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词条 Siege of Santo Domingo (1655)
释义

  1. Background

  2. Invasion

  3. Aftermath

  4. British Fleet

  5. Notes

  6. See also

  7. References

  8. Further reading

{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict=Siege of Santo Domingo
|partof=the Anglo-Spanish War (1654–60)
|image=
|caption=
|date=April 23–30, 1655
|place=Santo Domingo, Hispaniola
(present-day Dominican Republic)
|result=Spanish victory{{sfn|Rodger|2004|p=23}}
English forces fail to capture Hispaniola{{sfn|Rodger|2004|p=23}}
|combatant1={{flagicon|Spain|1506}} Spanish Empire
|combatant2={{flag|Commonwealth of England}}
|commander1={{flagicon|Spain|1506}} Bernardino de Meneses
|commander2={{flagicon|Commonwealth of England}} William Penn
{{flagicon|Commonwealth of England}} Robert Venables
|strength1= 2,400 soldiers:
  • 1,300 lancers
  • 700 regular soldiers
  • 200 marines
  • 200 militias

|strength2=13,120 soldiers:
  • 7,000 marines
  • 6,000 infantry
  • 120 cavalry

34 ships


|casualties1=30 dead{{sfn|Marley|1998|p=149}}
|casualties2=~600 dead{{sfn|Marley|1998|p=149}}
|campaignbox={{Campaignbox Anglo-Spanish War (1654-1667)}}{{Spanish colonial campaigns}}
}}

The Siege of Santo Domingo was fought between April{{nbs}}23, 1655 and April{{nbs}}30, 1655, at the Spanish Colony of Santo Domingo. A force of 2,400 Spanish troops led by Governor Don Bernardino Meneses y Bracamonte, Count of Peñalba successfully resisted a force of 13,120 soldiers led by General Robert Venables and 34 ships under Admiral Sir William Penn

of the English Commonwealth.

Background

In 1655 the Commonwealth of England, under Oliver Cromwell, decided to declare war on Spain. Religious fanaticism played a role in this, as the puritans running the Commonwealth loathed the Catholicism of Spain. More practically, England had a large standing army with ambitious commanders and Cromwell wished to occupy them with a successful campaign, preferably far from home. In addition it was believed that war with Spain would be both easy and profitable.{{sfn|Rodger|2004|p=22}}

Command of an expedition to the Caribbean to capture Spanish colonies named the "Western Design" was given to General Robert Venables, with Admiral Sir William Penn commanding the naval contingent of 34 ships. Their authority was constrained by two Civil Commissioners whom Cromwell has tasked with ensuring the loyalty of both Venables and Penn. The 13,000 troops sent to the Caribbean were selected for the mission based on which would be least missed due to perceived practical or political weakness. Administrative and financial problems meant that the expedition sailed short of equipment and supplies. It was hoped that the English might take possession of Santo Domingo, Cuba and Puerto Rico.{{sfn|Rodger|2004|pp=22–3}}

Invasion

High winds and surf made it difficult for the English to land near their first objective, the city of Santo Domingo. They eventually landed on April{{nbs}}13, 1655. However, the 13,000 Englishmen were put ashore at the mouth of the Nizao River, some thirty miles from the city.{{sfn|Plant|2010}} It took them four days, short of water, food and military supplies, to make their way to within sight of the city. They were then ambushed and routed by 2–300 local militia. Spanish records assert that some 1,500 British soldiers were killed, wounded and or taken prisoner. The English fleet carried out an ineffectual attempt to bombard the city into submission, then sailed off to re-embark the army's survivors.{{sfn|Rodger|2004|p=23}}

Aftermath

The British naval historian N.A.M. Rodger notes that "in one afternoon the invincible reputation of the New Model Army had been thrown away".{{sfn|Rodger|2004|p=23}} The English left Santo Domingo and sailed for Jamaica, which they successfully conquered in a six day campaign.{{sfn|Lajara Sola|2016}}

Venables and Penn were disgraced and imprisoned in the Tower of London.{{sfn|Rodger|2004|p=24}} Historian C.H. Firth opined that the main cause of the failure at Hispaniola was the lack of co-operation on the part of Venables and Penn. Venables never obtained the confidence either of his officers or his soldiers.{{sfn|Venables|Firth|1900|p=205}} Samuel Pepys, Clerk of the Acts to the Navy Board, considered Admiral Penn a "false knave".[1] Historian John Morrill wrote "[Venables] was over-promoted and under-supported in a high-profile fiasco in the Caribbean that cost him his reputation." His army was composed of inferior and undisciplined troops hastily assembled and badly equipped.{{sfn|Morrill|2004}}

