shocking sight to see the miserable remains of this mighty army," wrote Captain Drake, "... reduced to a handful."[80]

Aftermath Edit

 
The Duke of Marlborough receives captured standards at Ramillies. Artist: H. Dupray.
 
German war propaganda medal 1706. The obverse shows Louis XIV as a Roman warrior being subdued by Queen Anne as Minerva.
 
The reverse shows the seizure by the Allies of twelve Flanders towns: Brussels, Mechelen, Lier, Antwerp, Furnes (Veurne), Aalst, Ath, Oudenarde (Oudenaarde), Bruges (Brugge), Ghent (Gent), Damme, Leuven (Louvain).

What was left of Villeroi's army was now broken in spirit; the imbalance of the casualty figures amply demonstrates the extent of the disaster for Louis XIV's army: (see below). In addition, hundreds of French soldiers were fugitives, many of whom would never remuster to the colours. Villeroi also lost 52 artillery pieces and his entire engineer pontoon train.[81] In the words of Marshal Villars, the French defeat at Ramillies was "the most shameful, humiliating and disastrous of routs".[82]

Town after town now succumbed to the Allies. Leuven fell on 25 May 1706; three days later, the Allies entered Brussels, the capital of the Spanish Netherlands. Marlborough realised the great opportunity created by the early victory of Ramillies: "We now have the whole summer before us," wrote the Duke from Brussels to Robert Harley: "... and with the blessing of God I shall make the best use of it."[83] Malines, Lierre, Ghent, Alost, Damme, Oudenaarde, Bruges, and on 6 June Antwerp, all subsequently fell to Marlborough's victorious army and, like Brussels, proclaimed the Austrian candidate for the Spanish throne, the Archduke Charles, as their sovereign.[84] Villeroi was helpless to arrest the process of collapse. When Louis XIV learnt of the disaster he recalled Marshal Vendôme from northern Italy to take command in Flanders; but it would be weeks before the command changed hands.

 
Allied gains of the Ramillies campaign 1706. (Note: Dates of capitulation differ slightly depending on source).

As news spread of the Allies' triumph, the Prussians, Hessians and Hanoverian contingents, long delayed by their respective rulers, eagerly joined the pursuit of the broken French and Bavarian forces. "This," wrote Marlborough wearily, "I take to be owing to our late success."[85] Meanwhile, Overkirk took the port of Ostend on 4 July thus opening a direct route to the English Channel for communication and supply, but the Allies were making scant progress against Dendermonde whose governor, the Marquis de Valée, was stubbornly resisting. Only later when Cadogan and Churchill went to take charge did the town's defences begin to fail.[86]

Vendôme formally took over command in Flanders on 4 August;[87] Villeroi would never again receive a major command: "I cannot foresee a happy day in my life save only that of my death."[2] Louis XIV was more forgiving to his old friend: "At our age, Marshal, we must no longer expect good fortune."[88] In the meantime, Marlborough invested the elaborate fortress of Menin which, after a costly siege, capitulated on 22 August. Dendermonde finally succumbed on 6 September followed by Ath – the last conquest of 1706 – on 2 October.[89] By the time Marlborough had closed down the Ramillies campaign he had denied the French most of the Spanish Netherlands west of the Meuse and north of the Sambre – it was an unsurpassed operational triumph for the English Duke but once again it was not decisive as these gains did not defeat France.[2]

The immediate question for the Allies was how to deal with the Spanish Netherlands, a subject on which the Austrians and the Dutch were diametrically opposed.[90] Emperor Joseph I, acting on behalf of his younger brother King Charles III, absent in Spain, claimed that reconquered Brabant and Flanders should be put under immediate possession of a governor named by himself. The Dutch, however, who had supplied the major share of the troops and money to secure the victory (the Austrians had produced nothing of either) claimed the government of the region till the war was over, and that after the peace they should continue to garrison Barrier Fortresses stronger than those which had fallen so easily to Louis XIV's forces in 1701. Marlborough mediated between the two parties but favoured the Dutch position. To sway the Duke's opinion, the Emperor offered Marlborough the governorship of the Spanish Netherlands. It was a tempting offer, but in the name of Allied unity, it was one he refused.[91] In the end England and the Dutch Republic took control of the newly won territory for the duration of the war; after which it was to be handed over to the direct rule of Charles III, subject to the reservation of a Dutch Barrier, the extent and nature of which had yet to be settled.[92]

Meanwhile, on the Upper Rhine, Villars had been forced onto the defensive as battalion after battalion had been sent north to bolster collapsing French forces in Flanders; there was now no possibility of his undertaking the re-capture of Landau.[93] Further good news for the Allies arrived from northern Italy where, on 7 September, Prince Eugene had routed a French army before the Piedmontese capital, Turin, driving the Franco-Spanish forces from northern Italy. Only from Spain did Louis XIV receive any good news where Das Minas and Galway had been forced to retreat from Madrid towards Valencia, allowing Philip V to re-enter his capital on 4 October. All in all though, the situation had changed considerably and Louis XIV began to look for ways to end what was fast becoming a ruinous war for France. For Queen Anne also, the Ramillies campaign had one overriding significance: "Now we have God be thanked so hopeful a prospect of peace."[94] Instead of continuing the momentum of victory, however, cracks in Allied unity would enable Louis XIV to reverse some of the major setbacks suffered at Turin and Ramillies.[95]

