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English Armada





AIMS AND PLANNING

The overall intention of Elizabeth was to capitalise upon Spain's temporary weakness at sea after the successful repulse of the Spanish Armada and to compel Philip II to sue for peace. It was not a simple matter, and the expedition had three distinct aims: to burn the Spanish Atlantic fleet, to make a landing at Lisbon and raise a revolt there against Philip II , and then to continue south and establish a permanent base in the Azores. A further aim was to seize the Treasure Fleet as it returned from America to Cadiz , although this depended largely on the success of the Azores campaign.

Like its Spanish predecessor, the English Armada suffered from overly optimistic planning, based on hopes of repeating Drake's successful raid on Cadiz in 1587 . A critical contradiction lay between the separate aims, each of which was ambitious in its own right. But the most pressing need was the destruction of the Spanish Atlantic fleet lying at port at A Coruña , San Sebastian and Santander along the north coast of Spain, as directly ordered by the queen.

The expedition was floated as a joint stock company, with capital of about £80,000 - one quarter to come from the Queen, and one eighth from the Dutch, the balance to be made up by various noblemen, merchants and guilds. Concerns over logistics and adverse weather delayed the departure of the fleet, and confusion grew as it waited in port. The Dutch failed to supply their promised warships, a third of the victuals had already been consumed, and the number of veteran soldiers was only 1,800 while the ranks of volunteers had increased the planned contingent of troops from 10,000 to 19,000. The fleet also lacked siege guns and cavalry - items that had been lavishly laid on in the Spanish Armada expedition of the previous year - which raises serious doubts about the intentions of those in charge of the preparations.


EXECUTION

When the fleet sailed, it was made up of 6 royal galleons, 60 English armed merchantmen, 60 Dutch flyboats and about 20 pinnaces. In addition to the troops, there were 4,000 sailors and 1,500 officers and gentlemen adventurers. Drake assigned his vessels to 5 squadrons, led respectively by himself in the ''Revenge'', Norreys in ''Nonpareil'', Norreys' brother Edward in ''Foresight'', Thomas Fenner in ''Dreadnought'', and Roger Williams in ''Swiftsure''. Also sailing with them - against the Queen's express orders - was the Earl Of Essex .

Most of the ships lost in Philip II's expedition of 1588 were armed merchantmen, while the core of the armada - the Galleons of the Spanish Navy's Atlantic fleet - had survived their voyage with minimal losses and docked in Spain's Atlantic ports for a refit. Unforeseen delays and a fear of becoming embayed in the Bay of Biscay led Drake to bypass Santander, where most of this refitting was underway, and attack A Coruña in Galicia instead. Norreys took the lower town and killed 500 Spaniards, while Drake managed to destroy a few unimportant ships. They tarried there for two weeks, with little to show, before attention was turned to the second of the expedition's aims.

The Portuguese aristocracy had accepted Philip II As Their King In 1580 , and the pretender, Antonio, Prior Of Crato , having failed to establish an effective government in exile in the Azores, had turned to the English for support. The empire included Brazil , and the East Indies , among others, and trading posts in India and China. Elizabeth hoped that Portugal would prove a useful ally to England in curbing Spanish power in Europe and opening up the trade routes.

The Prior of Crato was the last surviving heir of the '', Catherine, Duchess Of Braganza . When Norreys invested Lisbon, which was defended by a disaffected garrison, the expected uprising was not forthcoming. But Drake did take the opportunity on June 30 of seizing a fleet of Hanseatic ships, which had broken the English blockade on trade with Spain by sailing all around the north of Scotland only to fetch up before the English cannon in the mouth of the Tagus. This seizure later required a publicly-printed justification, a ''Declaration of Causes'', from the Queen's own printer, as, without booty, she and her fellow English investors faced considerable losses.

Despite the bravado of Essex, who thrust a sword in at the gates of the city with a challenge to the defenders, the English could not take Lisbon. Essex received Elizabeth's orders to return to court, and it was decided to concentrate on the third aim of the expedition, the establishment of a permanent base in the Azores. But the campaign had taken its toll and, having initially caught the Spanish authorities off guard - perhaps mainly by its sheer audacity - Drake's forces suffered increasingly from disease.

It was soon understood that any attempt to land in the Azores was out of the question, and a final attempt to retrieve the mission was made by Drake. At this point, there were only 2,000 men fit to be mustered, and stormy weather had damaged a number of ships. While Norreys sailed for home with the sick and wounded, Drake took his pick of what was left and set out with twenty ships to hunt for the treasure fleet. Even that task was beyond him, as he was struck by another heavy storm, and while Puerto Santa in Madeira was plundered, his flagship, the ''Revenge'', sprung a leak and almost foundered as it led the remainder of the fleet home to Plymouth.


CONSEQUENCES

With the opportunity to strike a decisive blow against the weakened Spanish lost, the failure of the expedition further depleted the crown treasury that had been so carefully restored during the long reign of Elizabeth I . The Anglo-Spanish War was very costly to both sides, and Spain itself, also fighting France and the United Provinces , had to default on its debt repayments in 1596, following another raid on Cadiz. But the failure of the English Armada was a turning point, and the fortunes of the various parties to this complicated conflict fluctuated until the Treaty Of London in 1604, when a peace was agreed.

Spain's rebuilt navy had quickly recovered and exceeded its pre-Armada dominance of the sea, until defeats by the Dutch fifty years later marked the beginning of its decline. With the peace, the English were able to consolidate their hold on Ireland and make a concerted effort to establish colonies in North America.


REFERENCES

Winston Graham ''The Spanish Armadas'' (reprint, 2001) pp.166ff. ISBN 0141390204

The most detailed account, written in the form of a letter by an anonymous participant (Anthony Wingfield), was published in 1589: ''A true Coppie of a Discourse written by a Gentleman, employed in the late Voyage of Spain and Portingale...'' which set out openly to restore the credit of the participants.


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