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READING HALL

THE DOORS OF WISDOM

 

 
 

 

ANNALS OF WAR

THE WARS OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.

1702.

 

1. DEATH OF WILLIAM III, KING OF ENGLAND, AND HIS MILITARY CHARACTER.—2. WAR IN ITALY. 3. BATTLE OF LEZZARA.—4. THE EARL OF MARLBOROUGH NAMED GENERALISSIMO OF THE ALLIES.— 5. THE SIEGE OF KAISERSWERTH.—6. THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY AND MARSHAL BOUFLERS ASSUME THE COMMAND OF THE FRENCH ARMY. — 7. MARLBOROUH TAKES THE FIELD.—8. SIEGE OF VENLOO. 9. SIEGE OF LIEGE.—10. BATTLE OF FRIEDLINGEN.—11. MARLBOROUGH NARROWLY ESCAPES BEING MADE PRISONER.—12. BRITISH NAVAL EXPEDITION TO CADIZ AND VIGO.—13. NAVAL WAR IN THE WEST INDIES.—14. BATTLE OF CLISSAU. —15. WAR IN RUSSIA.

 

1. Death of William III, King of England, and his military Character.

The earliest and most important event of this year to the military reader, was the death of William the Third, King of England, and Stadtholder of the United Provinces. Greater as General of Holland, than either king or stadtholder, he left behind him the character of a great politician, though he had never been popular. He aspired to the honour of acting as umpire in all the contests of Europe. The distinguishing criterion of his character was ambition, yet it was an object of his constant attention to attend to the prosperity of that country to which he owed his birth and extraction. He spoke Dutch, French, English, and German equally well; and he understood Latin, Spanish, and Italian, so that he was well fitted to command armies composed of several nations. Though his constitution was weak, delicate, and infirm, he loved the manly exercises of the field, and was indefatigable in war; he proved himself a formidable enemy, though he was seldom victorious. His defects were manifestly due, in a great measure, to circumstances independent on him, but that spirit which even these defects could not suppress was all his own. He had a considerable degree of knowledge in fortification, and understood military operations by land, but neither professed nor pretended to any skill in maritime affairs. In courage, fortitude, and equanimity, he rivalled the most eminent warriors of antiquity. His deportment was grave, phlegmatic, and sullen; he was very sparing in speech, and dry in conversation; and his manners were unpleasing, except in battle, when his deportment was free, spirited, and animated. In tumult he was always dignified, cool, and serene, and a stranger to violent transports of passion in public; yet in private he was frequently harsh, passionate, and severe in regard to trifles. He was dead to all the warm and generous emotions of the human heart, a cold relation, an indifferent husband, a disagreeable man; perfectly indifferent about humouring mankind, yet not destitute of dissimulation and intrigue. Macaulay says of him, that danger had the same effect on him that wine has on many people, and roused him to cheerfulness and dash. His character and success served to show that moderate abilities may achieve the greatest purposes, if the objects aimed at be pur­sued with perseverance, and planned with ordinary judgment, even though without genius. The best advice of William to his successor, was a strong recommendation of the Earl of Marlborough, as the most proper person in England to lead her armies and direct her councils in the field.

2.War in Italy.

The earliest military event of the year occurred in Italy. Prince Eugene, in his observations during the winter, had observed the negligence of the French in their quarters, and was rather twitted to try the effect of surprise upon them by an insolent remark of Marshal de Villeroy, in allusion to Eugene, Commerci, and Vaudemont, “Il faut, disait Villeroy, que je fasse danser le rigodon à ces trois princes pendant le Carnival.” (“I must make these three princes dance a jig during the Carnival”) Accordingly, on the 1st of February, at three in the morning, a detachment of 400 men obtained admission into a priest’s garden, through a dry watercourse or aqueduct, immediately opened the gates of Cremona, and admitted 4000 men with so much secrecy, that the Spanish governor and Villeroy were thoroughly taken by surprise; the first, hastening into the streets, was killed by a musket-ball, and the marshal, awakened by the fire, mounted his horse, and suddenly found himself in the midst of the enemy, who quietly led him off prisoner to Prince Eugene’s tent. The prince desired Commerci to ask his marshal to give orders for a surrender. “On ne doit pas obeïr à un prisonnier,” (“ No one obeys a prisoner”) replied Villeroy. It happened that M. d’Entragues, who was colonel of a marine detachment in the river, had ordered a review on board the boats at four in the morning, and the marines were repairing to their rendezvous as the Germans entered the town. These were immediately collected by d’Entragues, and formed a nucleus, round which the surprised French, half naked and without order or officers to command them, rallied. They soon made head against the Imperial troops, and drove them from one street to another till they were fairly forced out of the town. Two Irish regi­ments, forming part of the garrison, defended the bridge across the Po, where Eugene had ordered a body of cuirassiere to penetrate, and M. de Praslin, who commanded here, availed himself of a favourable moment to blow up the bridge, so that Cremona was saved. The French, always ready with a jest, made this couplet in allusion to the loss of a general whom they did not value, and the recovery of the town after this surprise :—

