War of the Spanish Succession: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|1701–1714 royal succession crisis and subsequent wars in Spain}} |
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{{Infobox Military Conflict |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2022}} |
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|conflict=War of the Spanish Succession |
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{{Use British English|date=August 2013}} |
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|image=[[Image:Bakhuizen, Battle of Vigo Bay.jpg|300px]] |
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{{Infobox military conflict |
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|caption=At the [[Battle of Vigo Bay]], English and Dutch destroyed a [[Spanish treasure fleet]], capturing silver [[Potosí|from the Spanish colonies]] to the value of about a million [[pound sterling|pounds sterling]]. |
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| conflict = War of the Spanish Succession |
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|date=1702–1713 |
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| partof = [[French–Habsburg rivalry]]; [[Anglo-French Wars]] |
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|place=[[Europe]] and [[North America]] |
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| image = File:Final War of the Spanish Succession Collage.jpg |
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|result=[[Treaty of Utrecht|Treaty of Utrecht 1713]]<br />[[Treaty of Rastatt|Treaty of Rastatt 1714]] |
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| image_size = 300 |
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|combatant1=[[Image:Flag of the Holy Roman Empire.png|22px|border]] [[Holy Roman Empire]]<br /> |
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| caption = Clockwise, from top left:{{flatlist| |
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{{flagicon|UK|1606}} [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]] (1707–14) The [[Acts of Union 1707|Acts of Union of 1707]] united the crowns of England and Scotland, forming the Kingdom of Great Britain.</ref><br />{{flagicon|Netherlands|pri}} [[Dutch Republic]]<br />{{flagicon|Portugal|1707}} [[Kingdom of Portugal]]<br />{{flagicon|Savoy}} [[Duchy of Savoy]]<br /> [[Image:Siñal_d'Aragón.svg|25px]] [[Kingdom of Aragon]]<br /> [[Image:Siñal_d'Aragón.svg|25px]] [[Kingdom of Valencia]]<br />[[Image:Siñal_d'Aragón.svg|25px]] [[Kingdom of Mallorca]]<br />[[Image:Siñal_d'Aragón.svg|25px]] [[Catalonia]]<br />{{flagicon|Denmark}} [[Denmark-Norway]] |
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* [[Battle of Blenheim]] (13 August 1704) |
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|combatant2={{flagicon|France|restauration}} [[Ancien Régime in France|Kingdom of France]]<br />[[Image:Bandera de España(1701-1748).gif|22px]] [[Spain loyal to Philip V]]<br>{{flagicon|Bavaria}} [[Electorate of Bavaria]]<br />[[Rákóczi's War for Independence|Hungarians]] |
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* [[Battle of Ramillies]] (23 May 1706) |
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||commander1=[[Image:Flag of the Holy Roman Empire.png|22px|border]] [[Prince Eugene of Savoy|Eugene of Savoy]]<br /> |
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* [[Battle of Almansa]] (25 April 1707) |
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[[Image:Flag of the Holy Roman Empire.png|22px|border]] [[Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden|Margrave of Baden]]<br /> |
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* [[Battle of Denain]] (24 July 1712) |
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[[Image:Flag of the Holy Roman Empire.png|22px|border]] [[Guido Starhemberg|Count Starhemberg]]<br /> |
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}} |
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{{flagicon|UK|1606}} [[John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|Duke of Marlborough]]<br /> |
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| date = March 1701–September 7, 1714 (13 years) |
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{{flagicon|UK|1606}} [[Marquis de Ruvigny]]<br /> |
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| place = [[Europe]], [[Atlantic]], [[Mediterranean Sea]], [[Caribbean]] |
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{{flagicon|Netherlands|pri}} [[Hendrik Van Nassau-Ouwerkerk|Count Overkirk]]<br /> |
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| territory = * [[Philip V of Spain|Philip V]] recognised as [[King of Spain]], but renounces his place in the [[List of French monarchs|French succession]]. |
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{{flagicon|Portugal|1707}} [[Marquês das Minas]]<br /> |
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* Spain cedes the [[Duchy of Milan]], the [[Spanish Netherlands]], and the kingdoms of [[Kingdom of Naples|Naples]] and [[Kingdom of Sardinia|Sardinia]] to [[Habsburg monarchy|Austria]], the [[Kingdom of Sicily]] to [[Savoyard state|Savoy]], and [[Gibraltar]] and [[Menorca]] to [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]]. |
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{{flagicon|Savoy}} [[Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia]] |
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* [[Kingdom of France|France]] cedes [[Ypres]], [[Tournai]], [[Menen]], [[Veurne]], [[Fort Knokke]], and [[Warneton, Belgium|Warneton]] to Austria, while gaining the [[Principality of Orange]] and the [[Ubaye Valley]]. |
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|commander2={{flagicon|France|restauration}} [[Claude Louis Hector de Villars|Duc de Villars]]<br /> |
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* The [[Dutch Republic]] gains [[Barrier Treaty|barrier fortresses]] and part of [[Upper Guelders]]. |
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{{flagicon|France|restauration}} [[Louis Joseph de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme|Duc de Vendôme]]<br /> |
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| result = Treaties of [[Peace of Utrecht|Utrecht]], [[Treaty of Rastatt|Rastatt]], and [[Treaty of Baden (1714)|Baden]] |
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{{flagicon|France|restauration}} [[Louis François, duc de Boufflers|Duc de Boufflers]]<br /> |
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| combatant1 = {{flagdeco|Spain|1701}} Pro-[[Bourbon Spain]] |
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{{flagicon|France|restauration}} [[François de Neufville, duc de Villeroi|Duc de Villeroi]]<br /> |
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| combatant2 = {{flagdeco|Spain|1506}} Pro-[[Habsburg Spain]] |
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{{flagicon|France|restauration}} [[René de Froulay de Tessé|Count of Tessé]]<br /> |
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| combatant2a = {{plainlist| |
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{{flagicon|France|restauration}} [[James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick|Duke of Berwick]]<br /> |
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* {{flag|Holy Roman Empire}} |
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{{flagicon|Bavaria}} [[Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria|Maximilian II Emanuel]]<br /> |
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* {{flagcountry|Kingdom of England}} {{small|(until 1707)}} |
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{{flagicon|Spain|1701}} [[Francisco Castillo Fajardo, Marquis of Villadarias|Marquis of Villadarias]]<br /> |
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* {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Great Britain}} {{small|(from 1707)}} |
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[[Francis II Rákóczi]] |
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* {{flagcountry|Dutch Republic}} |
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|strength1=232,000<ref>Lynn, ''The Wars of Louis XIV: 1667–1714,'' p.271. The Allied figure is the strength in 1702: The Empire (90,000), the Dutch Republic (60,000 + 42,000 garrison troops), and England (40,000). It does not include minor German states or navies.</ref> |
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* {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Prussia|1701}} {{small|(from 1702)}} |
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|strength2=France 373,000<ref>Lynn, ''The Wars of Louis XIV: 1667–1714,'' p.271.The French strength is a paper figure; actual combat strength was approximately 255,000. To this must be added forces from Spain and, initially, Bavarian and Savoyard contingents</ref> |
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* {{flagdeco|Portugal|1707}} [[History of Portugal (1640–1777)|Portugal]] {{small|(from 1702)}} |
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|casualties1= |
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* {{flagdeco|Savoy}} [[Duchy of Savoy|Savoy]] {{small|(from 1703)}} |
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|casualties2= |
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}} |
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|notes= |
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| combatant1a = {{plainlist| |
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* {{flagcountry|Kingdom of France}} |
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* {{flagcountry|Electorate of Bavaria}} |
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* {{flagicon image|Black St George's Cross.svg}} [[Electorate of Cologne|Cologne]] |
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* {{flagicon image|LuikVlag.svg}} [[Prince-Bishopric of Liège|Liège]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Portugal|1707}} [[History of Portugal (1640–1777)|Portugal]] {{small|(until 1702)}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Savoy}} [[Duchy of Savoy|Savoy]] {{small|(until 1703)}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Transylvania|1703}} [[Kuruc]] {{small|(1703–1711)}} |
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}} |
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| commander2 = {{plainlist| |
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* {{flagdeco|Spain|1506}}{{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}} [[Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles VI]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}} [[Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor|Leopold I]] [[Death by natural causes|#]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}} [[Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor|Joseph I]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}} [[Prince Eugene of Savoy|Eugene of Savoy]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}} [[Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden|Louis of Baden]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}} [[Guido Starhemberg]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of England}}{{flagdeco|Scotland}}{{flagdeco|Dutch Republic}} [[William III of England|William III & II]] {{small|(until 1702)}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of England}}{{flagdeco|Scotland}}{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Anne, Queen of Great Britain|Anne]] {{small|(from 1702)}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of England}}{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer|Robert Harley]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of England}}{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|Marlborough]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of England}}{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde|Ormonde]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of England}} [[George Rooke]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Dutch Republic}} [[Anthonie Heinsius]] |
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* {{flagicon|Dutch Republic}} [[Godert de Ginkell, 1st Earl of Athlone|Athlone]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Dutch Republic}} [[Henry de Nassau, Lord Overkirk|Nassau-Ouwerkerk]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Dutch Republic}} [[Claude Frédéric t'Serclaes, Count of Tilly|Tilly]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Dutch Republic}} [[Philips van Almonde]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Prussia|1701}} [[Frederick I of Prussia|Frederick I]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Prussia|1701}} [[Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau|Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Portugal|1707}} [[Peter II of Portugal|Peter II]] [[Death by natural causes|#]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Portugal|1707}} [[John V of Portugal|John V]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Duchy of Savoy}} [[Victor Amadeus II]] |
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}} |
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| commander1 = {{plainlist| |
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* {{flagdeco|Spain|1701}} [[Philip V of Spain|Philip V]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Louis XIV]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Claude Louis Hector de Villars|Villars]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Louis Joseph, Duke of Vendôme|Vendôme]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick|Berwick]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Louis-François de Boufflers|Boufflers]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[François de Neufville, duc de Villeroy|Villeroy]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Camille d'Hostun, duc de Tallard|Tallard]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Jacques Bazin de Bezons|Bezons]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Philippe de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil|Vaudreuil]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Electorate of Bavaria}} [[Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria|Maximilian II Emanuel]] |
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* {{flagicon image|Black St George's Cross.svg}}{{flagicon image|LuikVlag.svg}} [[Joseph Clemens of Bavaria|Joseph Clemens]] |
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* {{flagdeco|Transylvania|1703}} [[Francis II Rákóczi]]}} |
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| strength2 = {{plainlist| |
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* {{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}}: 260,090{{Sfn|Wilson|2016|page=461}}{{Efn|Annual average, 1701–1713. Wilson estimates Imperial strength peaked at 343,000 in 1710.{{Sfn|Wilson|2016|page=460}}}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Dutch Republic}}: 119,000{{Sfn|Glete|2001|p=156}}{{Efn|Ostwald estimates Dutch strength peaked at 137,000.{{Sfn|Ostwald|2000|p=664}}}}{{efn|Including the [[Danish Auxiliary Corps in Anglo-Dutch service 1701–1714|Danish Auxiliary Corps]]}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}}: 70,000{{Sfn|Rasler|1994|p=129}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Prussia|1701}}: 40,000{{Sfn|Craig|1964|p=7}}{{Efn|The majority of Prussian troops were hired out to the Dutch or served with Imperial forces in Northern Italy.}} |
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*{{flagdeco|Portugal|1707}}: 28,000{{efn|Although the Portuguese promised to provide 28,000 men, their effective strength in 1704 barely reached 15,000 men{{Sfn|Wijn|1956|p=509}}}} |
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}} |
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| strength1 = {{plainlist| |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}}: 255,000–400,000{{Sfn|Dwyer|2014|p=14}}{{Sfn|Lynn|1994|p=894}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Spain|1701}}: 70,000{{Efn|The Spanish Army consisted of three separate forces; Spain (20,000), Spanish Netherlands (35,000) and Italy (15,000). These are authorised numbers and actual were almost certainly lower.{{sfn|Vault|2016|pp=98, 540, 625}}}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Electorate of Bavaria}}: 20,000{{Sfn|Vault|2016|p=454}} |
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}} |
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| casualties2 = {{plainlist| |
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* {{flagdeco|Dutch Republic}}{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}}: 250,000 killed and wounded |
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* {{flagdeco|Holy Roman Empire}}: 200,000 killed and wounded{{efn|Split 50:50 between [[Habsburg monarchy]] and other HRE states.{{Sfn|Clodfelter|2008|p=74}}}} |
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* {{flagdeco|Portugal|1707}}: 50,000 killed and wounded |
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* {{flagdeco|Savoy}}: 50,000 killed and wounded{{Sfn|Clodfelter|2008|page=74}} |
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}} |
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| casualties1 = {{plainlist| |
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* {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}}: 400,000–500,000 killed and wounded |
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* {{flagdeco|Spain|1701}}{{flagdeco|Electorate of Bavaria}}: {{circa|100,000}} killed and wounded{{Sfn|Clodfelter|2008|page=74}} |
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}} |
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| casualties3 = {{plainlist| |
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* '''Total deaths in combat (both sides)''': 400,000{{Sfn|Clodfelter|2008|page=74}} |
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* '''Total including disease''': 700,000{{Sfn|Urlanis|1971|p=187}} to 1,251,000{{Sfn|Levy|2014|p=90}} |
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}} |
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}} |
}} |
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{{Campaignbox War of the Spanish Succession}} |
{{Campaignbox War of the Spanish Succession}} |
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{{Campaignbox Queen Anne's War}} |
{{Campaignbox Queen Anne's War}} |
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{{Campaignbox War of the Spanish Succession: West Indies}} |
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{{Campaignbox Anglo-French wars}} |
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The '''War of the Spanish Succession''' was a European [[great power]] conflict fought between 1701 and 1714. The immediate cause was the death of the childless [[Charles II of Spain]] in November 1700, which led to a struggle for control of the [[Spanish Empire]] between supporters of the French [[House of Bourbon|Bourbons]] and the [[House of Habsburg|Habsburgs]]. Charles named his heir as [[Philip V of Spain|Philip of Anjou]], a grandson of [[Louis XIV of France]], whose claim was backed by [[Kingdom of France|France]] and most of [[Habsburg Spain|Spain]]. His rival, [[Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Archduke Charles of Austria]], was supported by the [[Grand Alliance (League of Augsburg)|Grand Alliance]], whose primary members included [[Habsburg monarchy|Austria]], the [[Dutch Republic]], and [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]]. Significant related conflicts include the 1700 to 1721 [[Great Northern War]], and [[Queen Anne's War]]. |
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Although by 1701 Spain was no longer the predominant European power, its global empire still included the [[Spanish Netherlands]], large parts of [[Italy]], and the [[Spanish America|Americas]]. Its acquisition by either France or Austria threatened the [[European balance of power]], and Philip's proclamation as king of Spain on 16 November 1700 led to war. The French held the advantage in the early stages but were forced onto the defensive after 1706. Although the Allies continued to advance in northern France, by 1709 Philip had cemented his position in Spain, the ostensible cause of the war. |
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The '''War of the Spanish Succession''' (1701–1714), which included [[Queen Anne's War]] in North America, was a major [[Europe]]an conflict about the succession to the Spanish throne and the resulting shift in the European balance of power. The war was marked by the military leadership of notable generals like the [[Claude-Louis-Hector de Villars|duc de Villars]], the [[James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick-upon-Tweed|Duke of Berwick]], the [[John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|Duke of Marlborough]], and [[Prince Eugene of Savoy]]. |
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When [[Emperor Joseph I]] died in 1711, Archduke Charles succeeded his brother as [[Holy Roman Emperor]]. Since a union of Spain and Austria was as unwelcome as one with France, the [[1710 British general election|new British government]] argued it was pointless to continue. By now, only British subsidies kept their allies in the war, and their withdrawal led to the [[Peace of Utrecht]] in 1713, followed by the treaties of [[Treaty of Rastatt|Rastatt]] and [[Treaty of Baden (1714)|Baden]] in 1714. |