Casualties Edit

The total number of French casualties cannot be calculated precisely, so complete was the collapse of the Franco-Bavarian army that day.[81] David G. Chandler's Marlborough as Military Commander and A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe are consistent with regards to French casualty figures, i.e. 12,000 dead and wounded plus some 7,000 taken prisoner. James Falkner, in Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, also notes 12,000 dead and wounded and "up to 10,000" taken prisoner. In Notes on the history of military medicine, Garrison puts French casualties at 13,000, including 2,000 killed, 3,000 wounded and 6,000 missing.[7] In The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History, Dupuy puts Villeroi's dead and wounded at 8,000, with a further 7,000 captured.[9] Neil Litten, using French archives, suggests 7,000 killed and wounded and 6,000 captured, with a further 2,000 choosing to desert.[8] John Millner's memoirs – Compendious Journal (1733) – is more specific, recording 12,087 of Villeroi's army were killed or wounded, with another 9,729 taken prisoner. In Marlborough, however, Correlli Barnett puts the total casualty figure as high as 30,000–15,000 dead and wounded with an additional 15,000 taken captive. Trevelyan estimates Villeroi's casualties at 13,000 but adds "his losses by desertion may have doubled that number". La Colonie omits a casualty figure in his Chronicles of an old Campaigner but Saint-Simon in his Memoirs states 4,000 killed adding "many others were wounded and many important persons were taken prisoner". Voltaire, however, in Histoire du siècle du Louis XIV records "the French lost there twenty thousand men". Gaston Bodart states 2,000 killed or wounded, 6,000 captured and 7,000 scattered for a total of 13,000 casualties.[5] Périni writes that both sides lost 2 to 3,000 killed or wounded (the Dutch losing precisely 716 killed and 1,712 wounded), and that 5,600 French were captured.[96]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ All dates in the article are in the Gregorian calendar (unless otherwise stated). The Julian calendar as used in England in 1706 differed by eleven days. Thus, the battle of Ramillies was fought on 23 May (Gregorian calendar) or 12 May (Julian calendar). In this article (O.S) is used to annotate Julian dates with the year adjusted to 1 January. See the article Old Style and New Style dates for a more detailed explanation of the dating issues and conventions.
  2. ^ a b c Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 308
  3. ^ All statistics taken from Falkner.
  4. ^ Grant 2017, p. 398.
  5. ^ a b c Bodart 1908, p. 147.
  6. ^ a b Eggenberger 1985, p. 355.
  7. ^ a b Garrison 1970, p. 141.
  8. ^ a b McNally 2014, p. 90.
  9. ^ a b Dupuy & Dupuy 1993.
  10. ^ Denmark never joined the Grand Alliance, but Danish troops, hired by the Maritime Powers (England and the Dutch Republic), were central to Allied success both at the Battle of Blenheim in 1704 and at Ramillies in 1706.
  11. ^ a b Barnett: Marlborough, 140
  12. ^ a b Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 154
  13. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 18
  14. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 157
  15. ^ Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 298
  16. ^ Barnett: Marlborough, 152
  17. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 164
  18. ^ Barnett: Marlborough, 158
  19. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 102.
  20. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 169
  21. ^ Barnett: Marlborough, 159
  22. ^ a b Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 168
  23. ^ a b Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 33
  24. ^ Barnett: Marlborough, 160
  25. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 38
  26. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 170
  27. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 103
  28. ^ Saint-Simon: Memoirs, vol i, 298
  29. ^ Villeroi was convinced that Marlborough had won the Battle of Blenheim by mere chance.
  30. ^ a b Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 172
  31. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 104
  32. ^ a b Barnett: Marlborough, 161
  33. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 106
  34. ^ a b Barnett: Marlborough, 162
  35. ^ Barnett: Marlborough, 163
  36. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 173
  37. ^ Falkner: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 50
  38. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 51
  39. ^ Chandler: A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe, 30
  40. ^ a b Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 304
  41. ^ Falkner: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 55
  42. ^ a b Chandler: A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe, 31
  43. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 57
  44. ^ La Colonie: The Chronicles of an old Campaigner, 306
  45. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 61
  46. ^ a b La Colonie: The Chronicles of an old Campaigner, 309
  47. ^ a b c Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 175
  48. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 65
  49. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 69
  50. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 71
  51. ^ a b c Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 176
  52. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 109
  53. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 75
  54. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 77
  55. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 78
  56. ^ La Colonie: The Chronicles of an old Campaigner, 313
  57. ^ De Vryer 1738, p. 50.
  58. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 80
  59. ^ Van Nimwegen 2020, p. 291.
  60. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 81
  61. ^ Maison du Roi (Household Cavalry): The mounted elements of the French Maison du Roi at Ramillies consisted of the Gardes du Corps, the Royal Carabiniers, the Mousquetaires, the Compagnie des Grenadiers à Cheval and the Compagnie des Gens d’Armes.
  62. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 82
  63. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 83
  64. ^ a b c Barnett: Marlborough, 168
  65. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 85
  66. ^ De Vryer 1738, p. 52.
  67. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 177
  68. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 87
  69. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 177. Trevelyan calls this the decisive manoeuvre of the day.
  70. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 116. After the retreat had become general, further disaster and confusion resulted from the block of waggons breaking down in the mud. The artillery could not pass, resulting in the loss of most of Villeroi’s cannon.
  71. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 92
  72. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 115
  73. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 94
  74. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 95
  75. ^ a b Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 98
  76. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 178
  77. ^ La Colonie: The Chronicles of an old Campaigner, 316
  78. ^ Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 306
  79. ^ a b Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 102
  80. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 118
  81. ^ a b Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 105
  82. ^ Barnett: Marlborough, 170
  83. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 179
  84. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 121
  85. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 116
  86. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 118
  87. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 181. Lynn states 1 August
  88. ^ Falkner: Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, 119
  89. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, 182
  90. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 132
  91. ^ Trevelyan: England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland, 135. Marlborough never fully abandoned the hope that one day he might be proclaimed governor of the Spanish Netherlands. It was his own personal ambition that created mutual suspicion between the Duke and the Dutch.
  92. ^ The Dutch and English expected the Belgians to contribute to the cost of the war and the maintenance of the garrisons. Subsequently, the hardships felt by the Belgians led to serious military setbacks when in 1708, Bruges and Ghent swapped sides.
  93. ^ Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 309
  94. ^ Gregg: Queen Anne, 216
  95. ^ Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714, 312
  96. ^ Périni 1906, p. 163.

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ 2 battalions Frisian Guards and the battalions of Slangenburg and Salish

References Edit

Primary Edit

  • La Colonie, Jean Martin de. The Chronicles of an Old Campaigner, (trans. W. C. Horsley), (1904)
  • Goslinga, S. van (1857) Mémoires relatifs à la Guerre de succession de 1706–1709 et 1711, de Sicco van Goslinga, publiés par mm. U. A. Evertsz et G. H. M. Delprat, au nom de la Société d’histoire, d’archéologie et de linquistique de Frise, (Published by G.T.N. Suringar, 1857)
  • Saint-Simon. Memoirs, vol i. Prion Books Ltd., (1999). ISBN 1-85375-352-1

Secondary Edit

  • Barnett, Correlli. Marlborough. Wordsworth Editions Limited, (1999). ISBN 1-84022-200-X
  • Chandler, David G. A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe. Wordsworth Editions Limited, (1998). ISBN 1-85326-694-9
  • Chandler, David G. Marlborough as Military Commander. Spellmount Ltd, (2003). ISBN 1-86227-195-X
  • Falkner, James. Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles. Pen & Sword Books Ltd, (2006). ISBN 1-84415-379-7
  • Gregg, Edward. Queen Anne. Yale University Press, (2001). ISBN 0-300-09024-2
  • Lynn, John A. The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714. Longman, (1999). ISBN 0-582-05629-2
  • McNally, M. (2014). Ramillies 1706: Marlborough's tactical masterpiece. Osprey. ISBN 978-1-78200-822-4.
  • Dupuy, Trevor N.; Dupuy, R. Ernest (1993). The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History 4th ed. HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-270056-1.
  • Trevelyan, G. M. England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union with Scotland. Longmans, Green and co., (1932)
  • Garrison, F.H. (1970). Notes on the history of military medicine. Legare Street Press. ISBN 978-1397937636.
  • Grant, R. G. (2017). 1001 Battles That Changed the Course of History. Chartwell Books. ISBN 978-0785835530.
  • Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618–1905). Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  • Périni, Hardÿ (1906). Batailles françaises [6e série]. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
  • Eggenberger, David (1985). An Encyclopedia of Battles. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-24913-1. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  • Van Nimwegen, Olaf (2020). De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672-1712 (in Dutch). Prometheus. ISBN 978-90-446-3871-4.
  • De Vryer, Abraham (1738). Histori van Joan Churchill, hertog van Marlborough en prins van Mindelheim. Deel 3 (in Dutch). Loveringh en De Jonge.
  • Bosssha, Johannes (1838). Neêrlands heldendaden te land, van de vroegste tijden af tot in onze dagen (in Dutch). Suringar.