 

« Par une faveur de Bellone

Et par un bonheur sans égal

Nous avons retrouve Cremone

Et perdu notre général »

“ The French have the luck of the devil-an’-all,

For they have taken Cremona and lost their general”

 

Marshal Villeroy was despatched prisoner to Innsbruck, and the Duke de Vendôme was sent to replace him at the head of the French army.

Prince Eugene went to blockade Mantua, which was defended by M. de Sesse, who contrived, notwithstanding, to introduce supplies. The contending generals made all sorts of efforts against each other. Eugene very nearly took Vendôme prisoner in his head­quarters at Rivalta, on the lake of Mantua. Vendôme opened a battery of twelve guns on Eugene’s house, and drove him out of it. The house of Commerci was burned by red-hot shot. Vendôme carried on against Eugene a war of artifice and surprises and small affairs, in which some hundreds of men were killed, and nothing gained. At length, the prince determined to raise the blockade of Mantua, and to give Vendôme battle. Philip, the new King of Spain, had arrived in Italy on a visit to his father-in-law, the Duke of Savoy, and repaired to the army of the Duke de Vendôme, having forbidden him to attack Prince Eugene until he should arrive in the camp.

3.The Battle of Luzzara. 15 August 1702

Prince Eugene had had an affair of cavalry with the enemy at Crostolo, a few days previous to the 15th of August, when he thought that with a force not above half that opposed to him (in fact, 26,000 men), he might post himself behind the dykes of Zero close to the Po, in such a manner as that the enemy, ignorant of his situation, or that he had crossed that river, might be surprised at the moment of their establishing their camp on the other bank. The camp was already marked out in front of the castle of Luzzara, which was about to be attacked, when by chance an adjutant with an advanced guard had the curiosity to ascend the dyke in order to view the country, where he discovered the Imperialists lying on their faces, with their horses in rear ranged in order of battle. The French camp was immediately alarmed, but the Imperialists pushed across the dyke and fell upon them before they could form. The ground was, how­ever, so intersected with hedges, that the former were in a posture of defence before the assailants could deploy. Nevertheless, the prince attacked them with great impetuosity. Commerci was killed in the left attack, and was replaced by Lichtenstein, who was killed likewise. Eugene attacked the centre, where he was opposed by Vendome. Night put an end to the contest, but both armies kept their ground. Out of compliment to the King of Spain, who was present, a Te Deum was chanted at Paris for this victory; and one was equally sung at Vienna. Two days after this battle, the Bourbon king returned to Spain, and nothing further occurred in Italy, where, nevertheless, Prince Eugene maintained his ground, notwithstanding the great disparity of force between the opposing armies. At the end of the year the prince also left the army and repaired to Vienna.

