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READING HALL

THE DOORS OF WISDOM

 

 
 

 

ANNALS OF WAR

 

 

1707.

 

1. WAR IN THE LOW COUNTRIES.—2. WAR IN GERMANY.—3. WAR IN SPAIN.—4. THE BATTLE OF ALMANZA.—5. CONSEQUENCES OP THE VICTORY.—6. THE DUKE OF SAVOY AND PRINCE EUGENE ENTER FRANCE.—7. THE AUSTRIANS UNDER COUNT DAUN CONQUER NAPLES.— 8. SIR CLOUDESLY SHOVEL WRECKED OFF SCILLY. HIS CHARACTER. —9. FRENCH NAVAL WAR.—10. WAR IN SCANDINAVIA.—11. DEATH AND CHARACTER OF MARSHAL DE VAUBAN.

 

1. War in the Low Countries.

 

Marlborough returning from his interview with Charles XII visited Berlin, Hanover, and the Hague, and about the middle of May assembled the allied army at Anderlecht, near Brussels. The Duke de Vendome commanded the French forces, having the Elector of Bavaria with him. Finding that they had quitted their lines, the Duke advanced on the 24th to Soignies with a design to engage them in the plain of Fleurus: but receiving intelligence, that by the help of drafts from all the garrisons, the enemy was too strong for him, Marlborough retired and took post on the 1st of June at Meldert, while the French advanced to Gembloux. Nothing therefore was done until it was discovered in the month of August that the French had sent away a large detachment to Provence; when the Duke and Overkirk resolved to attack them, first at Genappe, and afterwards at Nivelles; but the French retired behind the Scheldt, and through a variety of causes, the allies were never able to attack them; so that the campaign closed in October without a single battle.

 

2. War in Germany.

 

On the Upper Rhine the allies were not prosperous. By very remarkable exertions the French were enabled to renew the war on the Rhine, and even to cross that river into the empire. They still retained possession of Strasburg and Kehl, and Marshal Villars crossing the line at that point drove the Imperialists before him, took Radstadt, penetrated as far as the Danube, and had some hope of recovering Bavaria for the unlucky Elector. On the 22nd of May, Villars advanced to the lines of Bühl or Stollhofen with forty battalions and ten squadrons, and attacked and entirely defeated the German advanced guards. On the 23rd, on the clearing up of a fog, they prepared to force the lines, but found that the allied forces, alarmed lest they should be attacked in the rear by the Marquis de Vivans and the Count de Broglio, had abandoned them. The Marshal accordingly I took possession of these lines, esteemed the rampart of Germany, and prepared to follow the Imperialists with all possible expedition. Radstadt, Stuttgart, and Schorndorf were taken; 3000 Germans intrenched at Lorch, under the command of General Janus, were routed, and the general made prisoner; and the duchy of Würtemberg was laid under contribution. The contributions, which extended over a circle of fifty leagues, amounted to an enormous sum. One million one hundred thousand livres were raised in the imperial city of Ettlingen, on the Neckar, and 600,000 were demanded of the city of Baden. These the Marshal divided into three portions: one for the army, which accordingly cost the King nothing; the other to the officers, in lieu of subsistence ; and the third, as Villars himself wrote to his Majesty, “à engraisser mon veau, (to fatten my claf)” and Louis XIV approved of it. Marshal Villare was obliged to stop in the midst of his career, by the necessity of sending off detachments to Provence to protect the south of France, invaded by the Duke of Savoy, and accordingly he fell back on Strasburg, and recrossed the Rhine.

The Margrave of Baden died on the 4th of January. He had had great experience in war, but his extreme dilatoriness and his jealousy of Marlborough marred all the better parts of his character, and engendered chagrins, which destroyed his health and terminated his life. The supreme command of the Imperialists accordingly devolved upon the Elector of Hanover, afterwards George I, a brave and steady soldier, but no great general; he restored military discipline, and acted with uncommon prudence and circumspection, but had not force sufficient to undertake any enterprise of importance.