Due to the valor of the governor, Don Bernardino de Meneses y Bracamonte, Count of Peñalva, the site of the battle was named in his honor: Puerta del Conde, the Count's Gate. One anecdote of the invasion is that the English were terrified by the nocturnal noise of the crabs on the beach of Haina; in honour of the victory the Spaniards created a commemorative gold crab, which they paraded down the streets of Santo Domingo in triumph. The gold crab has not survived; it was stolen by General Joseph de Barquier, the last French governor on the island.[2]

British Fleet

Marley|1998|p=148}}
Ship Name Ship Type Guns Crew Captain
Swiftsure (flag) Warship 60 380 Jonas Poole
Paragon (vice-flag) Warship 54 330 William Goodson
Torrington (rear-admiral) Warship 54 330 George Dakins
Gloucester Warship 54 330 Benjamin Blake
Marston Moor Warship 54 330 Edward Blagg
Indian Warship 44 210 Captain Terry
Lion Warship 44 260 John Lumbert
Mathias Warship 44 230 John White
Dover Warship 40 190 Robert Saunders
Laurel Warship 40 190 William Crispin
Portland Warship 40 190 Richard Newberry
Bear Warship 36 180 Francis Kirby
Great Charity Warship 36 150 Leonard Harris
Selby Warship 24 ? John Clark
Grantham Warship 24 ? John Lightfoot
Martin Warship (galley) 12 60 Willam Vessey
Convertine Transport 30 ? John Hayward
Heart's Ease Transport 30 ? Thomas Wright
Katherine Transport 30 ? Willoughby Hannam
Half-Moon Transport 28 ? Bartholomew Ketcher
Rosebush Transport 28 ? Richard Hodges
Golden Cock Transport 25 ? William Garrat
Gillyflower Transport 24 ? Henry Fenn
Adam & Eve Transport 20 ? William Coppin
Arms of Holland Transport 20 ? Robert Story
Crow Transport 20 ? Thomas Thompson
Marigold Transport 20 ? Humphrey Felsted
Sampson Transport 20 ? John Hubbard
Westergate Transport 20 ? Samuel Hawkes
Cardiff Transport 18 ? John Grove
Tulip Transport 18 ? Jeffrey Dane
Falcon Flyboat 24 ? Thomas Fleet
Falcon Fireship 12 ? William Tickell
Hound Transport ? ? Richard Rooth
Falmouth Transport ? ? Robert Mills
Adventure Dogger ? ? ?
Unknown two ketches, one hoy ? ? ?

Notes

1. ^http://www.pepysdiary.com/diary/1663/12/31
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www3.diariolibre.com/noticias_det.php?id=234348|title=El Baluarte del Conde|publisher=DiarioLibre.com|accessdate=2010-07-28|year=2010|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202203657/http://www.diariolibre.com/noticias_det.php?id=234348|archivedate=2014-02-02|df=}}

See also

  • Anglo-Spanish War (1654–60)

References

  • {{Cite news|url=http://www.listindiario.com/la-republica/2016/10/09/438379/invasion-penn-y-venables-casi-ingleses|title=Invasión Penn y Venables casi ingleses|last=Lajara Sola|first=Homero Luis|date=October 9, 2016|work=|access-date=|via=Listin Diario|language=es|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last1=Marley|first1=David|title=Wars of the Americas: A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the New World, 1492 to the Present|date=1998|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=9780874368376|page=149|url=https://books.google.com/?id=rdvp3cGJUZoC|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia|ref=harv |last=Morrill |first=John |year=2004 |title=Venables, Robert (1612/13–1687)|encyclopedia=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography|publisher= Oxford University Press |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/28181}}
  • {{cite web|last1=Plant|first1=David|title=The Western Design, 1655|year=2010|publisher=BCW Project: British Civil War|url=http://bcw-project.org/military/anglo-spanish-war/western-design|website=bcw-project.org|accessdate=29 May 2017|language=en|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Rodger|first=N.A.M.|title=The Command of the Ocean|location=London |publisher=Penguin |date= 2004|ISBN= 0713884118|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|ref=harv |last=Venables |first=Robert

| last2 = Firth |first2=C. H. |authorlink2=Charles Harding Firth |year=1900|title=The narrative of General Venables, with an appendix of papers relating to the expedition to the West Indies and the conquest of Jamaica, 1654–1655|location=London, New York and Bombay |publisher=Longmans Green & Company|url=https://archive.org/details/narrativegenera00firtgoog}}

Further reading

  • Kris E. Lane, Pillaging the Empire: Piracy in the Americas, 1500-1750.
{{coord missing|Spain}}

10 : Conflicts in 1655|1655 in the Caribbean|1650s in New Spain|History of Hispaniola|Battles involving Spain|Sieges involving England|Sieges involving Spain|1655 in the British Empire|History of Santo Domingo|Anglo-Spanish War (1654–1660)

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