4. The Earl of Marlborough named Generalissimo of the Allies.

The Earl of Marlborough was despatched to the Hague within three weeks of Queen Anne’s succession to the English throne, and war was formally declared against France on the 4th of May, by the emperor, Great Britain, and the States General. Marlborough was forthwith named generalissimo of the allied armies, and repaired to Nimeguen to assume the command. Many of the small German powers sent their contingents to the Imperial army, and he therefore found himself at the head of 60,000 men, well provided with all necessaries, and long disciplined by the best officers of the age. On the other hand, the main body of the French army was assembled on the Meuse, and in the strong fortresses, existing in the bishopric of Liege, under the command of the Duke of Burgundy, grandson of the king, a youth utterly inexperienced in the management of a company, but who was assisted and virtually controlled by the celebrated Marshal Bouflers. A force under the command of the French general, Count de la Motte, and the Marquis de Bodmar, who commanded in the name of Philip, covered the western portion of the Netherlands; and Marshal Tallard, with 13,000 men, was posted as a corps of observation to interrupt the siege of Kaiserswerth.

5. The Siege of Kaiserswerth.

This place was invested in the month of April, in the name of the Elector Palatine, by the Prince of Nassau-Saarbrück, Maréchal-du-camp to the emperor, under whom the Dutch troops served as auxiliaries, because war had not yet been declared by the States General. The whole, Prussians, Palatines, and Dutch, amounted to 25,000 men, and their commander was a general who had been put forward, as a prince of the empire, to command in chief in lieu of Marlborough; but he and the Earl of Athlone, a Dutch general, who at the time commanded at Nimeguen, had mutually withdrawn their pretensions in favour of the English general. The French garrison at Kaiserswerth made a desperate defence. They worsted the besiegers in divers sallies, and maintained the place until it was reduced to a heap of ashes. At length, however, the allies made a general assault, attacking the counterscarp and ravelin, which they carried, after a very obstinate engagement, with the loss of 2000 men. Then the garrison capitulated on honourable terms. The siege lasted from the 18th of April to the 15th of June.

6. The Duke of Burgundy and Marshal Bouflers assume the command of the French army

The Duke of Burgundy arrived in the French camp in May, accompanied by the celebrated Duke de Berwick, and it was evident that Marshal Bouflers would signalize the arrival of a French prince by some decisive exploit. Athlone had rather expected this, and had thrown a garrison of 12,000 men into Maestricht, after the surrender of Kaiserswerth; and had taken post at Cranenburg, in the vicinity of Cleves. The Duke of Burgundy, being joined by the troops under Marshal Tallard, suddenly pushed forward, on the 18th of June, towards the Waal, with a view of surprising Nimeguen, which was without a garrison or a single gun upon its ramparts. The whole force collected under the French prince was fifty-six battalions and one hundred squadrons. Athlone’s whole force did not exceed twenty­seven battalions and sixty-two squadrons. This general was thoroughly taken by surprise, for the Marquis d’Alegre had been left before him with some cavalry, to keep him occupied. On discovering the deception, Athlone decamped at eight in the evening; d’Alegre kept upon his track, but could not check his march, and he entered the town at the very moment when the enemy was within gunshot of the works. He immediately threw the troops into the houses, behind the hedges, and along the covered way of the place—so that the French were just too late, and failed in their pro­ject, acknowledging to a loss of 300 men; but although the Dutch rejoiced in their deliverance, they were in consternation at having been exposed to so much peril.