 

3. War in Spain.

 

The King of France, by virtue of his capitulation with the Emperor in Italy, was enabled to send such reinforcements into Spain as turned the fortunes of the war in that country. By the strange and selfish treaty, above alluded to, the Emperor had consented to the undisturbed retreat of a considerable French force under the Count de Medavi, who were shut up in the Milanese, and these veteran troops were now sent to reinforce the Bourbon King in Spain. On the side of the allies little had been done to strengthen King Charles. It bad been resolved in the preceding winter that the allies should unite all their forces and march against Madrid by way of Aragon. Lord Rivers had disembarked his forces at Alicante in February, but at Oya de Castile a battalion, under the Marquis de Montandre, marching carelessly along the high road, was surprised and all taken prisoners or cut to pieces by Ashfeldt. On the 13th of March Charles’s army was assembled at Caudete, to the number of 16,000 men, under the command of Las Minas, under whom Lord Galway served as second in command. They marched but a little way before they received intelligence that an attack was threatened by the French on the side of Roussillon, which induced them to halt to defend the province of Catalonia. Galway and Las Minas now turned aside out of consideration of supplies, hoping to get hold of some of the enemy’s magazines; and arriving at Yecla, where the enemy had their largest magazines, which they destroyed, they at length determined to lay siege to the castle of Villena, in Valencia. The Duke de Berwick collected all his forces and marched to Chinchilla, on the 18th of April, to impede its capture, on which Galway and Las Minas raised the siege of Villena, and marched boldly to meet Berwick. Lord Galway had ordered a new camp to be marked out not far from Villena, designing to meet the enemy there, if they came to attack them, but as they did not, it was resolved to go in search of them. News being brought, that the enemy was near the town of Almanza, a council of war was held, and it was unanimously agreed to go the next day and give them battle. The whole confederate army under Lord Galway and the Marquis de Las Minas consisted of 4500 horse and 11,000 foot, of which there were sixteen battalions and 1200 cavalry British, and the rest Spanish. Berwick claims to have had fifty-five battalions and ninety-nine squadrons. It is thought that the allied generals were misled as to the enemy’s force, and supposed that the reinforcements had not reached the army, but that the Duke of Orleans in person had arrived; which was in both cases the reverse of the fact. The French are computed to have been 25,000 men.

 

4. The Battle of Almanza.

 

The two armies met on the plain of Almanza on Easter Monday, the 24th of April. The French were drawn up in two lines. The allies appeared in order of battle, in columns of cavalry and infantry mixed. At three o’clock in the afternoon they advanced under fire of the enemy to a great ravine on the right of the position, and occupied the heights on which had been placed the enemy’s artillery. Galway began the attack on the enemy’s right, and dislodged them from the height on which they stood. About eight o’clock the French cavalry charged the left of the position where Lord Galway commanded, but the allied infantry stood firm, and obliged them to retire : the cavalry of the allies were inferior to the French, but the fire of their infantry kept the enemy’s cavalry in check. Berwick now seeing that it would be difficult to do any thing on this flank without infantry, brought up his second line, under Bulkeley, and by a combined attack of cavalry and infantry shook the left of the allied position, and put them to the rout.