battle, ramillies, part, spanish, successionthe, huchtenburgdate23, 1706, locationramillies, spanish, netherlands50, 63861, 91278, 63861, 91278resultgrand, alliance, victory, belligerentsgrand, alliance, dutch, republic, england, scotland, france, bavaria, spa. Battle of RamilliesPart of the War of the Spanish SuccessionThe Battle of Ramillies by Jan van HuchtenburgDate23 May 1706 1 LocationRamillies Spanish Netherlands50 38 19 N 4 54 46 E 50 63861 N 4 91278 E 50 63861 4 91278ResultGrand Alliance victory 2 BelligerentsGrand Alliance Dutch Republic England Scotland France Bavaria SpainCommanders and leadersDuke of Marlborough Lord OverkirkDuke of Villeroi Maximilian of BavariaStrength62 000 3 60 000Casualties and losses3 663 5 000 4 5 6 13 000 7 5 15 000 8 9 6 class notpageimage Location within Belgium The Battle of Ramillies ˈ r ae m ɪ l iː z fought on 23 May 1706 was a battle of the War of the Spanish Succession For the Grand Alliance Austria England and the Dutch Republic the battle had followed an indecisive campaign against the Bourbon armies of King Louis XIV of France in 1705 Although the Allies had captured Barcelona that year they had been forced to abandon their campaign on the Moselle had stalled in the Spanish Netherlands and suffered defeat in northern Italy Yet despite his opponents setbacks Louis XIV wanted peace but on reasonable terms Because of this as well as to maintain their momentum the French and their allies took the offensive in 1706 The campaign began well for Louis XIV s generals in Italy Marshal Vendome defeated the Austrians at the Battle of Calcinato in April while in Alsace Marshal Villars forced the Margrave of Baden back across the Rhine Encouraged by these early gains Louis XIV urged Marshal Villeroi to go over to the offensive in the Spanish Netherlands and with victory gain a fair peace Accordingly the French Marshal set off from Leuven Louvain at the head of 60 000 men and marched towards Tienen Tirlemont as if to threaten Zoutleeuw Leau Also determined to fight a major engagement the Duke of Marlborough commander in chief of Anglo Dutch forces assembled his army some 62 000 men near Maastricht and marched past Zoutleeuw With both sides seeking battle they soon encountered each other on the dry ground between the rivers Mehaigne and Petite Gette close to the small village of Ramillies In less than four hours Marlborough s Dutch English and Danish forces 10 overwhelmed Villeroi s and Max Emanuel s Franco Spanish Bavarian army The Duke s subtle moves and changes in emphasis during the battle something his opponents failed to realise until it was too late caught the French in a tactical vice With their foe broken and routed the Allies were able to fully exploit their victory Town after town fell including Brussels Bruges and Antwerp by the end of the campaign Villeroi s army had been driven from most of the Spanish Netherlands With Prince Eugene s subsequent success at the Battle of Turin in northern Italy the Allies had imposed the greatest loss of territory and resources that Louis XIV would suffer during the war Thus the year 1706 proved for the Allies to be an annus mirabilis Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 2 1 On the move 3 Battle 3 1 Battlefield 3 2 Initial dispositions 3 3 Taviers 3 4 Offus and Autre Eglise 3 5 Ramillies 3 6 Breakthrough 3 7 Pursuit 4 Aftermath 5 Casualties 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Footnotes 9 References 9 1 Primary 9 2 SecondaryBackground EditAfter their disastrous defeat at Blenheim in 1704 the next year brought the French some respite The Duke of Marlborough had intended the 1705 campaign an invasion of France through the Moselle valley to complete the work of Blenheim and persuade King Louis XIV to make peace but the plan had been thwarted by friend and foe alike 11 The reluctance of his Dutch allies to see their frontiers denuded of troops for another gamble in Germany had denied Marlborough the initiative 11 but of far greater importance was the Margrave of Baden s pronouncement that he could not join the Duke in strength for the coming offensive This was in part due to the sudden switching of troops from the Rhine to reinforce Prince Eugene in Italy and part due to the deterioration of Baden s health brought on by the re opening of a severe foot wound he had received at the storming of the Schellenberg the previous year 12 Marlborough had to cope with the death of Emperor Leopold I in May and the accession of Joseph I which unavoidably complicated matters for the Grand Alliance 12 The resilience of the French King and the efforts of his generals also added to Marlborough s problems 13 Marshal Villeroi exerting considerable pressure on the Dutch commander Count Overkirk along the Meuse took Huy on 10 June before pressing on towards Liege With Marshal Villars sitting strong on the Moselle the Allied commander whose supplies had by now become very short was forced to call off his campaign on 16 June What a disgrace for Marlborough exulted Villeroi to have made false movements without any result 14 With Marlborough s departure north the French transferred troops from the Moselle valley to reinforce Villeroi in Flanders while Villars marched off to the Rhine 15 The Anglo Dutch forces gained minor compensation for the failed Moselle campaign with the success at Elixheim and the crossing of the Lines of Brabant in the Spanish Netherlands Huy was also retaken on 11 July but a chance to bring the French to a decisive engagement eluded Marlborough 16 The year 1705 proved almost entirely barren for the Duke whose military disappointments were only partly compensated by efforts on the diplomatic front where at the courts of Dusseldorf Frankfurt Vienna Berlin and Hanover Marlborough sought to bolster support for the Grand Alliance and extract promises of prompt assistance for the following year s campaign 17 Prelude EditOn 11 January 1706 Marlborough finally reached London at the end of his diplomatic tour but he had already been planning his strategy for the coming season The first option although it is debatable to what extent the Duke was committed to such an enterprise was a plan to transfer his forces from the Spanish Netherlands to northern Italy once there he intended linking up with Prince Eugene in order to defeat the French and safeguard Savoy from being overrun 18 Savoy would then serve as a gateway into France by way of the mountain passes or an invasion with naval support along the Mediterranean coast via Nice and Toulon in connexion with redoubled Allied efforts in Spain 19 It seems that the Duke s favoured scheme was to return to the Moselle valley where Marshal Marsin had recently taken command of French forces and once more attempt an advance into the heart of France 20 But these decisions soon became academic Shortly after Marlborough landed in the Dutch Republic on 14 April news arrived of big Allied setbacks in the wider war Determined to show the Grand Alliance that France was still resolute Louis XIV prepared to launch a double surprise in Alsace and northern Italy 21 On the latter front Marshal Vendome defeated the Imperial army at Calcinato on 19 April pushing the Imperialists back in confusion French forces were now in a position to prepare for the long anticipated siege of Turin In Alsace Marshal Villars took Baden by surprise and captured Haguenau driving him back across the Rhine in some disorder thus creating a threat on Landau 22 With these reverses the Dutch refused to contemplate Marlborough s ambitious march to Italy or any plan that denuded their borders of the Duke and their army 23 In the interest of coalition harmony Marlborough prepared to campaign in the Low Countries 23 On the move Edit nbsp Map of the Low Countries during the War of the Spanish Succession The village of Ramillies lies near the Mehaigne a tributary of the Meuse image reference needed The Duke left The Hague on 9 May God knows I go with a heavy heart he wrote six days later to his friend and political ally in England Lord Godolphin for I have no hope of doing anything considerable unless the French do what I am very confident they will not in other words court battle 24 On 17 May the Duke concentrated his Dutch and English troops at Tongeren near Maastricht The Hanoverians