7. Marlborough takes the Field.

The French army established itself behind the Meuse, in a place between Goch and Genep, and the allied army along the Waal, between Nimeguen and Fort Schenk. Here, on the 2nd of July, Marlborough took the command. His very first movements were much thwarted by the rivalries of the Dutch, Hanoverians, and Prussians. No one but a man of the temper and address of the generalissimo could have set such an army in motion. On the 7th he crossed the Waal, and established his head-quarters at Duckenberg, a little to the south of Nimeguen; the same day he threw three bridges over the Meuse below Grave. On the 26th, lie crossed that river and encamped with the right at Uden and the left at Zealand. At Hamont he was joined by a reinforcement of British cavalry and artillery, and by part of the corps of General Henkelm. The French hastened by forced marches in the direction of Peer and Bray; and, as Marlborough calculated, they directed their march through Sonhoven to Beringen. He proposed to attack them in their passage over the heaths or in their camp at Sonhoven, which was so ill chosen as to render defeat inevitable; but the Dutch deputies refused their consent to this resolve; and the French succeeded in reaching Beringen unmolested on the 8th of August. On the same day the confederate army established itself in the rear of Peer, with their right on the Dommel, and their left at Erlicum. They were now joined by ten battalions and several squadrons, and with artillery from Maestricht, the garrison of which was disengaged by this advance. With a view to ulterior operations, Marlborough prepared to pass the Dommel, but the French commanders broke up from Beringen on the 9th, and detached the Duke of Berwick on the 12th to cut off a valuable convoy, which had been long expected from Bois-le-duc. This obliged the duke to make a retrograde movement to Everbeck. At length the convoy, which had engrossed the attention of both armies, arrived from Bois-le-duc, having traversed the heath near Geldorp, within sight of Berwick, who was deterred from attempting to interrupt its march by the position of the allied detachment, and it therefore proceeded, and on the 20th reached the camp in safety. Marlborough was determined to oblige the enemy to withdraw from Bois-le-duc, and therefore advanced on the 22nd to Great Breugel, which movement alarmed the French commanders; and, on the following day, they came in sight of his line of march in such disorder, and with such apparent ignorance of the ground, that Marlborough determined to take the opportunity he had long desired, of risking an engagement. He, accordingly, gave orders to his army to advance, and approached so near the enemy that a cannonade was opened on both sides, but his orders were so slowly and reluctantly obeyed, that it was night before lie could get his troops to the attack. On the ensuing day, he found the enemy stronger than he expected; and in the night of the 28th they silently decamped, effecting their retreat to Beverloo, with no further detriment than a few casualties during the cannonade and a trifling attack on their rearguard. The Duke of Burgundy here quitted the command of the army in disgust at being obliged to retreat before the allies, and gave it over to Bouflers.

Marlborough having now the whole of Spanish Guelderland at his discretion, listened to the deputies from the States General, who represented to him the necessity of dispossessing the enemy of the places they maintained in it, which obstructed the free recognition of the Maese. The French army consisted at this time of 70 battalions and 114 squadrons, and the allies of 92 battalions and 150 squadrons. Unable to prevent the reduction of the fortresses, Marshal Bouflers made a movement, in hopes of some favourable opportunity to obstruct the confederates in their operations. On the 10th of September he marched, and on the 13th established his camp between Tongres and Borchloen, fixing his head-quarters at Bedol. Marshal Tailard was detached, with 17 battalions and 25 squadrons, to favour the retreat of the Elector of Cologne from Bonn, and to throw a gar­rison into that city. Meanwhile, the requisite preparations being matured, the investment of Venloo was completed by the allied generals.

8.The Siege of Venloo.

On the 5th of September, 32 battalions and 36 squadrons were detached for the siege, under the command of the Prince of Nassau-Saarbrück, and on the 7th the attack was opened on both sides of the Maese, under the direction of the celebrated engineer Coehoorn. To cover the operations, Marlborough on the 13th took up a position with his right at Sertendal, and his left at Lonaken. The trenches were rapidly pushed forward. The first attack was directed on the 18th against fort St. Michael, on the other side of the river, which was connected with the place by a bridge of boats, and formed its principal defence. Lord Cutts and a detachment of English troops were ordered to assault; they stormed the covered way, and carried the ravelin at the point of the bayonet, notwithstanding the explosion of a mine. Then, forcing their way over a bridge which connected this ravelin with the interior works, they obtained possession of the fort itself. Two hundred of the enemy were killed in the attack, and 600 drowned in attempting to get across the river. Batteries were now raised in the captured fort, and on the 23rd a tremendous fire was opened on the defences of the place. Before midday, an accessible breach being effected, the preparations were made for assault. At this moment news arrived in the camp of the reduction of Landau, and the event was announced by a salute of artillery that was to form the signal for attack. A flag of truce was immediately displayed, the capitulation arranged, and before the close of the day the garrison quitted the breach with the honours of war, and were conducted to Antwerp. Stevensvaert was next attacked on the 1st of October, but being provided with a small garrison, made bat a faint defence, and was surrendered on the 5th. The siege of Ruremonde was begun on the 2nd by the Prussians on one side of the river, and the English on the other. The batteries were opened on the 6th, and the same afternoon the garrison capitulated. In the midst of these operations the army of the empire, under the command of Joseph, the young King of the Romans, had resumed the offensive. In the beginning of June Landau had been invested, which was regarded as an outwork of Alsace. After an arduous struggle, this citadel was taken by assault on the 9th of September, and the place was surrendered on the 10th by Melac the governor.

