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War of the Grand Alliance - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

War of the Grand Alliance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nine Years War redirects here. For the Irish war see Nine Years' War (Ireland).

War of the Grand Alliance

Clockwise, starting top left:
King James II, King William III, Emperor Leopold I, King Louis XIV
Date 24 September 168820 September 1697[1]
Location Continental Europe, Ireland, North America
Result Indecisive, leading to the Treaty of Ryswick
Casus
belli
Dispute over Cologne succession.[2]
Combatants
Dutch Republic,
England,[3]
Holy Roman Empire,
Duchy of Savoy,
Spain,
Portugal
Sweden
France,
Jacobites
Commanders
William III,
Prince Waldeck,
Duke of Savoy,
Duke of Lorraine ,
Elector of Bavaria,
Prince of Baden
King Louis XIV,
Duc de Luxembourg †,
Duc de Villeroi,
Duc de Lorge,
Duc de Boufflers,
Nicolas Catinat,
Duc de Noailles,
James II
Strength
~250,000,
275 ships[4]
~440,000,[5]
221 ships[6]
Theatres of the War of the Grand Alliance
Continental EuropeIrelandNorth America

The War of the Grand Alliance (16881697) – often called the Nine Years’ War or occasionally, the War of the League of Augsburg or the War of the Palatinian Succession – was a major conflict fought primarily on Continental Europe, but which also encompassed secondary theatres in Ireland (often called the Williamite War), and North America (commonly known as King William's War).

Since the signing of the Treaty of Nijmegen, ending the Franco-Dutch War (16721678), France’s expansionist policies under Louis XIV had threatened to secure hegemony over Europe. However, by the 1680s the Holy Roman Empire under Leopold I was gaining ascendancy in its struggle with the Ottoman Turks in the Balkans – strengthening the Emperor’s position in central Europe. These advancements encouraged Leopold and his allies – the Protestant German princes, Spain, and Sweden – to form the defensive League of Augsburg in opposition to France on 9 July 1686.

In November 1688 William of Orange successfully invaded England leading to the ‘Glorious Revolution’ and the deposition of James II. With William as Stadtholder of the Dutch republic and now as King of England, he was able to form the coalition to oppose France that he had long since been striving. On 12 May 1689, William and Leopold formed the Grand Alliance with the aim of forcing France back to her borders as designated in the Treaty of Westphalia.

The war ended indecisively with the signing of the Treaty of Ryswick on 20 September 1697 by the main powers, France, the Dutch Republic, England and Spain, with Leopold signing later on 30 October. But although the French influence had increased militarily on land – and the English at sea – the conflict between the Habsburgs and Bourbon dynasties had yet to be resolved.

Contents

[edit] Background

At the death of Philip IV in 1665, the Spanish throne passed on to his son from his second marriage, the infirm Charles II. Although Louis did not dispute Charles's accession to the Spanish throne, he did claim that according to local law, at least part of the Spanish Netherlands should devolve to his wife, Maria Theresa, a daughter of the late Philip IV from his first marriage.[7] Maria Theresa had renounced these claims when she married Louis, but the renunciation had been conditioned on Spain paying her dowry within eighteen months. The Spanish not only failed to pay in time, but failed to pay at all.[8] These inheritance claims led to Louis' first war, the War of Devolution (16671668).

Part of the Spanish Habsburg genealogy.
Part of the Spanish Habsburg genealogy.

After an easy victory against Spanish forces, Louis decided to sue for peace after the Dutch Republic, England and Sweden formed the Triple Alliance in opposition. The subsequent peace of Aix-la-Chapelle rewarded Louis with minor gains, most notably of which was Lille, but the pressure from the Triple Alliance was not the only reason Louis accepted such easy terms. Earlier in January 1668, Louis had negotiated a secret partition treaty with the Austrian Habsburgs to divide up the substantial Spanish empire should the infirm Charles II die. The Holy Roman Emperor, Leopold I (or his children) would inherit the Spanish throne, the American empire, Milan and ports on the Tuscan coast; whereas Louis would inherit Spanish Navarre, the Spanish Netherlands, Franche-Comté, Naples, Sicily, and the Philippines. Although there was no formal signing between Louis and Leopold, the Spanish themselves tacitly accepted the partition to prevent any immediate major annexations.[9] However, Charles II did not die, and his survival through childhood made the succession issue far less immediate.

After French diplomacy brought about the dissolution of the Triple Alliance, Louis prepared for his first great conflict, the Franco-Dutch War (16721678). Louis’ war minister, Colbert, was keen to take much of the Dutch trade and to break certain Dutch trade monopolies – he believed France’s economic success could only be assured with the military destruction of the Dutch.[10] Louis’ motives though, were more personal. He saw the Dutch intervention in the War of Devolution as a betrayal and was determined to punish and destroy his heretical neighbour.[11] However, despite Leopold having signed a neutrality agreement with Louis, the ease of France’s military successes in the Dutch Republic had concerned both the Emperor and the Elector of Brandenburg who, along with Spain (worried over the annexation of the Spanish Netherlands), formed an anti-French coalition on 30 August 1673. On 28 May 1674, the German Diet, also concerned about French ambition, declared war on France, summoning the German princes to assist the Emperor. But despite Louis losing his ally, Charles II of England – who had been starved of funds by his anti-French parliament – and being forced to withdraw from most of the territory of the Dutch Republic, France’s inherent military and economic strength ensured her successes continued. However by 1676, both sides were exhausted enough to be willing to negotiate a settlement.[12]

[edit] Prelude

[edit] Treaty of Nijmegen (Nymegen)

At the end the Franco-Dutch War, Louis had significant advantages over his opponents: his armies had been increasingly successful at the closing stages of hostilities and, unlike his adversaries – the Dutch, the German princes and the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs – Louis had total control of his own policy-making, enabling him to exploit his enemies' differences.[13] William of Orange, the Dutch stadtholder, was determined to keep the allies together, but despite strengthening his hand by marrying Mary, the daughter of the heir to the English throne James Stuart, Duke of York, the financial pressure on the Dutch Republic was considerable.[14] Consequently the French and Dutch signed a peace treaty on 10 August 1678, resulting in the end of Dutch subsidies to their allies. Now with the prospect of the full weight of the French forces falling upon them, the Spanish and Austrians were compelled to follow suit on 17 September 1678 and 5 February 1679 respectively.[15] The three treaties are known collectively as the peace of Nijmegen.[16]

Map of the European boundaries at the end of the Thirty Years' War in 1648. The Grand Alliance aimed to force France back to her borders as they were at the end of the Thirty Years War, and the end of Franco-Spanish War in 1659. Both treaties are commonly known as the Peace of Westphalia.
Map of the European boundaries at the end of the Thirty Years' War in 1648. The Grand Alliance aimed to force France back to her borders as they were at the end of the Thirty Years War, and the end of Franco-Spanish War in 1659. Both treaties are commonly known as the Peace of Westphalia.

Although the treaty ensured the survival of the Dutch Republic and its trade, Spain had lost under its terms. Besides losing Haiti in the Caribbean, Spain also ceded Franche-Comté, reinforcing Louis’ control of his territory in Alsace. Louis also made modest gains in the Spanish Netherlands (largely fort exchanges with Spain), strengthening Vauban's policy of building a defensive barrier of fortresses along France’s northern borders. Lorraine, on his eastern border, also remained in French hands, as did Freiburg, but although Louis had settled for moderate terms and relatively small gains, he had been able to break up the allied coalition.[17] However, convinced that the peace with France was only temporary, William was determined to create a permanent alliance to oppose future French ambition.

