The Spanish Armada or "Great/Grand Armada" (Old Spanish: Grande y Felicísima Armada, "large and most fortunate fleet"; but called by the English, with ironic intention, la Armada Invencible, "the Invincible Fleet") refers to the Spanish-controlled fleet which sailed against England in 1588, with the intention of escorting an invading army across the English Channel. The largest fleet up until its time, it was sent by the Catholic King Philip II of Spain in 1588 in a failed attempt to bring an end to the conflict with England and was the largest campaign of the undeclared Anglo-Spanish War. The Spanish fleet, which consisted of more than 130 warships and converted merchant ships, was not entirely defeated by the English Navy but was scattered by an English fire-ship attack in the Battle of Gravelines in the English Channel off the coast of France, and then forced to flee back to Spain by circumnavigating Great Britain and Ireland. The rigours of the weather endured during the long journey home, combined with the dangers of traveling in unfamiliar waters, decimated the fleet.
Three months later a Papal bull was issued against Elizabeth giving special licence to her subjects to take up arms against her, absolving Roman Catholics in advance from their sins in so doing (Damnatio et Ecommunicatio Elizabetae Reginae Angliae, &c. Datum Romae, &c., 1570, 5 cal. Maii, Pontificatus Nostri Anno 5):
Three years later in 1573, 15 years before the Armada set sail, a treaty was signed by the King of Spain and the Pope to invade England and reconvert it to Catholicism. The building of the Armada was commenced in 1584, three years before the execution of Mary Stuart in 1587, following her conviction for conspiracy in the attempted assassination of Elizabeth.
To Philip, the Armada was to be a glorious crusade against the enemies of the faith, to return England to the fold of Catholicism under papal blessing. The Bull had solemnly conferred Elizabeth's kingdom upon Philip II, "to have and to hold as tributary and feudatory to the Papal Chair." The religious antagonism was increased by economic competition in trade with the Spanish Empire in America, and by privateering and piracy.
The matter of England's disruption (along with France) of the annual bullion-run by the Spanish treasure fleet from Peru and Mexico to the port of Seville in Spain was of critical importance to Philip. The Spanish were also vexed by the matter of England's direct interference in the revolt against Spanish rule in the Netherlands. The purpose of the Armada expedition was to put a stop to these matters, whether by invasion of England or by the credible threat of such invasion.
England had, with circumspection, joined the Eighty Years' War on the side of the Dutch Protestant United Provinces, led in revolt against Spain by William I of Orange. Their territory was roughly the modern provinces of Friesland, North and South Holland and Utrecht. A small English force had been sent to The Netherlands in their support and was present at the Battle of Zutphen in 1586.
On 29 July 1587, Pope Sixtus V granted Papal authority to overthrow Elizabeth, who had been declared a heretic by Pope Pius V, and place whomever he chose on the throne of England. Pope Sixtus had promised a contribution of a million gold crowns towards the expenses of the Armada, but when he saw to what end it had come, he refused to pay a single ducat. In vain Phillip urged that the Pope had instigated him to the attempt, that the expedition had been undertaken in the sacred cause of the church, and that the loss ought to be borne mutually. Sixtus would not hear him. He could not be expected, he said, to give a million of money for an Armada which had accomplished nothing, and was now at the bottom of the sea. (Oott. Libt., Titus, B.2. Strype, Annals, vol iii., p.522)
In 1588, in support of the Armada and the hoped for invasion of England, Pope Sixtus V renewed the solemn bull of excommunication against the Queen Elizabeth I, for the regicide of Mary Queen of Scots in 1587 as well as the previously catalogued offences against the Roman Catholic Church. There is some debate among scholars if this bull was published before the invasion and was carried on some of the ships in the Armada, or if it was only to be published after the invasion. Its existence is known, because Elizabeth's spies obtained a copy.Pope Sixtus V's 1588 Bull against Queen Elizabeth in support of the Amarda
At the launch of the Armada "a special mass for the success of the Spanish Armada to crush protestant England" was held, along with a special blessing upon the fleet by the Catholic Hierarchy of Spain:
Alessandro Farnese, the Duke of Parma, was to assemble an invading force in the Netherlands, along the North Sea coast. Parma's only means of transporting troops across the English Channel was a fleet of vulnerable barges. Therefore the Armada was to travel north from Spanish-controlled Lisbon and meet Parma's army in order to protect its passage. Command of the Armada was given to Alonso de Guzman El Bueno, 7th Duke of Medina Sidonia, a soldier with no naval experience. His instructions from Philip were detailed and strict, in contrast to Queen Elizabeth I's policy that her naval commanders be responsible for military decisions.