9. The Siege of Liege.

Marlborough now extorted the consent of the deputies to attempt the reduction of Liege, which commanded the navigation of the Maese above Maestricht. This enterprise he executed with his usual diligence and success. Apprised that Bouflers had examined the defences of the place, and was preparing to post himself under the walls, he suddenly broke up his camp, and marched with such celerity as to anticipate the enemy on the very ground they intended to occupy. So secret and so well combined was this movement, that the French commander approached within cannon-shot of the confederates before he was conscious of his danger. Bouflers might have made an intrenched camp behind Liege, and kept possession of the city with a good garrison; but he was now too late, and had only time to reinforce the citadel, which contained a garrison of eight battalions. He himself made a precipitate retreat to Orp-le-petit, and placed his camp between Lannuye and Landen. The city of Liege opened its gates to Marlborough on the 13th of October, and preparations were instantly made to attack the citadel. Ou the 20th the batteries were opened, and on the 23rd a breach was effected, and the approaches sufficiently advanced for an attack on the covered way. The troops, headed by the hereditary Prince of Hesse Cassel, descended the counterscarp and advanced to the breach, which they took, after a resistance of half an hour. The governor, the Sieur de Violaine, was made prisoner in the assault by an English lieutenant, and the citadel was carried with much vigour and bravery. Preparations were next made to attack the Chartreuse, a detached work on the opposite side of the Maese; but the garrison, being discouraged by the fate of their companions in the citadel, would not abide the consequences of an assault, but surrendered, at the first fire of the batteries, on the 29th. Three hundred thousand florins were found in the citadel, besides notes for above a million, drawn on substantial merchants in Liege, who paid the money, and the booty became the prize of the conquerors. After this the French returned behind the Mehaigne, with their right at Boneff and their left on the Josse; and Marlborough distributed his troops in winter-quarters, and prepared to return to England.

The French were not quite so unfortunate on the Rhine as in Flanders. On the 15th of June M. de Plainville surrendered Keiseven, in the electorate of Cologne, after fifty-nine days’ open trenches; and the Elector of Bavaria surprised the city of Ulm by a stratagem in a fog, and then declared in favour of the house of Bourbon, which had by this time complied with all his demands. The French made themselves masters of Neuburg in the circle of Suabia, while Prince Louis of Baden, weakened by sending off detachments, was obliged to lie inactive in his camp near Friedlingen.

10.The Battle of Friedlingen. 14 October 1702

Marshal Villars having been detached towards the Rhine, posted himself near Huningen, which was threatened by Prince Louis of Baden. The latter was stationed in the plain between the Rhine and the hills, with his left towards Basle, and his right extending towards the village of Friedlingen, before which he had raised a large redoubt. As winter approached, the Prince of Baden thought it best to retire, but did not apprehend that, in making his retreat, he had any thing to fear from an army posted on the other side of the river, which had a long bridge to pass over before they could come up with him; and he accordingly sent off his troops in two detachments— his infantry in one, and his cavalry in the other. Villars observed this movement, and ordered the army to cross the river. He then divided it into columns to follow the prince. The column led by M. Desbordes followed the infantry, but could not come up with it; the other column, under the direction of M. de Magnac, advanced rapidly on the enemy, that it was with difficulty they could recover themselves from the defile into which the head of the column had become entangled, and form themselves under the fire of the cannon of the redoubt, which supported their right. Here they were prepared to receive the attack of M. de Magnac; but with great judgment he feigned to retire, and drew on him the advance of the cavalry column, who thus quitted the protection of the redoubt In presence of M. de Magnac’s unbroken force, they now attempted to execute a change of formation, and whilst thus employed were attacked by the enemy, who put them into utter confusion. The Prince of Baden, having lost 2000 men, abandoned the field, and retired towards Stauffen; but in the moment of victory the French were unaccountably seized with a panic, so that if the Imperial guards had stood firm a moment or two longer, the victory would have turned to a defeat. Voltaire says of this transaction, “La plus grande peine qu’eut le général, ce fut de rallier les vainqueurs.” (“The greatest difficulty the general had was to rally the conquerors”) The next day Friedlingen surrendered. The certain result of this battle was that the Imperialists could not re-enter Alsace. For this feat of arms Villars obtained the bâton of marshal. Towards the latter end of October Marshal Tallard arrived with a body of 18,000 men, and reduced Treves and Traerbach; but on the other hand, the Prince of Hesse-Cassel, with a detachment from Marlborough’s army, reduced several small towns.