[edit] Reunions

France’s military superiority after the Dutch War was never more apparent, but Louis was no longer interested in an adventurist, open-ended war policy as in 1672. The insistence on other powers accepting French supremacy still remained but Louis used threats and dubious legal means, rather than open war, to achieve his objectives. As well as maintaining a huge standing army after the Dutch war, Vauban’s fortress system was extended along France’s eastern border with Louis’ most dangerous foe, Germany. However, to construct a proper defensive system France required more land from her neighbours.[18]

For this purpose special French courts, called the 'Chambers of Reunion', were set up to seek precedents for French suzerainty over the dependencies of land ceded to France since 1648 and 'reunite' them – unsurprisingly, the courts never failed to find these precedents.[19] The court’s judgments using these quasi-legal means allowed Louis to claim additional territory: more of the Spanish Netherlands, almost all Spanish Luxembourg, more of Lorraine, parts of the Saar valley, the duchy of Zweibrücken and the rest of Alsace. On 30 September 1681, the Imperial city of Strasbourg – which had not been claimed under the reunions policy – was also forced to submit to Louis after Louvois, Louis’ war minister, threatened that unless he received compliance – “All would be burnt and put to the sword." On the same day, Louis’ troops entered Casale in northern Italy, which he had bought from the Duke of Mantua.[20] Casale, together with Louis’ fort of Pinerolo, allowed France to pin down the Duchy of Savoy and threaten the Spanish Duchy of Milan. Louis’ troops also began the siege of Luxembourg to add to their acquisitions in the Moselle valley, but although this siege was abandoned in March 1682, French hostility continued.[15]

Military reforms: The French army rapidly expanded during the 17th century. During the War of the Grand Alliance, the numbers in the French army, rose to about 440,000 troops (although its real wartime strength was probably nearer 350,000).[21] Previously it had been the practice to drastically reduce numbers between wars (rarely maintaining 10,000 men), but after the Dutch War, a standing army of about 150,000 men was kept in French service.[22] The military reforms of Richelieu and Louis XIII were accelerated by Louis XIV’s war minister Michel le Tellier and his son and successor, the Marquis de Louvois. Louis’ army no longer heavily relied on mercenary and private forces supplied by nobles, but instead consisted of royal regiments, directly responsible and obedient to the king.[21] The battalion constituted the French combat unit: one or more battalions (500 – 800 troops) formed a regiment, as did two or three cavalry squadrons (about 140 men per squadron). These forces were primarily volunteers although limited conscription could boost manpower needs.[23] Other European states began to copy the French model of professional armies, but despite Louis’ increasing financial problems, he was able to maintain the edge until the end of the century.[24]

To Louis, these acquisitions under the reunions claims were rational acts of stabilization along his borders (all the lands taken were important strategic entry points between France and her neighbours and all were immediately fortified by Vauban), but the bordering states considered them acts of aggression.[15] The Spanish and minor German states involved were all cowed by Louis’ standing army and could only appeal to the Dutch and the Emperor for help. Therefore, on the same day that Strasbourg fell and Casale was occupied, the Dutch signed an alliance with Charles XI of Sweden, who was angry over his territory of Zweibrucken. This was followed by an alliance with Emperor Leopold in February 1682 and with Spain in May, but six out of the eight electorsMainz, Trier, Cologne, Saxony, Bavaria and Brandenburg-Prussia – remained allied to France.[25]

Leopold though, was under pressure along his Hungarian border.[26] By 1683 the Turks, encouraged by the French, had besieged Vienna, defining the high water mark of Ottoman power. Although Vienna was rescued by John III Sobieski, King of Poland, and Charles V, Duke of Lorraine, Louis was able to take advantage of the Ottoman crisis in the east and renewed the siege of the Spanish city of Luxembourg.[26] But the Spanish, encouraged by the relief of Vienna and under the misapprehension that the Emperor and the Dutch would assist them, declared war on France in autumn 1683.[27] Louis reacted with a brief and devastating campaign; by June 1684 Spanish resistance had collapsed and Luxembourg had fallen to Vauban and Marshal Créqui, leading in August to the negotiations at Regensburg (Ratisbon). In return for a truce with Spain and the Emperor (allowing Leopold and the princes to concentrate on the Balkans), France was allowed to keep all her reunion claims as well as Strasbourg and Luxembourg for a period of 20 years. Louis hoped to make these acquisitions permanent, but William of Orange remained intent on building a coalition with Spain and the Emperor and retake all that had been won by Louis’ military intimidation.[27]

The truce of Regensburg marked a high point of territorial expansion under Louis XIV.[28] The French king had reason to be satisfied: Vauban could complete his eastern and northern defences while the Austrian and German princes remained fully occupied in Hungary with the Turks. Further encouragement came in 1685 when the Catholic James II came to the English throne. Expecting James to ally himself with France, his son-in-law William of Orange became isolated and powerless, especially because Amsterdam’s powerful burghers wanted no further conflict with France.[27]

Louis XIV (1638–1715), by René Antoine Houasse. Here seen at the height of his powers at about the age of 40. To Louis, wars were contests over glory, territory and sovereignty.
Louis XIV (16381715), by René Antoine Houasse. Here seen at the height of his powers at about the age of 40. To Louis, wars were contests over glory, territory and sovereignty.[29]

[edit] League of Augsburg

In October 1685 Louis issued the Edict of Fontainebleau, revoking the Edict of Nantes, ending toleration of Protestants in France.[30] About 200,000 French Protestants (Huguenots) were forced to flee the country including many merchants, industrialists, soldiers and sailors. Although the Dutch benefited from the exodus with the increase of 9,000 sailors and 12,600 soldiers, the flight helped destroy the pro-French group in the Dutch Republic, not only because of their Protestant affiliations, but with the exodus of Huguenot merchants (who often acted as Dutch commercial agents), and the harassment of Dutch merchants living in France, it also greatly affected Franco-Dutch trade.[30]

In England there was growing concern over James’ Catholicism but his treatment of the Huguenots within the country reflected the king’s principles: on a human level he sympathized with their persecution (realising also that it would be looked upon unfavourably by his mainly Protestant subjects if he did nothing), but on the other hand he distrusted them on political grounds.[31] Elsewhere, in Brandenburg-Prussia the horrified Calvinist Elector, Frederick William, allied himself with the Dutch, as did Brandenburg’s Baltic rival, the Swedes.[32] The persecution did not, in itself, lead to a Protestant coalition against France, but in July 1686 the states of southern and western Germany (including Bavaria and the Palatinate), together with the Emperor, Spain and Sweden (in their capacity as princes within the Empire) formed the League of Augsburg to defend the treaties of Westphalia, Nijmegen and Regensburg.[33]

Initially the League posed little threat to Louis, but during 1686/87 Leopold made substantial progress against the Turks at Buda and Mohács. The subsequent revolt within the Turkish army and deposition of Sultan Mehmed IV paralysed the Ottomans, enabling Leopold’s forces to move on Belgrade the following year.[33] These remarkable victories had a profound effect on Europe. In contrast to Louis who had refused to help, both Protestant and Catholic princes extolled Leopold as a champion of Christendom; almost overnight the French king’s support in Germany disintegrated and Louis was branded as the ‘Christian Turk’.[33]

[edit] Archbishop of Cologne

By summer of 1688 it was clear to Louis and his principal advisors Louvois and Colbert de Croissey, that they had to act before the Emperor turned his attention from the Balkans to lead the Dutch, and a comparatively united German Empire, against France on the Rhine.[34] It was therefore imperative that the Turks were encouraged to continue fighting and tie down Leopold while Vauban finished his defences on their eastern border.