Hessians and Danes despite earlier undertakings found or invented pressing reasons for withholding their support 22 Marlborough wrote an appeal to the Duke of Wurttemberg the commander of the Danish contingent I send you this express to request your Highness to bring forward by a double march your cavalry so as to join us at the earliest moment 25 Additionally the King in Prussia Frederick I had kept his troops in quarters behind the Rhine while his personal disputes with Vienna and the States General at The Hague remained unresolved Nevertheless the Duke could think of no circumstances why the French would leave their strong positions and attack his army even if Villeroi was first reinforced by substantial transfers from Marsin s command 26 But in this he had miscalculated Although Louis XIV wanted peace he wanted it on reasonable terms for that he needed victory in the field and to convince the Allies that his resources were by no means exhausted 27 nbsp John Churchill 1st Duke of Marlborough 1650 1722 by Sir Godfrey KnellerFollowing the successes in Italy and along the Rhine Louis XIV was now hopeful of similar results in Flanders Far from standing on the defensive therefore and unbeknown to Marlborough Louis XIV was persistently goading his marshal into action Villeroi began to imagine wrote St Simon that the King doubted his courage and resolved to stake all at once in an effort to vindicate himself 28 Accordingly on 18 May Villeroi set off from Leuven at the head of 70 battalions 132 squadrons and 62 cannon comprising an overall force of some 60 000 troops and crossed the river Dyle to seek battle with the enemy Spurred on by his growing confidence in his ability to out general his opponent and by Versailles determination to avenge Blenheim Villeroi and his generals anticipated success 29 Neither opponent expected the clash at the exact moment or place where it occurred 30 The French moved first to Tienen as if to threaten Zoutleeuw abandoned by the French in October 1705 before turning southwards heading for Jodoigne this line of march took Villeroi s army towards the narrow aperture of dry ground between the rivers Mehaigne and Petite Gette close to the small villages of Ramillies and Taviers but neither commander quite appreciated how far his opponent had travelled Villeroi still believed on 22 May the Allies were a full day s march away when in fact they had camped near Corswaren waiting for the Danish squadrons to catch up for his part Marlborough deemed Villeroi still at Jodoigne when in reality he was now approaching the plateau of Mont St Andre with the intention of pitching camp near Ramillies see map at right 30 However the Prussian infantry was not there Marlborough wrote to Lord Raby the English resident at Berlin If it should please God to give us victory over the enemy the Allies will be little obliged to the King Frederick for the success 31 The following day at 01 00 Marlborough dispatched Cadogan his Quartermaster General with an advanced guard to reconnoitre the same dry ground that Villeroi s army was now heading toward country that was well known to the Duke from previous campaigns Two hours later the Duke followed with the main body 74 battalions 123 squadrons 90 pieces of artillery and 20 mortars totalling 62 000 troops 32 About 08 00 after Cadogan had just passed Merdorp his force made brief contact with a party of French hussars gathering forage on the edge of the plateau of Jandrenouille After a brief exchange of shots the French retired and Cadogan s dragoons pressed forward With a short lift in the mist Cadogan soon discovered the smartly ordered lines of Villeroi s advance guard some 6 kilometres 4 miles off a galloper hastened back to warn Marlborough Two hours later the Duke accompanied by the Dutch field commander Field Marshal Overkirk General Daniel van Dopff and the Allied staff rode up to Cadogan where on the horizon to the westward he could discern the massed ranks of the French army deploying for battle along the 6 km 4 mi front 32 Marlborough later told Bishop Burnet The French army looked the best of any he had ever seen 33 Battle EditBattlefield Edit The battlefield of Ramillies is very similar to that of Blenheim for here too there is an immense area of arable land unimpeded by woods or hedges 34 Villeroi s right rested on the villages of Franquenee and Taviers with the river Mehaigne protecting his flank A large open plain about 2 km 1 mi wide lay between Taviers and Ramillies but unlike Blenheim there was no stream to hinder the cavalry His centre was secured by Ramillies itself lying on a slight eminence which gave distant views to the north and east The French left flank was protected by broken country and by a stream the Petite Gheete which runs deep between steep and slippery slopes On the French side of the stream the ground rises to Offus the village which together with Autre Eglise farther north anchored Villeroi s left flank To the west of the Petite Gheete rises the plateau of Mont St Andre a second plain the plateau of Jandrenouille upon which the Anglo Dutch army amassed rises to the east 34 Initial dispositions Edit nbsp Initial attack at the Battle of Ramillies 23 May 1706 To the south between Taviers and Ramillies both commanders positioned the bulk of their cavalry It was here that Marlborough made his breakthrough At 11 00 the Duke ordered the army to take standard battle formation On the far right towards Foulz the British battalions and squadrons took up their posts in a double line near the Jeuche stream The centre was formed by the mass of Dutch German Protestant Swiss and Scottish infantry perhaps 30 000 men facing Offus and Ramillies Also facing Ramillies Marlborough placed a powerful battery of thirty 24 pounders dragged into position by a team of oxen further batteries were positioned overlooking the Petite Gheete On their left on the broad plain between Taviers and Ramillies and where Marlborough thought the decisive encounter must take place 35 Overkirk drew the 69 squadrons of the Dutch and Danish horse supported by 19 battalions of Dutch infantry and two artillery pieces 36 nbsp Maximilian II Emanuel Elector of Bavaria 1662 1726 by Joseph VivienMeanwhile Villeroi deployed his forces In Taviers on his right he placed two battalions of the Greder Suisse Regiment with a smaller force forward in Franquenee the whole position was protected by the boggy ground of the river Mehaigne thus preventing an Allied flanking movement 37 In the open country between Taviers and Ramillies he placed 82 squadrons under General de Guiscard supported by several interleaved brigades of French Swiss and Bavarian infantry Along the Ramillies Offus Autre Eglise ridge line Villeroi positioned Walloon and Bavarian infantry supported by the Elector of Bavaria s 50 squadrons of Bavarian and Walloon cavalry placed behind on the plateau of Mont St Andre Ramillies Offus and Autre Eglise were all packed with troops and put in a state of defence with alleys barricaded and walls loop holed for muskets 38 Villeroi also positioned powerful batteries near Ramillies These guns some of which were of the three barrelled kind first seen at Elixheim the previous year enjoyed good arcs of fire able to fully cover the approaches of the plateau of Jandrenouille over which the Allied infantry would have to pass Marlborough however noticed several important weaknesses in the French dispositions 39 Tactically it was imperative for Villeroi to occupy Taviers on his right and Autre Eglise on his left but by adopting this posture he had been forced to over extend his forces 40 Moreover this disposition concave in relation to the Allied army gave Marlborough the opportunity to form a more compact line drawn up in a shorter front between the horns of the French crescent when the Allied blow came it would be more concentrated and carry more weight Additionally the Duke s disposition facilitated the transfer of troops across his front far more easily than his foe a tactical advantage that would grow in importance as the events of the afternoon unfolded 40 Although Villeroi had the option of enveloping the flanks of the Allied army as they deployed on the plateau of Jandrenouille threatening to encircle their army the Duke correctly gauged that the