11. Marlborough narrowly escapes being made Prisoner.

Whilst the presence of Marlborough, who was already regarded as their saviour and protector by the Dutch, and by the English as one who had retrieved the ancient honour of the nation, was eagerly looked for both at the Hague and at London, both nations were in imminent peril of losing the great commander, on whom all their expectations and hopes were placed. On the 3rd of November he quitted Maestricht for the Hague, and descended the Maese with the Dutch deputies in a boat, accompanied by a guard of twenty-five men. At Ruremonde he was joined by Coehoorn, in another boat, with an additional escort of fifty followers. In this situation they were surprised by a French partisan from Gueldres, who with thirty-five men was lying in ambush among the sedges of the river. The duke’s tow-rope was suddenly seized, a volley poured into the boat, and the guard overpowered. The Dutch deputies were pro­vided with passes; not the general; but he did not lose his presence of mind in this moment of danger. One of his attendants, who had fortunately preserved a French pass (that had been granted to his brother, General Churchill, who had been obliged to quit the army from ill health), slipped it unperceived into his hand. The date had expired, but with undisturbed confidence he presented it to his captors. The darkness of the night, and the confusion of the moment, prevented a discovery; and Marlborough was suffered to proceed, and continued his journey to England, where he arrived, on the 28th of November. He was received with great favour by the queen, who ordered a patent of a duke to be conferred on him, and he was enthusiastically received by the parliament and by all classes of the British nation.

12.British Naval Expedition to Cadiz and Vigo.

The late king had formed a plan for the reduction of Cadiz, and accordingly an attempt was made upon it this year by sea and by land. Admiral Sir George Rooke, commanding a fleet of twenty five line-of-battle ships, with fire-ships and others, amounting to 160 sail, English and Dutch, and the Duke of Ormond, with a force of 13,000 men, entered the bay of Cadiz, and summoned the governor; but on his refusal, the commanders quarrelled as to what should be done. At length it was agreed to make for Vigo, where a rich flotilla from America had taken refuge. The combined French and Spanish fleets were moored in the harbour, protected by a strong boom, and a ship of the line at either extremity. Within the boom, five ships of from sixty to seventy guns with their broadsides bore upon the entrance. On the 11th of October the expedition anchored in the bay. On the 12th, Ormond with 2500 men landed in a sandy nook on the south side, about two leagues distant from the town; meeting with no opposition, the grenadiers, under Lord Shannon and Colonel Pierce, marched directly to the fort, which guarded the passage into the harbour. Vice-Admiral Hopson, in the “Torbay,” led the naval attack, and having broke the boom, was in a little time between the two ships placed to defend the harbour. Hopson, although a very brave and enterprising officer, had his misgivings as to his ability to break the boom, and sent to inform Sir George Rooke that he thought it could not be broken. The admiral accordingly at once repaired on board the “Torbay” himself, and observing that the length across the harbour exceeded half a mile, determined that no boom of such a length could resist a ship, and ordered Hopson to proceed; the other ships following found a way through the same passage. The “Torbay” suffered severely, having 115 men killed, besides many wounded, and was so disabled that Hopson shifted his flag into the “Monmouth.” Meanwhile the Duke of Ormond with the rest of the troops took post in the hills to sustain Lord Shannon’s detachment, which having driven the enemy from the fort, made themselves masters of the lower platform, mounting thirty-eight pieces of cannon. Hereupon Churchill’s regiment advanced, and the enemy, retiring into an old town, were kept at bay for some time. Here Captain Lovel, of the French navy, who commanded, thought to make a rush for their lines, but the British grenadiers following him, forced their way with them into the castle, and made themselves masters of the fort. The land forces having thus gained possession of the town, the French admiral gave orders to set fire to the ships of his fleet, so that seventy French ships, with 334 guns, were destroyed, besides three Spanish men-of-war carrying 178 guns. The English and Dutch captured however ten ships with 626 guns, and of the fifteen galleons nine were taken and four destroyed. The booty on board the captured fleet was computed at six millions of dollars. Chateau Regnaux proclaimed that he had nevertheless carried off the greater part of the gold and silver by the sailors of the fleet in carts to Madrid. The glory which the English acquired in this expedition was in some measure tarnished by the conduct of the forces, whose scandalous disorder and neglect of discipline were only exceeded by the indecent acrimony and conflicting accusations of the officers commanding the sea and land forces in the expedition.