The French king was concerned enough to take steps to perpetuate his influence at Cologne.[35] The pro-French Archbishop of Cologne held a number of strategically important bishoprics (they provided links for the Dutch with the Empire and the Spanish Netherlands), straddling the southern and eastern frontiers of the Dutch Republic. The existing Archbishop, Maximilian, was old and frail and Louis wanted to be sure of his successor. He therefore had his client, William Egon of Fürstenberg elected as coadjutor, and by implication, the next Archbishop.[35] After the incumbent Archbishop died in June 1688, and despite all the signs signifying victory for Fürstenberg, an inconclusive election for the position followed, after the brother of the Elector of Bavaria, Joseph Clement (supported by the Emperor and subsequently by Pope Innocent XI) stood against Fürstenberg. However, the disputed election at Cologne had aroused further fears in Germany of French aggression and helped further to unite the German princes. Moreover, the Dutch oligarchs and merchants, also more fearful of Louis’ ambitions, gave William their wholehearted support. From June 1688 the disputed election looked like it would provide the spark to ignite the war between Louis and the German princes.[36]

[edit] War of the Grand Alliance

[edit] Continental Europe (1688–89)

Siege warfare: Siege warfare was prevalent in 17th century. Amongst the chief practitioners of siege warfare and fortress design was Louis’ celebrated engineer Sébastien le Prestre de Vauban. Although Vauban did not originate the low-lying style of fortifications common to the period, he certainly greatly improved on the design.[29] Vauban considered a minimum of 20,000 men were essential to besiege a town successfully, but it was also important to defend one’s own territory from investment by the enemy; in 1688 the French committed almost half their army, 166,000 men, garrisoning 221 strongholds.[37] The Dutch engineer, Menno Van Coehoorn, was, like Vauban, employed in both fortification and siege warfare. In 1692 he defended the city of Namur against his great rival. Although Vauban eventually took the city, Coehoorn’s role was reversed three years later as he successfully conducted the attack on Namur in 1695. It was the last major military action of the War of the Grand Alliance in the Spanish Netherlands.[38]

Louis’ obsession of making France invulnerable led to the longest war to date of his reign – the War of the Grand Alliance.[15] Louis only planned a short campaign (similar to that against the Spanish in 1683/84), with the aim of encouraging the Turks to continue their war, and to frighten the Emperor and the Germans into accepting the Reunions claims (as confirmed at the peace of Regensberg), as permanent. By attacking across the Rhine to invest Philippsburg on 27 September 1688 (the only one of the three major fortresses in Alsace which Louis did not already control), Louis also hoped to resolve the Cologne election in favour of Fürstenberg and secure part of the Palatinate in favour of his sister-in-law.

Philippsburg fell on 30 October to the Dauphin (aided by Marshal Duras and Vauban). Mannheim capitulated after a short siege on 11 November, followed by Frankenthal, Oppenheim, Kaiserslautern, Heidelberg, Speyer and Mainz. Although militarily successful, as well as strengthening the Turkish resolve in the Balkans, the gambit to bring the Germans to terms failed.[39] Just after the initial attack in October 1688, Brandenburg-Prussia, Saxony, Hanover and Hesse-Cassel had all agreed to fight Louis, and Maximillian Emmanuel of Bavaria was ready to lead an army formed by the Emperor and the German princes of the Rhine.[40] With this escalation, Louis, unprepared for a wider war, lay waste the lands of the Palatinate, Baden and Württemberg (lands immediately to the north and east of Alsace), to make it incapable of sustaining the enemy. Louvois drafted a list of towns for destruction: Heidelberg was torched on 2 March 1689 and Mannheim on 8 March; Speyer, Worms, Oppenheim and Bingen, as well as many surrounding villages, also suffered under Louis’ destructive policy. Once the French had created their Rhineland defensive barrier they fended off the Germans as best they could, but Marshal Duras lacked the troops to defeat the enemy. These early French victories were partly reversed when Mainz fell on 8 September 1689 to a German force commanded by Duke Charles of Lorraine while Kaiserwörth and Bonn fell to the Elector of Brandenberg.[41] But while Louis XIV was busy on the Rhine, William’s attention was turned towards England.

[edit] 'Glorious Revolution' (1688–89)

Part of he House of Stuart genealogy. (The emblem shown is William and Mary's coat of arms). William III became James’ son-in-law when he married his daughter, Mary in 1677. Mary became joint sovereign with her husband in 1689 after the 'Glorious Revolution'.
Part of he House of Stuart genealogy. (The emblem shown is William and Mary's coat of arms). William III became James’ son-in-law when he married his daughter, Mary in 1677. Mary became joint sovereign with her husband in 1689 after the 'Glorious Revolution'.
Main article: Glorious Revolution

The openly Catholic James II’s ill-advised attempts to Catholicise the army, government and other institutions had proved increasingly unpopular with his (mainly Protestant) subjects. By royal prerogative James suspended the operation of various statutes such as the Act of Uniformity and the Test Act; he also suspended penal legislation against religious nonconformity, permitting Dissenters to worship in meeting-houses, and Catholics to worship in private.[42]

James’ open Catholicism and his dealings with Catholic France had also strained relations between England and the Dutch Republic, but because his wife Mary was the Protestant heir to the English throne, William had been reluctant to act against James in case it ruined her succession prospects.[43] However, on 10 June 1688 James’s second wife, Mary of Modena, gave birth to a male heir, threatening a Catholic dynasty to which neither the English public nor William would countenance.[41] Prominent English statesmen – Whigs, Tories and Protestant churchmen – secretly invited William to invade England and assume the throne. The Dutch oligarchs, worried about Anglo-French alliance, gave the Stadtholder a free hand to use Dutch troops; William also had the tacit approval of the Emperor and even the anti-French Pope Innocent XI in return for assurances that Catholics would be tolerated in Britain.[43]

Louis did little to stop William’s invasion of England (his principal concern was with the German powers in the Rhineland, dispelling fears in the Dutch Republic of a possible French attack upon them). This enabled William to land his forces unhindered at Torbay on 15 November (5 November O.S) 1688. French diplomats had calculated that William's invasion would plunge England into a protracted civil war which would absorb Dutch resources or draw England closer to France;[44] however, there was no civil war and William was welcomed by the people. The revolution that shortly followed, commonly know as the ‘Glorious Revolution’, ended James’ reign; William and Mary became joint sovereigns on 13 February 1689 while James became a refugee in France.[45]

The Arrival of William III by Sir James Thornhill. William III landed in England on 5 November (Guy Fawkes day); a day already special in the Protestant calendar.
The Arrival of William III by Sir James Thornhill. William III landed in England on 5 November (Guy Fawkes day); a day already special in the Protestant calendar.