characteristically cautious French commander was intent on a defensive battle along the ridge line 41 Taviers Edit At 13 00 the batteries went into action a little later two Allied columns set out from the extremities of their line and attacked the flanks of the Franco Bavarian army 42 To the south 4 battalions a under the command of Colonel Wertmuller came forward with their two field guns to seize the hamlet of Franquenee The small Swiss garrison in the village shaken by the sudden onslaught and unsupported by the battalions to their rear were soon compelled back towards the village of Taviers Taviers was of particular importance to the Franco Bavarian position it protected the otherwise unsupported flank of General de Guiscard s cavalry on the open plain while at the same time it allowed the French infantry to pose a threat to the flanks of the Dutch and Danish squadrons as they came forward into position 43 But hardly had the retreating Swiss rejoined their comrades in that village when the Dutch Guards renewed their attack The fighting amongst the alleys and cottages soon deteriorated into a fierce bayonet and clubbing melee but the superiority in Dutch firepower soon told The accomplished French officer Colonel de la Colonie standing on the plain nearby remembered This village was the opening of the engagement and the fighting there was almost as murderous as the rest of the battle put together 44 By about 15 00 the Swiss had been pushed out of the village into the marshes beyond nbsp Francois de Neufville Duke of Villeroi Marshal of France 1644 1730 by Alexandre Francois Caminade The Battle of Ramillies was Villeroi s last command Villeroi s right flank fell into chaos and was now open and vulnerable 45 Alerted to the situation de Guiscard ordered an immediate attack with 14 squadrons of French dragoons currently stationed in the rear Two other battalions of the Greder Suisse Regiment were also sent but the attack was poorly co ordinated and consequently went in piecemeal The Anglo Dutch commanders now sent dismounted Dutch dragoons into Taviers which together with the Guards and their field guns poured concentrated musketry and canister fire into the advancing French troops Colonel d Aubigni leading his regiment fell mortally wounded 46 As the French ranks wavered the leading squadrons of Wurttemberg s Danish horse now unhampered by enemy fire from either village were also sent into the attack and fell upon the exposed flank of the Franco Swiss infantry and dragoons 47 De la Colonie with his Grenadiers Rouge regiment together with the Cologne Guards who were brigaded with them was now ordered forward from his post south of Ramillies to support the faltering counter attack on the village But on his arrival all was chaos Scarcely had my troops got over when the dragoons and Swiss who had preceded us came tumbling down upon my battalions in full flight My own fellows turned about and fled along with them 46 De La Colonie managed to rally some of his grenadiers together with the remnants of the French dragoons and Greder Suisse battalions but it was an entirely peripheral operation offering only fragile support for Villeroi s right flank 48 Offus and Autre Eglise Edit nbsp Field Marshal George Hamilton 1666 1737 Earl of Orkney by Martin MaingaudWhile the attack on Taviers went on the Earl of Orkney launched his first line of English across the Petite Gheete in a determined attack against the barricaded villages of Offus and Autre Eglise on the Allied right Villeroi posting himself near Offus watched anxiously the redcoats advance mindful of the counsel he had received on 6 May from Louis XIV Have particular care to that part of the line which will endure the first shock of the English troops 42 Heeding this advice the French commander began to transfer battalions from his centre to reinforce the left drawing more foot from the already weakened right to replace them 47 As the English battalions descended the gentle slope of the Petite Gheete valley struggling through the boggy stream they were met by Major General de la Guiche s disciplined Walloon infantry sent forward from around Offus After concentrated volleys exacting heavy casualties on the redcoats the Walloons reformed back to the ridgeline in good order The English took some time to reform their ranks on the dry ground beyond the stream and press on up the slope towards the cottages and barricades on the ridge 49 The vigour of the English assault however was such that they threatened to break through the line of the villages and out onto the open plateau of Mont St Andre beyond This was potentially dangerous for the Allied infantry who would then be at the mercy of the Elector s Bavarian and Walloon squadrons patiently waiting on the plateau for the order to move 50 Although Henry Lumley s English cavalry had managed to cross the marshy ground around the Petite Gheete it was soon evident to Marlborough that sufficient cavalry support would not be practicable and that the battle could not be won on the Allied right 51 The Duke therefore called off the attack against Offus and Autre Eglise To make sure that Orkney obeyed his order to withdraw Marlborough sent his Quartermaster General in person with the command Despite Orkney s protestations Cadogan insisted on compliance and reluctantly Orkney gave the word for his troops to fall back to their original positions on the edge of the plateau of Jandrenouille It is still not clear how far Orkney s advance was planned only as a feint according to historian David Chandler it is probably more accurate to surmise that Marlborough launched Orkney in a serious probe with a view to sounding out the possibilities of the sector 47 Nevertheless the attack had served its purpose Villeroi had given his personal attention to that wing and strengthened it with large bodies of horse and foot that ought to have been taking part in the decisive struggle south of Ramillies 52 Ramillies Edit nbsp King s Horse at Ramillies 1706 Unknown author Meanwhile the Dutch assault on Ramillies was gaining pace Marlborough s younger brother General of Infantry Charles Churchill ordered four brigades of foot to attack the village The assault consisted of 12 battalions of Dutch infantry commanded by Major Generals Schultz and Spaar two brigades of Saxons under Count Schulenburg a Scottish brigade in Dutch service led by the 2nd Duke of Argyle and a small brigade of Protestant Swiss 53 The 20 French and Bavarian battalions in Ramillies supported by the Irish who had left Ireland in the Flight of the Wild Geese to join Clare s Dragoons who fought as infantry and captured a colour from the British 3rd Regiment of Foot and a small brigade of Cologne and Bavarian Guards under the Marquis de Maffei put up a determined defence initially driving back the attackers with severe losses 54 as commemorated in the song Clare s Dragoons Seeing that Schultz and Spaar were faltering Marlborough now ordered Orkney s second line British and Danish battalions who had not been used in the assault on Offus and Autre Eglise to move south towards Ramillies Shielded as they were from observation by a slight fold in the land their commander Brigadier General Van Pallandt ordered the regimental colours to be left in place on the edge of the plateau to convince their opponents they were still in their initial position Therefore unbeknown to the French who remained oblivious to the Allies real strength and intentions on the opposite side of the Petite Gheete Marlborough was throwing his full weight against Ramillies and the open plain to the south Villeroi meanwhile was still moving more reserves of infantry in the opposite direction towards his left flank crucially it would be some time before the French commander noticed the subtle change in emphasis of the Allied dispositions 55 nbsp Henry of Nassau Lord of OverkirkAround 15 30 Overkirk advanced his massed squadrons on the open plain in support of the infantry attack on Ramillies 48 Dutch squadrons supported on their left by 21 Danish squadrons led by Count Tilly and Lieutenants Generals Hompesch d Auvergne Ostfriesland and Dopff steadily advanced towards the enemy taking care not to prematurely tire the horses before breaking into a trot to gain the impetus for their charge 56 57 The