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In 1700, [[Charles II of Spain|Charles II]] died and had bequeathed all of his possessions to Philip, duc d'[[Anjou]] — a grandson of the [[Early_Modern_France|French]] [[Louis XIV of France|King Louis XIV]] — who thereby became [[Philip V of Spain]]. The war began slowly, as the [[Holy Roman Emperor]] [[Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor|Leopold I of Hapsburg]] fought to protect his own dynasty's claim to the Spanish inheritance. As Louis XIV began to expand his territories more aggressively, however, other European nations (chiefly [[England]], [[Portugal]], and the [[Dutch Republic]]) entered on the [[Holy Roman Empire|Holy Roman Empire's]] side to check French expansion.<ref>Also in the English case, to safeguard its own Protestant succession, opposing France as throughout the [[Second Hundred Years' War]] Tombs, ''That Sweet Enemy'', p.24.</ref> Other states joined the coalition opposing France and Spain in an attempt to acquire new territories, or to protect existing dominions. The war was fought not only in Europe, but also in North America, where the conflict became known to the English colonists as [[Queen Anne's War]], and by [[corsairs]] and [[privateers]] along the [[Spanish Main]]. Over the course of the fighting, some 400,000 people were killed.<ref>[http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/wars18c.htm#SpSucc Statistics of Wars, Oppressions and Atrocities of the Eighteenth Century, Matthew White]</ref> |
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Philip was confirmed as king of Spain but renounced his claim and those of his descendants to the French throne. The Spanish Empire ceded much of its Italian territories to [[Savoy]] and Austria, along with the Spanish Netherlands, although it remained largely intact outside Europe. Britain received Gibraltar and Menorca and acquired major trade concessions in the [[Spanish Americas]]. For the Dutch, despite attaining their long sought-after [[Barrier Treaty]], the war is seen as marking the beginning of their decline as a significant European power. Although Louis succeeded in placing his grandson on the Spanish throne, France was left financially exhausted. |
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The war was concluded by the treaties of [[Treaty of Utrecht (1713)|Utrecht (1713)]] and [[First Congress of Rastatt|Rastatt (1714)]]. As a result, Philip V remained King of Spain but was removed from the French line of succession, thereby averting a union of the two kingdoms. The Austrians gained most of the Spanish territories in Italy and the Netherlands. As a consequence, France's [[hegemony]] over continental Europe was ended, and the idea of a [[balance of power in international relations|balance of power]] became a part of the international order due to its mention in the Treaty of Utrecht.<ref>Wolf, ''The Emergence of the Great Powers: 1685–1715.'' p.92</ref> |
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==Background== |
==Background== |
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[[Charles II of Spain]] succeeded his father [[Philip IV of Spain|Philip IV]] at the age of four in 1665. Subject to extended periods of ill-health for much of his life, the issue of his successor was a matter of diplomatic debate for decades. For example, in [[Secret Treaty of Dover|1670]] [[Charles II of England]] agreed to support the rights of [[Louis XIV of France]], while the 1689 [[Grand Alliance (League of Augsburg)|Grand Alliance]] committed [[Kingdom of England|England]] and the [[Dutch Republic]] to back those of [[Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor]].{{sfn|Hochedlinger|2003|p=171}} |
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As [[Charles II of Spain|King Charles II]] of Spain had been both mentally and physically infirm from a very young age, it was clear that he could not produce an heir. Thus, the issue of the inheritance of the Spanish kingdoms — which included not only Spain, but also dominions in [[Italy]], the [[Low Countries]], and the Americas — became quite contentious. Two dynasties claimed the Spanish throne: the French [[Bourbons]] and the Austrian [[Habsburgs]]; both royal families were closely related to the late King of Spain. |
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[[Image:Louis XIV of France.jpg|thumb|left|170px|[[King Louis XIV]] (1638–1715), by [[Hyacinthe Rigaud]], (1701).]] |
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When Charles died in 1700, the [[Spanish Empire]] was no longer the dominant [[great power]], but still included much of [[Italy]] and the [[Spanish America|Americas]], the [[Spanish Netherlands]], and colonies such as the [[History of the Philippines (1521–1898)|Philippines]].{{sfn|Storrs|2006|pp=6–7}} Negotiations between Louis and Emperor Leopold centred on dividing these territories, which the Spanish refused to allow. Since the acquisition of an undivided empire by either Austria or France would make them too powerful, its inheritance led to a war that involved most of Europe. The 1700–1721 [[Great Northern War]] is considered a connected conflict since it affected the involvement of states such as [[Swedish Empire|Sweden]], [[Electorate of Saxony|Saxony]], [[Denmark–Norway]] and [[Tsardom of Russia|Russia]].{{sfn|Frey|Frey|1995|pp=191–192}} |
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The most direct and legitimate successor would have been [[Louis, Dauphin of France (1661-1711)|Louis, ''le Grand Dauphin'']], the only legitimate son of King Louis XIV of France and Spanish princess [[Maria Theresa of Spain|Maria Theresa]], herself King Charles II's elder half-sister. In addition, Louis XIV was a first cousin of his wife Maria Theresa and of King Charles II as his mother was Spanish princess [[Anne of Austria]], the sister of King [[Philip IV of Spain|Philip IV]], Charles II's father. The Dauphin, being next in the French line of succession as well, was a problematic choice: had he inherited both the French and the Spanish realms, he would have control of a vast empire that would have threatened the European [[balance of power in international relations|balance of power]]. Furthermore, both Anne and Maria Theresa had renounced their rights to the Spanish succession upon their marriages. In the latter case, however, the renunciation was widely seen as invalid, since it had been predicated upon Spain's payment of the [[Infanta]]'s dowry, which was never paid. |
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[[Image:King Charles II of Spain.jpg|thumb|right|170px|[[Charles II of Spain|Charles II]] was the last Habsburg King of Spain. After his death, the War of the Spanish Succession broke out as France and Austria vied for the [[Spanish Empire]].]] |
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Armies in the 1688 to 1697 [[Nine Years' War]] frequently numbered over 100,000, requiring expenditure unsustainable for pre-industrial economies.{{sfn|Childs|2013|p=1}} The 1690s also marked the low point of the [[Little Ice Age]], a period of cold and wet weather that drastically reduced crop yields across Europe.{{sfn|White|2011|pp=542–543}} The [[Great Famine of 1695–1697]] killed an estimated 15–25% of the population in present-day [[Scotland]], [[Scandinavia]] and the [[Baltic states]], plus another two million in France and [[Northern Italy]].{{sfn|de Vries|2009|pp=151–194}} |
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The alternative candidate was the Holy Roman Emperor, [[Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor|Leopold I]], of the Austrian Habsburg dynasty. He was a first cousin of the King of Spain, his mother having been another sister of Philip IV; moreover, Charles II's father, [[Philip IV of Spain|Philip IV]], had given the succession to the Austrian line in his will. This candidate, too, posed formidable problems, for Leopold's success would have reunited the powerful Spanish-Austrian Habsburg empire of the sixteenth century. In 1668, only three years after Charles II had ascended, the then-childless Leopold had agreed to the partition of the Spanish territories between the Bourbons and the Habsburgs, even though Philip IV's will entitled him to the entire inheritance. In 1689, however, when [[William III of England|William III]] of England required the Emperor's aid in the [[War of the Grand Alliance]] against France, he promised to support the Emperor's claim to the undivided Spanish empire. |
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This combination of financial exhaustion and famine led to the October 1697 [[Treaty of Ryswick]], a compromise that left the succession unresolved. Since it now seemed clear Charles would die without children, Leopold signed only with extreme reluctance, and all sides viewed Ryswick as only a temporary suspension of hostilities.{{sfn|Meerts|2014|p=168}} |
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A new candidate for the Spanish throne, the Electoral Prince [[Duke Joseph Ferdinand of Bavaria|Joseph Ferdinand]] of [[History_of_Bavaria#The_Electorate|Bavaria]], had been born in 1692. Joseph Ferdinand was Leopold I's grandson, but in the female line, so he belonged not to the Habsburg but to the [[Wittelsbach]] dynasty. His mother, Maria Antonia, had been Leopold's daughter by his first marriage, to Philip IV of Spain's younger daughter Margaret Theresa. As Joseph Ferdinand was neither a Bourbon nor a Habsburg, the likelihood of Spain merging with either France or Austria remained low. Although Leopold and Louis were both willing to defer their claims to a junior line of the family — Leopold to his younger son, the [[Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Archduke Charles]], and Louis to the Dauphin's younger son, the [[Philip V of Spain|duc d'Anjou]] — the Bavarian prince remained a far less threatening candidate. Accordingly, he soon became the preferred choice of England and the Netherlands. Joseph Ferdinand, moreover, would have been the lawful heir to the Spanish throne under Philip IV's will. |
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==Partition treaties== |
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[[Image:War of the Spanish Succession family tree.jpg|thumb|right|400px|A family tree showing the relationships of the various claimants to Charles II]] |
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[[File:Charles II of Spain anonymous portrait.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.7|[[Charles II of Spain|Charles II]], 1665–1700, last Habsburg King of Spain]] |
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Unlike the crowns of [[Kingdom of France|France]] or [[Habsburg monarchy|Austria]], that of Spain could be inherited through the female line. This allowed Charles' sisters [[Maria Theresa of Spain|Maria Theresa]] (1638–1683) and [[Margaret Theresa]] (1651–1673) to pass their rights onto the children of their respective marriages with Louis XIV and Emperor Leopold. Louis sought to avoid conflict over the issue through direct negotiation with his main opponent [[William III of England]] while excluding the Spanish.{{sfn|Frey|Frey|1995|p=389}} |
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As the [[War of the Grand Alliance]] came to a close in 1697, the issue of the Spanish succession was becoming critical. England and France, exhausted by the conflict, agreed to the [[Treaty of Den Haag (1698)|First Partition Treaty]], which named Joseph Ferdinand heir to the Spanish throne, but divided Spanish territory in Italy and the Low Countries between France and Austria. This decision was taken without consulting the Spanish, who vehemently objected to the dismemberment of their empire. Thus, when the Partition Treaty became known in 1698, Charles II of Spain agreed to name the Bavarian Prince his heir, but assigned to him the whole Spanish Empire, not just the parts England and France had chosen. |
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Leopold and Margaret's daughter [[Maria Antonia of Austria|Maria Antonia]] (1669–1692) married [[Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria]] in 1685, and on 28 October 1692, they had a son, [[Joseph Ferdinand of Bavaria|Joseph Ferdinand]]. Under the October 1698 [[Treaty of The Hague (1698)|Treaty of the Hague]] between France, Britain and the Dutch Republic, five-year-old Joseph was designated heir to Charles II; in return, France and Austria would receive parts of Spain's European territories.{{sfn|McKay|Scott|1983|pp=54–55}} Charles refused to accept this; on 14 November 1698, he published a will leaving an undivided Spanish monarchy to Joseph Ferdinand. However, the latter's death from smallpox in February 1699 undid these arrangements.{{sfn|Ward|Leathes|2010|p=385}} |
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The young Bavarian prince abruptly died of [[smallpox]] in 1699, reopening the issue of the Spanish succession. England and France soon ratified the [[Treaty of London, 1700|Second Partition Treaty]], assigning the Spanish throne to the Archduke Charles. The Italian territories would go to France, while the Archduke would receive the remainder of the Spanish empire. The Austrians, who were not party to the treaty, were displeased, for they openly vied for the whole of Spain, and it was the Italian territories in which they were most interested: richer, closer, and more governable. In Spain, distaste for the treaty was even greater; the courtiers were unified in opposing partition, but were divided on whether the throne should go to a Habsburg or a Bourbon. The pro-French statesmen, however, were in the majority, and in October 1700, Charles II agreed to bequeath all of his territory to the Dauphin's second son, the [[Philip V of Spain|duc d'Anjou]]. Charles took steps to prevent the union of France and Spain; should Anjou have inherited the French throne, Spain would have gone to his younger brother, the duc de Berri. After Anjou and his brother, the Archduke Charles was to have been next in the line of succession. |
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In 1685, Maria Antonia passed her claim to the Spanish throne onto Leopold's sons, [[Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor|Joseph]] and Archduke Charles.{{sfn|Ingrao|2010|p=105}} Her right to do so was doubtful, but Louis and William used this to devise the 1700 [[Treaty of London (1700)|Treaty of London]]. Archduke Charles became the new heir, while France, [[Duchy of Savoy|Savoy]] and Austria received territorial compensation; however, since neither Leopold nor Charles agreed, the treaty was largely pointless.{{sfn|Kamen|2001|p=3}} By early October 1700, Charles was dying; his final will left the throne to Louis XIV's grandson [[Philip V of Spain|Philip, Duke of Anjou]]; if he refused, the offer would pass to his younger brother the [[Charles, Duke of Berry (1686–1714)|Duke of Berry]], followed by Archduke Charles.{{sfn|Rule|2017|pp=91–108}} |
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==Prelude== |
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When the French court first learned of the will, Louis XIV's advisors convinced him that it was safer to accept the terms of the Second Partition Treaty, of 1700, than to risk war by claiming the whole Spanish inheritance. However, [[Jean-Baptiste Colbert, marquis de Torcy]], the French foreign secretary, successfully argued that whether France accepted the whole or a part of the Spanish Empire, it would still have to fight Austria, which did not accept the nature of the partition stipulated by the [[Treaty of London, 1700]]. Furthermore, the terms of Charles' will stipulated that Anjou was only to be offered the choice of the whole Spanish Empire or nothing; if he refused, the entire inheritance was to go to Philip's younger brother [[Charles de Bourbon, Duc de Berry|Charles, duke of Berry]], or to [[Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Archduke Charles of Austria]] if the duke of Berry refused. Knowing that the Maritime Powers — England and the United Provinces — would not join France in a fight to impose the partition treaty on the unwilling Austrians and Spanish, Louis determined to accept his grandson's inheritance. Charles II died on [[1 November]] [[1700]], and on [[24 November]], Louis XIV proclaimed Anjou King of Spain. The new King, Philip V, was declared ruler of the entire Spanish empire, contrary to the provisions of the Second Partition Treaty. [[William III of England]], however, could not declare war against France, since he did not have the support of the elites who determined policy in both England and the United Provinces. He reluctantly recognised Philip as king in April 1701.[[Image:Marlborough-duke-first.jpg|thumb|right|170px|The [[John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|Duke of Marlborough]] was the commander of the English, Dutch and German forces. He inflicted a crushing defeat on the French and Bavarians at the [[Battle of Blenheim]].]] |
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Charles died on 1 November 1700, and on the 9th, Spanish ambassadors formally offered the throne to Philip. Louis briefly considered refusing; although it meant the succession of Archduke Charles, insisting William help him enforce the Treaty of London meant he might achieve his territorial aims without fighting. However, his son the [[Louis, Grand Dauphin|Dauphin]] rejected the idea; French diplomats also advised Austria would fight regardless, while neither the British nor Dutch would go to war for a settlement intended to avoid war. Louis therefore accepted on behalf of his grandson, who was proclaimed Philip V of Spain on 16 November 1700.{{sfn|Rule|2017|pp= 91–108}} |
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Louis, however, took too aggressive a path in his attempt to secure French hegemony in Europe. He cut off England and the Netherlands from Spanish trade, thereby seriously threatening the commercial interests of those two countries. William III secured the support of his subjects and negotiated the [[Treaty of Den Haag (1701)|Treaty of Den Haag]] with the United Provinces and Austria. The agreement, reached on [[7 September]], [[1701]], recognised Philip V as King of Spain, but allotted Austria that which it desired most: the Spanish territories in Italy, forcing it to accept as well the [[Spanish Netherlands]], thus protecting that crucial region from French control. England and the Netherlands, meanwhile, were to retain their commercial rights in Spain. |
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==Prelude to war== |
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A few days after the signing of the treaty, the former King of England, [[James II of England|James II]] (who had been deposed by William III in 1688) died in France. Although Louis had treated William as King of England since the [[Treaty of Ryswick]], he now recognized James II's son, [[James Francis Edward Stuart]] (the "Old Pretender"), as the rightful monarch. England and the United Provinces had already begun raising armies; Louis's action alienated the English public even further, and gave William grounds for war. Armed conflict began slowly, as Austrian forces under [[Prince Eugene of Savoy]] invaded the [[Duchy of Milan]], one of the Spanish territories in Italy, prompting French intervention. England, the United Provinces, and most German states (most notably [[Prussia]] and [[Electorate of Hanover|Hanover]]), sided with Austria, but the [[Wittelsbach|Wittelsbach Electors]] of [[History_of_Bavaria#The_Electorate|Bavaria]] and [[Archbishopric of Cologne|Cologne]], the King of [[Portugal]], and the Duke of [[Savoy]] supported France and Spain. In Spain, the [[cortes]] of [[Aragon]], [[Kingdom of Valencia|Valencia]], and [[Catalonia]] (most of the regions of the [[Crown of Aragon]]) declared themselves in favour of the Austrian Archduke. Even after William III died in 1702, his successor in England, [[Anne of Great Britain|Anne]], continued the vigorous prosecution of the war, under the guidance of her ministers [[Sidney Godolphin, 1st Earl of Godolphin|Godolphin]] and [[John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|Marlborough]]. |
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[[File:Philippe de France proclamé roi d'Espagne.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.0|Proclamation of Philip of Anjou as [[Philip V of Spain]], Versailles, 16 November 1700]] |
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With most of his objectives achieved by diplomacy, Louis now made a series of moves that combined to make war inevitable.{{sfn|Falkner|2015|pp=508–510}} The [[Tories (British political party)|Tory]] majority in the English [[Parliament of England|Parliament]] objected to the Partition Treaties, chiefly the French acquisition of [[Kingdom of Sicily|Sicily]], an important link in the lucrative [[Levant]] trade.{{sfn|Gregg|2001|p=126}} However, a foreign diplomat observed their refusal to become involved in a European war was true "only so long as English commerce does not suffer".{{sfn|Somerset|2012|p=166}} Louis either failed to appreciate this or decided to ignore it and his actions gradually eroded Tory opposition.{{sfn|Falkner|2015|p=96}} |
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==Early fighting: 1701–1703== |
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[[Image:BattleOfFriedlingen.jpg|thumb|left|250px|The [[Claude Louis Hector de Villars|Duc de Villars]] leads his cavalry to victory at the battle of [[Battle of Friedlingen|Friedlingen]].]] |
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The war in Europe was centered in Spain and West-Central Europe (especially the [[Low Countries]]), with other important fighting in Germany and Italy. Prince Eugene and the Duke of Marlborough distinguished themselves as military commanders in the Low Countries. |