William had come to England to use her power in the struggle against French expansion. But although English troops were used extensively on the continent (almost as many as the Dutch), English politicians and generals played little part in the War; only at sea was command given to English rather than Dutch admirals.[46]

William’s success rapidly led to the formation of the European coalition he had long desired. On 12 May 1689 the Dutch and Emperor Leopold signed the Grand Alliance (the aim of which was to force the French back to their borders of 1648 and 1659); this meant for the Emperor and the German princes the re-conquest of Lorraine, Strasbourg, parts of Alsace and some fortresses on the Rhine.[46] The Emperor also insisted that the other allies should promise to support his claims to the Spanish succession if the present incumbent, the childless Charles II, died during the war.[46] William, as King William III of England, signed in December. Spain and Savoy joined the coalition in June 1690; Sweden and the major German Princes also associated themselves with the coalition. France was to fight alone, save for the loose relationship with the Turks who were still fighting against Leopold in the Balkans – a war that would last until 1699.[47]

The German princes proved willing to co-operate in the war against Louis and accepting of Leopold as their leader (although they had no intention of sacrificing their own independence). Since the Swedes were part of the coalition, Frederick of Brandenburg–Prussia put aside his differences with them over Pomerania, and the Emperor himself acted for the Empire rather than just his own dynastic and hereditary lands in Austria.

[edit] Ireland (1689–91)

Technology: The flintlock musket (fusil), was perfected as a sporting weapon by 1630, but because of manufacturing costs, and traditional conservatism of military leaders, the matchlock musket dominated the battlefield throughout most of the 17th century.[48] Infantrymen still carried the pike, but both the pike and the matchlock were superseded by bayonets and flintlock muskets later in the century, becoming standard in European armies by 1699. The effective range of both the matchlock and flintlock was between 45 – 90 m (50 – 100 yards) against large formations, resulting in close-quarter actions and high casualty rates.[49] The plug bayonet (inserted into the muzzle of the musket), was itself further developed and replaced by the socket bayonet in the 1680s, enabling the musket to be fired while the bayonet was still attached: the musketeer had become his own pikeman.[50]
Cavalry had shed much of its armour and relied primarily on the sword.[29] However, many cavalry regiments added picked companies of carabineers (troopers armed with rifled carbines), while the French substantially increased the number of dragoons.[51] French artillery became standardised and the numbers of mortars used in siege warfare increased;[51] a 24-pound siege canon was highly effective at 550 m (600 yards), and capable of inflicting casualties at 1,830 m (2,000 yards).[29] Mortar attacks promised to destroy a town without requiring an army to occupy it, but these attacks were indiscriminate. The moral injustice of attacking women and children were problematic to some, including Vauban.[52]

The war in Ireland was an extension of the continental struggle. After leaving France, the exiled James II, together with Count d’Avaux, the French ambassador to James’ court (and various other supporters), landed in Ireland at Kinsale in March 1689. Along with the Catholic Lord Deputy of Ireland, Richard Talbot, the Duke of Tyrconnell, James hoped first to establish control in Ireland before proceeding on to Scotland, and thence England, in an attempt to regain his throne.[53]

Several obstacles lay in James' way. Most influential Irish supporters were reluctant to ‘liberate’ England and Scotland from William – a number wished to break the English connection altogether; secondly, Louis held all the purse-strings and was reluctant to supply troops to Ireland; and thirdly, total success depended on pacifying the parts of Ulster – including Protestant strongholds of Londonderry and Enniskillen – that remained hostile to the old Catholic king.[54]

The subjugation of Ulster however proved a forlorn hope. The 105 days siege of Londonderry was abandoned on 10 August (31 July O.S) and, on the same day, James’ forces under Viscount Mountcashel were routed at Newtownbutler. Further bad news arrived for the Jacobite cause from Britain. Although William’s army in Scotland under the command of General Hugh Mackay was defeated by Dundee at the Battle of Killiecrankie on 6 August (27 July O.S) 1689, the Jacobite Highlanders were themselves defeated at Dunkeld on 31 August (21 August O.S) leading to the dispersion of the clans and the end, for now at least, of the Jacobite struggle in Scotland.[55]

On 23 August (13 August O.S), 15,000 Dutch, English and Danish troops of William’s army, commanded by Marshal Schomberg, landed near Bangor. However, after taking Carrickfergus and Belfast Schomberg’s army stalled at Dundalk, suffering through the winter months from sickness and desertion.[56] James and d’Avaux were confident that with a little French help they could drive Schomberg out of Ireland the following year, but the signs were ominous; James’ army lacked provisions and supplies and worryingly, William, realising reinforcements would be needed for a successful outcome announced in January he would come to Ireland in person with a substantial army.[56] Louis and his war minister Louvois were reluctant to supply men that were badly needed on the continent;[57] although 6,000 troops from the Savoy front, commanded by Count Lauzun, were eventually sent to Kinsale in March 1690.[58] On 24 June (14 June O.S), William landed at Carrickfergus with 15,000 troops, bringing the total of the Williamite forces to almost 44,000; (James could muster 39,000 in all).[59] No French fleet attempted to stop them – it was in France’s interest that William directed his attention and resources to Ireland.

Map of Ireland. To Louis XIV the Irish campaign was more of an attempt to occupy William III than it was to maintain James II and assist him in regaining his throne.
Map of Ireland. To Louis XIV the Irish campaign was more of an attempt to occupy William III than it was to maintain James II and assist him in regaining his throne.[60]

Meanwhile the epicentre of the war on the Continent had moved from the Rhine to the Spanish Netherlands and the French–Flanders border where, on 1 July (21 June O.S) 1690, the theatre’s French commander Marshal Luxembourg defeated Prince Waldeck at Fleurus. Later on 10 July (30 June O.S) Louis’ navy, under Tourville, defeated the Anglo-Dutch fleet under Torrington at Beachy Head, giving France control of the English Channel. These French successes threatened not only the prospect of limitless reinforcements to Ireland but also a possible invasion of England.[61] But despite William’s victory at the Battle of the Boyne on 11 July (1 July O.S) – leading to James’ hastened flight back to France – Louis still had a clear strategic advantage. However, James’ appeals for assistance to Louis were not heeded; with his attention drawn towards the Continent, the French king would neither send more troops to Ireland nor, for the moment, invade England.[62]

Dublin and Waterford were occupied by the Williamite forces, but after an unsuccessful siege of Limerick William returned to London in September 1690 leaving Godert de Ginkell, 1st Earl of Athlone in charge.[63] Lauzun and his French troops also returned home, but although Tryconnel was successful in obtaining arms and a new general he failed to get new French troops – the Boyne had caused Louis to think again, sapping his enthusiasm for supporting James.[64] Louis was also running out of Irish ports; the Earl of Marlborough took Cork and Kinsale in southern Ireland in October (isolating the Jacobite forces from further supplies), ready for the coup de grâce the following year.

Together with the successful Williamite siege of Athlone in June – July, and Ginkell’s victory over the Jacobite forces at Aughrim on 22 July (12 July O.S) 1691, James’ aspirations in Ireland were all but over.[65] Limerick was besieged for a second time on 4 September leading to the Treaty of Limerick. The treaty, signed by Ginkell and the Irish commander, Patrick Sarsfield on 13 October (3 October O.S) 1691, finally ended Louis’ Irish diversion and James’ hopes, for now at least, of regaining his kingdom.