13.Naval War in the West Indies.

In the West Indies, Admiral Benbow, a bold, rough seaman, fell in with a French squadron under Admiral Du Casse. The British had seven ships of the line, with one Dutch ship and five smaller vessels. The French had six ships of much heavier calibre. Chase was immediately given, but the ships were so much separated, that it was some time before Benbow could make the attack. The brunt of the action was borne by the flag-ships, “Breda,” Captain Fogg, and “Ruby,” 50, Captain Walton; both these ships, and the “Falmouth,” 48, Captain Vincent, pursued the enemy, and were closely engaged; but from want of energy in some of the others, the enemy effected their escape. On the 24th, the “Breda” came up with the sternmost French ship, which Benbow in person boarded three times. In these attacks the gallant officer had his right leg shattered by a chain-shot, but he insisted on being placed on deck, his leg lying in a cradle, from which he gave directions during the rest of the action. At the same time Benbow was deserted by his captains, and the enemy perceiving this assailed the “Breda,” but making no hand of it sailed away. The heroic Benbow, broken-hearted at this sad desertion and misconduct of his officers, gave over the pursuit, and proceeded with his squadron to Jamaica, where he died of his wounds on the 4th of November. When one of his lieutenants expressed to the admiral his concern for the loss of his leg, “I am sorry for it too,” replied the gallant Benbow, “but I would rather have lost them both than have witnessed such dishonour brought upon the English nation; but, do you hear, if another shot takes me off, behave like brave men and fight it out.” It is said that the boisterous manner of Benbow had so disgusted the captains, that they entered into a regular confederacy against him to let him be cut off. Captains Kirby and Wade were, however, both tried by court-martial, and shot for their misconduct. The French admiral was a brave man, and felt for his foe as he would under similar cir­cumstances have felt for himself, and the following letter written by him to the vice-admiral is said to be still extant in the Benbow family:—

“ Sir,—I had little hopes on Monday last but to have supped in your cabin, but it pleased God to order otherwise. As for those cowardly captains who deserted you, hang them up, for by----they deserve it.--------------------- “ Du Casse.”

