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War of the Spanish Succession

The War of the Spanish Succession was a European great power conflict that took place from 1701 to 1715. The death of childless Charles II of Spain in November 1700 led to a struggle for control of the Spanish Empire between his heirs, Philip of Anjou and Charles of Austria, and their respective supporters, among them Spain, Austria, France, the Dutch Republic, Savoy and Great Britain. Related conflicts include the 1700–1721 Great Northern War, Rákóczi's War of Independence in Hungary, the Camisards revolt in southern France, Queen Anne's War in North America and minor trade wars in India and South America.

War of the Spanish Succession
Part of the French–Habsburg rivalry

Clockwise, from top left:
Date9 July 1701 – 6 February 1715
(13 years, 6 months and 4 weeks)
Location
Result Treaties of Utrecht, Rastatt, and Baden
Territorial
changes
Belligerents

 Holy Roman Empire
 England (until 1707)
 Scotland (until 1707)
Great Britain (from 1707)
 Dutch Republic
Pro-Habsburg Spain
 Prussia (from 1702)
Savoy (from 1703)

 Portugal (from 1703)

 France
Bourbon Spain
 Bavaria (until 1704)
Savoy (until 1703)
Cologne (until 1702)

Liège (until 1702)
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Casualties and losses
  • Total deaths in combat (both sides): 400,000 [11]
  • Total including disease: 700,000[12] to 1,251,000[13]

Although weakened by over a century of continuous conflict, Spain remained a global power whose territories included the Spanish Netherlands, large parts of Italy, the Philippines, and much of the Americas, which meant its acquisition by either France or Austria potentially threatened the European balance of power. Attempts by Louis XIV of France and William III of England to resolve the issue through diplomacy were rejected by the Spanish and Charles II named Louis' grandson, Philip of Anjou, as his heir. His proclamation as king of an undivided Spanish Empire on 16 November 1700 led to war, with France and Spain on one side and the Grand Alliance on the other.

The French held the advantage in the early stages, but were forced onto the defensive after 1706; however, by 1710 the Allies had failed to make any significant progress, while Bourbon victories in Spain had secured Philip's position as king. When Emperor Joseph I died in 1711, Archduke Charles succeeded his brother as emperor, and the new British government initiated peace talks. Since only British subsidies kept their allies in the war, this resulted in the 1713–15 Peace of Utrecht treaties, followed by the 1714 Treaties of Rastatt and Baden.

Philip was confirmed as King of Spain in return for renouncing the right of himself or his descendants to inherit the French throne; the Spanish Empire remained largely intact, but ceded territories in Italy and the Low Countries to Austria and Savoy. Britain retained Gibraltar and Menorca which it captured during the war, acquired significant trade concessions in the Spanish Americas, and replaced the Dutch as the leading maritime and commercial European power. The Dutch gained a strengthened defence line in what was now the Austrian Netherlands; although they remained a major commercial power, the cost of the war permanently damaged their economy.

France withdrew backing for the exiled Jacobites and recognised the Hanoverians as heirs to the British throne; ensuring a friendly Spain was a major achievement, but left them financially exhausted. The decentralisation of the Holy Roman Empire continued, with Prussia, Bavaria and Saxony increasingly acting as independent states. Combined with victories over the Ottomans, this meant Austria increasingly switched focus to southern Europe.

Background

Charles II of Spain succeeded his father Philip IV at the age of four in 1665. Subject to extended periods of ill-health for much of his life, his death was anticipated almost from birth, and the issue of his successor a matter of diplomatic debate for decades, the two main contenders being Louis XIV of France and Emperor Leopold I. In the 1670 Secret Treaty of Dover, Charles II of England agreed to support the rights of Louis XIV, while the 1689 Grand Alliance committed England and the Dutch Republic to back those of Leopold.[14]

In 1700, the Spanish Empire included possessions in Italy, the Spanish Netherlands, the Philippines and the Americas, and though no longer the dominant great power, it remained largely intact.[15] Since the Spanish refused to allow their Empire to be divided and its acquisition by either the Austrian Habsburgs or French Bourbons would change the balance of power, its inheritance led to a war that involved most of Europe. The 1700–1721 Great Northern War is considered a connected conflict, since it affected the involvement of states such as Sweden, Saxony, Denmark–Norway and Russia.[16]

During the 1688–1697 Nine Years' War, armies grew from an average of 25,000 in 1648 to over 100,000 by 1697, which required a level of expenditure unsustainable for pre-industrial economies.[17] The 1690s also marked the lowest point of the Little Ice Age, a period of cold and wet weather that drastically reduced crop yields across Europe.[18] The Great Famine of 1695–1697 killed an estimated 15–25% of the population in present-day Scotland, Scandinavia and the Baltic states, plus another two million in France and Northern Italy.[19] The 1697 Treaty of Ryswick was the result of mutual exhaustion and the acceptance by Louis that France could no longer achieve its objectives without allies. Since the question of the succession was left unresolved, Leopold signed the treaty with extreme reluctance in October 1697, by which time it was clear Charles would die childless and a resumption of hostilities appeared inevitable.[20]

Partition treaties

 
Charles II, 1665–1700, last Habsburg King of Spain

Unlike the crowns of France or Austria, that of Spain could be inherited through the female line. This allowed Charles' sisters Maria Theresa (1638–1683) and Margaret Theresa (1651–1673) to pass their rights onto the children of their respective marriages with Louis XIV and Emperor Leopold. Louis sought to avoid conflict over the issue through direct negotiation with his main opponent William III of England, while excluding the Spanish.[21]

Maria Antonia (1669–1692), daughter of Leopold and Margaret, married Maximillian Emanuel of Bavaria in 1685, and on 28 October 1692, they had a son, Joseph Ferdinand. Under the October 1698 Treaty of the Hague between France, Britain and the Dutch Republic, five-year old Joseph was designated heir to Charles II; in return, France and Austria would receive parts of Spain's European territories.[22] Charles refused to accept this; on 14 November 1698, he published a will leaving an undivided Spanish monarchy to Joseph Ferdinand. However, the latter's death from smallpox in February 1699 undid these arrangements.[23]

In 1685, Maria Antonia passed her claim to the Spanish throne onto Leopold's sons, Joseph and Archduke Charles.[24] Her right to do so was doubtful, but Louis and William used this to devise the 1700 Treaty of London. Archduke Charles became the new heir, while France, Savoy and Austria received territorial compensation; however, since neither Leopold or Charles agreed, the treaty was largely pointless.[25] By early October 1700, Charles was clearly dying; his final will left the throne to Louis XIV's grandson Philip, Duke of Anjou; if he refused, the offer would pass to his younger brother the Duke of Berry, followed by Archduke Charles.[26]

Charles died on 1 November 1700, and on the 9th, Spanish ambassadors formally offered the throne to Philip. Louis briefly considered refusing; although it meant the succession of Archduke Charles, insisting William help him enforce the Treaty of London meant he might achieve his territorial aims without fighting. However, his son the Dauphin rejected the idea; French diplomats also advised Austria would fight regardless, while neither the British or Dutch would go to war for a settlement intended to avoid war. Louis therefore accepted on behalf of his grandson, who was proclaimed Philip V of Spain on 16 November 1700.[26]

Prelude to war

 
Proclamation of Philip of Anjou as Philip V of Spain, Versailles, 16 November 1700

With most of his objectives achieved by diplomacy, Louis now made a series of moves that combined to make war inevitable.[27] The Tory majority in the English Parliament objected to the Partition Treaties, chiefly the French acquisition of Sicily, an important link in the lucrative Levant trade.[28] However, a foreign diplomat observed their refusal to become involved in a European war was true "only so long as English commerce does not suffer".[29] Louis either failed to appreciate this or decided to ignore it and his actions gradually eroded Tory opposition.[30]

In early 1701, Louis registered Philip's claim to the French throne with the Paris Parlement, raising the possibility of union with Spain, contrary to Charles' will, though Philip was only third in the French succession. In February, the Spanish-controlled Duchies of Milan and Mantua in Northern Italy announced their support for Philip and accepted French troops. Combined with efforts to build an alliance between France and Imperial German states in Swabia and Franconia, these were challenges Leopold could not ignore.[31]

Helped by the Viceroy, Max Emanuel of Bavaria, French troops replaced Dutch garrisons in the 'Barrier' fortresses in the Spanish Netherlands, granted at Ryswick. It also threatened the Dutch monopoly over the Scheldt granted by the 1648 Peace of Münster, while French control of Antwerp and Ostend would allow them to blockade the English Channel at will.[32] Combined with other French actions that threatened English trade, this produced a clear majority for war and in May 1701, Parliament urged William to negotiate an anti-French alliance.[33]

On 7 September, Leopold, the Dutch Republic and Britain[f] signed the Treaty of The Hague renewing the 1689 Grand Alliance. Its provisions included securing the Dutch Barrier in the Spanish Netherlands, the Protestant succession in England and Scotland and an independent Spain but did not refer to placing Archduke Charles on the Spanish throne.[34] When the exiled James II of England died on 16 September 1701, Louis reneged on his recognition of the Protestant William III as king of England and Scotland and supported the claim of James' son, James Francis Edward Stuart. War became inevitable and when William himself died in March 1702, his successor Queen Anne confirmed her support for the Treaty of the Hague.[35] The Dutch now led by Grand Pensionary Anthonie Heinsius did the same, despite French hopes that without a Stadtholder the Republic would be torn apart internally.[36] On 8 May the Dutch Republic declared war on France, followed by the British and the Emperor on 15 May and the Imperial Diet on 30 September.[35]

General strategic drivers

 
France's central position required the Grand Alliance to attack on exterior lines.

The importance of trade and economic interests to the participants is often underestimated; contemporaries viewed Dutch and English support for the Habsburg cause as primarily driven by a desire for access to Spanish markets in the Americas.[37] Modern economists generally assume a constantly growing market, but the then dominant theory of Mercantilism viewed it as relatively static. Increasing one's share implied taking it from someone else, and the role of the state was to restrict foreign competition by attacking merchant ships and colonies.[38]

This expanded the war to North America, India, and other parts of Asia, with tariffs used as a policy weapon. From 1690 to 1704, English import duties on foreign goods increased by 400%, and the 1651–1663 Navigation Acts were a major factor in the Anglo-Dutch Wars. On 6 September 1700, France banned the import of English manufactured goods such as cloth, and imposed prohibitive duties on a wide range of others.[39]

Armies of the Nine Years' War often exceeded 100,000 men, levels unsustainable for pre-industrial economies; those of 1701–1714 averaged around 35,000 to 50,000.[40] Dependence on water-borne transport for supplying these numbers meant campaigns were focused on rivers like the Rhine and Adda, which limited operations in poor areas like Northern Spain. Better logistics, unified command, and simpler internal lines of communication gave Bourbon armies an advantage over their opponents.[41]

Strategic objectives by participant

Great Britain

 
Participants in the War of the Spanish Succession in 1703.

British foreign policy was based on three general principles, which remained largely consistent from the 16th through the 20th centuries. The first, overriding all others, was to preserve a balance of power in Europe, an objective threatened by French expansion under Louis XIV. The second was to prevent the Low Countries being controlled by a hostile power or one stronger than Britain; this included both the Spanish Netherlands and the Dutch Republic, whose deep harbours and prevailing winds made her a natural embarkation point for an attack on England, as demonstrated in 1688. The third was to maintain a navy strong enough to protect British trade, control her waters and launch attacks on her enemies' commercial routes and coastal areas.[42]

Alignment on reducing the power of France and securing the Protestant succession for the British throne masked differences on how to achieve them. In general, the Tories favoured a mercantilist strategy of using the Royal Navy to attack French and Spanish trade while protecting and expanding their own; land commitments were viewed as expensive and primarily of benefit to others.[43] The Whigs argued France could not be defeated by seapower alone, making a Continental strategy essential, while Britain's financial strength made it the only member of the Alliance able to operate on all fronts against France.[44]

Dutch Republic

Although the English Duke of Marlborough was Allied commander in the Low Countries, the Dutch provided much of the manpower, and strategy in this theatre was subject to their approval. The 1672 to 1678 Franco-Dutch War showed the Spanish could not defend the Southern Netherlands, and so the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick allowed the Dutch to place garrisons in eight key cities. They hoped this barrier would provide the strategic depth needed to protect their commercial and demographic heartlands around Amsterdam against attack from the south. They were quickly over-run in 1701, but Dutch priorities were to re-establish and strengthen the Barrier fortresses, retain control of the economically vital Scheldt estuary, and gain access to trade in the Spanish Empire.[45]

Austria and the Holy Roman Empire

 
Francis Rákóczi, leader of the 1703–1711 Hungarian revolt; funded by France, this was a major distraction for Austria.