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In early 1701, Louis registered Philip's claim to the French throne with the [[Parlement of Paris]], raising the possibility of union with Spain, contrary to Charles' will, though Philip was only third in the French succession. In February, the Spanish-controlled [[Duchy of Milan]] and allied [[Duchy of Mantua]] in Northern Italy announced their support for Philip and accepted French troops. Combined with efforts to build an alliance between France and Imperial German states in [[Swabia]] and [[Franconia]], these were challenges Leopold could not ignore.{{sfn|Thompson|1973|pp=158–160}} |
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In 1702, Eugene fought in Italy, where the French were led by the [[François de Neufville, duc de Villeroi|duc de Villeroi]], whom Eugene defeated and captured at the [[Battle of Cremona]] on [[1 February]]. Villeroi was now replaced by the [[Louis Joseph de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme|duc de Vendôme]], who, despite the drawn [[Battle of Luzzara]] in August and a considerable numerical superiority, proved unable to drive Eugene from Italy. |
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Helped by the governor, [[Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria|Max Emanuel of Bavaria]], French troops replaced Dutch garrisons in the 'Barrier' fortresses in the [[Spanish Netherlands]], granted at Ryswick. It also threatened the Dutch monopoly over the [[Scheldt]] granted by the 1648 [[Peace of Münster]], while French control of [[Antwerp]] and [[Ostend]] would allow them to blockade the [[English Channel]] at will.{{sfn|Israel|1990|pp=197–199}} Combined with other French actions that threatened English trade, this produced a clear majority for war and in May 1701, Parliament urged William to negotiate an anti-French alliance.{{sfn|Somerset|2012|p=167}} |
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In the meantime, Marlborough led combined English, Dutch, and German forces in the Low Countries, where he captured several important fortresses, most notably [[Liège (city)|Liège]]. On the Rhine, an Imperial army under [[Louis, Margrave of Baden-Baden|Louis of Baden]] captured [[Landau]] in September, but the threat to Alsace was relieved by the entrance of the [[Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria|Elector of Bavaria]] into the war on the French side. Prince Louis was forced to withdraw across the Rhine, where he was defeated by a French army under [[Claude-Louis-Hector de Villars]] at [[Battle of Friedlingen|Friedlingen]]. The English admiral [[George Rooke|Sir George Rooke]] also won an important naval battle, the [[Battle of Vigo Bay]], which resulted in the complete destruction of the [[Spanish treasure fleet]] and in the capture of tons of silver. |
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On 7 September, Leopold, the Dutch Republic and Britain{{efn|England and Scotland were separate kingdoms until 1707 but the Treaty was signed by William as King of Great Britain}} signed the [[Treaty of The Hague (1701)|Treaty of The Hague]] renewing the 1689 [[Grand Alliance (League of Augsburg)|Grand Alliance]]. Its provisions included securing the Dutch Barrier in the Spanish Netherlands, the Protestant succession in England and Scotland and an independent Spain but did not refer to placing Archduke Charles on the Spanish throne.{{sfn|Somerset|2012|p=168}} When the exiled [[James II of England]] died on 16 September 1701, Louis reneged on his recognition of the Protestant [[William III of England|William III]] as king of England and Scotland and supported the claim of James' son, [[James Francis Edward Stuart]]. War became inevitable and when William himself died in March 1702, his successor [[Anne, Queen of Great Britain|Queen Anne]] confirmed her support for the Treaty of the Hague.{{sfn|Wolf|1974|p=514}} The Dutch now led by [[Grand Pensionary]] [[Anthonie Heinsius]] did the same, despite French hopes that without a [[Stadtholder]] the republic would be torn apart internally.{{sfn|Nimwegen|2020|p=261}} On 8 May the Dutch Republic declared war on France, followed by the British and the Emperor on 15 May and the [[Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire)|Imperial Diet]] on 30 September.{{sfn|Wolf|1974|p=514}} |
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Next year, although Marlborough captured [[Bonn]] and drove the Elector of Cologne into exile, he failed in his efforts to capture [[Antwerp]], and the French were successful in Germany. A combined Franco-Bavarian army under Villars and Max Emanuel of Bavaria defeated Imperial armies under Louis of Baden and [[Hermann Styrum]], but the Elector's timidity prevented a march on Vienna, which led to Villars's resignation. French victories in south Germany continued after Villars' resignation, however, with a new army under [[Camille de Tallard]] victorious in the [[Electoral Palatinate|Palatinate]]. French leaders entertained grand designs, intending to use a combined French and Bavarian army to capture the [[Austria]]n capital the next year. By the end of the year 1703, however, France had suffered setbacks for Portugal and Savoy had defected to the other side. Meanwhile, the English, who had previously held the view that Philip could remain on the throne of Spain, now decided that their commercial interests would be more secure under the Archduke Charles. |
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==General strategic drivers== |
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[[Image:Philip-V-Making-1st-Duke-of-Berwick.jpg|thumb|left|300px|[[Philip V of Spain]] creates the [[Duke of Berwick|James FitzJames]] Duc de Fitz-James in the [[Peerage of France]], after he soundly defeated the Allies at the [[Battle of Almanza]]. Painting by [[Jean Dominique Auguste Ingres]].]] |
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[[File:Grand Strategy, War of the Spanish Succession.png|thumb|left|upright=1.0|France's central position required the Grand Alliance to attack on exterior lines.]] |
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The importance of trade and economic interests to the participants is often underestimated; contemporaries viewed Dutch and English support for the Habsburg cause as primarily driven by a desire for access to Spanish markets in the Americas.{{sfn|Schmidt Voges|Solana Crespo|2017|p=2}} While modern economists generally assume a constantly growing market, the then dominant theory of [[mercantilism]] viewed it as relatively static. This meant increasing your own share of a market required taking it from someone else, with the state facilitating this by attacking opponents' merchant ships and colonies.{{sfn|Rothbard|2010}} |
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==Middle phase: 1704–1709== |
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In 1704, the French plan was to use Villeroi's army in the Netherlands to contain Marlborough, while Tallard and the Franco-Bavarian army under Max Emanuel and [[Ferdinand de Marsin]], Villars's replacement, would march on Vienna. |
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As a result, the war quickly expanded to [[North America]], [[India]], and other parts of Asia, with tariffs used as a policy weapon. The 1651–1663 [[Navigation Acts]] were a major factor in the [[Anglo-Dutch Wars]], while between 1690 and 1704, English import duties on foreign goods increased by 400%. On 6 September 1700, France banned the import of English manufactured goods such as cloth and imposed prohibitive duties on a wide range of others.{{sfn|Schaeper|1986|p=1}} |
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Marlborough — ignoring the wishes of the Dutch, who preferred to keep their troops in the Low Countries — led the English and Dutch forces southward to Germany; Eugene, meanwhile, moved northward from Italy with the Austrian army. The objective of these manœuvres was to prevent the Franco-Bavarian army from advancing on Vienna. Having met, the forces under Marlborough and Eugene faced the French under Tallard at the [[Battle of Blenheim]]. The battle was a resounding success for Marlborough and Eugene, and had the effect of knocking Bavaria out of the war. In that year, England achieved another important success as it captured [[Gibraltar]] in Spain, with the help of Dutch forces under the command of [[Prince George of Hesse-Darmstadt]], on behalf of the Archduke Charles. |
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The field armies that operated in the Southern Netherlands during the Nine Years' War had often reached 100,000 men. The size of armies continued to grow during the War of the Spanish Succession. Between 1702 and 1707, the field armies in the Southern Netherlands had a strength of 60,000 to 80,000 men, and from 1708 onwards, over 120,000 men.{{sfn|Nimwegen|1995|p=9}} These extensive armies placed immense strain on pre-industrial economies.{{sfn|Nimwegen|1995|p=9}}{{sfn|Childs|2013|p=2}} Armies were restricted by their dependence on water-borne transport for supplies, so campaigns focused on rivers like the [[Rhine]] and [[Adda (river)|Adda]], while their absence limited operations in areas like Northern Spain. Better logistics, unified command, and simpler internal lines of communication gave Bourbon armies an advantage over their opponents.{{sfn|Falkner|2015|p=37}} |
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Following the Battle of Blenheim, Marlborough and Eugene separated again, with the former going to the Low Countries, and the latter to Italy. In 1705, little progress was made by either France or the allies in any theatre. While Marlborough's attempted invasion of France down the Moselle came to nought, and although he managed to wrong-foot Villeroi and [[Battle of Elixheim|break through]] the Lines of Brabant, he was unable to bring the French commander to battle. Villars and Louis of Baden manoeuvred indecisively on the Rhine, and the story was much the same for Vendôme and Eugene in Italy. The stalemate was broken in 1706, as Marlborough drove the French out of most of the Spanish Netherlands, decisively defeating troops under Villeroi in the [[Battle of Ramillies]] in May and following up with the conquest of [[Antwerp]] and [[Dunkirk, France|Dunkirk]]. Prince Eugene also met with success; in September, following the departure of Vendôme to shore up the shattered army in the Netherlands, he and the Duke of Savoy inflicted a heavy loss on the French under [[Philippe II, duc d'Orléans|Orleans]] and Marsin at the [[Battle of Turin]], driving them out of Italy by the end of the year. |
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==Strategic objectives by participant== |
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Now that France had been expelled from Germany, the Low Countries and Italy, Spain became the centre of activity in the next few years. In 1706, the Portuguese general [[Marquês das Minas]] led an invasion of Spain from Portugal, managing to capture [[Madrid]]. By the end of the year, however, Madrid was recovered by an army led by King Philip V and the [[James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick-upon-Tweed|Duke of Berwick]] (the illegitimate son of [[James II of England]], serving in the French army). [[Henri de Massue, 1st Earl of Galway|Galway]] led another attempt on Madrid in 1707, but Berwick roundly defeated him at the [[Battle of Almansa]] on [[25 April]]. Thereafter, the war in Spain settled into indecisive skirmishing from which it would not subsequently emerge. |
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[[Image:Prinz-Eugen-von-Savoyen1.jpg|thumb|170px|[[Prince Eugene of Savoy]] by [[Jacob van Schuppen]]. Prince Eugene was the greatest of the Habsburg commanders. He fought alongside Marlborough at [[Battle of Blenheim|Blenheim]], [[Battle of Oudenarde|Oudenarde]] and [[Battle of Malplaquet|Malplaquet]].]] |
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===Spain=== |
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In 1707, the War briefly intersected with the [[Great Northern War]], which was being fought simultaneously in Northern Europe. A Swedish army under [[Charles XII of Sweden|Charles XII]] arrived in [[Saxony]], where he had just finished chastising the Elector [[Augustus II of Poland|Augustus II]] and forced him to renounce his claims to the Polish throne. Both the French and the Allies sent envoys to Charles's camp, and the French hoped to encourage him to turn his troops against the Emperor [[Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor|Joseph I]], who Charles felt had slighted him by his support for Augustus. However, Charles, who liked to see himself as a champion of Protestant Europe, greatly disliked Louis XIV for his treatment of the Huguenots, and was generally uninterested in the western war. He turned his attention instead to Russia, ending the possibility of Swedish intervention. |
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[[File:Battle of Vigo Bay 1702.webp|thumb|right|An Anglo-Dutch squadron captures a [[Spanish treasure fleet]], Vigo Bay, October 1702]] |
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In 1700, Spain remained a great power in terms of territory control; recent research moreover shows that imports of bullion from the Americas reached their highest level between 1670 and 1700.{{Sfn|Kamen|2002|p=435}} However, this concealed major structural weaknesses; the vast majority of these imports were used to fund debt or pay foreign merchants. When the new Bourbon administration took over in 1701, they found the empire bankrupt and effectively defenceless, with fewer than 15,000 troops in Spain itself and a navy consisting of 20 ships in total.{{sfn|Kamen|2002|p=440}} |
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Later in 1707, Prince Eugene led an allied invasion of southern France from Italy, but was stalled by the French army. Marlborough, in the meantime, remained in the Low Countries, where he was caught up in capturing an endless succession of fortresses. In 1708, Marlborough's army clashed with the French, who were beset by leadership problems: their commanders, the [[Louis, Dauphin of France (1682-1712)|Duke of Burgundy]] (Louis XIV's grandson) and the duc de Vendôme were frequently at variance, the former often making unwise military decisions. Bourgogne's insistence that the French army not attack led Marlborough once again to unite his army with Eugene's, allowing the allied army to crush the French at the [[Battle of Oudenarde]], and then proceeded to capture [[Lille]]. In Italy, Austria sacked cities such as [[Forlì]] (1708). |
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Almost constant warfare during the 17th century made the economy subject to long periods of low productivity and depression, and largely reliant upon others for its prosperity. In many ways, the continued existence of the empire was not due to Spanish strength but to maintain a balance between the powers competing for a share of its markets. Despite fighting a series of wars against Spain from 1667 to 1697, France was also its most significant economic partner, supplying labour and controlling a large proportion of its foreign trade. This consideration was an important factor in the decision to name Philip his heir.{{sfn|Kamen|2002|p=435}} Its dependence on others was illustrated in 1703; despite the presence of an invading Allied army, the French ambassador urged Louis to allow Dutch and English merchants to purchase wool from Spanish farmers, "otherwise the flocks cannot be maintained".{{sfn|Kamen|2002|p=440}} |
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The disasters of Oudenarde and Lille led France to the brink of ruin. Louis XIV was forced to negotiate; he sent his foreign minister, the Marquis de Torcy, to meet the allied commanders at [[The Hague]]. Louis agreed to surrender Spain and all its territories to the allies, requesting only that he be allowed to keep [[Naples]] (in Italy). He was, moreover, prepared to furnish money to help expel Philip V from Spain. The allies, however, imposed more humiliating conditions; they demanded that Louis use the French army to dethrone his own grandson. Rejecting the offer, Louis chose to continue fighting until the bitter end. He appealed to the people of France, bringing thousands of new recruits into his army. |
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Enacting political or economic reform was extremely complex since [[Habsburg Spain]] was a personal union between the Crowns of [[Crown of Castile|Castile]] and [[Crown of Aragon|Aragon]], each with very different political cultures.{{efn|Aragon was divided into the Kingdoms of Aragon, Catalonia, Valencia, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, and Sardinia.}} Most of Philip's support came from the Castilian elite.{{sfn|Cowans|2003|pp=26–27}} The Spanish Netherlands had been governed by prince-elector Max Emanuel of Bavaria since 1692, while links with Italy, traditionally the major source of Spanish recruits and funding, had been weakened by decades of neglect and heavy taxation. It was widely, if reluctantly, accepted in Madrid that preserving an independent Spanish Empire required comprehensive reforms, including the elimination of the privileges or ''[[Fuero]]s'' held by the Aragonese states. It was no coincidence Archduke Charles had strong support in areas that were part of the Crown of Aragon, including [[Principality of Catalonia|Catalonia]] and [[Kingdom of Valencia|Valencia]].{{Sfn|Kamen|2002|pp=442–444}} |
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In 1709, the allies attempted three invasions of France, but two were so minor as to be merely diversionary. A more serious attempt was launched when Marlborough and Eugene advanced toward Paris. They clashed with the French under the duc de Villars at the [[Battle of Malplaquet]], the bloodiest battle of the war. Although the allies defeated the French, they lost over twenty thousand men, compared with only ten thousand for their opponents. The allies captured [[Mons]] but were unable to follow up their victory. The battle marked a turning point in the war; despite winning, the allies were unable to proceed with the invasion, having suffered such tremendous casualties. |
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[[Image:Duc de Villars.jpg|thumb|170px|left|[[Marshal Villars]] (1653–1734) rescued the French fortunes in the War of the Spanish Succession. Villars was King Louis' most successful commander in the war.]] |
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===France=== |
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==Final phase: 1710–1714== |
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Under [[Louis XIV]], France was the most powerful state in Europe, with revenue-generating capacities that far exceeded those of its rivals. Its geographical position provided enormous tactical flexibility; unlike Austria, it had [[French Navy|a navy]], and as the campaigns of 1708–1710 proved, even under severe pressure it could defend its borders. The [[Nine Years' War]] had shown France could not impose its objectives without support, and its new alliance with Spain and Bavaria made a successful outcome more likely.{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}} However, the previous wars had left France with severe economic problems. This was recognized by the [[Jules Louis Bolé, marquis de Chamlay|Marquis de Chamlay]], who advised Louis to not take on a purely offensive strategy. He argued that the combined might of the Grand Alliance forces made it highly improbable for France to launch a successful attack. The Dutch and Imperial fortresses were located far from convenient Franco-Spanish bases, and the Netherlands and [[Rhineland]] lacked easily navigable rivers for the Bourbon armies. Furthermore, besieging a major Dutch fortress demanded the commitment of two full armies. The French would thus pursue a strategy described as a "mixed war" in Europe. In this strategy, the Franco-Spanish forces would primarily assume a defensive posture to safeguard the vital fortresses they needed to retain. Offensive actions, on the other hand, were characterized by assertive posturing and strategic positioning, with an emphasis on sustaining their forces by living off enemy territory whenever feasible, while blocking enemy thrusts, and trying to engage them in battle where possible.{{sfn|Rowlands|2013|p=24}} Apart from denying an undivided Spanish monarchy to others, Louis's objectives were to secure his borders with the Holy Roman Empire, weaken his rival Austria, and increase French commercial strength through access to trade with the Americas.{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}} |
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In 1710, the allies launched a final campaign in Spain, but failed to make any progress. An army under [[James Stanhope, 1st Earl Stanhope|James Stanhope]] reached Madrid together with the Archduke Charles, but it was forced to capitulate at [[Battle of Brihuega|Brihuega]] when a relief army came from France. The alliance, in the meantime, began to weaken. In Great Britain, Marlborough's powerful political influence was lost, as the source of much of his clout — the friendship between his wife and the Queen — came to an end, with Queen Anne dismissing the [[Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough|Duchess of Marlborough]] from her offices and banishing her from the court. Moreover, the [[British Whig Party|Whig]] ministry which had lent its support to the war fell, and the new [[Tory]] government that took its place sought peace. |