An equally obstinate fight was kept up on the other flank. The French right, having driven back the enemy, turned to the left, and aided in the destruction of the allied right wing. It was one of the hardest fought battles of the war. The English and Dutch infantry kept the battle undecided for six sanguinary hours. Charge after charge, on the part of the French, was ineffectual, and even now, when the French and Spaniards were victorious on both wings, their centre was cut through, and the main body of their infantry completely broken. Ten battalions, English and Dutch, penetrated both lines, and advanced even to the walls of Almanza. The Duke of Berwick having now nothing to fear from the two flanks, where he was carrying all before him, ordered up two squadrons under Don Joseph Amézoge to charge the allies, and this gave courage to the French infantry, who immediately rallied. Las Minas made the greatest personal exertions, such as are seldom witnessed in a man of his rank and age; he was here, there, and every where. His mistress, who had followed him in this campaign, and wore a soldier’s dress, was killed fighting by his side. He himself was severely wounded. Galway received two sabre cuts on the face, which proves that he also was not deficient in his own personal endeavours to reassure the victory. This disabled him from the command, and had no doubt an unfavourable influence upon the fortune of the day. In the end, victory remained with Berwick. The allies finding their left wing beaten and their right in disorder, attempted to retreat, but in doing so many were cut to pieces. Thirteen battalions under Count de Dona gained a woody mountain, but were in the end made prisoners. The allies lost 5000 killed and nearly 10,000 prisoners, with all their artillery and baggage, and above 100 standards. The French lost about 2000 men. In the course of the following day the greater part of the allied army, to avoid starvation, surrendered, and the victory of Almanza was complete.

 

5. Consequences of the Victory.

 

The Duke of Orleans arrived in the camp the day after the battle, deeply grieved at not sharing the glory of the day, and at his only arriving at his command when there was no enemy’s force left to oppose him. Berwick entered Valencia, and captured a number of other towns. He now suffered greatly, like the enemy he had recently defeated, for want of provisions. Count de Las Minas and Galway retired at his approach, and, leaving Ashfeldt in Valencia, the Marshal arrived at Tortosa on the 23rd of May. Ashfeldt laid siege to Xativa, into which a body of 600 English had thrown themselves, and defended themselves with such obstinacy, that after being driven from the breach, they fought from house to house for eight days, after the enemy had possession of the town ; at length the English commandant in the castle asked for terms, which being refused, the garrison shut themselves up, leaving the town at Berwick’s mercy. With a paltry revenge he ordered all the inhabitants to leave the town, and not to presume to return; and then destroyed the whole town, with the exception of the principal church. This was unworthy of Berwick, and served to justify the charge that his personal character was that of a harsh man. It may have been more the act of Ashfeldt, who was deemed to be a man as relentless in peace as brave in war, but we have Berwick’s own authority that he “gave the orders.” A new town was afterwards built upon its ruins by King Philip, and called after him San Felipe. This new town remains and is a noble monument of a feat of arms, which confers lustre on the English character for firmness, bravery, and resolution. Saragossa capitulated without firing a shot on the 25th, and on the 10th of June Berwick and the Duke of Orleans crossed the Ebro. On the 1st of July they crossed the Cinca and advanced upon Lerida. From this time to the middle of August they were unable to undertake any thing. On the 18th the Duke de Berwick received orders by a courier to repair instantly to Provence, to serve under the Duke of Burgundy, who was marching to the assistance of Toulon, besieged by the Duke of Savoy, who had gallantly carried the war into the French territory. The Marshal instantly departed; but learning on the road, that the siege of Toulon had been raised without his assistance, he immediately returned to Spain, and rejoined the Duke of Orleans near Lerida in the month of September. The Duke would have opened the trenches immediately, though he had got together but fifteen pieces of cannon, and very little ammunition and siege material, but Lerida had been regarded, since the days of the great Condé, as one of the strongest places in Europe : it was difficult to approach on account of its rocky soil, and the distance from thence to obtain fascines and gabions : it was now garrisoned by 4000 British and 2000 Spaniards, under the Prince of Darmstadt. On Berwick’s persuasion, this siege was deferred till the 2nd of October, when the trenches were opened against the town, which was taken by assault and subjected to all the horrors of war on the 12th; the castle still held out, but was forced to capitulate, unconditionally, on the 11th of November. The Duke of Orleans was very alert throughout the siege, visiting the trenches, encouraging the soldiers, and exposing his own person freely. After his troops had made good their entry upon the rampart, he maintained such discipline that he would not permit the soldiers to enter the town till morning, when he gave it up to a systematic pillage for eight hours. The Prince of Darmstadt commanded in the town and Colonel Wills in the castle, but there was no concert between them, and they were worse supplied within the place than the French were without. There was a kind of army under the banner of Charles in the neigh­bourhood, which it was intended should succour Lerida,—consisting of about twenty battalions and seventy squadrons ; but as soon as they heard that the place was taken, they retired to Cervera. The campaign ended, on the side of the French, with the capture of Morelia, on the 17th of December.