Despite being the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire, Austrian and Imperial interests did not always coincide. The Habsburgs wanted to put Archduke Charles on the throne of an undivided Spanish Monarchy, while their Allies were fighting to prevent either the Bourbons or the Habsburgs from doing so. This divergence and Austria's financial collapse in 1703 meant the campaign in Spain was reliant on Anglo-Dutch naval support and after 1706, British funding. Particularly during the reign of Joseph I, the priority for the Habsburgs was to secure their southern borders from French intervention in northern Italy and suppress Rákóczi's War of Independence in Hungary.[46]

Much of the Spanish nobility resented what they considered to be the arrogance of the Austrians, a key factor in the selection of Philip as their preferred candidate in 1700. In return for British support, Charles agreed to major commercial concessions within the Empire, as well as accepting British control of Gibraltar and Menorca. These made him widely unpopular at all levels of Spanish society, and he was never able to sustain himself outside the coastal regions, which could be supplied by the Royal Navy. [47]

The Wittelsbach-controlled states of Bavaria, Liège, and Cologne allied with France, but the vast majority of the Empire remained neutral, or limited their involvement to the supply of mercenaries. Like Bavaria, the larger entities pursued their own policies; his claim to the Polish crown meant Augustus of Saxony focused on the Great Northern War, while Frederick I made his support dependent on Leopold recognising Prussia as a kingdom and making it an equal member of the Grand Alliance. Since George, Elector Hanover, was also heir to the British throne, his support was more reliable, but the suspicion remained the interests of Hanover came first.[48]

France

Under Louis XIV, France was the most powerful state in Europe, with revenue-generating capacities that far exceeded those of its rivals. Its geographical position provided enormous tactical flexibility; unlike Austria, it had a navy, and as the campaigns of 1708–1710 proved, even under severe pressure it could defend its borders. The Nine Years' War had shown France could not impose its objectives without support but the alliance with Spain and Bavaria made a successful outcome far more likely. Apart from denying an undivided Spanish Monarchy to others, Louis's objectives were to secure his borders with the Holy Roman Empire, weaken his rival Austria, and increase French commercial strength through access to trade with the Americas.[citation needed]

Spain

 
An Anglo-Dutch squadron captures a Spanish treasure fleet, Vigo Bay, October 1702.

In 1700, Spain remained a great power in terms of territory controlled, while recent research shows imports of bullion from the Americas actually reached their highest level between 1670 and 1700.[49] However, this concealed major structural weaknesses; the vast majority of these imports were used to fund debt or pay foreign merchants. When the new Bourbon administration took over in 1701, they found the Empire bankrupt and effectively defenceless, with fewer than 15,000 troops in Spain itself and a navy consisting of 20 ships in total.[50]

Almost constant warfare during the 17th century made the economy subject to long periods of low productivity and depression, and largely reliant upon others for its prosperity. In many ways, the continued existence of the Empire was not due to Spanish strength but to maintain a balance between the powers competing for a share of its markets. Despite fighting a series of wars against Spain from 1667 to 1697, France was also its most significant economic partner, supplying labour and controlling a large proportion of its foreign trade. This consideration was an important factor in the decision to name Philip heir.[49] Its dependence on others was illustrated in 1703; despite the presence of an invading Allied army, the French ambassador urged Louis to allow Dutch and English merchants to purchase wool from Spanish farmers, "otherwise the flocks cannot be maintained".[50]

Enacting political or economic reform was extremely complex since Habsburg Spain was a personal union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon, each with very different political cultures.[g] Most of Philip's support came from the Castilian elite.[51] The Spanish Netherlands had been governed by Bavaria since 1690, while links with Italy, traditionally the major source of Spanish recruits and funding, had been weakened by decades of neglect and heavy taxation. It was widely, if reluctantly, accepted in Madrid that preserving an independent Spanish empire required comprehensive reforms, including elimination of the privileges or Fueros held by the Aragonese states. It was no coincidence Archduke Charles had strong support in areas which were part of the Crown of Aragon, including Catalonia and Valencia.[52]

Savoy

Over the course of the 17th century, the Savoyard state, generally known as Savoy, sought to replace Spain as the dominant power in Northern Italy. Savoy consisted of two main geographic segments; Piedmont, which contained the capital Turin, and the Duchy of Aosta on the Italian side of the Alps, with the Duchy of Savoy and County of Nice in Transalpine France. The latter were almost impossible to defend and combined with the anti-Habsburg policy pursued by Louis XIV and his predecessors, this meant Savoy generally sided with France. However, Piedmont provided foreign powers access to the restive southern French provinces of the Dauphiné and Vaunage, former Huguenot strongholds with a long history of rebellion. This provided Victor Amadeus II with a degree of leverage, allowing him to manoeuvre between opposing parties in order to expand his territories.[53]

During the Nine Years' War in 1690, Savoy joined the Grand Alliance before agreeing a separate peace with France in 1696. The accession of Philip V in 1701 led to a reversal of long-standing strategic policy, with France now supporting the Spanish position in Lombardy, rather than seeking to weaken it, and Austria doing the opposite. While Victor Amadeus initially allied Savoy with France, his long-term goal was the acquisition of Duchy of Milan, which neither the Bourbons or Habsburgs would relinquish voluntarily. In fact, as discussed elsewhere in this article, securing his borders in Italy was of greater concern to Emperor Leopold than Spain itself. This meant Britain was the only power inclined to help Victor Amadeus achieve this objective and he changed sides in 1703 after the Royal Navy won control of the Western Mediterranean.[54]

Military campaigns; 1701–1708

Italy

 
Northern Italy; Milan, Savoy, and Mantua were the primary areas of conflict.

The war in Italy primarily involved the Spanish-ruled Duchies of Milan and Mantua, considered essential to the security of Austria's southern borders. In 1701, French troops occupied both cities and Victor Amadeus II, Duke of Savoy, allied with France, his daughter Maria Luisa marrying Philip V.[55] In May 1701, an Imperial army under Prince Eugene of Savoy moved into Northern Italy; by February 1702, victories at Carpi, Chiari and Cremona forced the French behind the Adda river.[56]

Vendôme, one of the best French generals, took command and was substantially reinforced; Prince Eugene managed a draw at the Battle of Luzzara but the French recovered most of the territory lost the year before.[57] In October 1703, Victor Amadeus declared war on France; by May 1706, the French held most of Savoy except Turin while victories at Cassano and Calcinato forced the Imperialists into the Trentino valley.[58]

However, in July 1706 Vendôme and any available forces were sent to reinforce France's northern frontier after the defeat at Ramillies. Reinforced by German auxiliaries led by Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau, Prince Eugene broke the Siege of Turin in September; despite a minor French victory at Castiglione, the war in Italy was over. To the fury of his allies, in the March 1707 Convention of Milan Emperor Joseph gave French troops in Lombardy free passage to Southern France.[59]

A combined Savoyard-Imperial attack on the French base of Toulon planned for April was postponed when Imperial troops were diverted to seize the Spanish Bourbon Kingdom of Naples. By the time they besieged Toulon in August, the French were too strong, and they were forced to withdraw. By the end of 1707, fighting in Italy ceased, apart from small-scale attempts by Victor Amadeus to recover Nice and Savoy.[60]

Low Countries, Rhine and Danube

 
Low Countries; note the location of Prince-Bishopric of Liège (in pink). Red lines show the Pré carré, a double line of fortresses guarding the French border.

The first objective for the Grand Alliance in this theatre was to secure the Dutch frontiers, threatened by the alliance between France, Bavaria, and Joseph Clemens of Bavaria, ruler of Liège and Cologne. During 1702, the Barrier fortresses were retaken along with Kaiserswerth, Venlo, Roermond and Liège.[61] The 1703 campaign was marred by Allied conflicts over strategy; they failed to take Antwerp, and the Dutch narrowly escaped defeat at Ekeren in June, which led to bitter recriminations.[62]

On the Upper Rhine, Imperial forces under Louis of Baden remained on the defensive, although they took Landau in 1702. Throughout 1703, French victories at Friedlingen, Höchstädt and Speyerbach with the capture of Kehl, Breisach and Landau directly threatened Vienna.

In 1704, Franco-Bavarian forces continued their advance with the Austrians struggling to suppress Rákóczi's revolt in Hungary.[63] To relieve the pressure, Marlborough marched up the Rhine, joined forces with Louis of Baden and Prince Eugene, and crossed the Danube on 2 July. Allied victory at Blenheim on 13 August forced Bavaria out of the war and the Treaty of Ilbersheim placed it under Austrian rule.[64]

Allied efforts to exploit their victory in 1705 foundered on poor co-ordination, tactical disputes and command rivalries, while the ruthless rule of Leopold's successor Joseph in Bavaria caused a brief but vicious peasant revolt.[65] In May 1706, an Allied force under Marlborough shattered a French army at the Battle of Ramillies and the Spanish Netherlands fell to the Allies in under two weeks.[66] France assumed a defensive posture for the rest of the war; despite the loss of strongpoints like Lille, they prevented the Allies from making a decisive breach in their frontiers. By 1712, the overall position remained largely unchanged from 1706.[67]

Spain and Portugal

 
Peninsular Spain, showing Castile and Aragon

British involvement was driven by safeguarding their trade routes in the Mediterranean. By putting Charles VI on the Spanish throne, they also hoped to gain commercial privileges within the Spanish Empire. The Habsburgs viewed Northern Italy, as well as suppressing the Hungarian revolt, as higher priorities, while, after 1704, the Dutch focused on Flanders. As a result, this theatre was largely dependent on British naval and military support; high casualties from disease made it a heavy drain on resources for little apparent benefit.[68]

Spain was a union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon, which was divided into the Principality of Catalonia, plus the Kingdoms of Aragon, Valencia, Majorca, Sicily, Naples and Sardinia. In 1701, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, and Sardinia declared for Philip, while a mixture of anti-Castilian and anti-French sentiment meant the others supported Archduke Charles, the most important being Catalonia. Allied victory at Vigo Bay in October 1702 persuaded Peter II of Portugal to switch sides, giving them an operational base in this area.[69]

Archduke Charles landed at Lisbon in March 1704 to begin a land campaign, while the British-Dutch capture of Gibraltar was a significant blow to Bourbon prestige. An attempt to retake it was defeated in August, with a land siege being abandoned in April 1705.[70] The 1705 Pact of Genoa between Catalan representatives and Britain opened a second front in the north-east; the loss of Barcelona and Valencia left Toulon as the only major port available to the Bourbons in the Western Mediterranean. Philip tried to retake Barcelona in May 1706 but was repulsed, while his absence allowed an Allied force from Portugal to enter Madrid and Saragossa.[71]

However, lack of popular support and logistical issues meant the Allies could not hold territory away from the coastline, and by November, Philip controlled Castile, Murcia, and parts of Valencia. Allied efforts to regain the initiative ended with defeat at Almansa in April 1707, followed by failure to take Toulon in August. The capture of Menorca in 1708, combined with possession of Gibraltar, gave the British control of the Western Mediterranean, which many considered their primary objective.[68]

War beyond Europe and related conflicts

 
The West Indies; the huge profits associated with sugar production made this area highly significant.

The close links between war and trade meant conflict extended beyond Europe, particularly in North America, where it is known as Queen Anne's War, and the West Indies, which produced sugar, then a hugely profitable commodity. Also, there were minor trade conflicts in South America, India, and Asia; the financial strains of war particularly affected the Dutch East India Company, as it was a huge drain on scarce naval resources.