The Armada invasion plan was flawed from the start in the unworkably precise timing and communication that it demanded between Medina Sidonia and Parma, as well as in the near-absence of deep-water ports accessible to Philip on the north-western European coastline for a fleet of the Armada's size and composition. However, a rendezvous with Parma was feasible if the Armada could maintain position in the English Channel near Parma's scattered barges long enough for him to assemble his soldiers for battle. Many of the dangers were well understood. Heated disputes between the Spanish admiral, Marquis of Santa Cruz of Mudela (who died before he could take charge), and Philip II over organization, delays and details marred preparations.
The English plan was implemented by a new fleet, built by John Hawkins, consisting of light, maneuverable ships equipped with long-range cannon. The English would then execute a "line ahead" or single-file formation, sailing by the enemy, landing broadsides, while remaining beyond the range of answering fire. Unsurprisingly, the Spanish put their faith in the tried and proven method of a combination of a single close-in ship-disabling cannonade with both heavy guns and anti-personnel weapons, followed by a boarding by their experienced marine corps. This dictated heavier ships with traditional, higher castles to rain down fire upon their opponents. It was hoped that by holding a tightly defended formation they could protect themselves and the invasion barges.
As far as they are known, the vessels involved are listed below.
On May 28, 1588, the Armada, with 131 ships and 35,000 men, began to set sail from Lisbon heading for the English Channel. At this time the English fleet was prepared and waiting in Plymouth for news of Spanish movements. It took until May 30 for all ships to leave port, and on the same day Elizabeth's ambassador Dr Valentine Dale met Parma's representatives to begin peace negotiations. It was not until July 17 that the peace negotiations were wholly abandoned.
Over the next week there followed two inconclusive engagements, at Eddystone and Portland, Dorset. However, at the Isle of Wight there was an opportunity for the Armada to create a temporary base in protected waters and wait for word from Parma's army. In a full-on attack, the English fleet broke into four groups with Drake coming in with a large force from the south. At that critical moment Medina-Sidonia sent reinforcements south and forced the Armada back into the open sea in order to avoid sandbanks. This left two Spanish wrecks near the Isle of Wight and, with no safe harbours, forced the Armada to Calais, whether the Spanish army was ready or not.
At the same time, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, was assembling a force of 4,000 soldiers at Tilbury Fort, Essex, to defend the estuary of the River Thames in the event of a Spanish landing. This and other coastal defences were rendered unnecessary, when the English naval battle plan proved effective in preventing the Armada from protecting Parma's invasion barges. In 1587 the Earl of Leicester had been recalled from the Netherlands, where he had been commanding officer of the English forces. Command of the English force remaining there fell to Lord Willoughby. Following the defeat of the Armada, he was given credit for having hindered Parma's efforts to get his invasion force together quickly. How far it was really effective is not clear: the unit is said to have numbered 1,500. It is likely that the English presence had made the independent Dutch more sympathetic to the English cause. However, they were already interested, as they had better information about the approaching armada than Parma did and it was not wholly clear that the fleet was not coming to attack them. The difference in effectiveness between the intelligence and communication systems of the Independent Dutch and the Spanish may have lain in the help and hindrance afforded by the English to the respective parties. Walsingham had already shown that he had recognized the importance of intelligence.