[edit] Continental Europe continued (1691–97)

Revenue: In 1692 and 1693 there were massive harvest failures leading to acute famine and epidemics in France; from 1693 to 1694 over 2 million people died.[66] The burden of financing the war fell upon this depleted economic base inducing finance raising measures including taxing every conceivable commodity and transaction, and in 1695, creating a poll tax from which even the nobility were not exempt.[66] England had often played a minor role in foreign affairs due to its relative lack of money, but the continental policy of William forced a reorganisation of its credit and finances.[67] Parliament created a permanent, funded national debt that paid annual interest to private financiers. The Bank of England (Influenced by the Dutch National Bank) was established to manage the debt which by 1698 had reached £17m.[68] Because the war was so expensive and increasingly unpopular, Parliament demanded greater control over the expenditures, allowing it an increased influence in military and foreign policy.[68] The English called this overlapping of Parliament and crown ‘King-in-Parliament’. In stark contrast to France, England had built a fiscal-military state without submitting to absolutist monarchy.[68]

The pacification of Ireland had released thousands of troops for William’s war on the continent but Louis also benefited from 12,000 Irish troops (the so-called Wild Geese) ceded to him under the terms of the Treaty of Limerick. William had returned to the Spanish Netherlands in early 1691, but despite the death of Louis’ talented War Minister, Louvois, the campaign in the Spanish Netherlands was a military failure for the Allies.[69] Marshal Boufflers took Mons on 10 April followed by Marshal Luxembourg’s victory against Prince Waldeck at Leuze on 19 September. This success was followed in 1692 at Namur (which capitulated on 2526 May) – by the middle of the year the French were ready for an invasion of England.

At Saint-Germain the court of the exiled King James had for two years insisted with the French War Office that England was ready for a restoration.[70] For this purpose, an army 20,000 troops assembled around Cherbourg, while the French fleet concentrated in the Norman and Breton ports. Reminiscent of 1588 and the threat from the Spanish Armada all England was alerted and its defences prepared to resist the invasion. But the coming battle for the control of the channel would be a very uneven struggle; Tourville’s fleet of 44 vessels were soon scattered by Admirals Russell’s and Rooke’s fleet of 99 rated ships, eventually cornering, and destroying 12 French vessels in anchorage at La Hogue.[71] The battle not only ended serious French invasion plans but now, starved of funds, it also spelt the end of France’s Atlantic navy.[72]

Other fronts were less active; operations along the Moselle and Rhine had declined since the initial clashes of 1688/89. The German forces outnumbered Marshal de Lorge’s French forces (who throughout 1692 had continued their modest campaign of ravaging and raiding in the area), but although by 1693 Marshal de Lorge’s army totaled 45,000 men (enabling them to capture Heidelberg on 2122 May), no decisive campaign in the east was forthcoming.[73] Meanwhile, in the Spanish Netherlands, despite Louis falling ill and having to retire to Versailles (never again to take to the battlefield with his army), Marshal Luxembourg defeated William’s army at the bloody Battle of Landen. The battle though, had little effect beyond attrition; despite suffering enormous casualties, William was able to maintain himself in the field.[74]

Naval developments: (Image: The Battle of Barfleur by Richard Paton.)
Louis’ naval minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert, greatly expanded France’s navy, but although France could handle a naval war with the Dutch Republic, it was overwhelmed with the combined English and Dutch fleets.[29] By 1688 the Dutch navy numbered 102 warships (69 ships of the line), the English 173 (including 100 ships of the line), and the French 221 (including 93 ships of the line).[75] However, as the English navy grew from 173 ships with 6,930 guns and a total displacement of 102,000 tons in 1688 to 323 ships with 9,912 guns and a total displacement of 160,000 tons by the end of the century,[76] the French navy rapidly declined in favour of the army.[77] Because of financial pressures, the French turned from fleet warfare, guerre d’escadre, to commerce raiding, guerre de course as epitomised by Jean Bart, the French sailor who terrorised the English coast during the war. These privateers (privately financed commerce raiders) carried letters of marque that officially recognised them as fighting in the name of the king - distinguishing them from common pirates - causing serious damage to the commerce of England and the Dutch Republic. 5,700 enemy vessels were taken in the course of the war, but this policy produced no great victories that Louis relished in his pursuit of gloire.[78]

Famine had exhausted the protagonists in 1694 and the year saw no great battles or sieges. Although William was able to take the small fortress of Huy in September, neither side wanted a repetition of the bloodbath at Landen.[79] At sea, the Anglo-Dutch fleets were sent to help the Allied war effort in Italy and Spain. With the French fleet largely confined to port the rapidly increasing Royal Navy had gained the upper hand, forcing a strategic re-think in France – the French navy switched from fleet warfare to privateering against Anglo-Dutch shipping. This caused serious damage to the commerce of the maritime powers, and together with the Anglo-Dutch fleets enforcing the blockade, the Allies were unable to use their navies in an offensive way against either Europe or French possessions overseas; Louis could only be defeated on the Continent.[72]

In January 1695, Louis’ undefeated commander Marshal Luxembourg died; with his passing, Marshal Villeroi became French commander in the Spanish Netherlands. Because Villeroi’s talents fell short of Luxembourg’s, the defensive nature of the war was further emphasised. However, the Allies achieved the last great victory of the War of the Grand Alliance in the Spanish Netherlands – the retaking of Namur. Coehoorn, in a role reversal of 1692, led the attack on the town which finally capitulated on 5 September.

Elsewhere, in northern Italy, the French forces commanded by Marshal Catinat had earlier defeated Victor Amadeus, the Duke of Savoy at the Battle of Staffarda on 18 August 1690. The following year Catinat took Nice between 24 March and 2 April and, while campaigning along the Po, he also captured Carmagnola just south of Turin. However, after Savoy was reinforced with imperial forces, raising their number to 45,000, Catinat was forced to pull back, losing Carmagnola in October. Despite a large numerical disadvantage throughout 1692 the French commander was able to hold on to Susa and Pinerolo and, in the following year (after French reinforcements were sent to aid Catinat), he defeated Amadeus at the Battle of Marsaglia on 4 October.[80] Throughout 1694 the theatre was relatively quiet, but although Amadeus had been badly bruised by the French, by 1695 both he and Louis were keen to cut a deal.