Related conflicts include Rákóczi's War of Independence in Hungary, which was funded by France and a serious concern for the Habsburgs throughout the war. In South-Eastern France, Britain funded the Huguenot 1704–1710 Camisard rebellion; one objective of the 1707 campaign in Northern Italy and Southern France was to support this revolt, one of a series that began in the 1620s.

Towards peace; 1709–1715

By the end of 1708, the French had withdrawn from Northern Italy, while the Maritime Powers controlled the Spanish Netherlands, and secured the borders of the Dutch Republic; in the Mediterranean, the Maritime Powers had achieved naval supremacy, and Britain acquired permanent bases in Gibraltar and Menorca. However, as Marlborough himself pointed out, the French frontiers remained largely intact, their army showed no signs of being defeated, while Philip proved far more popular with the Spanish than his rival. Many of the objectives set out by the Grand Alliance in 1701 had been achieved, but success in 1708 made them overconfident.[72]

Diplomacy

French diplomats focused on the Dutch, whom they considered were more likely to favour peace than their allies since victory at Ramillies removed any direct military threat to the Republic, while highlighting differences with Britain on the Spanish Netherlands. Peace talks broke down in late 1708 because the Allies had agreed not to negotiate a separate peace but could not agree on the terms.[73] The Great Frost of 1709 caused widespread famine in France and Spain, forcing Louis to re-open negotiations and in May 1709 the Allies presented him with the Preliminaries of the Hague. Philip was given two months to cede his throne to Archduke Charles, while France was required to remove him by force if he did not comply.[74]

 
Battle of Malplaquet, 1709: an Allied victory, the losses shocked Europe and increased the desire for peace.

Many Allied statesmen, including Marlborough, felt the terms seriously underestimated France's ability to continue the war and assumed Philip would abdicate on request. They also required the Spanish to accept Archduke Charles as king in his place, which they were clearly unwilling to do, as demonstrated by the failure of Allied campaigns to hold territory outside Catalonia.[75] Although Louis was willing to abandon his ambitions in Spain, making war on his grandson was unacceptable, a stipulation so offensive that when made public the French resolved to fight on.[76]

Marlborough's 1709 offensive in Northern France culminated in the Battle of Malplaquet on 11 September; a narrow Allied victory, total casualties were around 24,500 out of 86,000, the Dutch losing 8,500 out of 18,000.[77] Although the French strategic position continued to deteriorate, it showed their fighting abilities remained intact and increased war-weariness in both Britain and the Dutch Republic. More significant were Franco-Spanish victories at Alicante in April, and La Gudina in May 1709, which meant a successful military solution now appeared remote.[78]

Shortly after, the Dutch discovered they had been excluded from a commercial agreement signed by Archduke Charles which granted Britain exclusive trading rights in Spanish America. This deepened divisions between the Allies, while increasing Spanish opposition to having the Archduke as their king. When the Whig government in London tried to compensate the Dutch by agreeing concessions in the Spanish Netherlands, they were opposed by their Tory opponents as detrimental to British commerce.[78]

The Whigs had won the 1708 British general election by arguing military victory was the quickest road to peace, but failure in France was mirrored in Spain. Archduke Charles re-entered Madrid in 1710 after victories in the Battle of Almenar and Battle of Saragossa, but the Allies could not hold the interior and were forced to retreat. 3,500 British troops surrendered at Brihuega on 8 December, and the Battle of Villaviciosa on 10 December confirmed Bourbon control of Spain.[79] At the same time, costs continued to spiral; the Dutch were close to bankruptcy while Austrian troops were almost entirely funded by Britain. In 1709, Parliament approved expenditures of £6.4 million, up from £5.0 million in 1706; by the end of 1710, these had nearly doubled to £12.9 million, despite minimal gains.[80]

Negotiations

 
Battle of Denain, July 1712; defeat ended Austrian and Dutch hopes of improving their negotiating position.

When negotiations resumed in March 1710 at Geertruidenberg, it was clear to the French the mood in Britain had changed. This was confirmed when the pro-peace Tories won a landslide victory in the October 1710 British general election, although they confirmed their commitment to the war to prevent a credit crisis. Despite the capture of Bouchain in September, a decisive victory in Northern France continued to elude the Allies, and an expedition against Quebec in French North America ended in disaster.[81]

When Emperor Joseph died in April 1711, Archduke Charles was elected Emperor; continuing the war now seemed pointless since the union of Spain with Austria was as unwelcome as one with France. The British secretly negotiated peace terms directly with France, leading to the signing of the Preliminary Articles of London on 8 October 1711.[h] They included French acceptance of the Act of Settlement and a guarantee the French and Spanish crowns would remain separate; France undertook to ensure Spain ceded Gibraltar and Menorca, while giving Britain a thirty-year monopoly on the Asiento de Negros, the right to import slaves into their American colonies.[82] Despite their resentment at being excluded from these negotiations, the Dutch were financially exhausted by the enormous cost of the war, and could not continue without British support. Charles VI initially rejected the idea of a peace conference; he reluctantly agreed once the Dutch decided to support it, but Habsburg opposition to the treaty continued.[83]

Peace of Utrecht

 

Within weeks of the conference opening, events threatened the basis of the peace agreed between Britain and France. First, the French presented proposals awarding the Spanish Netherlands to Max Emmanuel of Bavaria and a minimal Barrier, leaving the Dutch with little to show for their huge investment of money and men. Second, a series of deaths left Louis XIV's two-year-old great-grandson, the future Louis XV as heir, making Philip next in line and his immediate renunciation imperative.[84]

The Dutch and Austrians fought on, hoping to improve their negotiating position but Bolingbroke issued 'Restraining Orders' to Marlborough's replacement, the Duke of Ormonde, instructing him not to participate in offensive operations against the French.[85] These orders caused fury then and later, with Whigs urging Hanoverian military intervention; those George considered responsible, including Ormonde and Bolingbroke were driven into exile after his succession, and became prominent Jacobites.[86]

Prince Eugene captured Le Quesnoy in June and besieged Landrecies but was defeated at Denain on 24 July; the French went on to recapture Le Quesnoy and many towns lost in previous years, including Marchines, Douai, and Bouchain. This showed the French retained their fighting ability, while the Dutch finally reached the end of their willingness and ability to continue the war.[87]

On 6 June, Philip confirmed his renunciation of the French throne, and the British offered the Dutch a revised Barrier Treaty, replacing that of 1709 which they rejected as overly generous. A significant improvement on the 1697 Barrier, it was subject to Austrian approval; although the final terms were less beneficial, it was sufficient for the Dutch to agree peace terms.[88]

 
Western Europe in 1714, after the Treaties of Utrecht and Rastatt

Charles withdrew from the Conference when France insisted he guarantee not to acquire Mantua or Mirandola; he was supported in this by George, Elector of Hanover, who wanted France to withdraw support for the Stuart heir James Francis. As a result, neither Austria nor the Empire signed the Treaty of Utrecht of 11 April 1713 between France and the other Allies; Spain made peace with the Dutch in June, then Savoy and Britain on 13 July 1713.[89]

Treaties of Rastatt and Baden

Fighting continued on the Rhine, but Austria was financially exhausted, and after the loss of Landau and Freiburg in November 1713, Charles finally made peace on 7 March 1714. In the Treaty of Rastatt, the Habsburg monarchy acceded to the terms of Utrecht, which confirmed their gains in Southern Italy, returned Breisach, Kehl, and Freiburg, ended French support for the Hungarian revolt and agreed on terms for the Dutch Barrier fortresses. Charles abandoned his claim to Strasbourg and Alsace and agreed to the restoration of the Wittelsbach Electors of Bavaria and Cologne, Max Emmanuel, and Joseph Clemens. Article XIX of the treaty transferred sovereignty over the Spanish Netherlands to Austria. On 7 September, the Holy Roman Empire joined the agreement by the Treaty of Baden; although Catalonia and Majorca were not finally subdued by the Bourbons until June 1715, the war was over. [90]

Aftermath

 
The Royal Navy destroys a Spanish fleet off Sicily, Cape Passaro, August 1718.

Article II of the Peace of Utrecht included the stipulation "because of the great danger which threatened the liberty and safety of all Europe, from the too-close conjunction of the kingdoms of Spain and France, ... the same person should never become King of both kingdoms." Some historians view this as a key point in the evolution of the modern nation-state; Randall Lesaffer argues it marks a significant milestone in the concept of collective security.[91]

Britain is usually seen as the main beneficiary of Utrecht, which marked its rise to becoming the dominant European commercial power.[92] It established naval superiority over its competitors, acquired the strategic Mediterranean ports of Gibraltar and Menorca and trading rights in Spanish America. France accepted the Protestant succession, ensuring a smooth inheritance by George I in August 1714, while agreeing to end support for the Stuarts in the 1716 Anglo-French Treaty.[93] Although the war left all participants with unprecedented levels of government debt, only Britain was able to finance it efficiently, providing a relative advantage over its competitors.[94]

Philip was confirmed as King of Spain, which retained its independence and the majority of its empire, in return for ceding the Spanish Netherlands, most of their Italian possessions, as well as Gibraltar and Menorca. These losses were deeply felt; Naples and Sicily were regained in 1735 and Menorca in 1782, although Gibraltar is still held by Britain, despite numerous attempts to regain it. The 1707 Nueva Planta decrees centralised power in Madrid, and abolished regional political structures, although Catalonia and Majorca remained outside the system until 1767.[95] Their economy recovered remarkably quickly, while the House of Bourbon still holds the Spanish throne.[96]

Despite failure in Spain, Austria secured its position in Italy and Hungary and acquired the bulk of the Spanish Netherlands; even after reimbursing the Dutch for the cost of their Barrier garrisons, the increased revenues funded a significant expansion of the Austrian army.[97] The shift of Habsburg focus away from Germany and into Southern Europe continued with victory in the Austro-Turkish War of 1716–1718. Their position as the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire was challenged by Bavaria, Hanover, Prussia, and Saxony, who increasingly acted as independent powers; in 1742, Charles of Bavaria became the first non-Habsburg Emperor in over 300 years.[98]

 
 
Veurne
 
Knokke
 
Ypres
 
Menen
 
Tournai
 
Mons
 
Dendermonde
 
Namur
class=notpageimage|
The Barrier fortresses as agreed in 1715

The Dutch had successfully defended their positions in the Southern Netherlands, and their troops were central to the alliance which halted French territorial expansion in Europe until a new cycle began in 1792.[99] However, the war left them effectively bankrupt, and inflicted permanent damage on the Dutch merchant navy; while they remained the dominant economic power in the Far East, Britain took over as the pre-eminent global commercial and maritime power.[100] The Barrier Treaty fortresses became the central driver of Dutch foreign policy in the decades after 1713, but although judged favourably by contemporaries,[101] modern historians still argue about their effectiveness, since the forts were conquered by France during the War of the Austrian Succession.[102][103]

Louis XIV died on 1 September 1715, and was succeeded by his five-year-old great-grandson Louis XV; on his deathbed, he is alleged to have admitted, "I have loved war too well".[104] True or not, while the final settlement was far more favourable than the Allied terms of 1709, it is hard to see what Louis gained he had not already achieved through diplomacy by February 1701.[105] Since 1666, French policies assumed military and economic superiority over their rivals, but this was no longer the case by 1714 when Britain appeared to have overtaken France on both fronts. The continued widening of this gap as British trade expanded post-Utrecht was viewed by Louis' successors as a permanent threat to the European balance of power. Seeking to reduce this was a major factor in France entering the 1740 to 1748 War of the Austrian Succession.[106]

Wider implications include the rise of Prussia and Savoy while many of the participants were involved in the 1700–1721 Great Northern War, with Russia becoming a major European power for the first time as a result. Finally, while colonial conflicts were relatively minor and largely confined to the North American theatre, the so-called Queen Anne's War, they were to become a key element in future wars.[105] Meanwhile, maritime unemployment brought on by the war's end led to the third stage of the Golden Age of Piracy, as many sailors formerly employed in the navies of the warring powers turned to piracy for survival.[107]

Claims to the Spanish throne

Family tree of claimants to the Spanish throne following the death of Charles II
Notes
Potential heirs are shown with a golden border. In cases of second marriages, the earlier spouse is to the left and the later to the right.
References
  • Durant, W.; Durant, A. (2011). The Age of Louis XIV: The Story of Civilization. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781451647655.
  • Kamen, H. (2001). Philip V of Spain: The King Who Reigned Twice. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300180541.


Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Annual average, 1701–1713. Wilson estimates Imperial strength peaked at 343,000 in 1710.[2]
  2. ^ Ostwald estimates Dutch strength peaked at 137,000.[5]
  3. ^ The majority of Prussian troops were hired out to the Dutch or served with Imperial forces in Northern Italy.
  4. ^ The Spanish Army consisted of three separate forces; Spain (20,000), Spanish Netherlands (35,000) and Italy (15,000). These are authorised numbers and actual were almost certainly lower.[10]
  5. ^ Split 50:50 between Habsburg monarchy and other HRE states.[11]
  6. ^ England and Scotland were separate kingdoms until 1707 but the Treaty was signed by William as King of Great Britain
  7. ^ Aragon was divided into the Kingdoms of Aragon, Catalonia, Valencia, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, Malta, and Sardinia.
  8. ^ Also known as the Mesnager Convention.

References

  1. ^ Wilson 2016, p. 461.
  2. ^ Wilson 2016, p. 460.
  3. ^ Rasler 1994, p. 129.
  4. ^ Glete 2001, p. 156.
  5. ^ Ostwald 2000, p. 664.
  6. ^ Craig 1964, p. 7.
  7. ^ Dwyer 2014, p. 14.
  8. ^ Lynn 1994, p. 894.
  9. ^ Vault 1845, p. 454.
  10. ^ Vault 1845, pp. 98, 540, 625.
  11. ^ a b c d Clodfelter 2008, p. 74.
  12. ^ Urlanis 1971, p. 187.
  13. ^ Levy 2014, p. 90.
  14. ^ Hochedlinger 2003, p. 171.
  15. ^ Storrs 2006, pp. 6–7.
  16. ^ Frey & Frey 1995, pp. 191–192.
  17. ^ Childs 1991, p. 1.
  18. ^ White 2011, pp. 542–543.
  19. ^ de Vries 2009, pp. 151–194.
  20. ^ Meerts 2014, p. 168.
  21. ^ Frey & Frey 1995, p. 389.
  22. ^ McKay & Scott 1983, pp. 54–55.
  23. ^ Ward & Leathes 1912, p. 385.
  24. ^ Ingrao 2000, p. 105.
  25. ^ Kamen 2001, p. 3.
  26. ^ a b Rule 2017, pp. 91–108.
  27. ^ Falkner 2015, pp. 508–510.
  28. ^ Gregg 1980, p. 126.
  29. ^ Somerset 2012, p. 166.
  30. ^ Falkner 2015, p. 96.
  31. ^ Thompson 1973, pp. 158–160.
  32. ^ Israel 1989, pp. 197–199.
  33. ^ Somerset 2012, p. 167.
  34. ^ Somerset 2012, p. 168.
  35. ^ a b Wolf 1968, p. 514.
  36. ^ Van Nimwegen 2020, p. 261.
  37. ^ Schmidt Voges & Solana Crespo 2017, p. 2.
  38. ^ Rothbard 2010.
  39. ^ Schaeper 1986, p. 1.
  40. ^ Childs 1991, p. 2.
  41. ^ Falkner 2015, p. 37.
  42. ^ Burke.
  43. ^ Shinsuke 2013, pp. 37–40.
  44. ^ Ostwald 2014, pp. 100–129.
  45. ^ Lesaffer.
  46. ^ Ingrao 1979, p. 220.
  47. ^ Hattendorf 1979, pp. 50–54.
  48. ^ Ingrao 1979, pp. 39–40.
  49. ^ a b Kamen 2002, p. 435.
  50. ^ a b Kamen 2002, p. 440.
  51. ^ Cowans 2003, pp. 26–27.
  52. ^ Kamen 2002, pp. 442–444.
  53. ^ Symcox 1985, pp. 146–147.
  54. ^ Symcox 1985, p. 149.
  55. ^ Dhondt 2015, pp. 16–17.
  56. ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 270–271.
  57. ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 276–277.
  58. ^ Falkner 2015, p. 1302.
  59. ^ Sundstrom 1992, p. 196.
  60. ^ Symcox 1985, p. 155.
  61. ^ Lynn 1999, p. 275.
  62. ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 280–281.
  63. ^ Ingrao 1979, p. 123.
  64. ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 286–294.
  65. ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 298–299.
  66. ^ Holmes 2008, pp. 347–349.
  67. ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 320–323.
  68. ^ a b Atkinson 1944, pp. 233–233.
  69. ^ Francis 1965, pp. 71–93.
  70. ^ Lynn 1999, p. 296.
  71. ^ Lynn 1999, p. 302.
  72. ^ Nicholson 1955, pp. 124–125.
  73. ^ Bromley 1970, p. 446.
  74. ^ Ward & Leathes 1912, pp. 422–423.
  75. ^ Kamen 2001, pp. 70–72.
  76. ^ Ward & Leathes 1912, p. 424.
  77. ^ Holmes 2008, p. 433.
  78. ^ a b Gregg 1980, p. 289.
  79. ^ Kamen 2001, p. 101.
  80. ^ Hattendorf 1978, p. 304.
  81. ^ Simms 2008, pp. 60–64.
  82. ^ Bromley 1970, pp. 459–460.
  83. ^ Elliott 2014, p. 63.
  84. ^ Somerset 2012, p. 470.
  85. ^ Gregg 1980, p. 354.
  86. ^ Somerset 2012, p. 477.
  87. ^ Holmes 2008, p. 462.
  88. ^ Myers 1917, pp. 799–829.
  89. ^ Somerset 2012, pp. 494–495.
  90. ^ Frey & Frey 1995, pp. 374–375.
  91. ^ Lesaffer 2014.
  92. ^ Pincus 2012, pp. 7–8.
  93. ^ Szechi 1994, pp. 93–95.
  94. ^ Carlos, Neal & Wandschneider 2006, p. 2.
  95. ^ Vives 1969, p. 591.
  96. ^ Fernández-Xesta y Vázquez 2012, p. 244.
  97. ^ Falkner 2015, pp. 4173–4181.
  98. ^ Lindsay 1957, p. 420.
  99. ^ Van Nimwegen 2020, p. 354.
  100. ^ Elliott 2014, p. 8.
  101. ^ Van Nimwegen 2002, p. 31-35.
  102. ^ Ward & Leathes 1912, p. 57.
  103. ^ Kubben 2011, p. 148.
  104. ^ Colville 1935, p. 149.
  105. ^ a b Lynn 1999, pp. 361–362.
  106. ^ McKay & Scott 1983, pp. 138–140.
  107. ^ "Golden Age of Piracy – Post Spanish Succession Period". goldenageofpiracy.org. Retrieved 25 August 2020.

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Further reading

  • de Bruin, Renger E. (2011). Performances of Peace: Utrecht 1713. Brill. JSTOR 10.1163/j.ctt1w76w4b.
  • Gilbert, Arthur N. (1976). "Army Impressment During the War of the Spanish Succession". The Historian. 38 (4): 689–708. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1976.tb00057.x. JSTOR 24444302.
  • Thomson, M. A. (1954). "Louis XIV and the Origins of the War of the Spanish Succession". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 4: 111–134. doi:10.2307/3678854. JSTOR 3678854. S2CID 159533647.