 

6. The Duke of Savoy and Prince Eugene enter France.

 

The attempt upon Toulon, by the Duke of Savoy and Prince Eugene, might have succeeded, if the Emperor had not divided his army in Italy, by detaching a considerable body towards Naples, of which he took possession without any difficulty. The project had been concerted between the courts of St. James and Turin, that Prince Eugene and the Duke of Savoy should cross the Alps with an army of 30,000 men, by the Col de Pende, while Sir Cloudesly Shovel, with a combined fleet of English and Dutch, was to co-operate off the coast of Provence. On the 10th of July their forces reached the Var. The French had raised works, which they deemed impregnable, to prevent the passage of this river. Sir John Norris, however, a gallant British seaman, ascended that river from the sea, with boats and gun-boats, and 600 sailors and marines, who were rowed within musket shot of the enemy’s intrenchments. They immediately landed, and made such a vigorous and desperate attack, that they carried the French works sword in hand, and compelled the defenders to fly with the utmost precipitation. This affair was directed by Sir Cloudesly in person; and the Duke of Savoy, taking advantage of the success, passed the river on the 11th without much further opposition, and marched directly towards Toulon, whither the battering train and ammunition were conveyed on board the allied squadrons.

The French King was extremely alarmed at this attempt, as 5000 pieces of cannon, vast magazines, and the best part of his fleet were in that harbour; and the whole kingdom was terrified at finding an enemy in the bosom of their country. The Monarch set to work forthwith to repair all deficiencies, and to draw in troops from all parts. His subjects exerted themselves in the most exemplary manner to assist him; the nobility marched into the town at the head of their servants and tenants; they coined their plate and pawned their jewels to pay for work on the fortifications; and such exertions were employed that, in a few days, the town and harbour were in a good state of defence. The allies took post on the eminences that commanded the city, and erected batteries, from which they began to cannonade and bombard the city, while the fleet attacked and reduced two forts at the entrance of the Mole. The garrison defended the place with great vigour. They sunk ships at the entrance of the Mole, and made desperate sallies. The French King had countermanded the forces that were on their way to Spain, and recalled a great part of the army on the Rhine, under Villars, and, as we have seen, determined to intrust the command of the force to the Duke de Berwick. A fortified camp, in which were forty battalions, had already been con­structed ; and on the 15th of August the French sallied out of it and recovered the position of St. Catharine, which they had lost on the 29th of July. Marshal de Tessé also now arrived with twenty battalions, and the Duke of Savoy, seeing little hope of reducing the place, and fearful of being intercepted on his passage back to Italy, resolved to raise the siege and abandon the enterprise ; but in retaliation for the ruin of his capital the previous year, he gave directions for bombarding the town, and he and Prince Eugene viewed from one of the heights “the dreadful blaze,” which was all the consolation they received for their disappointment. The destruction on the side of the harbour was, however, indeed terrible. The arsenal, and two batteries, and eight ships-of-the-line lying in the harbour, were totally destroyed by the Dutch and English fleet. On the night of the 25th of August the confederates retired in haste, and reached the Varon the 31st, whence they continued their retreat by the maritime Alps. As the detachments from the different French armies could not be spared, there was no pursuit, and Eugene was therefore in a condition to undertake the reduction of Susa, an ancient town at the foot of the Alps, and one of the best defences of Turin, on the side of France. The garrison resisted for a fortnight, and then capitulated ; and, by this conquest, the Duke of Savoy not only secured the key to his own dominions, but opened to himself a free passage into Dauphiné. The loss in this expedition, however, to the invading army has been put down at 10,000 men, between the 1st of July and 1st of September.