In 1696, Victor Amadeus and Louis concluded peace by signing the Treaty of Turin on 29 August. The Duke of Savoy was the first major partner to abandon the Allied coalition but Louis had agreed to substantial concessions; he surrendered Nice and the fortress of Pinerolo to Savoy and abandoned the fortress of Casale. However, the peace undermined the Spanish and Austrian troops who had been sent to aid Victor Amadeus, and furthermore, opened Spanish Milan to possible French invasion. The two powers therefore made an armistice with France in northern Italy, which, to William’s consternation, allowed Louis to transfer 30,000 men to the hard-pressed fronts in the Spanish Netherlands.[81]

 Unlike the fighting elsewhere, Savoy witnessed battles of manoeuvre. The French commander, Catinat, was unusual amongst other commanders in that he did not hail from the upper reaches of the aristocracy.
Unlike the fighting elsewhere, Savoy witnessed battles of manoeuvre. The French commander, Catinat, was unusual amongst other commanders in that he did not hail from the upper reaches of the aristocracy.[82]

Throughout 1696 and 1697 the main theatre of the war saw little action. Villeroi in Flanders and Boufflers on the Meuse commanded a total of 125,000 men against which William III, the Prince of Baden and the Landgrave of Hesse could muster a similar number. At the start of the campaign season in 1697 the French took Ath on 5 June and the Prince of Baden was able to take Ebernberg in September just before the end of the war. Behind the scenes however, William’s and Louis’ representatives were bargaining hard for peace.[83] The Dutch Republic, England and France alike, were facing economic and financial exhaustion.[84]

The only decisive theatre on the continent was in Spain. The Spanish could offer nothing more than token resistance and the Allies were unable to provide enough support.[85] However, the war in Spain was a sideshow for Louis. The theatre was dominated by amphibious warfare where naval assistance was necessary to seize coastal towns, of which Barcelona was the greatest prize.[86] The French forces, commanded by Duke de Noailles, numbered 12,000 in 1690 dropping to 10,000 in 1691; only in 1694 when other fronts were relatively quiet did the Spanish front grow in importance, (but even then Louis invested only 26,000 troops). After Rosas fell in 1693, the French drove deeper into Catalonia, defeating the Spanish at the Battle of Torroella (Ter) on 27 May 1694 and taking Palamos on 10 June; Gerona fell on 29 June. The arrival in August of an Allied fleet under Admiral Russell forestalled an intended French siege of Barcelona in 1694/95. However, after the Allied fleet departed from Cadiz and sailed north in 1696, Vendôme, with the assistance of French fleet under Victor-Marie d'Estrées, took Barcelona in 1697, the final major action of the war.

[edit] North America (1689–97)

Main article: King William's War

The European war was reflected in North America – albeit very different in meaning and scale. Notwithstanding a formal agreement between France and England to preserve peace, French policy in North America and the West Indies (the crown jewels of the English empire) had been aggressive towards the English colonies.[87] Actions by Louis include the invasion of English West Indies, in particular the divided island (half French, half English) of St Kitts; in the west down the Mississippi; in the north-east from Acadia into Maine, and in the north among the Indian tribes between Canada, New York and New England.[88] Moreover Hudson Bay was a focal point of dispute between the Protestant English and Catholic French colonists, both of whom claiming a share of its occupation and trade. It was with this background that in April 1689 William informed his colonists of his intention to declare war on France.

19th century print showing Quebec batteries firing on Phip’s ships during October 1690.
19th century print showing Quebec batteries firing on Phip’s ships during October 1690.

Although important to the colonists of England and France, the North American theatre of the War of the Grand Alliance, commonly called King William's War, was somewhat of a sideshow to European statesmen. Despite numerical superiority the English colonists suffered repeated defeats as New France effectively organised its French troops, Canadian militia and Indian allies to attack frontier settlements.[89]

The conflict began in 1689 with a series of Indian massacres (the first of which was the destruction of Dover, New Hampshire) instigated by the governor of Canada, Louis de Buade de Frontenac. This was followed in August by Pemaquid, Maine, and in February 1690, the town of Schenectady on the Mohawk; massacres at Casco, and Salmon Falls shortly followed.[90] In response, on 1 May 1690 at the Albany Conference, colonial representatives elected to invade Canada. In August a land force commanded by Colonel Winthrop set off for Montreal, and a naval force, commanded by Sir William Phips (who earlier on 11 May had seized the capital of French Acadia, Port Royal), set sail for Quebec via the Saint Lawrence River. Both the expeditions against Quebec and St Lawrence were humiliating and financial disasters, and, to compound the failures, the French were able to retake Port Royal. Phips sailed for England to request support, but William, whose navy was busy in the English Channel and whose troops were required in Ireland and the Spanish Netherlands, could provide little help for his distant colony; the colonists were left largely to defend themselves.[91]

The Quebec expedition was the last major offensive of King William’s War; for the remainder of the war the English colonists were reduced to defensive operations and skirmishes. However, the Iroquois Five Nations suffered from the ineptitude of their English allies.[92] In 1693 and 1696, the French and their Indian allies ravaged Iroquois towns and destroyed crops while New York colonists remained passive. After the English and French made peace with the signing of the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697, the Iroquois, now abandoned by the English colonists, remained at war with New France until 1701.[93]

[edit] Aftermath

Map of European borders as they stood after the Treaty of Ryswick and just previous to King Louis XIV's last great war, the War of the Spanish Succession in 1701.
Map of European borders as they stood after the Treaty of Ryswick and just previous to King Louis XIV's last great war, the War of the Spanish Succession in 1701.

There was considerable pressure from politicians in both England and the Dutch Republic for peace. Commerce in both countries was suffering, and the continual disruption of trade was now undermining their resolve to continue the war – the financial and economic exhaustion felt by the maritime powers was also being felt by France.[94] By the end of the 1696 campaigning season, both William III and Louis XIV were determined on peace. Louis’ aggressive stance had become increasingly moderate, but above all, he felt it essential to break up the Allied coalition before the infirm Charles II of Spain died – France would have far less chance of gaining the Spanish succession if it was still at war with Spain and if Austria’s allies were still committed to support Leopold’s claims.[95]

A peace congress opened in May 1697 at William's palace in Ryswick (now the town of Rijswijk) near The Hague. The Swedes were the official mediators but in fact it was Williams' advisor William Bentinck, Earl of Portland, and Louis' general, Marshal Boufflers, who found it easier to come to a settlement in private. William himself had no intention of continuing the war or for pressing Leopold’s claims in the Rhineland or Spanish succession – to him it was more important for the security of England and the Dutch Republic to obtain Louis’ recognition of the 1688 revolution.[96] Therefore, on 20 September 1697, France, the Dutch Republic, England and Spain signed the Treaty of Ryswick. Emperor Leopold though, desperate for a continuation of the war so as to strengthen his own claims to the Spanish succession, was reluctant to seek peace with Louis. However, because he was still at war with the Turks, and could not face fighting France alone, Leopold also sought terms and signed the treaty on 30 October.[97]

By the peace terms the French retained the whole of Alsace and Strasbourg, but Louis returned Luxembourg to Spain and other areas seized under the reunions claims in the Spanish Netherlands. As well as returning territory captured during the war along the Rhine, Lorraine was also handed back to its duke, though France retained enough of it to ensure effective military control. Louis also evacuated Catalonia (to curry favour with Madrid regarding the question of the Spanish succession) and gave way regarding the Palatinate and Cologne issues.[98] In North America, territorial gains made by the protagonists in the English and French colonies were returned to the original holders, establishing the status quo ante bellum. However in the Caribbean, Spain formally ceded Saint-Domingue to France.[99]

Neither Leopold nor the German princes had achieved their aim of pushing France back to the Westphalian borders, but Louis’ more extensive ambitions in the Rhineland had been curtailed. Austria would also gain influence after their peace with the Turks in 1699 – under the Treaty of Karlowitz the Emperor gained all of Hungary and Transylvania.[100] Although Louis continued to shelter James II, he now recognised William as King of Protestant England – Jacobitism had been suppressed and Scotland and Ireland were now firmly under direct control. French naval power had also been destroyed, paving the way for English naval supremacy in the following century – Britain had emerged as a European power in her own right.[101]