Marquis de Feuquieres writing after the battle described the scene They advanced in four lines As they approached they advanced their second and fourth lines into the intervals of their first and third lines so that when they made their advance upon us they formed only one front without any intermediate spaces 58 This made it nearly impossible for the French cavalry to perform flanking manoeuvres 59 The initial clash favoured the Dutch and Danish squadrons The disparity of numbers exacerbated by Villeroi stripping their ranks of infantry to reinforce his left flank enabled Overkirk s cavalry to throw the first line of French horse back in some disorder towards their second line squadrons This line also came under severe pressure and in turn was forced back to their third line of cavalry and the few battalions still remaining on the plain 60 But these French horsemen were amongst the best in Louis XIV s army the Maison du Roi 61 supported by four elite squadrons of Bavarian Cuirassiers Ably led by de Guiscard the French cavalry rallied thrusting back the Allied squadrons in successful local counterattacks 62 On Overkirk s right flank close to Ramillies ten of his squadrons suddenly broke ranks and were scattered riding headlong to the rear to recover their order leaving the left flank of the Allied assault on Ramillies dangerously exposed Notwithstanding the lack of infantry support de Guiscard threw his cavalry forward in an attempt to split the Allied army in two nbsp The Battle of RamilliesA crisis threatened the centre but from his vantage point Marlborough was at once aware of the situation 51 The Allied commander now summoned the cavalry on the right wing to reinforce his centre leaving only the English squadrons in support of Orkney Thanks to a combination of battle smoke and favourable terrain his redeployment went unnoticed by Villeroi who made no attempt to transfer any of his own 50 unused squadrons 51 While he waited for the fresh reinforcements to arrive Marlborough flung himself into the melee rallying some of the Dutch cavalry who were in confusion But his personal involvement nearly led to his undoing A number of French horsemen recognising the Duke came surging towards his party Marlborough s horse tumbled and the Duke was thrown Milord Marlborough was rid over wrote Orkney some time later 63 It was a critical moment of the battle Major General Murray recalled one eyewitness seeing him fall marched up in all haste with two Swiss battalions to save him and stop the enemy who were hewing all down in their way 64 Fortunately Marlborough s newly appointed aide de camp Richard Molesworth galloped to the rescue mounted the Duke on his horse and made good their escape before Murray s disciplined ranks threw back the pursuing French troopers 64 After a brief pause Marlborough s equerry Colonel Bringfield or Bingfield led up another of the Duke s spare horses but while assisting him onto his mount the unfortunate Bringfield was hit by an errant cannonball that sheared off his head One account has it that the cannonball flew between the Captain General s legs before hitting the unfortunate colonel whose torso fell at Marlborough s feet a moment subsequently depicted in a lurid set of contemporary playing cards 64 Nevertheless the danger passed and Overkirk and Tilly restored order among the confused squadrons and ordered them to attack again enabling the Duke to attend to the positioning of the cavalry reinforcements feeding down from his right flank a change of which Villeroi remained blissfully unaware 65 66 Breakthrough Edit nbsp Allied squadrons transferred from north to south gave the Allies a 5 3 advantage on the plain where some 25 000 French and Allied cavalry were heavily engaged 67 The time was about 16 30 and the two armies were in close contact across the whole 6 km 4 mi front from the skirmishing in the marshes in the south through the vast cavalry battle on the open plain to the fierce struggle for Ramillies at the centre and to the north where around the cottages of Offus and Autre Eglise Orkney and de la Guiche faced each other across the Petite Gheete ready to renew hostilities The arrival of the transferring squadrons now began to tip the balance in favour of the Allies Tired and suffering a growing list of casualties the numerical inferiority of Guiscard s squadrons battling on the plain at last began to tell 68 After earlier failing to hold or retake Franquenee and Taviers Guiscard s right flank had become dangerously exposed and a fatal gap had opened on the right of their line Taking advantage of this breach Wurttemberg s Danish cavalry now swept forward wheeling to penetrate the flank of the Maison du Roi whose attention was almost entirely fixed on holding back the Dutch Sweeping forwards virtually without resistance the 21 Danish squadrons reformed behind the French around the area of the Tomb of Ottomond facing north across the plateau of Mont St Andre towards the exposed flank of Villeroi s army 69 The final Allied reinforcements for the cavalry contest to the south were at last in position Marlborough s superiority on the left could no longer be denied and his fast moving plan took hold of the battlefield Now far too late Villeroi tried to redeploy his 50 unused squadrons but a desperate attempt to form line facing south stretching from Offus to Mont St Andre floundered amongst the baggage and tents of the French camp carelessly left there after the initial deployment 70 The Allied commander ordered his cavalry forward against the now heavily outnumbered French and Bavarian horsemen De Guiscard s right flank without proper infantry support could no longer resist the onslaught and turning their horses northwards they broke and fled in complete disorder 71 Even the squadrons currently being scrambled together by Villeroi behind Ramillies could not withstand the onslaught We had not got forty yards on our retreat remembered Captain Peter Drake an Irishman serving with the French when the words sauve qui peut went through the great part if not the whole army and put all to confusion 72 In Ramillies the Allied infantry now reinforced by the English troops brought down from the north at last broke through The Regiment de Picardie stood their ground but were caught between Colonel Borthwick s Scots Dutch regiment and the English reinforcements Borthwick was killed as was Charles O Brien the Irish Viscount Clare in French service fighting at the head of his regiment 73 The Marquis de Maffei attempted one last stand with his Bavarian and Cologne Guards but it proved in vain Noticing a rush of horsemen fast approaching from the south he later recalled I went towards the nearest of these squadrons to instruct their officer but instead of being listened to I was immediately surrounded and called upon to ask for quarter 74 Pursuit Edit The roads leading north and west were choked with fugitives Orkney now sent his English troops back across the Petite Gheete stream to once again storm Offus where de la Guiche s infantry had begun to drift away in the confusion 75 To the right of the infantry Lord John Hay s Scots Greys also picked their way across the stream and charged the Regiment du Roi within Autre Eglise Our dragoons wrote John Deane pushing into the village made terrible slaughter of the enemy 75 The Bavarian Horse Grenadiers and the Electoral Guards withdrew and formed a shield about Villeroi and the Elector but were scattered by Lumley s cavalry Stuck in the mass of fugitives fleeing the battlefield the French and Bavarian commanders narrowly escaped capture by General Cornelius Wood who unaware of their identity had to content himself with the seizure of two Bavarian Lieutenant Generals 76 Far to the south the remnants of de la Colonie s brigade headed in the opposite direction towards the French held fortress of Namur 77 The retreat became a rout 78 Individual Allied commanders drove their troops forward in pursuit allowing their beaten enemy no chance to recover Soon the Allied infantry could no longer keep up but their cavalry were off the leash heading through the gathering night for the crossings on the river Dyle 79 At last however Marlborough called a halt to the pursuit shortly after midnight near Meldert 19 km 12 mi from the field 79 It was