 

7. The Austrians under Count Daun conquer Naples.

 

Had the Emperor assisted Eugene with all his disposable troops, and had he acted with more promptness and vigour, Toulon might probably have been taken; but Joseph cast an avaricious eye on the Spanish possessions at the southern extremity of the Italian peninsula, and looked to the easy conquest of the kingdom of Naples, instead of aiding his allies. Count Daun, with 5000 foot and 3000 horse, crossed the Neapolitan frontier without resistance, and advanced to the strongly fortified city of Capua, which commands the passage of the river Volturno. That important city opened its gates and welcomed the Austrian without a blow; the city of Aversa did the same, and at length they entered the capital, amidst the joyful shouts of the people, who were exasperated at the Spanish viceroy for his impositions and arbitrary levies. They presented the keys of the city to Daun, and overthrew the statue of King Philip, which he had caused to be erected; while the three castles which command Naples surrendered without firing a shot. The Prince of Castiglione, with 1000 horse, took the road to Apulia, with the intention of preserving these provinces for King Philip; but he found the passes of the Apennines occupied by the Imperialists, and was obliged to retreat in the direction of Salerno. The flag of the Bourbon still floated at Gaeta, but the place was besieged by the Austrians, and carried by storm in the month of September. At this easy rate the fairest king­dom in Europe was secured to Austria in the course of a few months, not without serious injury to the more important movements of the confederates.

 

8. Sir Cloudesly Shovel wrecked off Scilly. His Character.

 

This distinguished Admiral having finished with Toulon, left a squadron with Sir Thomas Dilkes for the Mediterranean service, and set sail for England with the rest of the fleet; he was in soundings on the 22nd of October, when a storm arose in which his own ship, the “Association”, foundered, on the rocks of Scilly, with himself, his sons-in-law, many persons of distinction, and every soul on board; two other men-of-war also perished. The Admiral’s body was recovered and conveyed to London, where it was interred in Westminster Abbey with all the pomp and magnificence suitable to the reputation of such a brave officer. He had been the artificer of his own fortune, and by his personal merit alone from the lowest beginnings raised himself to almost the highest station in the navy. He was one of the greatest sea commanders of the age; of undaunted courage and resolution; and at the same time eminent for generosity, frankness, and integrity.

 

9. French Naval War.

 

The French Admiral de Forbin commanded a squadron at Dunkirk, consisting of ten ships-of-war, one frigate, and four privateers, which had considerable successes against the English ships-of-war and merchantmen this year. In the month of May the British ships “Royal Oak,” “Grafton,” and “Hampton Court,” with about forty coasters under convoy, being about six leagues to the westward of Beachy, fell in with this squadron. The “Grafton,” after the loss of her captain, Acton, was boarded by three men-of-war, who carried her after a warm dispute of about half an hour. The “Hampton Court” was attacked and boarded by three others, and struck; but not before her captain, Clements, was mortally wounded. The “Royal Oak,” under the English commodore, Baron Wylde, received several shots under water, but she plied her assailants so warmly, that they were at length forced to sheer off with their captures and leave her; but, while the men-of-war were thus engaged, the enemy's frigates and their privateers took twenty-one of the merchant ships : the rest got away. In July the same active officer captured fifteen ships belonging to the Russian company, off the coast of Lapland. In September he joined the Brest squadrons off the Lizard, under the command of Duguay-Trouin, having in all twelve or fourteen sail-of-the-line; and on the 10th of October they encountered the British squadron, consisting of the “Cumberland,” 80, “Devonshire,” 80, “Chester,” 50, “Ruby,” 50, and “Royal Oak,” 76, with the escort of the outward bound Lisbon fleets. Duguay-Trouin, in “Le Lys,” 74, and two others, attacked and captured the flag-ship “Cumberland Count de Forbin, in “L’Achille,” captured the “Ruby”, the “Chester” fell into the power of “Le Jason”, the “Devonshire” was burned, and about sixty merchant vessels were captured. The “Royal Oak,” under its old commodore, Baron Wylde, alone escaped. His conduct under two such singular escapes was investigated by a court- martial, and he was sentenced to be dismissed the service. Since the battle of Malaga the French King had not dared to keep the sea with such a fleet, but it is thought he was enabled to have such successes against the trade and convoys of England by the intelligence he was enabled to obtain privately from the Admiralty and other public offices.