Both the French and the Grand Alliance considered the agreements regarding France’s borders, as stipulated in the treaty, as little more than interim ones – the disputes over who would succeed the infirm Charles II had yet to be resolved. Within four years, both James II and William III would be dead, and Louis XIV and the Grand Alliance would plunge into an even more ferocious struggle – the War of the Spanish Succession.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ All dates in the article are New Style (unless otherwise stated). The Old Style calendar as used in England differed by ten days. Thus, the Battle of the Boyne is 11 July N.S or 1 July O.S.
  2. ^ Bromley, The Cambridge Modern History VI, p.224
  3. ^ Includes Scottish, Welsh and Irish troops. The term Great Britain was used only after the Act of Union 1707
  4. ^ Parker et al: The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare, p.128. This number includes both the maritime powers of England and the Dutch republic. Of the figure England had 100 ships of the line, and the Dutch, 69 ships of the line.
  5. ^ Dupuy: The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History 4th ed. p.580. This figure is its peak in 1693. However, this was only a paper figure; the actual wartime strength was a bit over 350,000.
  6. ^ Parker et al: The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare, p.128. This number includes 93 ships of the line.
  7. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.35
  8. ^ Carsten: The Cambridge Modern History V, p.210
  9. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.22
  10. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.25
  11. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.35
  12. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.33
  13. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.34
  14. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.34. William became stadtholder and captain general for life in 1672
  15. ^ a b c d Lynn: The French wars 1667 – 1714: The Sun King at War, p.48. The word of the Franco-Dutch peace did not reach the armies in the field, leading to the unnecessary Battle of St Denis on 14 August.
  16. ^ Doyle: Short Oxford History of France – Old Regime France, p181. Although Nijmegen was a triumph for Louis, peace disappointed him and he had dismissed Pomponne, the minister who had negotiated it.
  17. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.35
  18. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.36
  19. ^ Doyle: Short Oxford History of France – Old Regime France, p.182
  20. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.37
  21. ^ a b Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.28
  22. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.39. States 200,000
  23. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.29
  24. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.42
  25. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.38. Louis thought that the support of the German states was so strong that if Leopold died, they may even support a French candidate as emperor.
  26. ^ a b McKay &Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.38
  27. ^ a b c McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.39
  28. ^ Doyle: Short Oxford History of France – Old Regime France, p.183
  29. ^ a b c d e Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.32
  30. ^ a b Miller: James II, p.143
  31. ^ Miller: James II, p.145. As early as July 1685 he had suspected the Huguenots had been mixed up in Monmouth’s (Protestant) rebellion.
  32. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.40. The Elector’s son Frederick, proved to be William’s most loyal ally against the French.
  33. ^ a b c McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.41
  34. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.42
  35. ^ a b Miller: James II, p.189
  36. ^ Miller: James II, p.191
  37. ^ Parker: The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare, p.114
  38. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.56
  39. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.81
  40. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.44
  41. ^ a b Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.50
  42. ^ Miller: James II, p.156
  43. ^ a b McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.44
  44. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, p.30
  45. ^ Miller: James II, p.209
  46. ^ a b c McKay & Scott p.47: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815
  47. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.45
  48. ^ Dupuy: The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History 4th ed. p.572
  49. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.31
  50. ^ Dupuy: The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History 4th ed. p.572. The socket bayonet was possibly invented by Vauban.
  51. ^ a b Parker: The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare, p.167
  52. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.49
  53. ^ McNally: Battle of the Boyne 1690, p.13
  54. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, p.34
  55. ^ Kinross: The Boyne and Aughrim: The War of the Two Kings, p.17
  56. ^ a b Miller: James II, p.228
  57. ^ Kinross: The Boyne and Aughrim: The War of the Two Kings, p.14
  58. ^ Kinross: The Boyne and Aughrim: The War of the Two Kings, p.23. Six thousand Irish troops were sent to Europe in exchange.
  59. ^ Kilpatrick: William of Orange: A dedicated Life 1650-1702, p.57. The strength of the Williamite army varies from 35,000 to 44,000, depending on the source.
  60. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.50
  61. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, p.35
  62. ^ Kilpatrick: William of Orange: A dedicated Life 1650-1702, p.64
  63. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, p.37
  64. ^ Kinross: The Boyne and Aughrim: The War of the Two Kings, p.74
  65. ^ Dupuy: The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History 4th ed. p.613
  66. ^ a b Doyle: Short Oxford History of France – Old Regime France, p.184
  67. ^ Churchill: A History of the English-Speaking Peoples: Age of Revolution, p.16
  68. ^ a b c Taylor: American Colonies: The Settling of North America, p.289
  69. ^ Chandler: Marlborough as Military Commander, p.43
  70. ^ Churchill: A History of the English-Speaking Peoples: Age of Revolution, p.13
  71. ^ Lynn: The Wars of Louis XIV, p.230
  72. ^ a b Mackay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.48
  73. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.57
  74. ^ Churchill: A History of the English-Speaking Peoples: Age of Revolution, p.16. Churchill states the battle was unmatched in its slaughter except for Malplaquet or Borodino for over 200 years.
  75. ^ Parker: The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare, p.128
  76. ^ Parker: The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare, p.128
  77. ^ Lynn : The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.33
  78. ^ Doyle: Short Oxford History of France – Old Regime France, p.185
  79. ^ Kilpatrick: William of Orange: A dedicated Life 1650-1702, p.73
  80. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.60
  81. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.51
  82. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.60
  83. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.60
  84. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.51
  85. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.49
  86. ^ Lynn: The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War, p.57
  87. ^ Guttridge: The Colonial Policy of William III in America and the West Indies, p.45
  88. ^ Guttridge: The Colonial Policy of William III in America and the West Indies, p.45
  89. ^ Taylor: American Colonies: The Settling of North America, p.290
  90. ^ Elson: History of the United States of America, p.163
  91. ^ Taylor: American Colonies: The Settling of North America, p.290
  92. ^ Taylor: American Colonies: The Settling of North America, p.290
  93. ^ Taylor: American Colonies: The Settling of North America, p.291
  94. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.51
  95. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.51
  96. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.52
  97. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.52
  98. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.52
  99. ^ Parker: Times Atlas of World History, p.156
  100. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.76
  101. ^ McKay & Scott: The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815, p.53