14.The Battle of Clissau. July 19, 1702

In Poland affairs were so embroiled by the cardinal primate, that King Augustus entered into negotiations for his own personal security with Charles XII, but the king seized his brother king’s ambassador for daring to come without a passport, saying that he only negotiated with the kingdom and not with the king. A deputation accordingly presented themselves from the diet, but he told them he would only confer with them at Warsaw, whither he forthwith advanced on the 5th of May, and the gates were opened to him on the first summons. He plainly told them he would listen to no terms from the Poles till they had elected another king. Augustus saw clearly that he had no hope but in a battle. He had secretly collected together a body of Saxon troops from his electorate, for he was not popular in Poland; and the Palatines, frightened, tampered with, and irresolute, deserted his ranks. On the 13th of July, the two kings came in presence of each other on a vast plain near Clissau, between Warsaw and Cracow. Augustus had collected together 24,000 men. Charles had not above 12,000. The fight began with artillery, and when one of the first shots struck down the Duke of Holstein, commanding the Swedish cavalry, Charles is said to have shed a tear in passing on hearing of his death, and then dashed forward at the head of his guards. Augustus in like manner headed his troops, and did all that man could do to save a throne. The Polish portion of his troops, which formed his right wing, deserted him in the battle. Charles saw it, and that he had attained the ascendant in numbers; his victory was a complete one; he captured everything, and pursued the fugitive King of Poland into Cracow. Augustus in trying to escape from the conqueror passed through the town, and Charles in hot pursuit following him, fell from his horse and broke his collar­bone; he was carried back to Cracow, where he was confined for six weeks, but he still turned his attention to the deliberations of the diet at Warsaw, and declared that if he remained fifty years he would not budge till they had dethroned the King of Poland. The army of Augustus retired towards Prussia, to the north-west of Warsaw. Charles, as soon as he was cured, hastened after it, and came up with it on the banks of the river Bug, at a place called Pultesk-Gad. Stenau commanded the Saxons there, to the number of 10,000 men. Charles passed the river à la nage, at the head of his cavalry, and such was the terror of the reputation he had acquired, that the Saxons fled at his approach. Stenau held his ground for a moment with two regiments, but the flight soon became general, the larger portion of the troops dispersing themselves, that there were not above 1000 prisoners, and 600 killed. Augustus reached Thorn, on the Vistula. Charles advanced to besiege it, and Augustus not thinking himself safe again fled. Charles had been so rapid in all his movements, that he had no artillery to besiege Thorn; he was obliged to send for it from Sweden, when fourteen frigates and forty transports arrived with the artillery and reinforcements at Dantzio to ascend the Vistula. The magistrates refused to admit them, and allow them to disembark; and General Steinboch put the town under a contribution of 100,000 crowns. The siege of Thorn was begun on the 22nd of September. Robel, the governor, had a garrison of 5000; and he defended the place for a month, when he surrendered at discretion. Charles then entered Elbing, on the Vistula, on the 13th of December, and raised heavy contributions on the in­habitants of both these towns.

15.War in Russia.

The Czar Peter continued to make repeated attacks on the Swedes wherever they were to be met with, either by sea or land; and although their king was absent in Poland, the spirit of his subjects every where rivalled that of their sovereign. General Schlippenbach commanded the Swedish forces, and was opposed by General Sheremetoff, who appears to have been both a land and a sea officer; for in a naval action on the lake Peipus he succeeded in capturing a Swedish frigate. This success encouraged the czar to make a forced march to defend Archangel against a Swedish fleet On the 19th of July, Sheremetoff encountered Schlippenbach on the river Embre, where he gained a victory, and took sixteen colours and twenty guns. Advancing to the confines of Livonia and Ingria, he took the town of Marienburg, when he destroyed the town and carried away the inhabitants. There, in the house of the Pastor Gluck, resided a young Livonian peasant who, included among the captives, was destined afterwards to become the Empress Catharine, wife of Peter the Great. On the lake Ladoga, the Russian fleet compelled the Swedes to retire to Viborg, from whence they beheld the strong town of Noteborg not only besieged, from the 18th of September to the 12th of October, when it was taken by assault, but also destroyed to make way for the fort of Schlusselburg (that is, the town of the key), which almost immediately arose in its place, and of which the celebrated Menschikoff was made governor. Before the surrender of Noteborg, it is related that the Swedish commandant desired to send for two Swedish officers from the nearest port to certify, that having only eighty-three surviving combatants and 156 wounded men, he could not successfully defend the breach or maintain the place against the enemy any longer.

 

 

1703.

1. DEFECTION OF THE DUKE OF SAVOY FROM FRANCE.—2. WAR ON THE RHINE.—3. SIEGE OF BONN. 4. MARSHAL DE V1LLER0Y COMMANDS THE FRENCH FORCES.—5. MARSHAL VILLARS GAINS THE BATTLE OF HOCHS'! ADT OVER COUNT STYRUM.—6. OPDAM ROUTED BY MARSHAL BOUFLERS.—7* MARLBOROUGH TAKES HUY AND LIMBURG. 8. MARSHAL VILLARS REPLACED BY THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY.— 9. BATTLE OF SPIREBACH.—10. WAR IN IT4LY.—11. WAR IN SCAN­DINAVIA.—12. NAVAL WAR.

 

 

 

 

 

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