indeed a truly shocking sight to see the miserable remains of this mighty army wrote Captain Drake reduced to a handful 80 Aftermath Edit nbsp The Duke of Marlborough receives captured standards at Ramillies Artist H Dupray nbsp German war propaganda medal 1706 The obverse shows Louis XIV as a Roman warrior being subdued by Queen Anne as Minerva nbsp The reverse shows the seizure by the Allies of twelve Flanders towns Brussels Mechelen Lier Antwerp Furnes Veurne Aalst Ath Oudenarde Oudenaarde Bruges Brugge Ghent Gent Damme Leuven Louvain What was left of Villeroi s army was now broken in spirit the imbalance of the casualty figures amply demonstrates the extent of the disaster for Louis XIV s army see below In addition hundreds of French soldiers were fugitives many of whom would never remuster to the colours Villeroi also lost 52 artillery pieces and his entire engineer pontoon train 81 In the words of Marshal Villars the French defeat at Ramillies was the most shameful humiliating and disastrous of routs 82 Town after town now succumbed to the Allies Leuven fell on 25 May 1706 three days later the Allies entered Brussels the capital of the Spanish Netherlands Marlborough realised the great opportunity created by the early victory of Ramillies We now have the whole summer before us wrote the Duke from Brussels to Robert Harley and with the blessing of God I shall make the best use of it 83 Malines Lierre Ghent Alost Damme Oudenaarde Bruges and on 6 June Antwerp all subsequently fell to Marlborough s victorious army and like Brussels proclaimed the Austrian candidate for the Spanish throne the Archduke Charles as their sovereign 84 Villeroi was helpless to arrest the process of collapse When Louis XIV learnt of the disaster he recalled Marshal Vendome from northern Italy to take command in Flanders but it would be weeks before the command changed hands nbsp Allied gains of the Ramillies campaign 1706 Note Dates of capitulation differ slightly depending on source As news spread of the Allies triumph the Prussians Hessians and Hanoverian contingents long delayed by their respective rulers eagerly joined the pursuit of the broken French and Bavarian forces This wrote Marlborough wearily I take to be owing to our late success 85 Meanwhile Overkirk took the port of Ostend on 4 July thus opening a direct route to the English Channel for communication and supply but the Allies were making scant progress against Dendermonde whose governor the Marquis de Valee was stubbornly resisting Only later when Cadogan and Churchill went to take charge did the town s defences begin to fail 86 Vendome formally took over command in Flanders on 4 August 87 Villeroi would never again receive a major command I cannot foresee a happy day in my life save only that of my death 2 Louis XIV was more forgiving to his old friend At our age Marshal we must no longer expect good fortune 88 In the meantime Marlborough invested the elaborate fortress of Menin which after a costly siege capitulated on 22 August Dendermonde finally succumbed on 6 September followed by Ath the last conquest of 1706 on 2 October 89 By the time Marlborough had closed down the Ramillies campaign he had denied the French most of the Spanish Netherlands west of the Meuse and north of the Sambre it was an unsurpassed operational triumph for the English Duke but once again it was not decisive as these gains did not defeat France 2 The immediate question for the Allies was how to deal with the Spanish Netherlands a subject on which the Austrians and the Dutch were diametrically opposed 90 Emperor Joseph I acting on behalf of his younger brother King Charles III absent in Spain claimed that reconquered Brabant and Flanders should be put under immediate possession of a governor named by himself The Dutch however who had supplied the major share of the troops and money to secure the victory the Austrians had produced nothing of either claimed the government of the region till the war was over and that after the peace they should continue to garrison Barrier Fortresses stronger than those which had fallen so easily to Louis XIV s forces in 1701 Marlborough mediated between the two parties but favoured the Dutch position To sway the Duke s opinion the Emperor offered Marlborough the governorship of the Spanish Netherlands It was a tempting offer but in the name of Allied unity it was one he refused 91 In the end England and the Dutch Republic took control of the newly won territory for the duration of the war after which it was to be handed over to the direct rule of Charles III subject to the reservation of a Dutch Barrier the extent and nature of which had yet to be settled 92 Meanwhile on the Upper Rhine Villars had been forced onto the defensive as battalion after battalion had been sent north to bolster collapsing French forces in Flanders there was now no possibility of his undertaking the re capture of Landau 93 Further good news for the Allies arrived from northern Italy where on 7 September Prince Eugene had routed a French army before the Piedmontese capital Turin driving the Franco Spanish forces from northern Italy Only from Spain did Louis XIV receive any good news where Das Minas and Galway had been forced to retreat from Madrid towards Valencia allowing Philip V to re enter his capital on 4 October All in all though the situation had changed considerably and Louis XIV began to look for ways to end what was fast becoming a ruinous war for France For Queen Anne also the Ramillies campaign had one overriding significance Now we have God be thanked so hopeful a prospect of peace 94 Instead of continuing the momentum of victory however cracks in Allied unity would enable Louis XIV to reverse some of the major setbacks suffered at Turin and Ramillies 95 Casualties EditThe total number of French casualties cannot be calculated precisely so complete was the collapse of the Franco Bavarian army that day 81 David G Chandler s Marlborough as Military Commander and A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe are consistent with regards to French casualty figures i e 12 000 dead and wounded plus some 7 000 taken prisoner James Falkner in Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles also notes 12 000 dead and wounded and up to 10 000 taken prisoner In Notes on the history of military medicine Garrison puts French casualties at 13 000 including 2 000 killed 3 000 wounded and 6 000 missing 7 In The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History Dupuy puts Villeroi s dead and wounded at 8 000 with a further 7 000 captured 9 Neil Litten using French archives suggests 7 000 killed and wounded and 6 000 captured with a further 2 000 choosing to desert 8 John Millner s memoirs Compendious Journal 1733 is more specific recording 12 087 of Villeroi s army were killed or wounded with another 9 729 taken prisoner In Marlborough however Correlli Barnett puts the total casualty figure as high as 30 000 15 000 dead and wounded with an additional 15 000 taken captive Trevelyan estimates Villeroi s casualties at 13 000 but adds his losses by desertion may have doubled that number La Colonie omits a casualty figure in his Chronicles of an old Campaigner but Saint Simon in his Memoirs states 4 000 killed adding many others were wounded and many important persons were taken prisoner Voltaire however in Histoire du siecle du Louis XIV records the French lost there twenty thousand men Gaston Bodart states 2 000 killed or wounded 6 000 captured and 7 000 scattered for a total of 13 000 casualties 5 Perini writes that both sides lost 2 to 3 000 killed or wounded the Dutch losing precisely 716 killed and 1 712 wounded and that 5 600 French were captured 96 See also EditThe battle was used as the name of several Royal Navy ships HMS Ramillies Notes Edit All dates in the article are in the Gregorian calendar unless otherwise stated The Julian calendar as used in England in 1706 differed by eleven days Thus the battle of Ramillies was fought on 23 May Gregorian calendar or 12 May Julian calendar In this article O S is used to annotate Julian dates with the year adjusted to 1 January See the article Old Style and New Style dates for a more detailed explanation of the dating issues and conventions a b c Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 