External links

  •   Media related to War of the Spanish Succession at Wikimedia Commons

spanish, succession, european, great, power, conflict, that, took, place, from, 1701, 1715, death, childless, charles, spain, november, 1700, struggle, control, spanish, empire, between, heirs, philip, anjou, charles, austria, their, respective, supporters, am. The War of the Spanish Succession was a European great power conflict that took place from 1701 to 1715 The death of childless Charles II of Spain in November 1700 led to a struggle for control of the Spanish Empire between his heirs Philip of Anjou and Charles of Austria and their respective supporters among them Spain Austria France the Dutch Republic Savoy and Great Britain Related conflicts include the 1700 1721 Great Northern War Rakoczi s War of Independence in Hungary the Camisards revolt in southern France Queen Anne s War in North America and minor trade wars in India and South America War of the Spanish SuccessionPart of the French Habsburg rivalryClockwise from top left Battle of Blenheim 13 August 1704 Battle of Ramillies 23 May 1706 Battle of Denain 24 July 1712 Battle of Almansa 25 April 1707 Date9 July 1701 6 February 1715 13 years 6 months and 4 weeks LocationEurope Low Countries Italy Hungary Spain Portugal Southeast FranceNorth America Spanish Florida West Indies Thirteen Colonies and St John s NewfoundlandSouth America New Kingdom of Granada Portuguese BrazilAsia India East IndiesAfrica West AfricaResultTreaties of Utrecht Rastatt and BadenTerritorialchangesPhilip V is recognised as King of Spain but renounces his place in the French succession Spain cedes the Spanish Netherlands Naples Milan and Sardinia to Austria Sicily to Savoy Gibraltar and Menorca to Great Britain France cedes Ypres to Austria while gaining the Principality of Orange and the Ubaye Valley Dutch Republic is awarded barrier fortressesBelligerents Holy Roman Empire England until 1707 Scotland until 1707 Great Britain from 1707 Dutch Republic Pro Habsburg Spain Prussia from 1702 Savoy from 1703 Portugal from 1703 France Bourbon Spain Bavaria until 1704 Savoy until 1703 Cologne until 1702 Liege until 1702 Commanders and leadersCharles VI Leopold I Joseph I Eugene of Savoy Louis of Baden Guido Starhemberg William III amp II until 1702 Anne from 1702 Robert Harley Marlborough George Rooke Anthonie Heinsius Athlone Nassau Ouwerkerk Albemarle Philips van Almonde Frederick I Leopold of Anhalt Dessau Victor Amadeus Peter II of Portugal Antonio Sousa Frederick of Hesse Charles AlexanderLouis XIV Villars Vendome Berwick Boufflers Villeroy Tallard Bezons Vaudreuil Philip V Maximilian II Joseph Clemens Francis II RakocziStrength Holy Roman Empire 260 090 1 a Great Britain 70 000 3 Dutch Republic 119 000 4 b Prussia 40 000 6 c France 255 000 400 000 7 8 Bavaria 20 000 9 Spain 70 000 d Casualties and losses Dutch Republic and Great Britain 250 000 killed and wounded Holy Roman Empire 200 000 killed and wounded e Portugal 50 000 killed and wounded Savoy 50 000 killed and wounded 11 France 400 000 500 000 killed and wounded Spain and Bavaria circa 100 000 killed and wounded 11 Total deaths in combat both sides 400 000 11 Total including disease 700 000 12 to 1 251 000 13 Although weakened by over a century of continuous conflict Spain remained a global power whose territories included the Spanish Netherlands large parts of Italy the Philippines and much of the Americas which meant its acquisition by either France or Austria potentially threatened the European balance of power Attempts by Louis XIV of France and William III of England to resolve the issue through diplomacy were rejected by the Spanish and Charles II named Louis grandson Philip of Anjou as his heir His proclamation as king of an undivided Spanish Empire on 16 November 1700 led to war with France and Spain on one side and the Grand Alliance on the other The French held the advantage in the early stages but were forced onto the defensive after 1706 however by 1710 the Allies had failed to make any significant progress while Bourbon victories in Spain had secured Philip s position as king When Emperor Joseph I died in 1711 Archduke Charles succeeded his brother as emperor and the new British government initiated peace talks Since only British subsidies kept their allies in the war this resulted in the 1713 15 Peace of Utrecht treaties followed by the 1714 Treaties of Rastatt and Baden Philip was confirmed as King of Spain in return for renouncing the right of himself or his descendants to inherit the French throne the Spanish Empire remained largely intact but ceded territories in Italy and the Low Countries to Austria and Savoy Britain retained Gibraltar and Menorca which it captured during the war acquired significant trade concessions in the Spanish Americas and replaced the Dutch as the leading maritime and commercial European power The Dutch gained a strengthened defence line in what was now the Austrian Netherlands although they remained a major commercial power the cost of the war permanently damaged their economy France withdrew backing for the exiled Jacobites and recognised the Hanoverians as heirs to the British throne ensuring a friendly Spain was a major achievement but left them financially exhausted The decentralisation of the Holy Roman Empire continued with Prussia Bavaria and Saxony increasingly acting as independent states Combined with victories over the Ottomans this meant Austria increasingly switched focus to southern Europe Contents 1 Background 2 Partition treaties 3 Prelude to war 4 General strategic drivers 5 Strategic objectives by participant 5 1 Great Britain 5 2 Dutch Republic 5 3 Austria and the Holy Roman Empire 5 4 France 5 5 Spain 5 6 Savoy 6 Military campaigns 1701 1708 6 1 Italy 6 2 Low Countries Rhine and Danube 6 3 Spain and Portugal 6 4 War beyond Europe and related conflicts 7 Towards peace 1709 1715 7 1 Diplomacy 7 2 Negotiations 7 3 Peace of Utrecht 7 4 Treaties of Rastatt and Baden 8 Aftermath 9 Claims to the Spanish throne 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksBackground EditCharles II of Spain succeeded his father Philip IV at the age of four in 1665 Subject to extended periods of ill health for much of his life his death was anticipated almost from birth and the issue of his successor a matter of diplomatic debate for decades the two main contenders being Louis XIV of France and Emperor Leopold I In the 1670 Secret Treaty of Dover Charles II of England agreed to support the rights of Louis XIV while the 1689 Grand Alliance committed England and the Dutch Republic to back those of Leopold 14 In 1700 the Spanish Empire included possessions in Italy the Spanish Netherlands the Philippines and the Americas and though no longer the dominant great power it remained largely intact 15 Since the Spanish refused to allow their Empire to be divided and its acquisition by either the Austrian Habsburgs or French Bourbons would change the balance of power its inheritance led to a war that involved most of Europe The 1700 1721 Great Northern War is considered a connected conflict since it affected the involvement of states such as Sweden Saxony Denmark Norway and Russia 16 During the 1688 1697 Nine Years War armies grew from an average of 25 000 in 1648 to over 100 000 by 1697 which required a level of expenditure unsustainable for pre industrial economies 17 The 1690s also marked the lowest point of the Little Ice Age a period of cold and wet weather that drastically reduced crop yields across Europe 18 The Great Famine of 1695 1697 killed an estimated 15 25 of the population in present day Scotland Scandinavia and the Baltic states plus another two million in France and Northern Italy 19 The 1697 Treaty of Ryswick was the result of mutual exhaustion and the acceptance by Louis that France could no longer achieve its objectives without allies Since the question of the succession was left unresolved Leopold signed the treaty with extreme reluctance in October 1697 by which time it was clear Charles would die childless and a resumption of hostilities appeared inevitable 20 Partition treaties Edit Charles II 1665 1700 last Habsburg King of Spain Unlike the crowns of France or Austria that of Spain could be inherited through the female line This allowed Charles sisters Maria Theresa 1638 1683 and Margaret Theresa 1651 1673 to pass their rights onto the children of their respective marriages with Louis XIV and Emperor Leopold Louis sought to avoid conflict over the issue through direct negotiation with his main opponent William III of England while excluding the Spanish 21 Maria Antonia 1669 1692 daughter of Leopold and Margaret married Maximillian Emanuel of Bavaria in 1685 and on 28 October 1692 they had a son Joseph Ferdinand Under the October 1698 Treaty of the Hague between France Britain and the Dutch Republic five year old Joseph was designated heir to Charles II in return France and Austria would receive parts of Spain s European territories 22 Charles refused to accept this on 14 November 1698 he published a will leaving an undivided Spanish monarchy to Joseph Ferdinand However the latter s death from smallpox in February 1699 undid these arrangements 23 In 1685 Maria Antonia passed her claim to the Spanish throne onto Leopold s sons Joseph and Archduke Charles 24 Her right to do so was doubtful but Louis and William used this to devise the 1700 Treaty of London Archduke Charles became the new heir while France Savoy and Austria received territorial compensation however since neither Leopold or Charles agreed the treaty was largely pointless 25 By early October 1700 Charles was clearly dying his final will left the throne to Louis XIV s grandson Philip Duke of Anjou if he refused the offer would pass to his younger brother the Duke of Berry followed by Archduke Charles 26 Charles died on 1 November 1700 and on the 9th Spanish ambassadors formally offered the throne to Philip Louis briefly considered refusing although it meant the succession of Archduke Charles insisting William help him enforce the Treaty of London meant he might achieve his territorial aims without fighting However his son the Dauphin rejected the idea French diplomats also advised Austria would fight regardless while neither the British or Dutch would go to war for a settlement intended to avoid war Louis therefore accepted on behalf of his grandson who was proclaimed Philip V of Spain on 16 November 1700 26 Prelude to war Edit Proclamation of Philip of Anjou as Philip V of Spain Versailles 16 November 1700 With most of his objectives achieved by diplomacy Louis now made a series of moves that combined to make war inevitable 27 The Tory majority in the English Parliament objected to the Partition Treaties chiefly the French acquisition of Sicily an important link in the lucrative Levant trade 28 However a foreign diplomat observed their refusal to become involved in a European war was true only so long as English commerce does not suffer 29 Louis either failed to appreciate this or decided to ignore it and his actions gradually eroded Tory opposition 30 In early 1701 Louis registered Philip s claim to the French throne with the Paris Parlement raising the possibility of union with Spain contrary to Charles will though Philip was only third in the French succession In February the Spanish controlled Duchies of Milan and Mantua in Northern Italy announced their support for Philip and accepted French troops Combined with efforts to build an alliance between France and Imperial German states in Swabia and Franconia these were challenges Leopold could not ignore 31 Helped by the Viceroy Max Emanuel of Bavaria French troops replaced Dutch garrisons in the Barrier fortresses in the Spanish Netherlands granted at Ryswick It also threatened the Dutch monopoly over the Scheldt granted by the 1648 Peace of Munster while French control of Antwerp and Ostend would allow them to blockade the English Channel at will 32 Combined with other French actions that threatened English trade this produced a clear majority for war and in May 1701 Parliament urged William to negotiate an anti French alliance 33 On 7 September Leopold the Dutch Republic and Britain f signed the Treaty of The Hague renewing the 1689 Grand Alliance Its provisions included securing the Dutch Barrier in the Spanish Netherlands the Protestant succession in England and Scotland and an independent Spain but did not refer to placing Archduke Charles on the Spanish throne 34 When the exiled James II of England died on 16 September 1701 Louis reneged on his recognition of the Protestant William III as king of England and Scotland and supported the claim of James son James Francis Edward Stuart War became inevitable and when William himself died in March 1702 his successor Queen Anne confirmed her support for the Treaty of the Hague 35 The Dutch now led by Grand Pensionary Anthonie Heinsius did the same despite French hopes that without a Stadtholder the Republic would be torn apart internally 36 On 8 May the Dutch Republic declared war on France followed by the British and the Emperor on 15 May and the Imperial Diet on 30 September 35 General strategic drivers Edit France s central position required the Grand Alliance to attack on exterior lines The importance of trade and economic interests to the participants is often underestimated contemporaries viewed Dutch and English support for the Habsburg cause as primarily driven by a desire for access to Spanish markets in the Americas 37 Modern economists generally assume a constantly growing market but the then dominant theory of Mercantilism viewed it as relatively static Increasing one s share implied taking it from someone else and the role of the state was to restrict foreign competition by attacking merchant ships and colonies 38 This expanded the war to North America India and other parts of Asia with tariffs used as a policy weapon From 1690 to 1704 English import duties on foreign goods increased by 400 and the 1651 1663 Navigation Acts were a major factor in the Anglo Dutch Wars On 6 September 1700 France banned the import of English manufactured goods such as cloth and imposed prohibitive duties on a wide range of others 39 Armies of the Nine Years War often exceeded 100 000 men levels unsustainable for pre industrial economies those of 1701 1714 averaged around 35 000 to 50 000 40 Dependence on water borne transport for supplying these numbers meant campaigns were focused on rivers like the Rhine and Adda which limited operations in poor areas like Northern Spain Better logistics unified command and simpler internal lines of communication gave Bourbon armies an advantage over their opponents 41 Strategic objectives by participant EditGreat Britain Edit Participants in the War of the Spanish Succession in 1703 British foreign policy was based on three general principles which remained largely consistent from the 16th through the 20th centuries The first overriding all others was to preserve a balance of power in Europe an