These successes very much gratified Louis XIV, and he used to take pleasure in hearing Duguay-Trouin himself recount his many gallant exploits. One day, eagerly describing a combat, he said to the King, “J’ordonnai à ‘la Gloire,’ (c’était le nom d’un de ses frigates) de me suivre.” “ Et elle fut fidele, reprit le Roi en l’interrompant.” The same gallant commander captured this year, on the 6th of November, another British sixty-four gun ship, the “Gloucester,” after an hour and a half’s combat. Admiral de Forbin had, in the latter part of this year, taken on board Charles Stuart, the Pretender, with the intention of landing him in Scotland, and sailed with that object on the 19th of March, but the vigilance of Sir George Byng foiled the enterprise, and one of their ships was boarded and taken ; but they got safely back to Dunkirk, having been tossed about for a whole month in very tempestuous weather. It was on this occasion that Louis XIV. at parting gave the Prince a sword, studded with valuable diamonds, saying that the best wish he could give him was, that he might never see him again.

 

10. War in Scandinavia.

 

Charles XII set off from Saxony in September with 43,000 men. Besides this army, Löwenhaupt, one of his best generals, awaited his arrival in Poland with 20,000 more men. He had, moreover, an army of 15,000 in Finland, and recruits daily arriving from Sweden. With such a force he had no doubt that he should be able to dethrone the Czar, the only object of his ambition at this time. As he marched his army towards Russia he was overtaken by an ambassador from Turkey, who sent him 100 Swedish soldiers, rescued by the Calmuck Tartars, as the most agreeable offering the Sultan could render to the King, being the enemy of the Russians in common with themselves. Peter had advanced as far as Leopold, but had again retired to Grodno, in Lithuania, to which place the Swedish King marched in the midst of ice and snow, and arrived there on the 1st day of January. He left Stanislaus in Poland, with 10,000 Swedish troops to uphold his influence and his throne.

 

11. Death and Character of Marshal de Vauban.

 

This year died this celebrated engineer of France, whose character is thus portrayed by Fontenelle, “Un sens droit et étendu qui s’attachait au vrai par une espéce de sympathie et sentait le faux sans le discuter, lui épargnait les longs circuits par ou les autres marchent.” As a military engineer he carried the art of fortifying, attacking, and defending towns to a degree of perfection unknown before his time. He improved 300 citadels, erected thirty-three new ones—had the management of fifty-three sieges, and was present in 140 engagements.

 

1708.

 

1. WAR IN THE NETHERLANDS.—2. BATTLE OF OUDENARDE.—3. CONSEQUENCES OF THE VICTORY.—4. THE SIEGE OF LILLE. MARLBOROUGH AND EUGENE AGAINST BOUFLERS, VENDOME, AND BERWICK. —5. MARLBOROUGH RECOVERS GHENT.—6. THE WAR IN ITALY.—7- THE WAR IN SPAIN. CAPTURE OF MINORCA.—8. NAVAL WAR.—9. THE WAR BETWEEN CHARLES XII. AND PETER I.—10. DEATH AND CHARACTER OF MARSHAL OVERKIRK.

 

 

 

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