308 All statistics taken from Falkner Grant 2017 p 398 a b c Bodart 1908 p 147 a b Eggenberger 1985 p 355 a b Garrison 1970 p 141 a b McNally 2014 p 90 a b Dupuy amp Dupuy 1993 Denmark never joined the Grand Alliance but Danish troops hired by the Maritime Powers England and the Dutch Republic were central to Allied success both at the Battle of Blenheim in 1704 and at Ramillies in 1706 a b Barnett Marlborough 140 a b Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 154 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 18 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 157 Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 298 Barnett Marlborough 152 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 164 Barnett Marlborough 158 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 102 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 169 Barnett Marlborough 159 a b Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 168 a b Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 33 Barnett Marlborough 160 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 38 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 170 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 103 Saint Simon Memoirs vol i 298 Villeroi was convinced that Marlborough had won the Battle of Blenheim by mere chance a b Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 172 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 104 a b Barnett Marlborough 161 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 106 a b Barnett Marlborough 162 Barnett Marlborough 163 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 173 Falkner The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 50 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 51 Chandler A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe 30 a b Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 304 Falkner The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 55 a b Chandler A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe 31 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 57 La Colonie The Chronicles of an old Campaigner 306 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 61 a b La Colonie The Chronicles of an old Campaigner 309 a b c Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 175 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 65 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 69 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 71 a b c Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 176 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 109 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 75 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 77 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 78 La Colonie The Chronicles of an old Campaigner 313 De Vryer 1738 p 50 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 80 Van Nimwegen 2020 p 291 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 81 Maison du Roi Household Cavalry The mounted elements of the French Maison du Roi at Ramillies consisted of the Gardes du Corps the Royal Carabiniers the Mousquetaires the Compagnie des Grenadiers a Cheval and the Compagnie des Gens d Armes Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 82 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 83 a b c Barnett Marlborough 168 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 85 De Vryer 1738 p 52 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 177 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 87 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 177 Trevelyan calls this the decisive manoeuvre of the day Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 116 After the retreat had become general further disaster and confusion resulted from the block of waggons breaking down in the mud The artillery could not pass resulting in the loss of most of Villeroi s cannon Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 92 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 115 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 94 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 95 a b Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 98 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 178 La Colonie The Chronicles of an old Campaigner 316 Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 306 a b Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 102 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 118 a b Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 105 Barnett Marlborough 170 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 179 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 121 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 116 Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 118 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 181 Lynn states 1 August Falkner Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles 119 Chandler Marlborough as Military Commander 182 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 132 Trevelyan England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland 135 Marlborough never fully abandoned the hope that one day he might be proclaimed governor of the Spanish Netherlands It was his own personal ambition that created mutual suspicion between the Duke and the Dutch The Dutch and English expected the Belgians to contribute to the cost of the war and the maintenance of the garrisons Subsequently the hardships felt by the Belgians led to serious military setbacks when in 1708 Bruges and Ghent swapped sides Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 309 Gregg Queen Anne 216 Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 312 Perini 1906 p 163 Footnotes Edit 2 battalions Frisian Guards and the battalions of Slangenburg and SalishReferences EditPrimary Edit La Colonie Jean Martin de The Chronicles of an Old Campaigner trans W C Horsley 1904 Goslinga S van 1857 Memoires relatifs a la Guerre de succession de 1706 1709 et 1711 de Sicco van Goslinga publies par mm U A Evertsz et G H M Delprat au nom de la Societe d histoire d archeologie et de linquistique de Frise Published by G T N Suringar 1857 Saint Simon Memoirs vol i Prion Books Ltd 1999 ISBN 1 85375 352 1Secondary Edit Barnett Correlli Marlborough Wordsworth Editions Limited 1999 ISBN 1 84022 200 X Chandler David G A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe Wordsworth Editions Limited 1998 ISBN 1 85326 694 9 Chandler David G Marlborough as Military Commander Spellmount Ltd 2003 ISBN 1 86227 195 X Falkner James Ramillies 1706 Year of Miracles Pen amp Sword Books Ltd 2006 ISBN 1 84415 379 7 Gregg Edward Queen Anne Yale University Press 2001 ISBN 0 300 09024 2 Lynn John A The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 Longman 1999 ISBN 0 582 05629 2 McNally M 2014 Ramillies 1706 Marlborough s tactical masterpiece Osprey ISBN 978 1 78200 822 4 Dupuy Trevor N Dupuy R Ernest 1993 The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History 4th ed HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 0 06 270056 1 Trevelyan G M England Under Queen Anne Ramillies and the Union with Scotland Longmans Green and co 1932 Garrison F H 1970 Notes on the history of military medicine Legare Street Press ISBN 978 1397937636 Grant R G 2017 1001 Battles That Changed the Course of History Chartwell Books ISBN 978 0785835530 Bodart Gaston 1908 Militar historisches Kriegs Lexikon 1618 1905 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Perini Hardy 1906 Batailles francaises 6e serie Retrieved 4 February 2023 Eggenberger David 1985 An Encyclopedia of Battles New York Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 24913 1 Retrieved 7 July 2022 Van Nimwegen Olaf 2020 De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672 1712 in Dutch Prometheus ISBN 978 90 446 3871 4 De Vryer Abraham 1738 Histori van Joan Churchill hertog van Marlborough en prins van Mindelheim Deel 3 in Dutch Loveringh en De Jonge Bosssha Johannes 1838 Neerlands heldendaden te land van de vroegste tijden af tot in onze dagen in Dutch Suringar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Ramillies amp oldid 1178707430, wikipedia, wiki, 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