objective threatened by French expansion under Louis XIV The second was to prevent the Low Countries being controlled by a hostile power or one stronger than Britain this included both the Spanish Netherlands and the Dutch Republic whose deep harbours and prevailing winds made her a natural embarkation point for an attack on England as demonstrated in 1688 The third was to maintain a navy strong enough to protect British trade control her waters and launch attacks on her enemies commercial routes and coastal areas 42 Alignment on reducing the power of France and securing the Protestant succession for the British throne masked differences on how to achieve them In general the Tories favoured a mercantilist strategy of using the Royal Navy to attack French and Spanish trade while protecting and expanding their own land commitments were viewed as expensive and primarily of benefit to others 43 The Whigs argued France could not be defeated by seapower alone making a Continental strategy essential while Britain s financial strength made it the only member of the Alliance able to operate on all fronts against France 44 Dutch Republic Edit Although the English Duke of Marlborough was Allied commander in the Low Countries the Dutch provided much of the manpower and strategy in this theatre was subject to their approval The 1672 to 1678 Franco Dutch War showed the Spanish could not defend the Southern Netherlands and so the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick allowed the Dutch to place garrisons in eight key cities They hoped this barrier would provide the strategic depth needed to protect their commercial and demographic heartlands around Amsterdam against attack from the south They were quickly over run in 1701 but Dutch priorities were to re establish and strengthen the Barrier fortresses retain control of the economically vital Scheldt estuary and gain access to trade in the Spanish Empire 45 Austria and the Holy Roman Empire Edit Francis Rakoczi leader of the 1703 1711 Hungarian revolt funded by France this was a major distraction for Austria Despite being the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire Austrian and Imperial interests did not always coincide The Habsburgs wanted to put Archduke Charles on the throne of an undivided Spanish Monarchy while their Allies were fighting to prevent either the Bourbons or the Habsburgs from doing so This divergence and Austria s financial collapse in 1703 meant the campaign in Spain was reliant on Anglo Dutch naval support and after 1706 British funding Particularly during the reign of Joseph I the priority for the Habsburgs was to secure their southern borders from French intervention in northern Italy and suppress Rakoczi s War of Independence in Hungary 46 Much of the Spanish nobility resented what they considered to be the arrogance of the Austrians a key factor in the selection of Philip as their preferred candidate in 1700 In return for British support Charles agreed to major commercial concessions within the Empire as well as accepting British control of Gibraltar and Menorca These made him widely unpopular at all levels of Spanish society and he was never able to sustain himself outside the coastal regions which could be supplied by the Royal Navy 47 The Wittelsbach controlled states of Bavaria Liege and Cologne allied with France but the vast majority of the Empire remained neutral or limited their involvement to the supply of mercenaries Like Bavaria the larger entities pursued their own policies his claim to the Polish crown meant Augustus of Saxony focused on the Great Northern War while Frederick I made his support dependent on Leopold recognising Prussia as a kingdom and making it an equal member of the Grand Alliance Since George Elector Hanover was also heir to the British throne his support was more reliable but the suspicion remained the interests of Hanover came first 48 France Edit Under Louis XIV France was the most powerful state in Europe with revenue generating capacities that far exceeded those of its rivals Its geographical position provided enormous tactical flexibility unlike Austria it had a navy and as the campaigns of 1708 1710 proved even under severe pressure it could defend its borders The Nine Years War had shown France could not impose its objectives without support but the alliance with Spain and Bavaria made a successful outcome far more likely Apart from denying an undivided Spanish Monarchy to others Louis s objectives were to secure his borders with the Holy Roman Empire weaken his rival Austria and increase French commercial strength through access to trade with the Americas citation needed Spain Edit An Anglo Dutch squadron captures a Spanish treasure fleet Vigo Bay October 1702 In 1700 Spain remained a great power in terms of territory controlled while recent research shows imports of bullion from the Americas actually reached their highest level between 1670 and 1700 49 However this concealed major structural weaknesses the vast majority of these imports were used to fund debt or pay foreign merchants When the new Bourbon administration took over in 1701 they found the Empire bankrupt and effectively defenceless with fewer than 15 000 troops in Spain itself and a navy consisting of 20 ships in total 50 Almost constant warfare during the 17th century made the economy subject to long periods of low productivity and depression and largely reliant upon others for its prosperity In many ways the continued existence of the Empire was not due to Spanish strength but to maintain a balance between the powers competing for a share of its markets Despite fighting a series of wars against Spain from 1667 to 1697 France was also its most significant economic partner supplying labour and controlling a large proportion of its foreign trade This consideration was an important factor in the decision to name Philip heir 49 Its dependence on others was illustrated in 1703 despite the presence of an invading Allied army the French ambassador urged Louis to allow Dutch and English merchants to purchase wool from Spanish farmers otherwise the flocks cannot be maintained 50 Enacting political or economic reform was extremely complex since Habsburg Spain was a personal union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon each with very different political cultures g Most of Philip s support came from the Castilian elite 51 The Spanish Netherlands had been governed by Bavaria since 1690 while links with Italy traditionally the major source of Spanish recruits and funding had been weakened by decades of neglect and heavy taxation It was widely if reluctantly accepted in Madrid that preserving an independent Spanish empire required comprehensive reforms including elimination of the privileges or Fueros held by the Aragonese states It was no coincidence Archduke Charles had strong support in areas which were part of the Crown of Aragon including Catalonia and Valencia 52 Savoy Edit Victor Amadeus II Duke of Savoy Over the course of the 17th century the Savoyard state generally known as Savoy sought to replace Spain as the dominant power in Northern Italy Savoy consisted of two main geographic segments Piedmont which contained the capital Turin and the Duchy of Aosta on the Italian side of the Alps with the Duchy of Savoy and County of Nice in Transalpine France The latter were almost impossible to defend and combined with the anti Habsburg policy pursued by Louis XIV and his predecessors this meant Savoy generally sided with France However Piedmont provided foreign powers access to the restive southern French provinces of the Dauphine and Vaunage former Huguenot strongholds with a long history of rebellion This provided Victor Amadeus II with a degree of leverage allowing him to manoeuvre between opposing parties in order to expand his territories 53 During the Nine Years War in 1690 Savoy joined the Grand Alliance before agreeing a separate peace with France in 1696 The accession of Philip V in 1701 led to a reversal of long standing strategic policy with France now supporting the Spanish position in Lombardy rather than seeking to weaken it and Austria doing the opposite While Victor Amadeus initially allied Savoy with France his long term goal was the acquisition of Duchy of Milan which neither the Bourbons or Habsburgs would relinquish voluntarily In fact as discussed elsewhere in this article securing his borders in Italy was of greater concern to Emperor Leopold than Spain itself This meant Britain was the only power inclined to help Victor Amadeus achieve this objective and he changed sides in 1703 after the Royal Navy won control of the Western Mediterranean 54 Military campaigns 1701 1708 EditItaly Edit Northern Italy Milan Savoy and Mantua were the primary areas of conflict The war in Italy primarily involved the Spanish ruled Duchies of Milan and Mantua considered essential to the security of Austria s southern borders In 1701 French troops occupied both cities and Victor Amadeus II Duke of Savoy allied with France his daughter Maria Luisa marrying Philip V 55 In May 1701 an Imperial army under Prince Eugene of Savoy moved into Northern Italy by February 1702 victories at Carpi Chiari and Cremona forced the French behind the Adda river 56 Vendome one of the best French generals took command and was substantially reinforced Prince Eugene managed a draw at the Battle of Luzzara but the French recovered most of the territory lost the year before 57 In October 1703 Victor Amadeus declared war on France by May 1706 the French held most of Savoy except Turin while victories at Cassano and Calcinato forced the Imperialists into the Trentino valley 58 However in July 1706 Vendome and any available forces were sent to reinforce France s northern frontier after the defeat at Ramillies Reinforced by German auxiliaries led by Leopold of Anhalt Dessau Prince Eugene broke the Siege of Turin in September despite a minor French victory at Castiglione the war in Italy was over To the fury of his allies in the March 1707 Convention of Milan Emperor Joseph gave French troops in Lombardy free passage to Southern France 59 A combined Savoyard Imperial attack on the French base of Toulon planned for April was postponed when Imperial troops were diverted to seize the Spanish Bourbon Kingdom of Naples By the time they besieged Toulon in August the French were too strong and they were forced to withdraw By the end of 1707 fighting in Italy ceased apart from small scale attempts by Victor Amadeus to recover Nice and Savoy 60 Low Countries Rhine and Danube Edit Low Countries note the location of Prince Bishopric of Liege in pink Red lines show the Pre carre a double line of fortresses guarding the French border The first objective for the Grand Alliance in this theatre was to secure the Dutch frontiers threatened by the alliance between France Bavaria and Joseph Clemens of Bavaria ruler of Liege and Cologne During 1702 the Barrier fortresses were retaken along with Kaiserswerth Venlo Roermond and Liege 61 The 1703 campaign was marred by Allied conflicts over strategy they failed to take Antwerp and the Dutch narrowly escaped defeat at Ekeren in June which led to bitter recriminations 62 On the Upper Rhine Imperial forces under Louis of Baden remained on the defensive although they took Landau in 1702 Throughout 1703 French victories at Friedlingen Hochstadt and Speyerbach with the capture of Kehl Breisach and Landau directly threatened Vienna In 1704 Franco Bavarian forces continued their advance with the Austrians struggling to suppress Rakoczi s revolt in Hungary 63 To relieve the pressure Marlborough marched up the Rhine joined forces with Louis of Baden and Prince Eugene and crossed the Danube on 2 July Allied victory at Blenheim on 13 August forced Bavaria out of the war and the Treaty of Ilbersheim placed it under Austrian rule 64 Allied efforts to exploit their victory in 1705 foundered on poor co ordination tactical disputes and command rivalries while the ruthless rule of Leopold s successor Joseph in Bavaria caused a brief but vicious peasant revolt 65 In May 1706 an Allied force under Marlborough shattered a French army at the Battle of Ramillies and the Spanish Netherlands fell to the Allies in under two weeks 66 France assumed a defensive posture for the rest of the war despite the loss of strongpoints like Lille they prevented the Allies from making a decisive breach in their frontiers By 1712 the overall position remained largely unchanged from 1706 67 Spain and Portugal Edit Peninsular Spain showing Castile and Aragon British involvement was driven by safeguarding their trade routes in the Mediterranean By putting Charles VI on the Spanish throne they also hoped to gain commercial privileges within the Spanish Empire The Habsburgs viewed Northern Italy as well as suppressing the Hungarian revolt as higher priorities while after 1704 the Dutch focused on Flanders As a result this theatre was largely dependent on British naval and military support high casualties from disease made it a heavy drain on resources for little apparent benefit 68 Spain was a union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon which was divided into the Principality of Catalonia plus the Kingdoms of Aragon Valencia Majorca Sicily Naples and Sardinia In 1701 Majorca Naples Sicily and Sardinia declared for Philip while a mixture of anti Castilian and anti French sentiment meant the others supported Archduke Charles the most important being Catalonia Allied victory at Vigo Bay in October 1702 persuaded Peter II of Portugal to switch sides giving them an operational base in this area 69 Archduke Charles landed at Lisbon in March 1704 to begin a land campaign while the British Dutch capture of Gibraltar was a significant blow to Bourbon prestige An attempt to retake it was defeated in August with a land siege being abandoned in April 1705 70 The 1705 Pact of Genoa between Catalan representatives and Britain opened a second front in the north east the loss of Barcelona and Valencia left Toulon as the only major port available to the Bourbons in the Western Mediterranean Philip tried to retake Barcelona in May 1706 but was repulsed while his absence allowed an Allied force from Portugal to enter Madrid and Saragossa 71 However lack of popular support and logistical issues meant the Allies could not hold territory away from the coastline and by November Philip controlled Castile Murcia and parts of Valencia Allied efforts to regain the initiative ended with defeat at Almansa in April 1707 followed by failure to take Toulon in August The capture of Menorca in 1708 combined with possession of Gibraltar gave the British control of the Western Mediterranean which many considered their primary objective 68 War beyond Europe and related conflicts Edit The West Indies the huge profits associated with sugar production made this area highly significant The close links between war and trade meant conflict extended beyond Europe particularly in North America where it is known as