At midnight of July 28, the English set eight pitch- and gunpowder-filled ships alight and sent them downwind among the closely-anchored Spanish vessels. Two were intercepted and towed away but many of the Spanish ships cut their cables in order to escape. Medina Sidonia's and a few other "core" ships were exceptions to this. No ship in the Spanish fleet was actually burnt by the fire ships but the deadly factor of confusion entered the equation. Spanish morale was damaged and, more importantly, the now scattered Spanish ships were now too far to leeward of Calais in the rising south-westerly wind, to recover their position. The lighter English vessels could now engage the scattered ships individually.
The English had learned much of the Armada's strengths and weaknesses during the skirmishes in the English Channel. That done, they had carefully conserved their heavy shot and powder. The English attacked on July 29. Eleven Spanish ships were lost or damaged (though the most seaworthy Atlantic-class vessels escaped largely unscathed), and the Spaniards suffered nearly 2,000 casualties from the battle as well as illness and exposure, before the English fleet ran out of ammunition. The Spaniards' heavy guns were unwieldy and their heavy guns' crews were not trained to re-load during a battle as were the English crews, but after firing once, left the decks for their main job as marines in the rigging. Consequently, given the greater manoeuvrability of the English fleet, it was possible to provoke the Spanish to fire but to stay out of effective range until the heavy shot was loosed before closing and firing repeated and damaging broadsides into the Spanish ships. The English manoeuvrability, too, enabled them to maintain a position to windward so that the heeling Spaniards' hulls were exposed to damage below the water-line. Wrecks of the Spanish ships discovered in Ireland still contain most of their ammunition.
English casualties were much lighter, initially in the low hundreds from the battle itself, but a raging typhus epidemic soon swept throughout the defensive fleet, killing thousands of English sailors. Although the Gravelines engagement itself was largely an indecisive stalemate, it afforded the English defenders some breathing space as Medina-Sidonia, unaware of the scarcity of English ammunition, soon directed the Armada northward, away from the Flemish coast, pursued by the bluffing English fleet with its empty shot lockers. The Armada was unable to re-form to return and was soon too far away to beat back even had it been possible to communicate the order to do so.
In 2002 Dr Colin Martin of the University of St Andrews claimed that many Spanish ships carried cannon shot that was the wrong size for their cannon. The equipment had been gathered from a wide variety of sources in the Spanish Habsburg lands which were world-wide and in Europe, were scattered between the Heel of Italy, southern Portugal and the Ems estuary. The notion of standardization had barely been explored at this stage. However, the Spaniards' main difficulty was that their thinking had been directed towards boarding and hand-to-hand fighting. The English knew this and avoided compliance with such tactics. By the Gravelines stage, they also knew the gunnery implications.
Tilbury was a poor location at which to muster the army, as a difficult river-crossing would have been necessary to prevent the Spanish from capturing London, had they landed in Kent. In the event, Parma did not cross the English Channel, and the troops at Tilbury were disbanded later that month.
The Spanish fleet sailed around Scotland and Ireland into the North Atlantic. The ships were beginning to show wear from the long voyage, and some were kept intact by having their hulls bundled up with cables. Supplies of food and water ran short, and the cavalry horses were driven overboard into the sea. Shortly after reaching the latitude of Ireland, the Armada ran straight into a hurricane - to this day, it remains one of the northernmost on record. The hurricane scattered the fleet and drove some two dozen vessels onto the coast of Ireland.
A new theory suggests that the Spanish fleet failed to account for the effect of the gulf stream. Therefore they were much closer to Ireland than planned and the devastating navigational error was a fact.
This was during the "Little Ice Age" and the Spanish were not aware that conditions were far colder and more difficult than they had expected for their trip around the north of England and Ireland. As a result many more ships and sailors were lost to cold and stormy weather than in combat actions.
Following the storm, it is reckoned that 5,000 men died, whether by drowning and starvation or by execution at the hands of English authority in Ireland. The reports from Ireland abound with strange accounts of brutality and survival, and attest on occasion to the brilliance of Spanish seamanship. Survivors did receive help from the Gaelic Irish, with many escaping to Scotland and beyond.
