Online Encyclopedia

LES ESPAGNOLS SUR MER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 772 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LES ESPAGNOLS SUR MER  , the name given to the
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naval victory gained by King
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Edward III. of England over a
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Spanish
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fleet off Winchelsea, on the 29th of August 1350 . Spanish
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ships had fought against England as the allies or mercenaries of France, and there had been instances of piratical violence between the trading ships of both nations . A Spanish merchant fleet was loading cargoes in the Flemish ports to be carried to the Basque coast . The ships were armed and had warships with them . They were all under the command of Don Carlos de la Cerda, a soldier of fortune who belonged to a branch of the Castilian royal
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family . On its way to Flanders the Spanish fleet had captured a number of
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English trading ships, and had thrown the crews overboard . Piratical violence and
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massacre of this kind was then universal on the sea . On the loth of August, when the king was at Rotherhithe, he announced his intention of attacking the Spaniards on their way home . The
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rendezvous of his fleet was at Winchelsea, and thither the king went by
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land, accompanied by his wife and her ladies, by his sons, the Black Prince and John of Gaunt, as well as by many nobles . The ladies were placed in a convent and the king embarked on his
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flagship, the "
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Cog Thomas," on the 28th of August . The English fleet did not put to sea but remained at anchor, waiting for the appearance of the Spaniards . Its strength is not known with certainty, but Stow puts it at 50 ships and pinnaces .

Carlos de la Cerda was obviously well disposed to give the king a

meeting . He might easily have avoided the English if he had kept well out in the Channel . But he relied on the
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size and strength of his 40 large ships, and in expectation of an encounter had recruited a
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body of mercenaries—mostly crossbowmen—in the Flemish ports . In the afternoon of the 29th of August he
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bore down boldly on King Edward's ships at anchor at Winchelsea . When the Spaniards
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hove in sight, the king was sitting on the
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deck of his
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ship, with his knights and nobles, listening to his minstrels who played German airs, and to the singing of
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Sir John Chandos . When the look-out in the tops reported the enemy in sight, the king and his
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company drank to one another's
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health, the trumpet was sounded, and the whole
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line stood out . All battles at that time, whether on land or sea, were finally settled by stroke of sword . The English steered to board the Spaniards . The king's own ship was run into by one of the enemy with such violence that both were damaged, and she began to sink . The Spaniard stood on, and the " Cog Thomas " was laid alongside another, which was carried by boarding . It was high time, for the king and his following had barely reached the deck of the Spaniard before the " Cog Thomas " went to the bottom . Other Spaniards were taken, but the fight was hot .

La Cerda's crossbowmen did much

execution, and the higher-built Spaniards were able to drop bars of iron or other weights on the lighter English vessels, by which they were damaged . The conflict was continued till
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twilight . At the close the large English vessel called " La Salle du Roi," which carried the king's household, and was commanded by the Fleming, Robert of Namur, afterwards a knight of the Garter, was grappled by a big Spaniard, and was being dragged off by him . The crew called loudly for a rescue, but were either not heard or, if heard, could not be helped . The " Salle du Roi " would have been taken if a Flemish
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squire of Robert of Namur, named Hannequin, had not performed a
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great feat of arms . He boarded the Spaniard and cut the halyards of her mainsail with his sword . The Spanish ship was taken . King Edward is said to have captured 14 of the enemy . What his o,wn loss was is not stated, but as his own vessel, and also the vessel carrying the Black Prince, were sunk, and from the peril of " La Salle du Roi," we may conclude that the English fleet suffered heavily . There was no pursuit, and a truce was made with the Basque towns the next
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year . The
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battle with " the Spaniards on the sea " is a very typical example of a
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medieval sea-fight, when the ships were of the >ize of a small coaster or a fishing
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smack, were crowded with men, and when the
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personal prowess of a single knight or squire was an important element of strength . The only real authority for the battle is Froissart, who was at different times in the service of King Edward or of his wife, Philippa of Hainaut, and of the
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counts of Namur .

He repeated what was told him by men who had been

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present, and dwells as usual on the " chivalry " of his patrons . See his Chroniques, iv . 91 . (D .

End of Article: LES ESPAGNOLS SUR MER
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