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===Austria and the Holy Roman Empire=== |
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In 1711, the Archduke Charles became Holy Roman Emperor as [[Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles VI]] following the sudden death of Joseph, his elder brother. At that point, a decisive victory for Austria would upset the balance of power just as much as a victory for France. Marlborough achieved a strategic victory over Villars, breaking the French Lines of Ne Plus Ultra and [[Siege of Bouchain|capturing Bouchain]], but was recalled to Great Britain at the end of the year, and was replaced by the [[James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde|Duke of Ormonde]]. |
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[[File:II. Rákóczi Ferenc Mányoki.jpg|thumb|right|upright=0.8|[[Francis II Rákóczi|Francis Rákóczi]], leader of the 1703–1711 Hungarian revolt; funded by France, this was a major distraction for Austria]] |
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Despite being the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire, Austrian and Imperial interests did not always coincide. The Habsburgs wanted to put [[Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Archduke Charles]] on the throne of an undivided Spanish monarchy, while their Allies were fighting to prevent either the Bourbons or the Habsburgs from doing so. This divergence and Austria's financial collapse in 1703 meant the campaign in Spain was reliant on Anglo-Dutch naval support and after 1706, British funding. Particularly during the reign of [[Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor|Joseph I]], the priority for the Habsburgs was to secure their southern borders from French intervention in northern Italy and suppress [[Rákóczi's War of Independence]] in Hungary.{{sfn|Ingrao|1979|p=220}} |
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The British, led by Secretary of State [[Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke|Henry St John]], began to secretly correspond with the Marquis de Torcy, excluding the Dutch and Austrians from their negotiations. The Duke of Ormonde refused to commit British troops to battle, so the French under Villars were able to recover much lost ground in 1712, such as at the [[Battle of Denain]]. |
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Much of the Spanish nobility resented what they considered to be the arrogance of the Austrians, a key factor in the selection of Philip as their preferred candidate in 1700. In return for British support, Charles agreed to major commercial concessions within the empire, as well as accepting British control of [[Gibraltar]] and [[Menorca]]. These made him widely unpopular at all levels of Spanish society, and he was never able to sustain himself outside the coastal regions, which could be supplied by the Anglo-Dutch navies.{{sfn|Hattendorf|1979|pp=50–54}} |
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Great Britain and the Netherlands ceased fighting France, when the [[Treaty of Utrecht]] was concluded in 1713. [[Barcelona]], which had supported the Archduke's claim to the throne of Spain and the allies in 1705, finally surrendered to the Bourbon army in [[11 September]] [[1714]] following [[Siege of Barcelona|a long siege]], ending the presence of the allies in Spain. Nowadays this date is remembered as the [[National Day of Catalonia]]. Hostilities between France and Austria continued until 1714, when the Treaties of Rastatt and Baden were ratified, marking the end of the War of the Spanish Succession. Spain was slower in ratifying treaties of peace; it did not formally end its conflict with Austria until 1720, after it had been defeated by all the powers in the [[War of the Quadruple Alliance]]. |
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The [[House of Wittelsbach|Wittelsbach]]-controlled states of [[Electorate of Bavaria|Bavaria]], [[Prince-Bishopric of Liège|Liège]], and [[Electorate of Cologne|Cologne]] allied with France, but the vast majority of the Empire remained neutral, or limited their involvement to the supply of mercenaries.{{Citation needed|reason=Given the Imperial Diet voted for war this statement needs proper citations|date=May 2024}} Like Bavaria, the larger entities pursued their own policies; his claim to the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth|Polish crown]] meant [[Augustus II the Strong|Augustus of Saxony]] focused on the [[Great Northern War]], while [[Frederick I of Prussia|Frederick I]] made his support dependent on Leopold recognising [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]] as a kingdom and making it an equal member of the Grand Alliance. Since [[George I of Great Britain|George, Elector of Hanover]], was also heir to the British throne, his support was more reliable, but the suspicion remained that the interests of [[Electorate of Hanover|Hanover]] came first.{{sfn|Ingrao|1979|pp=39–40}} |
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===England and Scotland/Great Britain=== |
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[[File:War of the Spanish Succession alliances (1703).png|thumb|right|Participants in the War of the Spanish Succession in 1703: Pro-Habsburg (orange) and Pro-Bourbon (lavender)]] |
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British foreign policy was based on three general principles, which remained largely consistent from the 16th through the 20th centuries. The first, overriding all others, was to preserve a balance of power in Europe, an objective threatened by French expansion under Louis XIV. The second was to prevent the [[Low Countries]] from being controlled by a hostile power or one stronger than Britain; this included both the Spanish Netherlands and the Dutch Republic, whose deep harbours and prevailing winds made her a natural embarkation point for an attack on England, as [[Glorious Revolution|demonstrated in 1688]]. The third was to maintain a navy strong enough to protect British trade, control her waters and launch attacks on her enemies' commercial routes and coastal areas.{{Sfn|Burke}} |
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Alignment on reducing the power of France and securing the Protestant succession for the British throne masked differences on how to achieve them. In general, the [[Tories (British political party)|Tories]] favoured a mercantilist strategy of using the [[Royal Navy]] to attack French and Spanish trade while protecting and expanding their own; land commitments were viewed as expensive and primarily of benefit to others.{{sfn|Shinsuke|2013|pp=37–40}} The [[Whigs (British political party)|Whigs]] argued France could not be defeated by seapower alone, making a Continental strategy essential, while Britain's financial strength made it the only member of the Alliance able to operate on all fronts against France.{{sfn|Ostwald|2014|pp=100–129}} |
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===Dutch Republic=== |
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The Dutch had been engaged in the struggle to contain France since the ''[[Rampjaar]]'' (Disaster Year) of 1672, when the Dutch Republic had nearly been overrun by the French army. Apart from the worry about the balance of power, the Dutch had long been concerned with the fate of the Spanish Netherlands, viewing it as a strategic buffer against France. This perception endured even during periods of alliance with France, as evidenced by the popularity of the motto "Gallicus amicus non vicinus" (France is a good friend, not a good neighbour) within the Dutch Republic.{{sfn|Rowen|1954|p=3}} The [[War of Devolution]] (1667–68) and the [[Franco-Dutch War]] (1672–78) showed the Spanish could not defend the Southern Netherlands, and so the 1697 [[Treaty of Ryswick]] allowed the Dutch to place garrisons in eight key cities. They hoped [[Barrier Treaty|this barrier]] would provide the [[strategic depth]] needed to protect their commercial and demographic heartlands around [[Amsterdam]] against attack from the south. However, with the help of Maximilian of Bavaria, the governor of the Spanish Netherlands, the Dutch garrison troops had been replaced by French troops by 1701. Dutch priorities were to {{Nowrap|re-establish}} and strengthen the Barrier fortresses, retain control of the economically vital Scheldt estuary, and gain access to trade in the Spanish Empire.{{sfn|Lesaffer}} |
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Although the English [[John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough|Duke of Marlborough]] was Allied commander in the [[Low Countries]], the Dutch provided most of the manpower and supplies. Strategy in this theatre was thus subject to the approval of their [[Field deputies (Dutch Republic)|field deputies]] and generals.{{Efn|[[Godert de Ginkel, 1st Earl of Athlone|Athlone]] until 1703, [[Henry de Nassau, Lord Overkirk|Overkirk]] from 1704 to 1708 and [[Claude Frédéric t'Serclaes, Count of Tilly|Tilly]] from 1708.{{sfnp|Nimwegen|2020|pages=184, 262, 306}}}} When Dutch forces operated outside the Spanish Netherlands this was often a concession to their English allies.{{sfn|Lesaffer}}{{sfn|Van Alphen|Hoffenaar|Lemmers|Van der Spek|2021|p=86}} |
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===Savoy=== |
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[[File:Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia - Palace of Venaria (cropped).png|thumb|upright=0.8|[[Victor Amadeus II]], [[Duke of Savoy]]]] |
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Throughout the 17th century, [[Savoyard state|Savoy]] sought to replace Spain as the dominant power in [[Northern Italy]]. Savoy consisted of two main geographic segments; [[Prince of Piedmont|Piedmont]], which contained the capital [[Turin]], and the [[Duchy of Aosta]] on the Italian side of the [[Alps]], with the [[Duchy of Savoy]] and [[County of Nice]] in Transalpine France. The latter were almost impossible to defend and combined with the anti-Habsburg policy pursued by Louis XIV and his predecessors, this meant Savoy generally sided with France. However, Piedmont provided foreign powers access to the restive southern French provinces of the [[Dauphiné]] and [[Vaunage]], former [[Huguenot]] strongholds with a long history of rebellion. This provided [[Victor Amadeus II]] with a degree of leverage, allowing him to manoeuvre between opposing parties to expand his territories.{{sfn|Symcox|1985|pp=146–147}} |
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During the Nine Years' War in 1690, Savoy joined the Grand Alliance before agreeing to a [[Treaty of Turin (1696)|separate peace]] with France in 1696. The accession of Philip V in 1701 led to a reversal of long-standing strategic policy, with France now supporting the Spanish position in Lombardy, rather than seeking to weaken it, and Austria doing the opposite. While Victor Amadeus initially allied Savoy with France, his long-term goal was the acquisition of the [[Duchy of Milan]], which neither Bourbons nor Habsburgs would relinquish voluntarily. As discussed elsewhere in this article, securing his borders in Italy was of greater concern to Emperor Leopold than Spain itself. This meant Britain was the only power inclined to help Victor Amadeus achieve this objective and he changed sides in 1703 after the Anglo-Dutch navies won control of the Western Mediterranean.{{sfn|Symcox|1985|p=149}} |
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==Military campaigns; 1701–1708== |
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===Italy=== |
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[[File:North Italy 1700.png|thumb|right|upright=1.35|Northern Italy; Milan, Savoy, and Mantua were the primary areas of conflict]] |
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The war in Italy primarily involved the Spanish-ruled [[Duchy of Milan]] and the French-allied [[Duchy of Mantua]], considered essential to the security of Austria's southern borders. In 1701, French troops occupied both cities and [[Victor Amadeus II]], Duke of Savoy, allied with France, his daughter [[Maria Luisa of Savoy|Maria Luisa]] marrying Philip V.{{sfn|Dhondt| 2015|pp=16–17}} In May 1701, an Imperial army under [[Prince Eugene of Savoy]] moved into Northern Italy; by February 1702, victories at [[Battle of Carpi|Carpi]], [[Battle of Chiari|Chiari]], and [[Battle of Cremona|Cremona]] forced the French behind the [[Adda (river)|Adda River]].{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=270–271}} |
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[[Louis Joseph, Duke of Vendôme]], one of the best French generals, took command and was substantially reinforced; Prince Eugene managed a draw at the [[Battle of Luzzara]] but the French recovered most of the territory and lost the year before.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=276–277}} In October 1703, Victor Amadeus declared war on France; by May 1706, the French held most of Savoy except [[Turin]] while victories at [[Battle of Cassano (1705)|Cassano]] and [[Battle of Calcinato|Calcinato]] forced the Imperialists into the [[Trentino]] valley.{{sfn|Falkner|2015|p=1302}} |
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However, in July 1706, Vendôme and any available forces were sent to reinforce France's northern frontier after the defeat at [[Battle of Ramillies|Ramillies]]. Reinforced by German auxiliaries led by [[Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau|Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau]], Prince Eugene broke the [[siege of Turin]] in September; despite a minor French victory at [[Battle of Castiglione (1706)|Castiglione]], the war in Italy was over. To the fury of his allies, the 1707 [[Convention of Milan]] Emperor Joseph gave French troops in Lombardy free passage to Southern France.{{sfn|Sundstrom|1992|p=196}} |
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A combined Savoyard-Imperial attack on the French base of [[Toulon]] planned for April was postponed when Imperial troops were diverted to seize the Spanish Bourbon [[Kingdom of Naples]]. By the time they [[Siege of Toulon (1707)|besieged Toulon]] in August, the French were too strong, and they were forced to withdraw. By the end of 1707, fighting in Italy ceased, apart from small-scale attempts by Victor Amadeus to recover Nice and Savoy.{{sfn|Symcox|1985|p=155}} |
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===Low Countries, Rhine, and Danube=== |
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[[File:Low Countries 1700 and entrenched lines.png|thumb|left|upright=1.3|[[Low Countries]]; note the location of [[Prince-Bishopric of Liège]] (in pink). Red lines show the {{lang|fr|[[pré carré]]}}, a double line of fortresses guarding the French border.]] |
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The first objective for the Grand Alliance in this theatre was to secure the Dutch frontiers, threatened by the alliance between France, Bavaria, and [[Joseph Clemens of Bavaria]], ruler of [[Prince-Bishopric of Liège|Liège]] and [[Electorate of Cologne|Cologne]]. During 1702, the Grand Alliance repelled an [[Assault on Nijmegen (1702)|assault on Nijmegen]], [[Siege of Kaiserswerth|captured Kaiserswerth]], a strong town on the eastern side of the Dutch Republic, and took [[Siege of Venlo (1702)|Venlo]], [[Roermond]], [[Stevensweert]] and Liège along the [[Meuse]].{{sfn|Lynn|1999|p=275}} The 1703 campaign was marred by Allied conflicts over strategy. Despite capturing [[Siege of Bonn (1703)|Bonn]], they failed to take [[Antwerp]], while a Dutch contingent narrowly escaped disaster at [[Battle of Ekeren|Ekeren]] in June.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=280–281}} |
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On the [[Upper Rhine]], Imperial forces under [[Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden]] remained on the defensive, although they took [[Siege of Landau (1702)|Landau]] in 1702. Supported by the Bavarians, during the 1703 campaign French forces retook Landau, won victories at [[Battle of Friedlingen|Friedlingen]], [[First Battle of Höchstädt|Höchstädt]] and [[Battle of Speyerbach|Speyerbach]], then captured [[Siege of Kehl (1703)|Kehl]] and [[Breisach]]. With Austrian resources absorbed by [[Rákóczi's War of Independence]] in Hungary, the Franco-Bavarian plan for 1704 was to march on Vienna.{{sfn|Ingrao|1979|p=123}} To relieve the pressure, Marlborough marched up the Rhine, joined forces with Louis of Baden and Prince Eugene, and crossed the Danube on 2 July. Allied victory at [[Battle of Blenheim|Blenheim]] on 13 August forced Bavaria out of the war and the [[Treaty of Ilbersheim]] placed it under Austrian rule.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=286–294}} |
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Allied efforts to exploit their victory in 1705 floundered on poor coordination, tactical disputes, and command rivalries.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=298–299}} A diplomatic crisis between the Dutch Republic and England was only averted by the dismissal of General [[Frederik Johan van Baer|Slangenburg]],{{Sfn|Nimwegen|2020|p=285}} while the imposition of Austrian rule in Bavaria caused a brief but vicious [[Bavarian uprising of 1705–1706|peasant revolt]].{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=298–299}} In May 1706, the French were comprehensively defeated at [[Battle of Ramillies|Ramillies]] by an Allied army under Marlborough, which then occupied much of the Spanish Netherlands in under two weeks.{{sfn|Holmes|2008|pp=347–349}} France assumed a largely defensive posture for the rest of the war.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=320–323}} |
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The 1707 campaign was without any significant events, as both parties focussed on other fronts. The French, now under Marshal Vendôme, avoided battle and Marlborough did little to force one upon them. By 1708, the focus of both sides was again almost entirely on the fighting in the Low Countries. The allies once more set their sights on breaking French fortification belts, while the French themselves planned a major [[counteroffensive]]. Although this counteroffensive was initially successful when the French surprised the Allied garrisons at [[Ghent]] and [[Bruges]],{{efn|This was in part possible due to the help from Flemish citizens who were dissatisfied with their new Anglo-Dutch rulers.{{sfn|Veenendaal|1950|pp=34–41}}}} it failed after the Allies defeated them at the [[Battle of Oudenaarde]]. In its aftermath the Allies managed to [[Siege of Lille (1708)|capture Lille]], the strongest fortress of the French fortress belts, while a [[Assault on Brussels (1708)|French assault on Brussels]] was reppelled and [[Siege of Ghent (1708)|Ghent]] and Bruges recaptured.{{sfn|Nimwegen|2020|p=354}}{{sfn|Veenendaal|1950|pp=34–41}} But despite losses like Lille and other strongpoints, the French would prevent the Allies from making a decisive breach in their frontiers.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=320–323}} |
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===Spain and Portugal=== |
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[[File:Spain 1702-1714.png|thumb|right|upright=1.3|Peninsular Spain, showing [[Castile (historical region)|Castile]] and [[Aragon]]]] |
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British involvement was primarily driven by the need to protect their trade routes in the Mediterranean. By putting Archduke Charles on the Spanish throne, they also hoped to gain commercial privileges within the Spanish Empire. Despite their dynastic claim, the Austrian Habsburgs viewed securing Northern Italy and suppressing the Hungarian revolt as higher priorities. With the Dutch focusing on Flanders post-1704, this theatre was largely dependent on British naval and military support.{{sfn|Atkinson|1944|pp=233–233}} |
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Spain at the time was a [[personal union]] between the Crowns of [[Crown of Castile|Castile]] and [[Crown of Aragon|Aragon]]. The latter was further divided into the separate entities of [[Principality of Catalonia|Catalonia]], [[Kingdom of Aragon|Aragon]], [[Kingdom of Valencia|Valencia]], [[Kingdom of Majorca|Majorca]], [[Kingdom of Sicily|Sicily]], [[Kingdom of Naples|Naples]], and [[Kingdom of Sardinia (1324–1720)|Sardinia]]. In 1701, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, and Sardinia declared for Philip, while a mixture of anti-Castilian and anti-French sentiment meant the others supported Archduke Charles, the most important being Catalonia. Allied victory at [[Battle of Vigo Bay|Vigo Bay]] in October 1702 persuaded [[Peter II of Portugal]] to switch sides, giving them an operational base in this area.{{sfn|Francis|1965|pp=71–93}} |
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Archduke Charles landed at [[Lisbon]] in March 1704 to begin a land campaign, while the British-Dutch [[capture of Gibraltar]] was a significant blow to Bourbon prestige. An attempt to retake it was defeated [[Battle of Vélez-Málaga|in August]], with a [[Twelfth siege of Gibraltar|land siege]] being abandoned in April 1705.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|p=296}} The 1705 [[Pact of Genoa]] between Catalan representatives and Britain opened a second front in the north-east; the loss of [[Siege of Barcelona (1705)|Barcelona]] and Valencia left [[Toulon]] as the only major port available to the Bourbons in the Western Mediterranean. Philip [[Siege of Barcelona (1706)|tried to retake Barcelona]] in May 1706 but was repulsed, while his absence allowed an Allied force from Portugal to enter Madrid and [[Zaragoza]].{{sfn|Lynn|1999|p=302}} |
