Battle of the Channel

1605 naval battle
Battle of the Channel (1605)
Part of the Eighty Years War
DateJuly 1605
Location
English Channel
Result Dutch victory
Belligerents
 Spain  Dutch Republic
Commanders and leaders
Pedro de Zubiaur  (DOW) Willem de Zoete
Strength
12 galleons
2 frigates
80 ships
Casualties and losses
2 galleons sunk
400 dead
Several ships sunk
  • v
  • t
  • e
Eighty Years' War
OriginsList of battles

1566–1572

Western Europe

  • Beeldenstorm
  • Valenciennes
  • Wattrelos
  • Lannoy
  • Oosterweel
  • Dahlen
  • Heiligerlee
  • Jemmingen
  • Jodoigne
  • Le Quesnoy

1572–1576

Western Europe

European waters

1576–1579

Western Europe


1579–1588

Western Europe

European waters

Ten Years, 1588–1598

Western Europe

  • 1st Bergen op Zoom
  • 2nd Geertruidenberg
  • 2nd Breda
  • 2nd Zutphen
  • 2nd Deventer
  • Delfzijl
  • Knodsenburg
  • 1st Hulst
  • Nijmegen
  • Rouen
  • Caudebec
  • 2nd Steenwijk
  • 1st Coevorden
  • 1st Luxemburg
  • 3rd Geertruidenberg
  • 2nd Coevorden
  • Groningen
  • 2nd Luxemburg
  • Huy
  • 1st Groenlo
  • Lippe
  • 2nd Lier
  • Calais
  • 2nd Hulst
  • Turnhout
  • 2nd Rheinberg
  • 1st Meurs
  • 2nd Groenlo
  • Bredevoort
  • Enschede
  • Ootmarsum
  • 1st Oldenzaal
  • 1st Lingen
European waters
  • 1st English Channel · Flanders
  • Bayona Islands
  • Gulf of Almería
  • 1st Cádiz
  • Azores

1599–1609

Western Europe

European waters
  • Dover Strait
  • 2nd Sluis
  • 2nd English Channel
  • 1st Cape St. Vincent
  • 1st Gibraltar

Twelve Years' Truce, 1609–1621

Western Europe

  • Aachen

East Indies


1621–1648

Western Europe

European waters

Americas

East Indies


PeaceAftermathHistoriography

The Battle of the Channel was a 1605 naval engagement in the English Channel between a Spanish transport fleet captained by Pedro de Zubiaur and the Dutch armada under Willem de Zoete. The Spanish fleet carried a tercio under Pedro de Sarmiento for the Eighty Years' War, which the Dutch attempted to intercept and destroy. Zubiaur managed to break through overwhelming numerical superiority with a few of his ships and take refuge in Dover, England. However, many of the troops he transported were captured by the Dutch or died in England. The battle was the last deployment of Zubiaur, who died in Dover from his wounds, after which the remaining troops reached their destination in Dunkirk in English ships.

Background

On May 24, 1605, Zubiaur sailed off from Lisbon at the head of eight galleons and two frigates, with the mission to carry 2400 tercio soldiers under maestre de campo Pedro de Sarmiento to Dunkirk. On their way through the English Channel, they were intercepted by an enormous 80-ship fleet of Dutch admiral Willem de Zoete. Learning about Willem's presence, four additional Spanish galleons were sent from Dunkirk to link with Zubiaur and arrived in time.[1]

Battle

Witnessing the disproportion of strengths, Zubiaur ordered the Spanish carriers to head for the allied English port of Dover while he performed a diversionary attack with his own flagship and several other ships readied to fight. Zubiaur and his vessels faced the first 18 Dutch ships in battle for more than a day, sinking multiple enemy ships and dismasting others, which allowed them to follow the rest of the fleet to Dover. Willem attempted to give chase, but the local cannons forced him to withdraw. In exchange for the damage inflicted, Zubiaur had lost two galleons and was wounded himself.[1][2]

Aftermath

Zubiaur received medical attention in Dover, but he died of his wounds on August 2, 1605. However, his leadership had been instrumental to save the rest of the fleet. Resuming the travel and crossing the Strait of Dover proved difficult for the rest of the fleet, which was entertained by diplomatic trouble with King James VI and I and the presence of Dutch ships, but after finally wintering in England, they crossed to Dunkirk in December.[3] The troops he had transported who were still alive were carried to Flanders in English ships.[4]

References

  • Blok, P.J.; Molhuysen, P.C. (1912). "Zoete, Willem". Nieuw Nederlandsch biografisch woordenboek. Deel 1.
  • Fernández Duro, Cesáreo (1903). La Armada Española desde la unión de los reinos de Castilla y Aragón. Tipográfico.
  • De la Guardia, Ricardo (1914). Notas para un Cronicón de la Marina Militar de España. Anales de trece siglos de historia de la marina. El Correo Gallego.
  • Colmenares y Orgaz, Aurelio (1946). Epistolario del General Zubiaur (1568-1605). Instituto Histórico de Marina.
  • Van Lennep, Jacob (1880). "17". De geschiedenis van Nederland, aan het Nederlandsche Volk verteld. Deel 2 [The history of the Netherlands, told to the Dutch nation.] (in Dutch). Vol. 2. Leiden: Veertiende hoofdstuk. p. 225. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
  • Rodríguez González, Agustín (2018). Señores del mar. La Esfera de los Libros. ISBN 9788491642572.
  • Rodríguez González, Agustín (2020). Corsarios españoles. EDAF. ISBN 9788441440609.
  • Rodríguez Hernández, Antonio José (2015). Breve historia de los Tercios de Flandes. Nowtilus. ISBN 9788499676586.