Queen Anne s War and the West Indies which produced sugar then a hugely profitable commodity Also there were minor trade conflicts in South America India and Asia the financial strains of war particularly affected the Dutch East India Company as it was a huge drain on scarce naval resources Related conflicts include Rakoczi s War of Independence in Hungary which was funded by France and a serious concern for the Habsburgs throughout the war In South Eastern France Britain funded the Huguenot 1704 1710 Camisard rebellion one objective of the 1707 campaign in Northern Italy and Southern France was to support this revolt one of a series that began in the 1620s Towards peace 1709 1715 EditBy the end of 1708 the French had withdrawn from Northern Italy while the Maritime Powers controlled the Spanish Netherlands and secured the borders of the Dutch Republic in the Mediterranean the Maritime Powers had achieved naval supremacy and Britain acquired permanent bases in Gibraltar and Menorca However as Marlborough himself pointed out the French frontiers remained largely intact their army showed no signs of being defeated while Philip proved far more popular with the Spanish than his rival Many of the objectives set out by the Grand Alliance in 1701 had been achieved but success in 1708 made them overconfident 72 Diplomacy Edit Further information No Peace Without Spain French diplomats focused on the Dutch whom they considered were more likely to favour peace than their allies since victory at Ramillies removed any direct military threat to the Republic while highlighting differences with Britain on the Spanish Netherlands Peace talks broke down in late 1708 because the Allies had agreed not to negotiate a separate peace but could not agree on the terms 73 The Great Frost of 1709 caused widespread famine in France and Spain forcing Louis to re open negotiations and in May 1709 the Allies presented him with the Preliminaries of the Hague Philip was given two months to cede his throne to Archduke Charles while France was required to remove him by force if he did not comply 74 Battle of Malplaquet 1709 an Allied victory the losses shocked Europe and increased the desire for peace Many Allied statesmen including Marlborough felt the terms seriously underestimated France s ability to continue the war and assumed Philip would abdicate on request They also required the Spanish to accept Archduke Charles as king in his place which they were clearly unwilling to do as demonstrated by the failure of Allied campaigns to hold territory outside Catalonia 75 Although Louis was willing to abandon his ambitions in Spain making war on his grandson was unacceptable a stipulation so offensive that when made public the French resolved to fight on 76 Marlborough s 1709 offensive in Northern France culminated in the Battle of Malplaquet on 11 September a narrow Allied victory total casualties were around 24 500 out of 86 000 the Dutch losing 8 500 out of 18 000 77 Although the French strategic position continued to deteriorate it showed their fighting abilities remained intact and increased war weariness in both Britain and the Dutch Republic More significant were Franco Spanish victories at Alicante in April and La Gudina in May 1709 which meant a successful military solution now appeared remote 78 Shortly after the Dutch discovered they had been excluded from a commercial agreement signed by Archduke Charles which granted Britain exclusive trading rights in Spanish America This deepened divisions between the Allies while increasing Spanish opposition to having the Archduke as their king When the Whig government in London tried to compensate the Dutch by agreeing concessions in the Spanish Netherlands they were opposed by their Tory opponents as detrimental to British commerce 78 The Whigs had won the 1708 British general election by arguing military victory was the quickest road to peace but failure in France was mirrored in Spain Archduke Charles re entered Madrid in 1710 after victories in the Battle of Almenar and Battle of Saragossa but the Allies could not hold the interior and were forced to retreat 3 500 British troops surrendered at Brihuega on 8 December and the Battle of Villaviciosa on 10 December confirmed Bourbon control of Spain 79 At the same time costs continued to spiral the Dutch were close to bankruptcy while Austrian troops were almost entirely funded by Britain In 1709 Parliament approved expenditures of 6 4 million up from 5 0 million in 1706 by the end of 1710 these had nearly doubled to 12 9 million despite minimal gains 80 Negotiations Edit Battle of Denain July 1712 defeat ended Austrian and Dutch hopes of improving their negotiating position When negotiations resumed in March 1710 at Geertruidenberg it was clear to the French the mood in Britain had changed This was confirmed when the pro peace Tories won a landslide victory in the October 1710 British general election although they confirmed their commitment to the war to prevent a credit crisis Despite the capture of Bouchain in September a decisive victory in Northern France continued to elude the Allies and an expedition against Quebec in French North America ended in disaster 81 When Emperor Joseph died in April 1711 Archduke Charles was elected Emperor continuing the war now seemed pointless since the union of Spain with Austria was as unwelcome as one with France The British secretly negotiated peace terms directly with France leading to the signing of the Preliminary Articles of London on 8 October 1711 h They included French acceptance of the Act of Settlement and a guarantee the French and Spanish crowns would remain separate France undertook to ensure Spain ceded Gibraltar and Menorca while giving Britain a thirty year monopoly on the Asiento de Negros the right to import slaves into their American colonies 82 Despite their resentment at being excluded from these negotiations the Dutch were financially exhausted by the enormous cost of the war and could not continue without British support Charles VI initially rejected the idea of a peace conference he reluctantly agreed once the Dutch decided to support it but Habsburg opposition to the treaty continued 83 Peace of Utrecht Edit Main article Peace of Utrecht The Treaty of Utrecht Abraham Allard 18th century Within weeks of the conference opening events threatened the basis of the peace agreed between Britain and France First the French presented proposals awarding the Spanish Netherlands to Max Emmanuel of Bavaria and a minimal Barrier leaving the Dutch with little to show for their huge investment of money and men Second a series of deaths left Louis XIV s two year old great grandson the future Louis XV as heir making Philip next in line and his immediate renunciation imperative 84 The Dutch and Austrians fought on hoping to improve their negotiating position but Bolingbroke issued Restraining Orders to Marlborough s replacement the Duke of Ormonde instructing him not to participate in offensive operations against the French 85 These orders caused fury then and later with Whigs urging Hanoverian military intervention those George considered responsible including Ormonde and Bolingbroke were driven into exile after his succession and became prominent Jacobites 86 Prince Eugene captured Le Quesnoy in June and besieged Landrecies but was defeated at Denain on 24 July the French went on to recapture Le Quesnoy and many towns lost in previous years including Marchines Douai and Bouchain This showed the French retained their fighting ability while the Dutch finally reached the end of their willingness and ability to continue the war 87 On 6 June Philip confirmed his renunciation of the French throne and the British offered the Dutch a revised Barrier Treaty replacing that of 1709 which they rejected as overly generous A significant improvement on the 1697 Barrier it was subject to Austrian approval although the final terms were less beneficial it was sufficient for the Dutch to agree peace terms 88 Western Europe in 1714 after the Treaties of Utrecht and Rastatt Charles withdrew from the Conference when France insisted he guarantee not to acquire Mantua or Mirandola he was supported in this by George Elector of Hanover who wanted France to withdraw support for the Stuart heir James Francis As a result neither Austria nor the Empire signed the Treaty of Utrecht of 11 April 1713 between France and the other Allies Spain made peace with the Dutch in June then Savoy and Britain on 13 July 1713 89 Treaties of Rastatt and Baden Edit Fighting continued on the Rhine but Austria was financially exhausted and after the loss of Landau and Freiburg in November 1713 Charles finally made peace on 7 March 1714 In the Treaty of Rastatt the Habsburg monarchy acceded to the terms of Utrecht which confirmed their gains in Southern Italy returned Breisach Kehl and Freiburg ended French support for the Hungarian revolt and agreed on terms for the Dutch Barrier fortresses Charles abandoned his claim to Strasbourg and Alsace and agreed to the restoration of the Wittelsbach Electors of Bavaria and Cologne Max Emmanuel and Joseph Clemens Article XIX of the treaty transferred sovereignty over the Spanish Netherlands to Austria On 7 September the Holy Roman Empire joined the agreement by the Treaty of Baden although Catalonia and Majorca were not finally subdued by the Bourbons until June 1715 the war was over 90 Aftermath Edit The Royal Navy destroys a Spanish fleet off Sicily Cape Passaro August 1718 Article II of the Peace of Utrecht included the stipulation because of the great danger which threatened the liberty and safety of all Europe from the too close conjunction of the kingdoms of Spain and France the same person should never become King of both kingdoms Some historians view this as a key point in the evolution of the modern nation state Randall Lesaffer argues it marks a significant milestone in the concept of collective security 91 Britain is usually seen as the main beneficiary of Utrecht which marked its rise to becoming the dominant European commercial power 92 It established naval superiority over its competitors acquired the strategic Mediterranean ports of Gibraltar and Menorca and trading rights in Spanish America France accepted the Protestant succession ensuring a smooth inheritance by George I in August 1714 while agreeing to end support for the Stuarts in the 1716 Anglo French Treaty 93 Although the war left all participants with unprecedented levels of government debt only Britain was able to finance it efficiently providing a relative advantage over its competitors 94 Philip was confirmed as King of Spain which retained its independence and the majority of its empire in return for ceding the Spanish Netherlands most of their Italian possessions as well as Gibraltar and Menorca These losses were deeply felt Naples and Sicily were regained in 1735 and Menorca in 1782 although Gibraltar is still held by Britain despite numerous attempts to regain it The 1707 Nueva Planta decrees centralised power in Madrid and abolished regional political structures although Catalonia and Majorca remained outside the system until 1767 95 Their economy recovered remarkably quickly while the House of Bourbon still holds the Spanish throne 96 Despite failure in Spain Austria secured its position in Italy and Hungary and acquired the bulk of the Spanish Netherlands even after reimbursing the Dutch for the cost of their Barrier garrisons the increased revenues funded a significant expansion of the Austrian army 97 The shift of Habsburg focus away from Germany and into Southern Europe continued with victory in the Austro Turkish War of 1716 1718 Their position as the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire was challenged by Bavaria Hanover Prussia and Saxony who increasingly acted as independent powers in 1742 Charles of Bavaria became the first non Habsburg Emperor in over 300 years 98 Veurne Knokke Ypres Menen Tournai Mons Dendermonde Namurclass notpageimage The Barrier fortresses as agreed in 1715 The Dutch had successfully defended their positions in the Southern Netherlands and their troops were central to the alliance which halted French territorial expansion in Europe until a new cycle began in 1792 99 However the war left them effectively bankrupt and inflicted permanent damage on the Dutch merchant navy while they remained the dominant economic power in the Far East Britain took over as the pre eminent global commercial and maritime power 100 The Barrier Treaty fortresses became the central driver of Dutch foreign policy in the decades after 1713 but although judged favourably by contemporaries 101 modern historians still argue about their effectiveness since the forts were conquered by France during the War of the Austrian Succession 102 103 Louis XIV died on 1 September 1715 and was succeeded by his five year old great grandson Louis XV on his deathbed he is alleged to have admitted I have loved war too well 104 True or not while the final settlement was far more favourable than the Allied terms of 1709 it is hard to see what Louis gained he had not already achieved through diplomacy by February 1701 105 Since 1666 French policies assumed military and economic superiority over their rivals but this was no longer the case by 1714 when Britain appeared to have overtaken France on both fronts The continued widening of this gap as British trade expanded post Utrecht was viewed by Louis successors as a permanent threat to the European balance of power Seeking to reduce this was a major factor in France entering the 1740 to 1748 War of the Austrian Succession 106 Wider implications include the rise of Prussia and Savoy while many of the participants were involved in the 1700 1721 Great Northern War with Russia becoming a major European power for the first time as a result Finally while colonial conflicts were relatively minor and largely confined to the North American theatre the so called Queen Anne s War they were to become a key element in future wars 105 Meanwhile maritime unemployment brought on by the war s end led to the third stage of the Golden Age of Piracy as many sailors formerly employed in the navies of the warring powers turned to piracy for survival 107 Claims to the Spanish throne EditFamily tree of claimants to the Spanish throne following the death of Charles IIThis table includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this table by introducing more precise citations November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Philip IIIKing of Spain1578 1621Margaretof Austria1584 1611Ferdinand IIIHoly Roman Emperor1608 1657Maria Annaof Spain1606 1646Anneof Austria1601 1666Elisabethof France1602 1644Philip IVKing of Spain1605 1665Marianaof Austria1635 1696Louis XIVKing of France1638 1715Maria Theresaof Spain1638 1683Charles IIKing of Spain1661 1700Margaret Theresaof Spain1651 1673Leopold IHoly Roman Emperor1640 1705Eleonore Magdaleneof Neuburg1655 1720LouisGrand Dauphin of France1661 1711Maria Antoniaof