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However, lack of popular support and logistical issues meant the Allies could not hold territory away from the coastline, and by November, Philip controlled Castile, [[Kingdom of Murcia|Murcia]], and parts of Valencia. Allied efforts to regain the initiative ended with defeat at [[Battle of Almansa|Almansa]] in April 1707, followed by an unsuccessful [[Siege of Toulon (1707)|siege of Toulon]] in August. Despite these failures, control of Gibraltar and the [[Capture of Menorca (1708)|capture of Menorca]] in 1708 allowed the [[Royal Navy]] to dominate the Western Mediterranean. Since many British politicians considered this their primary objective, they became reluctant to approve further expensive land campaigns in this theatre.{{sfn|Atkinson|1944|pp=233–233}} |
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===War beyond Europe and related conflicts=== |
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[[File:Caribbean general map.png|thumb|left|upright=1.0|The [[West Indies]]; the huge profits associated with sugar production made this area highly significant.]] |
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The close links between war and trade meant conflict extended beyond Europe, particularly in North America, where it is known as [[Queen Anne's War]], and the [[West Indies]], which [[Sugar plantations in the Caribbean|produced sugar]], then a hugely profitable commodity. Also, there were minor trade conflicts in South America, India, and Asia; the financial strains of war particularly affected the [[Dutch East India Company]], as it was a huge drain on scarce naval resources. |
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Related conflicts include [[Rákóczi's War of Independence]] in [[Kingdom of Hungary (1526-1867)|Hungary]], which was funded by France and a serious concern for the Habsburgs throughout the war. In South-Eastern France, Britain funded the [[Huguenot]] 1704-1710 [[Camisard]] rebellion; one objective of the 1707 campaign in Northern Italy and Southern France was to support this revolt, one of a series that began in the 1620s. |
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==Towards peace; 1709–1715== |
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By the end of 1708, the French had withdrawn from Northern Italy, while the maritime powers controlled the Spanish Netherlands, and secured the borders of the Dutch Republic; in the Mediterranean, the maritime powers had achieved naval supremacy, and Britain acquired permanent bases in Gibraltar and Menorca. However, as Marlborough himself pointed out, the French frontiers remained largely intact, their army showed no signs of being defeated, while Philip proved far more popular with the Spanish than his rival. Many of the objectives set out by the Grand Alliance in 1701 had been achieved, but success in 1708 made them overconfident.{{sfn|Nicholson|1955|pp=124–125}} |
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===Diplomacy and renewed war=== |
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{{further|No Peace Without Spain}} |
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French diplomats focused on the Dutch, whom they considered were more likely to favour peace than their allies, for victory at Ramillies removed any direct military threat to the Republic, while highlighting differences with Britain on the Spanish Netherlands. Peace talks broke down in late 1708 because the Allies had agreed not to negotiate a separate peace but could not agree on the terms.{{sfn|Bromley|1979|p=446}} The [[Great Frost of 1709]] caused widespread famine in France and Spain, forcing Louis to re-open negotiations and he hinted at his willingness to cede French fortresses to the Dutch Republic.{{sfn|Ward|Leathes|2010|pp=422–423}}{{sfn|Nimwegen|2020|p=307}} |
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In May 1709 the Allies presented him with the preliminaries of the Hague. Britain and Austria still insisted |
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on an undivided Spanish monarchy for Archduke Charles. The Allies demanded that Philip was given two months to cede his throne to Charles, while France was required to remove him by force if he did not comply, besides having to cede the strongholds, [[Thionville]], [[Cambrai]] and [[Valenciennes]] as collateral.{{sfn|Ward|Leathes|2010|pp=422–423}} Although Spain was of less importance to them, the Dutch negotiators, led by Heinsius, considered these strict conditions necessary to ensure that peace conditions were honoured, as they doubted Louis' sincerity. They were concerned that the Allies would still have to exhaust themselves in Spain, while France, after a period of recuperation, might once again lend support to Phillip.{{sfn|Nimwegen|2020|pp=307–308 & 321}} |
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[[File:The Battle of Malplaquet, 1709.png|thumb|right|upright=1.2|[[Battle of Malplaquet]], 1709: an Allied victory, the losses shocked Europe and increased the desire for peace.]] |
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Many Allied statesmen, including Marlborough, assumed Philip would abdicate on request and felt that the terms seriously underestimated France's ability to continue the war. They also required the Spanish to accept Archduke Charles as king in his place, which they were certainly unwilling to do, as demonstrated by the failure of Allied campaigns to hold territory outside Catalonia.{{sfn|Kamen|2001|pp=70–72}} Although Louis seemed willing to abandon his ambitions in Spain, making war on his grandson was unacceptable, a stipulation so offensive that when made public, the French resolved to fight on.{{sfn|Ward|Leathes|2010|p=424}} |
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Following success in the [[Siege of Tournai (1709)|Siege of Tournai]], Marlborough's 1709 offensive in northern France culminated in the [[Battle of Malplaquet]] on 11 September; a nominal Allied victory, but one in which their total casualties numbered 22,000 out of 86,000 soldiers, the Dutch infantry losing 8,500 out of 18,000.{{Sfn|Holmes|2008|p=433}} Although the French strategic position continued to deteriorate, the battle showed that their fighting abilities had remained intact and increased war-weariness in both Britain and the Dutch Republic. More significant were Franco-Spanish victories at [[Siege of Alicante|Alicante]] in April, and [[Battle of La Gudina|La Gudina]] in May, which showed that a successful military solution in Spain for the Allies now appeared remote.{{sfn|Gregg|2001|p=289}} |
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Shortly after, the Dutch discovered they had been excluded from a commercial agreement signed by Archduke Charles which granted Britain exclusive trading rights in Spanish America. This deepened divisions between the Allies while increasing Spanish opposition to having the Archduke as their king.{{sfn|Gregg|2001|p=289}} The [[Godolphin–Marlborough ministry|Whig government]] in London was however afraid to push the Dutch into the hands of the French and went back on their commercial agreement with Archduke Charles. In exchange for a Dutch guarantee to support the Hanoverian succession, Britain agreed to share trading rights in Spanish America and the Mediterranean. Additionally, the Whigs promised the Dutch a significantly expanded barrier in the Spanish Netherlands, including key fortress towns such as Lille, Valenciennes, [[Vieux-Condé|Condé]] and [[Maubeuge]]. The Dutch now seemed to obtain all they had ever wanted outset of the war, not only in the Low Countries but also in the Mediterranean and America.{{sfn|Veendendaal|1970|p=438–439}} It however proved to be an awkward and ill-fated agreement. The treaty quickly sparked resentment, particularly from the Emperor, who was offended by the heavy burden it imposed on Charles's sovereignty over the Southern Netherlands, while in Britain the new treaty led to heavy opposition by the Tories as they saw it as detrimental to British commerce.{{sfn|Veendendaal|1970|p=439}}{{sfn|Gregg|2001|p=289}} |
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The Whigs had won the [[1708 British general election]] by arguing military victory was the quickest road to peace, but failure in France was mirrored in Spain. Archduke Charles re-entered Madrid in 1710 after victories at [[Battle of Almenar|Almenar]] and [[Battle of Saragossa|Saragossa]], but the Allies could not hold the interior and were forced to retreat. 3,500 British troops surrendered at [[Battle of Brihuega|Brihuega]] on 8 December, while the [[Battle of Villaviciosa]] on 10 December confirmed Bourbon control of Spain.{{sfn|Kamen|2001|p=101}} At the same time, costs continued to spiral; the Dutch were close to bankruptcy while Austrian troops were almost entirely funded by Britain. In 1709, [[Parliament of Great Britain|Parliament]] approved expenditures of £6.4 million, up from £5.0 million in 1706; by the end of 1710, these had doubled to £12.9 million, despite minimal gains.{{Sfn|Hattendorf|1978|p=304}} |
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===Negotiations=== |
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[[File:Villars a Denain1.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.8|[[Battle of Denain]], July 1712; defeat ended Austrian and Dutch hopes of improving their negotiating position.]] |
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When talks resumed at [[Geertruidenberg]] in March 1710, Louis now even showed a willingness to assist the Allies in removing his grandson from Spain. The Dutch proposed compensating Philip with Sicily and Sardinia, but neither the Austrians or British would agree, and negotiations broke down again.{{sfn|Onnekink|Bruin|2013|p=65–66}} However, it was clear to the French the mood in Britain had changed. This was confirmed when the pro-peace Tories won a landslide victory in the October [[1710 British general election|1710 British election]], although they confirmed their commitment to the war to prevent a credit crisis. Despite the capture of [[Siege of Bouchain|Bouchain]] in September, a decisive victory in northern France continued to elude the Allies, while an [[Quebec expedition (1711)|attack on Quebec]] ended in disaster.{{sfn|Simms|2008|pp=60–64}} |
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When Emperor Joseph died in April 1711, his brother Archduke Charles was [[1711 imperial election|elected emperor]]. For the Dutch and British, his accession undermined a key reason for continuing the war, since a union of Spain with Austria was as unwelcome as one with France. The British secretly negotiated peace terms directly with France, leading to the signing of the Preliminary Articles of London on 8 October 1711.{{efn|Also known as the Mesnager Convention.}} These included French acceptance of the [[Act of Settlement 1701]] and a guarantee the French and Spanish crowns would remain separate. In addition, France undertook to ensure Spain ceded Gibraltar and Menorca, while giving Britain a thirty-year monopoly on the {{lang|es|[[Asiento de Negros]]}}, the right to import slaves into Spanish American colonies.{{sfn|Bromley|1979|pp=459–460}} Despite their resentment at being excluded from these talks, the Dutch were financially exhausted by the war, and could not continue without British support. Charles VI initially rejected the idea of a peace conference, only agreeing once the Dutch decided to support it, but continued to oppose the treaty.{{sfn|Elliott|2014|p=63}} |
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===Peace of Utrecht=== |
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{{main|Peace of Utrecht}} |
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[[File:Treaty of Utrecht 1713.png|thumb|right|upright=1.0|The [[Treaty of Utrecht]]; [[Abraham Allard]], 18th century]] |
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Within weeks of the conference opening, events threatened the basis of the peace agreed between Britain and France. First, the French presented proposals awarding the Spanish Netherlands to Max Emmanuel of Bavaria and a minimal Barrier, leaving the Dutch with little to show for their huge investment of money and men. Second, a series of deaths left Louis XIV's two-year-old great-grandson, the future [[Louis XV]] as heir, making Philip next in line and his immediate renunciation imperative.{{sfn|Somerset|2012|p=470}} |
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The Dutch and Austrians fought on, hoping to improve their negotiating position but the new British government ordered Marlborough's replacement, [[James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde]], not to participate in offensive operations against the French.{{sfn|Gregg|2001|p=354}} These orders caused fury then and later, with Whigs urging Hanoverian military intervention. Those considered responsible, including Ormonde and the Tory statesman [[Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke]], were driven into exile when George I succeeded Queen Anne in 1714, and became prominent [[Jacobitism|Jacobites]].{{sfn|Somerset|2012|p=477}} |
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Prince Eugene captured [[Le Quesnoy]] in June and besieged [[Landrecies]], but was [[Battle of Denain|defeated at Denain]] on 24 July. The French then [[Rhine campaign of 1713|went on to recapture Le Quesnoy]] and other towns lost in previous two years, including Marchines, Douai, and Bouchain. This showed the French retained their fighting ability, while the Dutch had finally reached the end of their willingness and ability to continue the war.{{sfn|Holmes|2008|p=462}} |
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On 6 June, Philip confirmed his renunciation of the French throne, and the British offered the Dutch a revised [[Barrier Treaty]], replacing that of 1709 which they rejected as overly generous. A significant improvement on the 1697 Barrier, it was subject to Austrian approval, and while less beneficial, the final terms were sufficient for the Dutch to agree.{{sfn|Myers|1917|pp=799–829}} Despite this, negotiations dragged on until 1715, as the Austrians were reluctant to pay for Dutch garrisons stationed in their territory, although British pressure meant the issue was ultimately concluded in favour of the Dutch.{{sfn|Nimwegen|2002|p=29}} |
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[[File:Europe 1714.png|thumb|right|upright=1.2|Western Europe in 1714, after the Treaties of [[Treaty of Utrecht|Utrecht]] and [[Treaty of Rastatt|Rastatt]]]] |
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Charles withdrew from the conference when France insisted he guarantee not to acquire Mantua or [[Duchy of Mirandola|Mirandola]]. He was supported by the future George I, who wanted France to withdraw backing for the Stuart heir [[James Francis Edward Stuart|James Francis]]. As a result, neither Austria nor the Empire signed the [[Peace of Utrecht]] of 11 April 1713 between France and the other Allies; Spain made peace with the Dutch in June, then Savoy and Britain on 13 July 1713.{{sfn|Somerset|2012|pp=494–495}} |
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===Treaties of Rastatt and Baden=== |
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Fighting continued on the Rhine, but Austria was financially exhausted and after the loss of [[Landau]] and [[Freiburg]] in November 1713, Charles finally made peace on 7 March 1714. In the [[Treaty of Rastatt]], the [[Habsburg monarchy]] acceded to the terms of Utrecht, which confirmed their gains in Southern Italy, returned [[Breisach]], [[Kehl]], and Freiburg, ended French support for the Hungarian revolt and agreed on terms for the Dutch Barrier fortresses. Charles abandoned his claim to Strasbourg and [[Upper Alsace|Alsace]] and agreed to the restoration of the Wittelsbach electors of Bavaria and Cologne, Max Emmanuel and Joseph Clemens, lifting the [[Imperial ban]] on them. Article XIX of the treaty transferred sovereignty over the Spanish Netherlands to Austria. On 7 September, the Holy Roman Empire joined the agreement by the [[Treaty of Baden (1714)|Treaty of Baden]]; although Catalonia and Majorca were not finally subdued by the Bourbons until June 1715, the war was over.{{sfn|Frey|Frey|1995|pp=374–375}} |
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==Aftermath== |
==Aftermath== |
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[[File:The Battle of Cape Passaro, 11 August 1718 RMG BHC0351.tiff|thumb|right|upright=1.3|The Royal Navy destroys a Spanish fleet off Sicily, [[Battle of Cape Passaro|Cape Passaro]], August 1718]] |
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[[Image:Western Europe Utrecht Treaty.jpg|thumb|right|A map depicting [[Western Europe|Western Europe's]] borders after the [[Treaty of Utrecht]] and the [[Treaty of Rastatt]].]] |
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{{main|Treaty of Utrecht}} |
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Article II of the Peace of Utrecht included the stipulation "because of the great danger which threatened the liberty and safety of all Europe, from the too-close conjunction of the kingdoms of Spain and France, ... the same person should never become King of both kingdoms." Some historians view this as a key point in the evolution of the modern nation-state; [[Randall Lesaffer]] argues it marks a significant milestone in the concept of collective security.{{sfn|Lesaffer|2014}} |
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Under the Peace of Utrecht, [[Philip V of Spain|Philip]] was recognized as King Philip V of Spain, but renounced his place in the French line of succession, thereby precluding the union of the French and Spanish crowns (although there was some sense in France that this renunciation was illegal). He retained the Spanish overseas empire, but ceded the [[Spanish Netherlands]], [[Naples]], [[Milan]], and [[Sardinia]] to Austria; [[Sicily]] and parts of the Milanese to [[Savoy]]; and [[Gibraltar]] and [[Minorca]] to Great Britain. Moreover, he granted the British the exclusive right to [[slave trade|slave trading]] in Spanish America for thirty years, the so-called ''[[asiento]]''. |
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===Spain=== |
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With regard to the political organization of their kingdoms, Philip issued the ''[[Nueva Planta decrees]]'', following the centralizing approach of the Bourbons in France, ending the political autonomy of the kingdoms which used to make the [[Crown of Aragon]]; territories in Spain that had supported the Archduke Charles and up to then had kept their institutions in a framework of loose dynastic union. On the other hand, the [[Kingdom of Navarre]] and the [[Basque Country (autonomous community)|Basque Provinces]], having supported the king against the Habsburg pretender, did not lose their autonomy and retained their traditional differentiated institutions and laws. |
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Philip was confirmed as king of Spain, which retained its independence and the majority of its empire, in return for ceding the Spanish Netherlands, most of its Italian possessions, as well as Gibraltar and Menorca. These losses were deeply felt; [[Kingdom of Naples|Naples]] and [[Kingdom of Sicily|Sicily]] were regained in 1735 and Menorca in 1782, although Gibraltar would still be held by Britain, despite numerous attempts to regain it. The 1707 [[Nueva Planta decrees]] centralised power in Madrid, and abolished regional political structures including the Crown of Aragon, although Catalonia and Majorca remained outside the system until 1767.{{sfn|Vives|1969|p=591}} Their economy recovered remarkably quickly, and the House of Bourbon (save for brief interruptions) has held the Spanish throne ever since.{{sfn|Fernández-Xesta y Vázquez|2012|p=244}} |
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===France=== |
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No important changes were made to French territory in Europe. Grandiose imperial desires to turn back the French expansion to the Rhine which had occurred since the middle decades of the seventeenth century were not realized, nor was the French border pushed back in the Low Countries. France agreed to stop supporting the [[House of Stuart|Stuart]] pretenders to the British throne, instead recognizing Anne as the legitimate queen. France gave up various North American colonial possessions, recognizing British sovereignty over [[Rupert's Land]] and [[Newfoundland (island)|Newfoundland]], and ceding [[Acadia]] and its half of [[Saint Kitts]]. The Dutch were permitted to retain various forts in the Spanish Netherlands, and were permitted to annex a part of Spanish [[Guelders]]. |
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Louis XIV died on 1 September 1715, and was succeeded by his five-year-old great-grandson Louis XV; on his deathbed, he is alleged to have admitted, "I have loved war too well".{{sfn|Colville|1935|p=149}} True or not, while the final settlement was far more favourable than the Allied terms of 1709, it is hard to see what Louis gained that he had not already achieved through diplomacy by February 1701.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=361–362}} From 1666 onward French policies assumed military and economic superiority over their rivals, but this was no longer the case by 1714 when Britain appeared to have overtaken France on both fronts. The continued widening of this gap as British trade expanded post-Utrecht was viewed by Louis's successors as a permanent threat to the European [[Balance of power (international relations)|balance of power]]. Seeking to reduce this was a major factor in France entering the 1740–1748 [[War of the Austrian Succession]].{{sfn|McKay|Scott|1983|pages=138–140}} |