[edit] References

  • Carsten, F.L. (editor) The New Cambridge Modern History V: The Ascendancy of France 1648-88. Cambridge University Press, (1961).
  • Chandler, David G. Marlborough as Military Commander. Spellmount Ltd, (2003). ISBN 1-86227-195-X
  • Churchill, Winston. A History of the English-Speaking Peoples: Age of Revolution. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, (2002). ISBN 0-304-36393-6
  • Bromley, J.S. (editor) The New Cambridge Modern History VI: The Rise of Great Britain and Russia 1668-1715. Cambridge University Press, (1970). ISBN 0-521-07524-6
  • Doyle, William. Short Oxford History of France – Old Regime France. Oxford University Press, (2001). ISBN 0-19-873129-9
  • Dupuy, R. E & Dupuy, T. N. The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History 4th ed. HarperCollins Publishers, (1995). ISBN 0-06-270056-1.
  • Elson, Henry William. History of the United States of America. The MacMillan Company (1904) [1]. Retrieved on 24 September 2006.
  • Guttridge, G. H. The Colonial Policy of William III in America and the West Indies. Cambridge University Press, (1922) [2]. Retrieved on 24 September 2006.
  • Kilpatrick, Cecil. William of Orange: A dedicated Life 1650-1702. GOLI Publications, (1998). ISBN 0-9501444-7-9
  • Kinross, John. The Boyne and Aughrim: The War of the Two Kings. The Windrush Press, (1998). ISBN 1-900624-07-9
  • Lynn, John A. The French wars 1667–1714: The Sun King at War. Osprey Publishing, (2002). ISBN 1-84176-361-6
  • Lynn, John A. The Wars of Louis XIV, 1667–1714. Longman, (1999). ISBN 0-582-05629-2
  • McKay, Derek & Scott, H. M. The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815. Longman, (1984). ISBN 0-582-48554-1
  • McNally, Michael. Battle of the Boyne 1690. Osprey Publishing, (2005). ISBN 1-84176-891-X
  • Miller, John. James II. Yale University Press, (2000). ISBN 0-300-08728-4
  • Taylor, Alan. American Colonies: The Settling of North America. Penguin Books, (2002). ISBN 0-14-200210-0
  • Parker, Geoffrey (editor). The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare. Cambridge University Press, (1995). ISBN 0-521-79431-5
  • Parker, Geoffrey (editor). The Times Atlas of World History. Times Books Limited, (1994)

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aa - ab - af - ak - als - am - an - ang - ar - arc - as - ast - av - ay - az - ba - bar - bat_smg - bcl - be - be_x_old - bg - bh - bi - bm - bn - bo - bpy - br - bs - bug - bxr - ca - cbk_zam - cdo - ce - ceb - ch - cho - chr - chy - co - cr - crh - cs - csb - cu - cv - cy - da - de - diq - dsb - dv - dz - ee - el - eml - en - eo - es - et - eu - ext - fa - ff - fi - fiu_vro - fj - fo - fr - frp - fur - fy - ga - gan - gd - gl - glk - gn - got - gu - gv - ha - hak - haw - he - hi - hif - ho - hr - hsb - ht - hu - hy - hz - ia - id - ie - ig - ii - ik - ilo - io - is - it - iu - ja - jbo - jv - ka - kaa - kab - kg - ki - kj - kk - kl - km - kn - ko - kr - ks - ksh - ku - kv - kw - ky - la - lad - lb - lbe - lg - li - lij - lmo - ln - lo - lt - lv - map_bms - mdf - mg - mh - mi - mk - ml - mn - mo - mr - mt - mus - my - myv - mzn - na - nah - nap - nds - nds_nl - ne - new - ng - nl - nn - no - nov - nrm - nv - ny - oc - om - or - os - pa - pag - pam - pap - pdc - pi - pih - pl - pms - ps - pt - qu - quality - rm - rmy - rn - ro - roa_rup - roa_tara - ru - rw - sa - sah - sc - scn - sco - sd - se - sg - sh - si - simple - sk - sl - sm - sn - so - sr - srn - ss - st - stq - su - sv - sw - szl - ta - te - tet - tg - th - ti - tk - tl - tlh - tn - to - tpi - tr - ts - tt - tum - tw - ty - udm - ug - uk - ur - uz - ve - vec - vi - vls - vo - wa - war - wo - wuu - xal - xh - yi - yo - za - zea - zh - zh_classical - zh_min_nan - zh_yue - zu -

Static Wikipedia 2006 (no images)

aa - ab - af - ak - als - am - an - ang - ar - arc - as - ast - av - ay - az - ba - bar - bat_smg - bcl - be - be_x_old - bg - bh - bi - bm - bn - bo - bpy - br - bs - bug - bxr - ca - cbk_zam - cdo - ce - ceb - ch - cho - chr - chy - co - cr - crh - cs - csb - cu - cv - cy - da - de - diq - dsb - dv - dz - ee - el - eml - eo - es - et - eu - ext - fa - ff - fi - fiu_vro - fj - fo - fr - frp - fur - fy - ga - gan - gd - gl - glk - gn - got - gu - gv - ha - hak - haw - he - hi - hif - ho - hr - hsb - ht - hu - hy - hz - ia - id - ie - ig - ii - ik - ilo - io - is - it - iu - ja - jbo - jv - ka - kaa - kab - kg - ki - kj - kk - kl - km - kn - ko - kr - ks - ksh - ku - kv - kw - ky - la - lad - lb - lbe - lg - li - lij - lmo - ln - lo - lt - lv - map_bms - mdf - mg - mh - mi - mk - ml - mn - mo - mr - mt - mus - my - myv - mzn - na - nah - nap - nds - nds_nl - ne - new - ng - nl - nn - no - nov - nrm - nv - ny - oc - om - or - os - pa - pag - pam - pap - pdc - pi - pih - pl - pms - ps - pt - qu - quality - rm - rmy - rn - ro - roa_rup - roa_tara - ru - rw - sa - sah - sc - scn - sco - sd - se - sg - sh - si - simple - sk - sl - sm - sn - so - sr - srn - ss - st - stq - su - sv - sw - szl - ta - te - tet - tg - th - ti - tk - tl - tlh - tn - to - tpi - tr - ts - tt - tum - tw - ty - udm - ug - uk - ur - uz - ve - vec - vi - vls - vo - wa - war - wo - wuu - xal - xh - yi - yo - za - zea - zh - zh_classical - zh_min_nan - zh_yue - zu

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aa - ab - af - ak - als - am - an - ang - ar - arc - as - ast - av - ay - az - ba - bar - bat_smg - bcl - be - be_x_old - bg - bh - bi - bm - bn - bo - bpy - br - bs - bug - bxr - ca - cbk_zam - cdo - ce - ceb - ch - cho - chr - chy - co - cr - crh - cs - csb - cu - cv - cy - da - de - diq - dsb - dv - dz - ee - el - eml - en - eo - es - et - eu - ext - fa - ff - fi - fiu_vro - fj - fo - fr - frp - fur - fy - ga - gan - gd - gl - glk - gn - got - gu - gv - ha - hak - haw - he - hi - hif - ho - hr - hsb - ht - hu - hy - hz - ia - id - ie - ig - ii - ik - ilo - io - is - it - iu - ja - jbo - jv - ka - kaa - kab - kg - ki - kj - kk - kl - km - kn - ko - kr - ks - ksh - ku - kv - kw - ky - la - lad - lb - lbe - lg - li - lij - lmo - ln - lo - lt - lv - map_bms - mdf - mg - mh - mi - mk - ml - mn - mo - mr - mt - mus - my - myv - mzn - na - nah - nap - nds - nds_nl - ne - new - ng - nl - nn - no - nov - nrm - nv - ny - oc - om - or - os - pa - pag - pam - pap - pdc - pi - pih - pl - pms - ps - pt - qu - quality - rm - rmy - rn - ro - roa_rup - roa_tara - ru - rw - sa - sah - sc - scn - sco - sd - se - sg - sh - si - simple - sk - sl - sm - sn - so - sr - srn - ss - st - stq - su - sv - sw - szl - ta - te - tet - tg - th - ti - tk - tl - tlh - tn - to - tpi - tr - ts - tt - tum - tw - ty - udm - ug - uk - ur - uz - ve - vec - vi - vls - vo - wa - war - wo - wuu - xal - xh - yi - yo - za - zea - zh - zh_classical - zh_min_nan - zh_yue - zu