Austria1669 1692Charles VIHoly Roman Emperor1685 1740LouisPetit Dauphin of France1682 1712Philip VKing of Spain1683 1746CharlesDuke of Berry1686 1714Joseph Ferdinandof Bavaria1692 1699Notes Potential heirs are shown with a golden border In cases of second marriages the earlier spouse is to the left and the later to the right References Durant W Durant A 2011 The Age of Louis XIV The Story of Civilization New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781451647655 Kamen H 2001 Philip V of Spain The King Who Reigned Twice New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300180541 Explanatory notes Edit Annual average 1701 1713 Wilson estimates Imperial strength peaked at 343 000 in 1710 2 Ostwald estimates Dutch strength peaked at 137 000 5 The majority of Prussian troops were hired out to the Dutch or served with Imperial forces in Northern Italy The Spanish Army consisted of three separate forces Spain 20 000 Spanish Netherlands 35 000 and Italy 15 000 These are authorised numbers and actual were almost certainly lower 10 Split 50 50 between Habsburg monarchy and other HRE states 11 England and Scotland were separate kingdoms until 1707 but the Treaty was signed by William as King of Great Britain Aragon was divided into the Kingdoms of Aragon Catalonia Valencia Majorca Naples Sicily Malta and Sardinia Also known as the Mesnager Convention References Edit Wilson 2016 p 461 Wilson 2016 p 460 Rasler 1994 p 129 Glete 2001 p 156 Ostwald 2000 p 664 Craig 1964 p 7 Dwyer 2014 p 14 Lynn 1994 p 894 Vault 1845 p 454 sfn error no target CITEREFVault1845 help Vault 1845 pp 98 540 625 sfn error no target CITEREFVault1845 help a b c d Clodfelter 2008 p 74 Urlanis 1971 p 187 Levy 2014 p 90 Hochedlinger 2003 p 171 Storrs 2006 pp 6 7 Frey amp Frey 1995 pp 191 192 Childs 1991 p 1 sfn error no target CITEREFChilds1991 help White 2011 pp 542 543 de Vries 2009 pp 151 194 Meerts 2014 p 168 Frey amp Frey 1995 p 389 McKay amp Scott 1983 pp 54 55 Ward amp Leathes 1912 p 385 sfn error no target CITEREFWardLeathes1912 help Ingrao 2000 p 105 sfn error no target CITEREFIngrao2000 help Kamen 2001 p 3 a b Rule 2017 pp 91 108 Falkner 2015 pp 508 510 Gregg 1980 p 126 sfn error no target CITEREFGregg1980 help Somerset 2012 p 166 Falkner 2015 p 96 Thompson 1973 pp 158 160 Israel 1989 pp 197 199 sfn error no target CITEREFIsrael1989 help Somerset 2012 p 167 Somerset 2012 p 168 a b Wolf 1968 p 514 sfn error no target CITEREFWolf1968 help Van Nimwegen 2020 p 261 Schmidt Voges amp Solana Crespo 2017 p 2 Rothbard 2010 Schaeper 1986 p 1 Childs 1991 p 2 sfn error no target CITEREFChilds1991 help Falkner 2015 p 37 Burke Shinsuke 2013 pp 37 40 Ostwald 2014 pp 100 129 Lesaffer Ingrao 1979 p 220 Hattendorf 1979 pp 50 54 Ingrao 1979 pp 39 40 a b Kamen 2002 p 435 a b Kamen 2002 p 440 Cowans 2003 pp 26 27 Kamen 2002 pp 442 444 Symcox 1985 pp 146 147 Symcox 1985 p 149 Dhondt 2015 pp 16 17 Lynn 1999 pp 270 271 Lynn 1999 pp 276 277 Falkner 2015 p 1302 Sundstrom 1992 p 196 Symcox 1985 p 155 Lynn 1999 p 275 Lynn 1999 pp 280 281 Ingrao 1979 p 123 Lynn 1999 pp 286 294 Lynn 1999 pp 298 299 Holmes 2008 pp 347 349 Lynn 1999 pp 320 323 a b Atkinson 1944 pp 233 233 Francis 1965 pp 71 93 Lynn 1999 p 296 Lynn 1999 p 302 Nicholson 1955 pp 124 125 Bromley 1970 p 446 sfn error no target CITEREFBromley1970 help Ward amp Leathes 1912 pp 422 423 sfn error no target CITEREFWardLeathes1912 help Kamen 2001 pp 70 72 Ward amp Leathes 1912 p 424 sfn error no target CITEREFWardLeathes1912 help Holmes 2008 p 433 a b Gregg 1980 p 289 sfn error no target CITEREFGregg1980 help Kamen 2001 p 101 Hattendorf 1978 p 304 Simms 2008 pp 60 64 Bromley 1970 pp 459 460 sfn error no target CITEREFBromley1970 help Elliott 2014 p 63 Somerset 2012 p 470 Gregg 1980 p 354 sfn error no target CITEREFGregg1980 help Somerset 2012 p 477 Holmes 2008 p 462 Myers 1917 pp 799 829 Somerset 2012 pp 494 495 Frey amp Frey 1995 pp 374 375 Lesaffer 2014 Pincus 2012 pp 7 8 Szechi 1994 pp 93 95 Carlos Neal amp Wandschneider 2006 p 2 Vives 1969 p 591 Fernandez Xesta y Vazquez 2012 p 244 Falkner 2015 pp 4173 4181 Lindsay 1957 p 420 Van Nimwegen 2020 p 354 Elliott 2014 p 8 Van Nimwegen 2002 p 31 35 Ward amp Leathes 1912 p 57 sfn error no target CITEREFWardLeathes1912 help Kubben 2011 p 148 Colville 1935 p 149 a b Lynn 1999 pp 361 362 McKay amp Scott 1983 pp 138 140 Golden Age of Piracy Post Spanish Succession Period goldenageofpiracy org Retrieved 25 August 2020 Sources EditAnderson M S 1995 The War of Austrian Succession 1740 1748 Routledge ISBN 978 0 582 05950 4 Atkinson C T 1944 The Peninsula Second Front in the War of the Spanish Succession Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research JSTOR 44228346 Bromley J S 1979 1970 The New Cambridge Modern History Vol 6 The Rise of Great Britain and Russia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29396 9 Burke Kathleen At War with the French Louis XIV and Napoleon Gresham College Retrieved 25 July 2021 Carlos Ann Neal Larry Wandschneider Kirsten 2006 The Origins of National Debt The Financing and Re financing of the War of the Spanish Succession International Economic History Association Childs John 2013 1991 The Nine Years War and the British Army 1688 1697 The Operations in the Low Countries Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 8996 1 Clodfelter M 2008 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 3rd ed McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 7470 7 Colville Alfred 1935 Studies in Anglo French History During the Eighteenth Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Forgotten Books ISBN 978 1 5280 2239 2 Cowans Jon 2003 Modern Spain A Documentary History University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 1846 6 Craig Gordon A 1964 The Politics of the Prussian Army 1640 1945 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 500257 7 de Vries Jan 2009 The Economic Crisis of the 17th Century Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 40 2 Dhondt Frederik 2015 De Ruysscher D Capelle K eds History in Legal Doctrine Vattel and Real De Curban on the Spanish Succession the War of the Spanish Succession inLegal history moving in new directions Maklu ISBN 978 90 466 0758 9 Dwyer Philip G 2014 The Rise of Prussia 1700 1830 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 582 29268 0 Elliott John 2014 Dadson Trevor ed The Road to Utrecht in Britain Spain and the Treaty of Utrecht 1713 2013 Routledge ISBN 978 1 909662 22 3 Falkner James 2015 The War of the Spanish Succession 1701 1714 Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 78159 031 7 Fernandez Xesta y Vazquez Ernesto 2012 La Heraldica Familiar PDF Emblemata in Spanish 18 243 257 Francis David May 1965 Portugal and the Grand Alliance Historical Research 38 97 71 93 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2281 1965 tb01638 x Frey Linda Frey Marsha eds 1995 The Treaties of the War of the Spanish Succession An Historical and Critical Dictionary Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 27884 6 Glete Jan 2001 War and the State in Early Modern Europe Spain the Dutch Republic and Sweden as Fiscal Military States 1500 1660 Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 22645 5 Gregg Edward 2001 1980 Queen Anne The English Monarchs Series Revised ed Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09024 6 Hattendorf John 1978 England in the war of the Spanish succession Naval War College Center for Advanced Research Hattendorf John 1979 A Study in the English View and Conduct of Grand Strategy 1701 1713 PhD thesis Pembroke College Oxford Hochedlinger Michael 2003 Austria s Wars of Emergence 1683 1797 Routledge ISBN 0 582 29084 8 Holmes Richard 2008 Marlborough England s Fragile Genius Harper ISBN 978 0 00 722572 9 Ingrao Charles 1979 In Quest amp Crisis Emperor Joseph I and the Habsburg Monarchy 2010 ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78505 1 Ingrao Charles 2010 2000 The Habsburg Monarchy 1618 1815 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78505 1 Israel Jonathan 1990 1989 Dutch Primacy in World Trade 1585 1740 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 821139 6 Kamen Henry 2001 Philip V of Spain The King Who Reigned Twice Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 253 19025 3 Kamen Henry 1969 The War of Succession in Spain 1700 15 Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18054 1 Kamen Henry 2002 Spain s Road to Empire The Making of a World Power 1492 1763 Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 9365 3 Kann Robert 1974 A History of the Habsburg Empire 1526 1918 1980 ed University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04206 3 Kubben Raymond 2011 Regeneration and Hegemony Franco Batavian Relations in the Revolutionary Era 1795 1803 Martinus Nijhoff ISBN 978 90 04 18558 6 Lesaffer Randall 10 November 2014 The peace of Utrecht and the balance of power Blog OUP com Retrieved 5 May 2018 Lesaffer Randall Fortress Belgium The 1715 Barrier Treaty OUP Law Retrieved 4 July 2020 Levy Jack 2014 War in the Modern Great Power System 1495 to 1975 University of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 6365 9 Lindsay J O 1957 The New Cambridge Modern History Vol 7 The Old Regime 1713 1763 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 04545 2 Lynn John 1999 The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 Modern Wars in Perspective Longman ISBN 978 0 582 05629 9 Lynn John A 1994 Recalculating French Army Growth during the Grand Siecle 1610 1715 French Historical Studies 18 4 881 906 doi 10 2307 286722 JSTOR 286722 McKay Derek Scott H M 1983 The Rise of the Great Powers 1648 1815 The Modern European State System Routledge ISBN 978 0 582 48554 9 Meerts Paul Willem 2014 Diplomatic negotiation Essence and Evolution PhD thesis Leiden University hdl 1887 29596 Myers 1917 Violation of Treaties Bad Faith Nonexecution and Disregard The American Journal of International Law 11 4 794 819 doi 10 2307 2188206 JSTOR 2188206 S2CID 147292326 Navarro i Soriano Ferran 2019 Harca harca harca Musiques per a la recreacio historica de la Guerra de Successio 1794 1715 Editorial DENES ISBN 978 84 16473 45 8 Nicholson G W L 1955 Marlborough and the War of the Spanish Succession Queen s Printer Ostwald Jamel 2014 Murray Williamson Sinnreich Richard eds Creating the British way of war English strategy in the War of the Spanish Succession in Successful Strategies Triumphing in War and Peace from Antiquity to the Present Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 63359 9 Pincus Steven 2012 Rethinking Mercantilism Political Economy The British Empire and the Atlantic World in the 17th and 18th Centuries William and Mary Quarterly 69 1 Rasler Karen 1994 The Great Powers and Global Struggle 1490 1990 University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 1889 5 Rothbard Murray 23 April 2010 Mercantilism as the Economic Side of Absolutism Mises org Retrieved 7 April 2018 Rule John 2017 The Partition Treaties 1698 1700 in A European View in Redefining William III The Impact of the King Stadholder in International Context Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 25796 2 Schaeper Thomas March 1986 French and English Trade after Utrecht Journal for Eighteenth Century Studies 9 1 doi 10 1111 j 1754 0208 1986 tb00117 x Schmidt Voges Inken Solana Crespo Ana eds 2017 Introduction to New Worlds Transformations in the Culture of International Relations Around the Peace of Utrecht in Politics and Culture in Europe 1650 1750 Routledge ISBN 978 1 4724 6390 6 Shinsuke Satsuma 2013 Britain and Colonial Maritime War in the Early Eighteenth Century Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 862 3 Simms Brendan 2008 Three Victories and a Defeat The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire 1714 1783 Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 028984 8 Somerset Anne 2012 Queen Anne the Politics of Passion Harper ISBN 978 0 00 720376 5 Storrs Christopher 2006 The Resilience of the Spanish Monarchy 1665 1700 Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924637 3 Sundstrom Roy A 1992 Sidney Godolphin Servant of the State EDS ISBN 978 0 87413 438 4 Symcox Geoffrey 1985 Victor Amadeus Absolutism in the Savoyard State 1675 1730 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04974 1 Szechi Daniel 1994 The Jacobites Britain and Europe 1688 1788 Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 3774 0 Thompson Andrew 2014 Dadson Trevor ed The Utrecht Settlement and its Aftermath in Britain Spain and the Treaty of Utrecht 1713 2013 Routledge ISBN 978 1 909662 22 3 Thompson R T 1973 Lothar Franz von Schonborn and the Diplomacy of the Electorate of Mainz Springer ISBN 978 90 247 1346 2 Urlanis Boris Cezarevic 1971 Wars and Population Progress Publishing Vault Francois Eugene de 2016 1845 Pelet Jean Jacques Germain baron ed Memoires militaires relatifs a la succession d Espagne sous Louis XIV Extraits de la correspondance de la cour et des generaux in French Vol 1 Wentworth Press ISBN 978 1 372 87768 1 Vives Jaime 1969 An Economic History of Spain Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05165 9 Ward William Leathes Stanley 2010 1912 The Cambridge Modern History Nabu ISBN 978 1 174 38205 5 White Ian 2011 Rural Settlement 1500 1770 The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 211696 3 Wilson Peter 2016 The Holy Roman Empire A Thousand Years of Europe s History Allen Lane ISBN 978 1 84614 318 2 Wolf John 1974 1968 Louis XIV WW Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0 393 00753 4 Van Nimwegen Olaf 2020 De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672 1712 de strijd van de Nederlanders tegen de Zonnekoning The 40 Years War 1672 1712 the Dutch struggle against the Sun King in Dutch Prometheus ISBN 978 90 446 3871 4 Van Nimwegen Olaf 2002 De Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden als grote mogendheid Buitenlandse politiek en oorlogvoering in de eerste helft van de achttiende eeuw en in het bijzonder tijdens de Oostenrijkse Successieoorlog 1740 1748 in Dutch De Bataafsche Leeuw ISBN 90 6707 540 X Ostwald Jamel 2000 The Decisive Battle of Ramillies 1706 Prerequisites for Decisiveness in Early Modern Warfare The Journal of Military History 42 3 649 677 JSTOR 44224692 Further reading Editde Bruin Renger E 2011 Performances of Peace Utrecht 1713 Brill JSTOR 10 1163 j ctt1w76w4b Gilbert Arthur N 1976 Army Impressment During the War of the Spanish Succession The Historian 38 4 689 708 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6563 1976 tb00057 x JSTOR 24444302 Thomson M A 1954 Louis XIV and the Origins of the War of the Spanish Succession Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 4 111 134 doi 10 2307 3678854 JSTOR 3678854 S2CID 159533647 External links Edit Media related to War of the Spanish Succession at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title War of the Spanish Succession amp oldid 1137048738, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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