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===Austria and the Holy Roman Empire=== |
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With the Peace of Utrecht, the wars to prevent French hegemony that had dominated the seventeenth century were over for the time being. France and Spain, both under Bourbon monarchs, remained allies during the following years. Spain, stripped of its territories in Italy and the Low Countries, lost much of its power, and became a second-rate nation in Continental politics. |
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Despite the failure in Spain, Austria secured its position in Italy and Hungary and acquired the bulk of the Spanish Netherlands; even after reimbursing the Dutch for the cost of their Barrier garrisons, the increased revenues from the [[Austrian Netherlands]] funded a significant expansion of the [[Imperial Army of the Holy Roman Emperor|Austrian army]].{{sfn|Falkner|2015|pp=4173–4181}} The Habsburgs also acquired the duchies of Milan and Mantua, the kingdoms of Naples and Sardinia (exchanged in 1720 for Sicily) and a dominance over Italy that would last (interrupted by [[Napoleon]]) until 1859. The shift of Habsburg focus away from Germany and into Southern Europe continued with victory in the [[Austro-Turkish War of 1716–1718]]. Their position as the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire was challenged by Bavaria, Hanover, Prussia, and Saxony, who increasingly acted as independent powers; in 1742, [[Charles VII, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles Albert of Bavaria]] became the first non-Habsburg Emperor in over 300 years.{{sfn|Lindsay|1957|p=420}} |
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== |
===Great Britain=== |
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Britain is usually seen as the main beneficiary of Utrecht, which marked its rise to becoming the dominant European commercial power.{{sfn|Pincus|2012|pp=7–8}} It established naval superiority over its competitors, acquired the strategic Mediterranean ports of Gibraltar and Menorca and trading rights in Spanish America. France accepted the Protestant succession, ensuring a smooth inheritance by George I in August 1714, while agreeing to end support for the Stuarts in the [[Anglo-French Alliance (1716–1731)|1716 Anglo-French Treaty]].{{sfn|Szechi|1994|pp=93–95}} Although the war left all participants with unprecedented levels of government debt, only Britain was able to finance it efficiently, providing a relative advantage over its competitors.{{sfn|Carlos|Neal|Wandschneider|2006|p=2}} |
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{{Reflist}} |
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===Dutch Republic=== |
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== External links == |
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{{Location map many|Belgium|caption = The Barrier fortresses as agreed in 1715, corresponding to the modern borders of Belgium|border = black| width = 250| relief = yes|float = right |
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* [http://www.a2a.org.uk/search/documentxsl.asp?com=1&i=2&nbKey=1&stylesheet=xsl\A2A_com.xsl&keyword=catalans&properties=0601 Documents about ''The case of the catalans''] dating to 1714, at the [[House of Lords]], [[UK]]. |
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|label = Veurne|pos=top |lat_deg=51|lat_min =4|lon_deg = 2|lon_min = 39 |
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* Journal of the House of Lords: volume 19, 2 August 1715, ''Further Articles of Impeachment against E. Oxford brought from H.C.'' [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=38455&strquery=catalan%20case#s14 Article VI]. |
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|label2 =Knokke|pos2=right|lat2_deg=50|lat2_min = 59|lon2_deg = 2|lon2_min = 48 |
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|label3 =Ypres |pos3= left|lat3_deg=50|lat3_min = 51|lon3_deg = 2|lon3_min = 53 |
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|label4 =Menen |pos4=right|lat4_deg=50|lat4_min = 48|lon4_deg = 3|lon4_min = 7 |
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|label5=Tournai|pos5=right|lat5_deg=50|lat5_min = 36|lon5_deg = 3|lon5_min = 23 |
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|label6 =Mons |pos6=right|lat6_deg=50|lat6_min = 27|lon6_deg = 3|lon6_min = 57 |
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|label7=Dendermonde|pos7 = right|lat7_deg = 51 | lat7_min = 2 | lon7_deg = 4 | lon7_min = 6 |
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|label8 = Namur|pos8 = right|lat8_deg = 50 | lat8_min = 28 | lon8_deg = 4 | lon8_min = 52 |
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}} |
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The Dutch had successfully recovered their positions in the Southern Netherlands, and their troops were central to the alliance which halted French territorial expansion in Europe until a new cycle began in [[French Revolutionary Wars|1792]].{{sfn|Nimwegen|2020|p=354}} However, the war left them effectively bankrupt, and inflicted permanent damage on the Dutch merchant navy; while they remained the dominant economic power in the [[Far East]], Britain took over as the pre-eminent global commercial and maritime power.{{sfn|Elliott|2014|p=8}} The exhaustion of the [[Dutch admiralties]] had also allowed the [[Barbary pirates|pirates]] from [[Regency of Algiers|Algiers]] to capture numerous Dutch merchant vessels, which the Dutch were only able to stop after a [[Dutch-Algerian War (1715–1726)|long conflict]]. The Barrier Treaty fortresses became the central driver of Dutch foreign policy in the decades after 1713 and were put to the test during the [[War of the Austrian Succession]].{{efn|Although judged favourably by contemporaries,{{sfn|Nimwegen|2002|pp=31–35}} modern historians still argue about the true effectiveness of the barrier fortresses, since they were conquered by France during the [[War of the Austrian Succession]].{{sfn|Ward|Leathes|2010|p=57}}{{sfn|Kubben|2011|p=148}} Advocates instead emphasise that it took 3 years of campaigning for the French to conquer all barrier fortresses and that the purpose of the barrier was to give the Dutch enough time to mobilize and fortify their own borders. According to them, nobody in the Dutch Republic was under the illusion that the barrier would itself stop French armies.{{sfn|Wijn|1964|p=703}}{{sfn|Nimwegen|2002|pp=31–33}}}} |
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===Other=== |
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Wider implications include the rise of Prussia and Savoy while many of the participants were involved in the 1700–1721 [[Great Northern War]], with Russia becoming a major European power for the first time as a result. Finally, while colonial conflicts were relatively minor and largely confined to the North American theatre, the so-called [[Queen Anne's War]], they were to become a key element in future wars.{{sfn|Lynn|1999|pp=361–362}} Meanwhile, maritime [[unemployment]] brought on by the war's end led to the third stage of the [[Golden Age of Piracy]], as many sailors formerly employed in the navies of the warring powers turned to [[piracy]] for survival.<ref>{{cite web |title=Golden Age of Piracy – Post Spanish Succession Period |url=https://goldenageofpiracy.org/history/post-spanish-succession-period.php |access-date=25 August 2020 |website=goldenageofpiracy.org}}</ref> |
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==Claims to the Spanish throne== |
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{{War of the Spanish Succession family tree|State=collapsed}} |
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==See also== |
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* [[Decline of Spain]] |
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* [[Madeleine Caulier]] |
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==Explanatory notes== |
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{{notelist}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist|20em}} |
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* Chandler, David G. ''Marlborough as Military Commander.'' Spellmount Ltd, (2003). ISBN 1-86227-195-X |
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* Frey, Linda and Marsha. ''The Treaties of the War of the Spanish Succession: An Historical and Critical Dictionary'' Greenwood (1995). |
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* Hattendorf, John B. ''England in the War of the Spanish Succession: A Study of the English View and Conduct of Grand Strategy, 1702–1712.'' Garland (1987). |
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* Jongste, Jan A.F. de, and Augustuus J. Veenendaal, Jr. ''Anthonie Heinsius and The Dutch Republic 1688–1720: Politics, War, and Finance.'' Institute of Netherlands History (2002). |
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* Lynn, John A. ''The Wars of Louis XIV: 1667–1714.'' Longman, (1999). ISBN 0-582-05629-2 |
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* McKay, Derek & Scott, H. M. ''The Rise of the Great Powers 1648–1815.'' Longman, (1984). ISBN 0-582-48554-1 |
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* Ostwald, Jamel. ''Vauban under Siege: Engineering Efficiency and Martial Vigor in the War of the Spanish Succession.'' Brill (2007). |
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* Symcox, Geoffrey. ''War, Diplomacy, and Imperialism: 1618–1763.'' Harper & Row, (1973). ISBN 06-139500-5 |
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* Tombs, Robert and Isabelle. ''That Sweet Enemy: The French and the British from the Sun King to the Present''. London: William Heinemann, 2006. |
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* Veenendaal, A. J., ''Briefwisselling van Anthonie Heinsius, 1702–1720.'' 19 volumes. Instituut voor Nederlandse Geschiedenis (1976–2001). |
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* Wolf, John B. ''The Emergence of the Great Powers: 1685–1715.'' Harper & Row, (1962). ISBN 0061397509 |
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* {{cite journal |last=Ostwald |first=Jamel |title=The 'Decisive' Battle of Ramillies, 1706: Prerequisites for Decisiveness in Early Modern Warfare. |journal=History |date=2000 |volume=42 |issue=3 |pages=649–677 |doi=10.2307/120864 |jstor=120864 |url=https://doi.org/10.2307/120864 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Ostwald |first=Jamel |title=Creating the British way of war: English strategy in the War of the Spanish Succession in Successful Strategies: Triumphing in War and Peace from Antiquity to the Present |year=2014 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-63359-9 |editor1-last=Murray |editor1-first=Williamson |editor2-last=Sinnreich |editor2-first=Richard}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Pincus |first=Steven |year=2012 |title=Rethinking Mercantilism: Political Economy, The British Empire and the Atlantic World in the 17th and 18th Centuries |journal=[[William and Mary Quarterly]] |volume=69 |issue=1}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Rasler |first=Karen |title=The Great Powers and Global Struggle, 1490–1990 |year=1994 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |isbn=978-0-8131-1889-5}} |
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* {{cite web |last=Rothbard |first=Murray |author-link=Murray Rothbard |date=23 April 2010 |title=Mercantilism as the Economic Side of Absolutism |url=https://mises.org/library/mercantilism-economic-side-absolutism |access-date=7 April 2018 |website=Mises.org }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Rowen |first=Herbert H. |title=John de Witt and the Triple Alliance. |journal=The Journal of Modern History |date=1954 |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=1–14 |doi=10.1086/237659 |jstor=44224692 |s2cid=145695238 |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/1874869 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Rowlands |first=Guy |title=The financial decline of a great power war, influence, and money in Louis XIV's France |year=2013 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780191744600}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Rule |first=John |title=The Partition Treaties, 1698–1700 in A European View in Redefining William III: The Impact of the King-Stadholder in International Context |year=2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-138-25796-2}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Schaeper |first=Thomas |date=March 1986 |title=French and English Trade after Utrecht |journal=Journal for Eighteenth Century Studies |volume=9 |issue=1 |doi=10.1111/j.1754-0208.1986.tb00117.x}} |
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* {{cite book |title=Introduction to New Worlds?: Transformations in the Culture of International Relations Around the Peace of Utrecht in Politics and Culture in Europe, 1650–1750 |year=2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-4724-6390-6 |editor1-last=Schmidt Voges |editor1-first=Inken |editor2-last=Solana Crespo |editor2-first=Ana}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Shinsuke |first=Satsuma |title=Britain and Colonial Maritime War in the Early Eighteenth Century |year=2013 |publisher=Boydell Press |isbn=978-1-84383-862-3}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Simms |first=Brendan |title=Three Victories and a Defeat: The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire, 1714–1783 |year=2008 |publisher=Penguin |isbn=978-0-14-028984-8}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Somerset |first=Anne |title=Queen Anne: the Politics of Passion |year=2012 |publisher=Harper |isbn=978-0-00-720376-5}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Storrs |first=Christopher |title=The Resilience of the Spanish Monarchy 1665–1700 |year=2006 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-924637-3}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Sundstrom |first=Roy A. |title=Sidney Godolphin: Servant of the State |year=1992 |publisher=EDS |isbn=978-0-87413-438-4}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Symcox |first=Geoffrey |title=Victor Amadeus: Absolutism in the Savoyard State, 1675–1730 |year=1985 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-04974-1}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Szechi |first=Daniel |title=The Jacobites: Britain and Europe, 1688–1788 |year=1994 |publisher=Manchester University Press |isbn=978-0-7190-3774-0}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Thompson |first=Andrew |title=The Utrecht Settlement and its Aftermath in Britain, Spain and the Treaty of Utrecht 1713–2013 |year=2014 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-909662-22-3 |editor-last=Dadson |editor-first=Trevor}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Thompson |first=R.T. |title=Lothar Franz von Schönborn and the Diplomacy of the Electorate of Mainz |year=1973 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-90-247-1346-2}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Urlanis |first=Boris Cezarevič |title=Wars and Population |year=1971 |publisher=Progress Publishing}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Vault |first=François Eugène de|editor-last=Pelet |editor-first=Jean Jacques Germain baron |title=Mémoires militaires relatifs à la succession d'Espagne sous Louis XIV: Extraits de la correspondance de la cour et des généraux |volume=1 |orig-year=1845 |year=2016 |publisher=Wentworth Press |isbn=978-1-372-87768-1 |language=fr}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Veenendaal |first=A. J. |title=The Opening Phase of Marlborough's Campaign of 1708 in the Netherlands: A Version from Dutch Sources |journal=History |date=1950 |volume=35 |issue=123/124 |pages=34–48 |doi=10.2307/120864 |jstor=24402730 |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/24402730 }} |
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* {{Cite book |editor-last=Bromley|editor-first=J.S. |last=Veendendaal |first=A.J. |title= The New Cambridge Modern History: Volume 6, The war of the Spanish succession in Europe |date=1970 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-29396-9}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Vives |first=Jaime |title=An Economic History of Spain |year=1969 |publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] |isbn=978-0-691-05165-9}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Ward |first1=William |last2=Leathes |first2=Stanley |title=The Cambridge Modern History |orig-year=1912 |publisher=Nabu |isbn=978-1-174-38205-5 |year=2010}} |
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* {{cite book |last=White |first=Ian |chapter=Rural Settlement 1500–1770 |title=The Oxford Companion to Scottish History |year=2011 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-211696-3}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Wilson |first=Peter |title=The Holy Roman Empire: A Thousand Years of Europe's History |year=2016 |publisher=Allen Lane |isbn=978-1-84614-318-2}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Wolf |first=John |title=Louis XIV |orig-year=1968 |publisher=W. W. Norton & Co. |isbn=978-0-393-00753-4 |year=1974}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Wijn |first=J.W. |title=Het Staatsche Leger: Deel VIII – Het tijdperk van de Spaanse Successieoorlog 1702–1705 (The Dutch States Army: Part VIII – The era of the War of the Spanish Succession 1702–1705) |publisher=Martinus Nijhoff |date=1956 |language=nl}} |
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* {{Cite book |last=Wijn |first=J.W. |title=Het Staatsche Leger: Deel VIII Het tijdperk van de Spaanse Successieoorlog 1711–1715 (The Dutch States Army: Part VIII – The era of the War of the Spanish Succession 1711–1715) |publisher=Martinus Nijhoff |date=1964|language=Dutch}} |
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{{refend}} |
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==Further reading== |
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* {{cite book |last=de Bruin |first=Renger E. |title=Performances of Peace: Utrecht 1713 |publisher=Brill |date=2011 |jstor=10.1163/j.ctt1w76w4b}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Gilbert |first=Arthur N. |title=Army Impressment During the War of the Spanish Succession |journal=[[The Historian (journal)|The Historian]] |volume=38 |issue=4 |date=1976 |pages=689–708 |doi=10.1111/j.1540-6563.1976.tb00057.x |jstor=24444302}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Thomson |first=M.A. |title=Louis XIV and the Origins of the War of the Spanish Succession |journal=Transactions of the Royal Historical Society |volume=4 |date=1954 |pages=111–134 |doi=10.2307/3678854 |jstor=3678854|s2cid=159533647}} |
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==External links== |
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* {{Commons category-inline}} |
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{{United States – Commonwealth of Nations recessions}} |
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Latest revision as of 22:30, 11 December 2024
The War of the Spanish Succession was a European great power conflict fought between 1701 and 1714. The immediate cause was the death of the childless Charles II of Spain in November 1700, which led to a struggle for control of the Spanish Empire between supporters of the French Bourbons and the Habsburgs. Charles named his heir as Philip of Anjou, a grandson of Louis XIV of France, whose claim was backed by France and most of Spain. His rival, Archduke Charles of Austria, was supported by the Grand Alliance, whose primary members included Austria, the Dutch Republic, and Great Britain. Significant related conflicts include the 1700 to 1721 Great Northern War, and Queen Anne's War.
Although by 1701 Spain was no longer the predominant European power, its global empire still included the Spanish Netherlands, large parts of Italy, and the Americas. Its acquisition by either France or Austria threatened the European balance of power, and Philip's proclamation as king of Spain on 16 November 1700 led to war. The French held the advantage in the early stages but were forced onto the defensive after 1706. Although the Allies continued to advance in northern France, by 1709 Philip had cemented his position in Spain, the ostensible cause of the war.
When Emperor Joseph I died in 1711, Archduke Charles succeeded his brother as Holy Roman Emperor. Since a union of Spain and Austria was as unwelcome as one with France, the new British government argued it was pointless to continue. By now, only British subsidies kept their allies in the war, and their withdrawal led to the Peace of Utrecht in 1713, followed by the treaties of Rastatt and Baden in 1714.
Philip was confirmed as king of Spain but renounced his claim and those of his descendants to the French throne. The Spanish Empire ceded much of its Italian territories to Savoy and Austria, along with the Spanish Netherlands, although it remained largely intact outside Europe. Britain received Gibraltar and Menorca and acquired major trade concessions in the Spanish Americas. For the Dutch, despite attaining their long sought-after Barrier Treaty, the war is seen as marking the beginning of their decline as a significant European power. Although Louis succeeded in placing his grandson on the Spanish throne, France was left financially exhausted.