In the end, 67 ships and around 10,000 men survived. Many of the men were near death from disease, as the conditions were very cramped and most of the ships ran out of food and water. Many more died in Spain, or on hospital ships in Spanish harbours, from diseases contracted during the voyage. It was reported that, when Philip II learned of the result of the expedition, he declared, "I sent my ships to fight against the English, not against the elements".
English losses were minimal and none of their ships were sunk. But after the victory, typhus and dysentery killed many sailors and troops (estimated at 6,000–8,000) as they languished for weeks in readiness for the Armada's return out of the North Sea. Then a demoralising dispute occasioned by the government's fiscal shortfalls left many of the Armada defenders unpaid for months, which was in contrast to the assistance given by the Spanish government to its surviving men.
Although the victory was acclaimed by the English as their greatest since Agincourt, an attempt in the following year to press home their advantage failed, when the English Armada returned to port with little to show for its efforts. But the boost to national pride lasted for years, and Elizabeth's legend persisted and grew well after her death. The repulse of Spanish naval might gave heart to the Protestant cause across Europe. High seas buccaneering against the Spanish persisted, and the supply of troops and munitions from England to Philip II's enemies in the Netherlands and France continued, albeit fitfully and with decreasing success.
Two more fleets sent by the Spanish in 1596 and 1597 were dispersed and forced back by fierce Atlantic storms. Indeed, the 1597 armada was in sight of the English coast and was unopposed. The difficulties encountered in the Normandy landings of France in 1944 show that, with much larger modern ships and across a relatively narrow stretch of water, the weather was always of utmost concern. This highlights the difficulties facing the Armada expeditions with their small, vulnerable ships (about the size of modern tug boats and trawlers) launched from a distant base. Nonetheless the Spanish had learned from the expedition, constantly rebuilding their fleet with English innovations in mind, and managed to secure dominance of the Atlantic while England's navy went into decline.
Fifty years after the Armada expedition, the Dutch, who had been steadily increasing their naval power, broke the back of Spanish dominance at sea (Battle of the Downs), and it was only during the Napoleonic Wars that the British navy finally established its overwhelming mastery, at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805.
England's treasure was wasted in a brutal war in Ireland (the Nine Years' War, 1595-1603), which was fitfully supported by Spain and proved the most expensive military campaign waged by the English for over a hundred years; such was the expense, that Elizabeth's government was drawn to the brink of bankruptcy.
In 1595, a Spanish infantry force of about 400 men landed in Cornwall. They collected supplies, burned a number of towns and even conducted a mass, before setting sail for home, when they evaded a fleet under the command of Sir Walter Raleigh.
England would be on the losing side of most of the remaining battles with Spain, and was plunged into debt with its colonial ambitions frustrated. Spain reached the pinnacle of its military power, both at sea and on land, in the years after the Armada defeat. Its long dominance at sea was only broken by the Dutch at the Battle of the Downs (1639); and the strength of its tercios, the dominant fighting unit in European land campaigns for over a century, was broken by the French at the Battle of Rocroi (1643).
By the end of the long war with England in the Treaty of London of 1604 Spain had achieved some of its aims that had originally been intended by the failed "knockout" blow of the Armada, but England remained true to its protestant revolution and was now free to pursue its commercial interests in North America. The failure of the Armada to win a quick victory against England meant that Philip would not be able to concentrate his forces on recovering the Netherlands, a situation worsened by the war with France a few years later.
Two further wars between England and Spain were waged in the 17th century.
1588 | Battles of England | Battles of the Netherlands | Battles of Spain | Eighty Years' War | Fleets | Naval battles
Armada | Spanische Armada | Grande y Felicísima Armada | Invincible Armada | הארמדה הספרדית | Armada Sepanyol | Armada | 無敵艦隊 | Wielka Armada | Invencível Armada | Voittamaton armada | Spanska armadan | Іспанська Армада | 無敵艦隊
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"Spanish Armada".
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