Background
[edit]Charles II of Spain succeeded his father Philip IV at the age of four in 1665. Subject to extended periods of ill-health for much of his life, the issue of his successor was a matter of diplomatic debate for decades. For example, in 1670 Charles II of England agreed to support the rights of Louis XIV of France, while the 1689 Grand Alliance committed England and the Dutch Republic to back those of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor.[15]
When Charles died in 1700, the Spanish Empire was no longer the dominant great power, but still included much of Italy and the Americas, the Spanish Netherlands, and colonies such as the Philippines.[16] Negotiations between Louis and Emperor Leopold centred on dividing these territories, which the Spanish refused to allow. Since the acquisition of an undivided empire by either Austria or France would make them too powerful, its inheritance led to a war that involved most of Europe. The 1700–1721 Great Northern War is considered a connected conflict since it affected the involvement of states such as Sweden, Saxony, Denmark–Norway and Russia.[17]
Armies in the 1688 to 1697 Nine Years' War frequently numbered over 100,000, requiring expenditure unsustainable for pre-industrial economies.[18] The 1690s also marked the low point of the Little Ice Age, a period of cold and wet weather that drastically reduced crop yields across Europe.[19] The Great Famine of 1695–1697 killed an estimated 15–25% of the population in present-day Scotland, Scandinavia and the Baltic states, plus another two million in France and Northern Italy.[20]
This combination of financial exhaustion and famine led to the October 1697 Treaty of Ryswick, a compromise that left the succession unresolved. Since it now seemed clear Charles would die without children, Leopold signed only with extreme reluctance, and all sides viewed Ryswick as only a temporary suspension of hostilities.[21]
Partition treaties
[edit]Unlike the crowns of France or Austria, that of Spain could be inherited through the female line. This allowed Charles' sisters Maria Theresa (1638–1683) and Margaret Theresa (1651–1673) to pass their rights onto the children of their respective marriages with Louis XIV and Emperor Leopold. Louis sought to avoid conflict over the issue through direct negotiation with his main opponent William III of England while excluding the Spanish.[22]
Leopold and Margaret's daughter Maria Antonia (1669–1692) married Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria in 1685, and on 28 October 1692, they had a son, Joseph Ferdinand. Under the October 1698 Treaty of the Hague between France, Britain and the Dutch Republic, five-year-old Joseph was designated heir to Charles II; in return, France and Austria would receive parts of Spain's European territories.[23] Charles refused to accept this; on 14 November 1698, he published a will leaving an undivided Spanish monarchy to Joseph Ferdinand. However, the latter's death from smallpox in February 1699 undid these arrangements.[24]
In 1685, Maria Antonia passed her claim to the Spanish throne onto Leopold's sons, Joseph and Archduke Charles.[25] Her right to do so was doubtful, but Louis and William used this to devise the 1700 Treaty of London. Archduke Charles became the new heir, while France, Savoy and Austria received territorial compensation; however, since neither Leopold nor Charles agreed, the treaty was largely pointless.[26] By early October 1700, Charles was dying; his final will left the throne to Louis XIV's grandson Philip, Duke of Anjou; if he refused, the offer would pass to his younger brother the Duke of Berry, followed by Archduke Charles.[27]
Charles died on 1 November 1700, and on the 9th, Spanish ambassadors formally offered the throne to Philip. Louis briefly considered refusing; although it meant the succession of Archduke Charles, insisting William help him enforce the Treaty of London meant he might achieve his territorial aims without fighting. However, his son the Dauphin rejected the idea; French diplomats also advised Austria would fight regardless, while neither the British nor Dutch would go to war for a settlement intended to avoid war. Louis therefore accepted on behalf of his grandson, who was proclaimed Philip V of Spain on 16 November 1700.[27]
Prelude to war
[edit]With most of his objectives achieved by diplomacy, Louis now made a series of moves that combined to make war inevitable.[28] The Tory majority in the English Parliament objected to the Partition Treaties, chiefly the French acquisition of Sicily, an important link in the lucrative Levant trade.[29] However, a foreign diplomat observed their refusal to become involved in a European war was true "only so long as English commerce does not suffer".[30] Louis either failed to appreciate this or decided to ignore it and his actions gradually eroded Tory opposition.[31]
In early 1701, Louis registered Philip's claim to the French throne with the Parlement of Paris, raising the possibility of union with Spain, contrary to Charles' will, though Philip was only third in the French succession. In February, the Spanish-controlled Duchy of Milan and allied Duchy of Mantua in Northern Italy announced their support for Philip and accepted French troops. Combined with efforts to build an alliance between France and Imperial German states in Swabia and Franconia, these were challenges Leopold could not ignore.[32]
Helped by the governor, Max Emanuel of Bavaria, French troops replaced Dutch garrisons in the 'Barrier' fortresses in the Spanish Netherlands, granted at Ryswick. It also threatened the Dutch monopoly over the Scheldt granted by the 1648 Peace of Münster, while French control of Antwerp and Ostend would allow them to blockade the English Channel at will.[33] Combined with other French actions that threatened English trade, this produced a clear majority for war and in May 1701, Parliament urged William to negotiate an anti-French alliance.[34]
On 7 September, Leopold, the Dutch Republic and Britain[h] signed the Treaty of The Hague renewing the 1689 Grand Alliance. Its provisions included securing the Dutch Barrier in the Spanish Netherlands, the Protestant succession in England and Scotland and an independent Spain but did not refer to placing Archduke Charles on the Spanish throne.[35] When the exiled James II of England died on 16 September 1701, Louis reneged on his recognition of the Protestant William III as king of England and Scotland and supported the claim of James' son, James Francis Edward Stuart. War became inevitable and when William himself died in March 1702, his successor Queen Anne confirmed her support for the Treaty of the Hague.[36] The Dutch now led by Grand Pensionary Anthonie Heinsius did the same, despite French hopes that without a Stadtholder the republic would be torn apart internally.[37] On 8 May the Dutch Republic declared war on France, followed by the British and the Emperor on 15 May and the Imperial Diet on 30 September.[36]
General strategic drivers
[edit]The importance of trade and economic interests to the participants is often underestimated; contemporaries viewed Dutch and English support for the Habsburg cause as primarily driven by a desire for access to Spanish markets in the Americas.[38] While modern economists generally assume a constantly growing market, the then dominant theory of mercantilism viewed it as relatively static. This meant increasing your own share of a market required taking it from someone else, with the state facilitating this by attacking opponents' merchant ships and colonies.[39]
As a result, the war quickly expanded to North America, India, and other parts of Asia, with tariffs used as a policy weapon. The 1651–1663 Navigation Acts were a major factor in the Anglo-Dutch Wars, while between 1690 and 1704, English import duties on foreign goods increased by 400%. On 6 September 1700, France banned the import of English manufactured goods such as cloth and imposed prohibitive duties on a wide range of others.[40]
The field armies that operated in the Southern Netherlands during the Nine Years' War had often reached 100,000 men. The size of armies continued to grow during the War of the Spanish Succession. Between 1702 and 1707, the field armies in the Southern Netherlands had a strength of 60,000 to 80,000 men, and from 1708 onwards, over 120,000 men.[41] These extensive armies placed immense strain on pre-industrial economies.[41][42] Armies were restricted by their dependence on water-borne transport for supplies, so campaigns focused on rivers like the Rhine and Adda, while their absence limited operations in areas like Northern Spain. Better logistics, unified command, and simpler internal lines of communication gave Bourbon armies an advantage over their opponents.[43]
Strategic objectives by participant
[edit]Spain
[edit]In 1700, Spain remained a great power in terms of territory control; recent research moreover shows that imports of bullion from the Americas reached their highest level between 1670 and 1700.[44] However, this concealed major structural weaknesses; the vast majority of these imports were used to fund debt or pay foreign merchants. When the new Bourbon administration took over in 1701, they found the empire bankrupt and effectively defenceless, with fewer than 15,000 troops in Spain itself and a navy consisting of 20 ships in total.[45]
Almost constant warfare during the 17th century made the economy subject to long periods of low productivity and depression, and largely reliant upon others for its prosperity. In many ways, the continued existence of the empire was not due to Spanish strength but to maintain a balance between the powers competing for a share of its markets. Despite fighting a series of wars against Spain from 1667 to 1697, France was also its most significant economic partner, supplying labour and controlling a large proportion of its foreign trade. This consideration was an important factor in the decision to name Philip his heir.[44] Its dependence on others was illustrated in 1703; despite the presence of an invading Allied army, the French ambassador urged Louis to allow Dutch and English merchants to purchase wool from Spanish farmers, "otherwise the flocks cannot be maintained".[45]
Enacting political or economic reform was extremely complex since Habsburg Spain was a personal union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon, each with very different political cultures.[i] Most of Philip's support came from the Castilian elite.[46] The Spanish Netherlands had been governed by prince-elector Max Emanuel of Bavaria since 1692, while links with Italy, traditionally the major source of Spanish recruits and funding, had been weakened by decades of neglect and heavy taxation. It was widely, if reluctantly, accepted in Madrid that preserving an independent Spanish Empire required comprehensive reforms, including the elimination of the privileges or Fueros held by the Aragonese states. It was no coincidence Archduke Charles had strong support in areas that were part of the Crown of Aragon, including Catalonia and Valencia.[47]
France
[edit]Under Louis XIV, France was the most powerful state in Europe, with revenue-generating capacities that far exceeded those of its rivals. Its geographical position provided enormous tactical flexibility; unlike Austria, it had a navy, and as the campaigns of 1708–1710 proved, even under severe pressure it could defend its borders. The Nine Years' War had shown France could not impose its objectives without support, and its new alliance with Spain and Bavaria made a successful outcome more likely.[citation needed] However, the previous wars had left France with severe economic problems. This was recognized by the Marquis de Chamlay, who advised Louis to not take on a purely offensive strategy. He argued that the combined might of the Grand Alliance forces made it highly improbable for France to launch a successful attack. The Dutch and Imperial fortresses were located far from convenient Franco-Spanish bases, and the Netherlands and Rhineland lacked easily navigable rivers for the Bourbon armies. Furthermore, besieging a major Dutch fortress demanded the commitment of two full armies. The French would thus pursue a strategy described as a "mixed war" in Europe. In this strategy, the Franco-Spanish forces would primarily assume a defensive posture to safeguard the vital fortresses they needed to retain. Offensive actions, on the other hand, were characterized by assertive posturing and strategic positioning, with an emphasis on sustaining their forces by living off enemy territory whenever feasible, while blocking enemy thrusts, and trying to engage them in battle where possible.[48] Apart from denying an undivided Spanish monarchy to others, Louis's objectives were to secure his borders with the Holy Roman Empire, weaken his rival Austria, and increase French commercial strength through access to trade with the Americas.[citation needed]
Austria and the Holy Roman Empire
[edit]Despite being the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire, Austrian and Imperial interests did not always coincide. The Habsburgs wanted to put Archduke Charles on the throne of an undivided Spanish monarchy, while their Allies were fighting to prevent either the Bourbons or the Habsburgs from doing so. This divergence and Austria's financial collapse in 1703 meant the campaign in Spain was reliant on Anglo-Dutch naval support and after 1706, British funding. Particularly during the reign of Joseph I, the priority for the Habsburgs was to secure their southern borders from French intervention in northern Italy and suppress Rákóczi's War of Independence in Hungary.[49]
Much of the Spanish nobility resented what they considered to be the arrogance of the Austrians, a key factor in the selection of Philip as their preferred candidate in 1700. In return for British support, Charles agreed to major commercial concessions within the empire, as well as accepting British control of Gibraltar and Menorca. These made him widely unpopular at all levels of Spanish society, and he was never able to sustain himself outside the coastal regions, which could be supplied by the Anglo-Dutch navies.[50]
The Wittelsbach-controlled states of Bavaria, Liège, and Cologne allied with France, but the vast majority of the Empire remained neutral, or limited their involvement to the supply of mercenaries.[citation needed] Like Bavaria, the larger entities pursued their own policies; his claim to the Polish crown meant Augustus of Saxony focused on the Great Northern War, while Frederick I made his support dependent on Leopold recognising Prussia as a kingdom and making it an equal member of the Grand Alliance. Since George, Elector of Hanover, was also heir to the British throne, his support was more reliable, but the suspicion remained that the interests of Hanover came first.[51]
England and Scotland/Great Britain
[edit]British foreign policy was based on three general principles, which remained largely consistent from the 16th through the 20th centuries. The first, overriding all others, was to preserve a balance of power in Europe, an objective threatened by French expansion under Louis XIV. The second was to prevent the Low Countries from being controlled by a hostile power or one stronger than Britain; this included both the Spanish Netherlands and the Dutch Republic, whose deep harbours and prevailing winds made her a natural embarkation point for an attack on England, as demonstrated in 1688. The third was to maintain a navy strong enough to protect British trade, control her waters and launch attacks on her enemies' commercial routes and coastal areas.[52]
Alignment on reducing the power of France and securing the Protestant succession for the British throne masked differences on how to achieve them. In general, the Tories favoured a mercantilist strategy of using the Royal Navy to attack French and Spanish trade while protecting and expanding their own; land commitments were viewed as expensive and primarily of benefit to others.[53] The Whigs argued France could not be defeated by seapower alone, making a Continental strategy essential, while Britain's financial strength made it the only member of the Alliance able to operate on all fronts against France.[54]
Dutch Republic
[edit]The Dutch had been engaged in the struggle to contain France since the Rampjaar (Disaster Year) of 1672, when the Dutch Republic had nearly been overrun by the French army. Apart from the worry about the balance of power, the Dutch had long been concerned with the fate of the Spanish Netherlands, viewing it as a strategic buffer against France. This perception endured even during periods of alliance with France, as evidenced by the popularity of the motto "Gallicus amicus non vicinus" (France is a good friend, not a good neighbour) within the Dutch Republic.[55] The War of Devolution (1667–68) and the Franco-Dutch War (1672–78) showed the Spanish could not defend the Southern Netherlands, and so the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick allowed the Dutch to place garrisons in eight key cities. They hoped this barrier would provide the strategic depth needed to protect their commercial and demographic heartlands around Amsterdam against attack from the south. However, with the help of Maximilian of Bavaria, the governor of the Spanish Netherlands, the Dutch garrison troops had been replaced by French troops by 1701. Dutch priorities were to re-establish and strengthen the Barrier fortresses, retain control of the economically vital Scheldt estuary, and gain access to trade in the Spanish Empire.[56]
Although the English Duke of Marlborough was Allied commander in the Low Countries, the Dutch provided most of the manpower and supplies. Strategy in this theatre was thus subject to the approval of their field deputies and generals.[j] When Dutch forces operated outside the Spanish Netherlands this was often a concession to their English allies.[56][58]
Savoy
[edit]Throughout the 17th century, Savoy sought to replace Spain as the dominant power in Northern Italy. Savoy consisted of two main geographic segments; Piedmont, which contained the capital Turin, and the Duchy of Aosta on the Italian side of the Alps, with the Duchy of Savoy and County of Nice in Transalpine France. The latter were almost impossible to defend and combined with the anti-Habsburg policy pursued by Louis XIV and his predecessors, this meant Savoy generally sided with France. However, Piedmont provided foreign powers access to the restive southern French provinces of the Dauphiné and Vaunage, former Huguenot strongholds with a long history of rebellion. This provided Victor Amadeus II with a degree of leverage, allowing him to manoeuvre between opposing parties to expand his territories.[59]
During the Nine Years' War in 1690, Savoy joined the Grand Alliance before agreeing to a separate peace with France in 1696. The accession of Philip V in 1701 led to a reversal of long-standing strategic policy, with France now supporting the Spanish position in Lombardy, rather than seeking to weaken it, and Austria doing the opposite. While Victor Amadeus initially allied Savoy with France, his long-term goal was the acquisition of the Duchy of Milan, which neither Bourbons nor Habsburgs would relinquish voluntarily. As discussed elsewhere in this article, securing his borders in Italy was of greater concern to Emperor Leopold than Spain itself. This meant Britain was the only power inclined to help Victor Amadeus achieve this objective and he changed sides in 1703 after the Anglo-Dutch navies won control of the Western Mediterranean.[60]
Military campaigns; 1701–1708
[edit]Italy
[edit]The war in Italy primarily involved the Spanish-ruled Duchy of Milan and the French-allied Duchy of Mantua, considered essential to the security of Austria's southern borders. In 1701, French troops occupied both cities and Victor Amadeus II, Duke of Savoy, allied with France, his daughter Maria Luisa marrying Philip V.[61] In May 1701, an Imperial army under Prince Eugene of Savoy moved into Northern Italy; by February 1702, victories at Carpi, Chiari, and Cremona forced the French behind the Adda River.[62]
Louis Joseph, Duke of Vendôme, one of the best French generals, took command and was substantially reinforced; Prince Eugene managed a draw at the Battle of Luzzara but the French recovered most of the territory and lost the year before.[63] In October 1703, Victor Amadeus declared war on France; by May 1706, the French held most of Savoy except Turin while victories at Cassano and Calcinato forced the Imperialists into the Trentino valley.[64]
However, in July 1706, Vendôme and any available forces were sent to reinforce France's northern frontier after the defeat at Ramillies. Reinforced by German auxiliaries led by Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau, Prince Eugene broke the siege of Turin in September; despite a minor French victory at Castiglione, the war in Italy was over. To the fury of his allies, the 1707 Convention of Milan Emperor Joseph gave French troops in Lombardy free passage to Southern France.[65]
A combined Savoyard-Imperial attack on the French base of Toulon planned for April was postponed when Imperial troops were diverted to seize the Spanish Bourbon Kingdom of Naples. By the time they besieged Toulon in August, the French were too strong, and they were forced to withdraw. By the end of 1707, fighting in Italy ceased, apart from small-scale attempts by Victor Amadeus to recover Nice and Savoy.[66]
Low Countries, Rhine, and Danube
[edit]The first objective for the Grand Alliance in this theatre was to secure the Dutch frontiers, threatened by the alliance between France, Bavaria, and Joseph Clemens of Bavaria, ruler of Liège and Cologne. During 1702, the Grand Alliance repelled an assault on Nijmegen, captured Kaiserswerth, a strong town on the eastern side of the Dutch Republic, and took Venlo, Roermond, Stevensweert and Liège along the Meuse.[67] The 1703 campaign was marred by Allied conflicts over strategy. Despite capturing Bonn, they failed to take Antwerp, while a Dutch contingent narrowly escaped disaster at Ekeren in June.[68]
On the Upper Rhine, Imperial forces under Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden remained on the defensive, although they took Landau in 1702. Supported by the Bavarians, during the 1703 campaign French forces retook Landau, won victories at Friedlingen, Höchstädt and Speyerbach, then captured Kehl and Breisach. With Austrian resources absorbed by Rákóczi's War of Independence in Hungary, the Franco-Bavarian plan for 1704 was to march on Vienna.[69] To relieve the pressure, Marlborough marched up the Rhine, joined forces with Louis of Baden and Prince Eugene, and crossed the Danube on 2 July. Allied victory at Blenheim on 13 August forced Bavaria out of the war and the Treaty of Ilbersheim placed it under Austrian rule.[70]
Allied efforts to exploit their victory in 1705 floundered on poor coordination, tactical disputes, and command rivalries.[71] A diplomatic crisis between the Dutch Republic and England was only averted by the dismissal of General Slangenburg,[72] while the imposition of Austrian rule in Bavaria caused a brief but vicious peasant revolt.[71] In May 1706, the French were comprehensively defeated at Ramillies by an Allied army under Marlborough, which then occupied much of the Spanish Netherlands in under two weeks.[73] France assumed a largely defensive posture for the rest of the war.[74]
The 1707 campaign was without any significant events, as both parties focussed on other fronts. The French, now under Marshal Vendôme, avoided battle and Marlborough did little to force one upon them. By 1708, the focus of both sides was again almost entirely on the fighting in the Low Countries. The allies once more set their sights on breaking French fortification belts, while the French themselves planned a major counteroffensive. Although this counteroffensive was initially successful when the French surprised the Allied garrisons at Ghent and Bruges,[k] it failed after the Allies defeated them at the Battle of Oudenaarde. In its aftermath the Allies managed to capture Lille, the strongest fortress of the French fortress belts, while a French assault on Brussels was reppelled and Ghent and Bruges recaptured.[76][75] But despite losses like Lille and other strongpoints, the French would prevent the Allies from making a decisive breach in their frontiers.[74]
Spain and Portugal
[edit]British involvement was primarily driven by the need to protect their trade routes in the Mediterranean. By putting Archduke Charles on the Spanish throne, they also hoped to gain commercial privileges within the Spanish Empire. Despite their dynastic claim, the Austrian Habsburgs viewed securing Northern Italy and suppressing the Hungarian revolt as higher priorities. With the Dutch focusing on Flanders post-1704, this theatre was largely dependent on British naval and military support.[77]
Spain at the time was a personal union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon. The latter was further divided into the separate entities of Catalonia, Aragon, Valencia, Majorca, Sicily, Naples, and Sardinia. In 1701, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, and Sardinia declared for Philip, while a mixture of anti-Castilian and anti-French sentiment meant the others supported Archduke Charles, the most important being Catalonia. Allied victory at Vigo Bay in October 1702 persuaded Peter II of Portugal to switch sides, giving them an operational base in this area.[78]
Archduke Charles landed at Lisbon in March 1704 to begin a land campaign, while the British-Dutch capture of Gibraltar was a significant blow to Bourbon prestige. An attempt to retake it was defeated in August, with a land siege being abandoned in April 1705.[79] The 1705 Pact of Genoa between Catalan representatives and Britain opened a second front in the north-east; the loss of Barcelona and Valencia left Toulon as the only major port available to the Bourbons in the Western Mediterranean. Philip tried to retake Barcelona in May 1706 but was repulsed, while his absence allowed an Allied force from Portugal to enter Madrid and Zaragoza.[80]
However, lack of popular support and logistical issues meant the Allies could not hold territory away from the coastline, and by November, Philip controlled Castile, Murcia, and parts of Valencia. Allied efforts to regain the initiative ended with defeat at Almansa in April 1707, followed by an unsuccessful siege of Toulon in August. Despite these failures, control of Gibraltar and the capture of Menorca in 1708 allowed the Royal Navy to dominate the Western Mediterranean. Since many British politicians considered this their primary objective, they became reluctant to approve further expensive land campaigns in this theatre.[77]
War beyond Europe and related conflicts
[edit]The close links between war and trade meant conflict extended beyond Europe, particularly in North America, where it is known as Queen Anne's War, and the West Indies, which produced sugar, then a hugely profitable commodity. Also, there were minor trade conflicts in South America, India, and Asia; the financial strains of war particularly affected the Dutch East India Company, as it was a huge drain on scarce naval resources.
Related conflicts include Rákóczi's War of Independence in Hungary, which was funded by France and a serious concern for the Habsburgs throughout the war. In South-Eastern France, Britain funded the Huguenot 1704-1710 Camisard rebellion; one objective of the 1707 campaign in Northern Italy and Southern France was to support this revolt, one of a series that began in the 1620s.
Towards peace; 1709–1715
[edit]By the end of 1708, the French had withdrawn from Northern Italy, while the maritime powers controlled the Spanish Netherlands, and secured the borders of the Dutch Republic; in the Mediterranean, the maritime powers had achieved naval supremacy, and Britain acquired permanent bases in Gibraltar and Menorca. However, as Marlborough himself pointed out, the French frontiers remained largely intact, their army showed no signs of being defeated, while Philip proved far more popular with the Spanish than his rival. Many of the objectives set out by the Grand Alliance in 1701 had been achieved, but success in 1708 made them overconfident.[81]
Diplomacy and renewed war
[edit]French diplomats focused on the Dutch, whom they considered were more likely to favour peace than their allies, for victory at Ramillies removed any direct military threat to the Republic, while highlighting differences with Britain on the Spanish Netherlands. Peace talks broke down in late 1708 because the Allies had agreed not to negotiate a separate peace but could not agree on the terms.[82] The Great Frost of 1709 caused widespread famine in France and Spain, forcing Louis to re-open negotiations and he hinted at his willingness to cede French fortresses to the Dutch Republic.[83][84]
In May 1709 the Allies presented him with the preliminaries of the Hague. Britain and Austria still insisted on an undivided Spanish monarchy for Archduke Charles. The Allies demanded that Philip was given two months to cede his throne to Charles, while France was required to remove him by force if he did not comply, besides having to cede the strongholds, Thionville, Cambrai and Valenciennes as collateral.[83] Although Spain was of less importance to them, the Dutch negotiators, led by Heinsius, considered these strict conditions necessary to ensure that peace conditions were honoured, as they doubted Louis' sincerity. They were concerned that the Allies would still have to exhaust themselves in Spain, while France, after a period of recuperation, might once again lend support to Phillip.[85]
Many Allied statesmen, including Marlborough, assumed Philip would abdicate on request and felt that the terms seriously underestimated France's ability to continue the war. They also required the Spanish to accept Archduke Charles as king in his place, which they were certainly unwilling to do, as demonstrated by the failure of Allied campaigns to hold territory outside Catalonia.[86] Although Louis seemed willing to abandon his ambitions in Spain, making war on his grandson was unacceptable, a stipulation so offensive that when made public, the French resolved to fight on.[87]
Following success in the Siege of Tournai, Marlborough's 1709 offensive in northern France culminated in the Battle of Malplaquet on 11 September; a nominal Allied victory, but one in which their total casualties numbered 22,000 out of 86,000 soldiers, the Dutch infantry losing 8,500 out of 18,000.[88] Although the French strategic position continued to deteriorate, the battle showed that their fighting abilities had remained intact and increased war-weariness in both Britain and the Dutch Republic. More significant were Franco-Spanish victories at Alicante in April, and La Gudina in May, which showed that a successful military solution in Spain for the Allies now appeared remote.[89]
Shortly after, the Dutch discovered they had been excluded from a commercial agreement signed by Archduke Charles which granted Britain exclusive trading rights in Spanish America. This deepened divisions between the Allies while increasing Spanish opposition to having the Archduke as their king.[89] The Whig government in London was however afraid to push the Dutch into the hands of the French and went back on their commercial agreement with Archduke Charles. In exchange for a Dutch guarantee to support the Hanoverian succession, Britain agreed to share trading rights in Spanish America and the Mediterranean. Additionally, the Whigs promised the Dutch a significantly expanded barrier in the Spanish Netherlands, including key fortress towns such as Lille, Valenciennes, Condé and Maubeuge. The Dutch now seemed to obtain all they had ever wanted outset of the war, not only in the Low Countries but also in the Mediterranean and America.[90] It however proved to be an awkward and ill-fated agreement. The treaty quickly sparked resentment, particularly from the Emperor, who was offended by the heavy burden it imposed on Charles's sovereignty over the Southern Netherlands, while in Britain the new treaty led to heavy opposition by the Tories as they saw it as detrimental to British commerce.[91][89]
The Whigs had won the 1708 British general election by arguing military victory was the quickest road to peace, but failure in France was mirrored in Spain. Archduke Charles re-entered Madrid in 1710 after victories at Almenar and Saragossa, but the Allies could not hold the interior and were forced to retreat. 3,500 British troops surrendered at Brihuega on 8 December, while the Battle of Villaviciosa on 10 December confirmed Bourbon control of Spain.[92] At the same time, costs continued to spiral; the Dutch were close to bankruptcy while Austrian troops were almost entirely funded by Britain. In 1709, Parliament approved expenditures of £6.4 million, up from £5.0 million in 1706; by the end of 1710, these had doubled to £12.9 million, despite minimal gains.[93]
Negotiations
[edit]When talks resumed at Geertruidenberg in March 1710, Louis now even showed a willingness to assist the Allies in removing his grandson from Spain. The Dutch proposed compensating Philip with Sicily and Sardinia, but neither the Austrians or British would agree, and negotiations broke down again.[94] However, it was clear to the French the mood in Britain had changed. This was confirmed when the pro-peace Tories won a landslide victory in the October 1710 British election, although they confirmed their commitment to the war to prevent a credit crisis. Despite the capture of Bouchain in September, a decisive victory in northern France continued to elude the Allies, while an attack on Quebec ended in disaster.[95]
When Emperor Joseph died in April 1711, his brother Archduke Charles was elected emperor. For the Dutch and British, his accession undermined a key reason for continuing the war, since a union of Spain with Austria was as unwelcome as one with France. The British secretly negotiated peace terms directly with France, leading to the signing of the Preliminary Articles of London on 8 October 1711.[l] These included French acceptance of the Act of Settlement 1701 and a guarantee the French and Spanish crowns would remain separate. In addition, France undertook to ensure Spain ceded Gibraltar and Menorca, while giving Britain a thirty-year monopoly on the Asiento de Negros, the right to import slaves into Spanish American colonies.[96] Despite their resentment at being excluded from these talks, the Dutch were financially exhausted by the war, and could not continue without British support. Charles VI initially rejected the idea of a peace conference, only agreeing once the Dutch decided to support it, but continued to oppose the treaty.[97]
Peace of Utrecht
[edit]Within weeks of the conference opening, events threatened the basis of the peace agreed between Britain and France. First, the French presented proposals awarding the Spanish Netherlands to Max Emmanuel of Bavaria and a minimal Barrier, leaving the Dutch with little to show for their huge investment of money and men. Second, a series of deaths left Louis XIV's two-year-old great-grandson, the future Louis XV as heir, making Philip next in line and his immediate renunciation imperative.[98]
The Dutch and Austrians fought on, hoping to improve their negotiating position but the new British government ordered Marlborough's replacement, James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde, not to participate in offensive operations against the French.[99] These orders caused fury then and later, with Whigs urging Hanoverian military intervention. Those considered responsible, including Ormonde and the Tory statesman Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, were driven into exile when George I succeeded Queen Anne in 1714, and became prominent Jacobites.[100]
Prince Eugene captured Le Quesnoy in June and besieged Landrecies, but was defeated at Denain on 24 July. The French then went on to recapture Le Quesnoy and other towns lost in previous two years, including Marchines, Douai, and Bouchain. This showed the French retained their fighting ability, while the Dutch had finally reached the end of their willingness and ability to continue the war.[101]
On 6 June, Philip confirmed his renunciation of the French throne, and the British offered the Dutch a revised Barrier Treaty, replacing that of 1709 which they rejected as overly generous. A significant improvement on the 1697 Barrier, it was subject to Austrian approval, and while less beneficial, the final terms were sufficient for the Dutch to agree.[102] Despite this, negotiations dragged on until 1715, as the Austrians were reluctant to pay for Dutch garrisons stationed in their territory, although British pressure meant the issue was ultimately concluded in favour of the Dutch.[103]
Charles withdrew from the conference when France insisted he guarantee not to acquire Mantua or Mirandola. He was supported by the future George I, who wanted France to withdraw backing for the Stuart heir James Francis. As a result, neither Austria nor the Empire signed the Peace of Utrecht of 11 April 1713 between France and the other Allies; Spain made peace with the Dutch in June, then Savoy and Britain on 13 July 1713.[104]
Treaties of Rastatt and Baden
[edit]Fighting continued on the Rhine, but Austria was financially exhausted and after the loss of Landau and Freiburg in November 1713, Charles finally made peace on 7 March 1714. In the Treaty of Rastatt, the Habsburg monarchy acceded to the terms of Utrecht, which confirmed their gains in Southern Italy, returned Breisach, Kehl, and Freiburg, ended French support for the Hungarian revolt and agreed on terms for the Dutch Barrier fortresses. Charles abandoned his claim to Strasbourg and Alsace and agreed to the restoration of the Wittelsbach electors of Bavaria and Cologne, Max Emmanuel and Joseph Clemens, lifting the Imperial ban on them. Article XIX of the treaty transferred sovereignty over the Spanish Netherlands to Austria. On 7 September, the Holy Roman Empire joined the agreement by the Treaty of Baden; although Catalonia and Majorca were not finally subdued by the Bourbons until June 1715, the war was over.[105]
Aftermath
[edit]Article II of the Peace of Utrecht included the stipulation "because of the great danger which threatened the liberty and safety of all Europe, from the too-close conjunction of the kingdoms of Spain and France, ... the same person should never become King of both kingdoms." Some historians view this as a key point in the evolution of the modern nation-state; Randall Lesaffer argues it marks a significant milestone in the concept of collective security.[106]
Spain
[edit]Philip was confirmed as king of Spain, which retained its independence and the majority of its empire, in return for ceding the Spanish Netherlands, most of its Italian possessions, as well as Gibraltar and Menorca. These losses were deeply felt; Naples and Sicily were regained in 1735 and Menorca in 1782, although Gibraltar would still be held by Britain, despite numerous attempts to regain it. The 1707 Nueva Planta decrees centralised power in Madrid, and abolished regional political structures including the Crown of Aragon, although Catalonia and Majorca remained outside the system until 1767.[107] Their economy recovered remarkably quickly, and the House of Bourbon (save for brief interruptions) has held the Spanish throne ever since.[108]
France
[edit]Louis XIV died on 1 September 1715, and was succeeded by his five-year-old great-grandson Louis XV; on his deathbed, he is alleged to have admitted, "I have loved war too well".[109] True or not, while the final settlement was far more favourable than the Allied terms of 1709, it is hard to see what Louis gained that he had not already achieved through diplomacy by February 1701.[110] From 1666 onward French policies assumed military and economic superiority over their rivals, but this was no longer the case by 1714 when Britain appeared to have overtaken France on both fronts. The continued widening of this gap as British trade expanded post-Utrecht was viewed by Louis's successors as a permanent threat to the European balance of power. Seeking to reduce this was a major factor in France entering the 1740–1748 War of the Austrian Succession.[111]
Austria and the Holy Roman Empire
[edit]Despite the failure in Spain, Austria secured its position in Italy and Hungary and acquired the bulk of the Spanish Netherlands; even after reimbursing the Dutch for the cost of their Barrier garrisons, the increased revenues from the Austrian Netherlands funded a significant expansion of the Austrian army.[112] The Habsburgs also acquired the duchies of Milan and Mantua, the kingdoms of Naples and Sardinia (exchanged in 1720 for Sicily) and a dominance over Italy that would last (interrupted by Napoleon) until 1859. The shift of Habsburg focus away from Germany and into Southern Europe continued with victory in the Austro-Turkish War of 1716–1718. Their position as the dominant power within the Holy Roman Empire was challenged by Bavaria, Hanover, Prussia, and Saxony, who increasingly acted as independent powers; in 1742, Charles Albert of Bavaria became the first non-Habsburg Emperor in over 300 years.[113]
Great Britain
[edit]Britain is usually seen as the main beneficiary of Utrecht, which marked its rise to becoming the dominant European commercial power.[114] It established naval superiority over its competitors, acquired the strategic Mediterranean ports of Gibraltar and Menorca and trading rights in Spanish America. France accepted the Protestant succession, ensuring a smooth inheritance by George I in August 1714, while agreeing to end support for the Stuarts in the 1716 Anglo-French Treaty.[115] Although the war left all participants with unprecedented levels of government debt, only Britain was able to finance it efficiently, providing a relative advantage over its competitors.[116]
Dutch Republic
[edit]The Dutch had successfully recovered their positions in the Southern Netherlands, and their troops were central to the alliance which halted French territorial expansion in Europe until a new cycle began in 1792.[76] However, the war left them effectively bankrupt, and inflicted permanent damage on the Dutch merchant navy; while they remained the dominant economic power in the Far East, Britain took over as the pre-eminent global commercial and maritime power.[117] The exhaustion of the Dutch admiralties had also allowed the pirates from Algiers to capture numerous Dutch merchant vessels, which the Dutch were only able to stop after a long conflict. The Barrier Treaty fortresses became the central driver of Dutch foreign policy in the decades after 1713 and were put to the test during the War of the Austrian Succession.[m]
Other
[edit]Wider implications include the rise of Prussia and Savoy while many of the participants were involved in the 1700–1721 Great Northern War, with Russia becoming a major European power for the first time as a result. Finally, while colonial conflicts were relatively minor and largely confined to the North American theatre, the so-called Queen Anne's War, they were to become a key element in future wars.[110] Meanwhile, maritime unemployment brought on by the war's end led to the third stage of the Golden Age of Piracy, as many sailors formerly employed in the navies of the warring powers turned to piracy for survival.[123]
Claims to the Spanish throne
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See also
[edit]Explanatory notes
[edit]- ^ The Spanish Army consisted of three separate forces; Spain (20,000), Spanish Netherlands (35,000) and Italy (15,000). These are authorised numbers and actual were almost certainly lower.[3]
- ^ Annual average, 1701–1713. Wilson estimates Imperial strength peaked at 343,000 in 1710.[6]
- ^ Ostwald estimates Dutch strength peaked at 137,000.[8]
- ^ Including the Danish Auxiliary Corps
- ^ The majority of Prussian troops were hired out to the Dutch or served with Imperial forces in Northern Italy.
- ^ Although the Portuguese promised to provide 28,000 men, their effective strength in 1704 barely reached 15,000 men[11]
- ^ Split 50:50 between Habsburg monarchy and other HRE states.[12]
- ^ England and Scotland were separate kingdoms until 1707 but the Treaty was signed by William as King of Great Britain
- ^ Aragon was divided into the Kingdoms of Aragon, Catalonia, Valencia, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, and Sardinia.
- ^ Athlone until 1703, Overkirk from 1704 to 1708 and Tilly from 1708.[57]
- ^ This was in part possible due to the help from Flemish citizens who were dissatisfied with their new Anglo-Dutch rulers.[75]
- ^ Also known as the Mesnager Convention.
- ^ Although judged favourably by contemporaries,[118] modern historians still argue about the true effectiveness of the barrier fortresses, since they were conquered by France during the War of the Austrian Succession.[119][120] Advocates instead emphasise that it took 3 years of campaigning for the French to conquer all barrier fortresses and that the purpose of the barrier was to give the Dutch enough time to mobilize and fortify their own borders. According to them, nobody in the Dutch Republic was under the illusion that the barrier would itself stop French armies.[121][122]
References
[edit]- ^ Dwyer 2014, p. 14.
- ^ Lynn 1994, p. 894.
- ^ Vault 2016, pp. 98, 540, 625.
- ^ Vault 2016, p. 454.
- ^ Wilson 2016, p. 461.
- ^ Wilson 2016, p. 460.
- ^ Glete 2001, p. 156.
- ^ Ostwald 2000, p. 664.
- ^ Rasler 1994, p. 129.
- ^ Craig 1964, p. 7.
- ^ Wijn 1956, p. 509.
- ^ a b c d Clodfelter 2008, p. 74.
- ^ Urlanis 1971, p. 187.
- ^ Levy 2014, p. 90.
- ^ Hochedlinger 2003, p. 171.
- ^ Storrs 2006, pp. 6–7.
- ^ Frey & Frey 1995, pp. 191–192.
- ^ Childs 2013, p. 1.
- ^ White 2011, pp. 542–543.
- ^ de Vries 2009, pp. 151–194.
- ^ Meerts 2014, p. 168.
- ^ Frey & Frey 1995, p. 389.
- ^ McKay & Scott 1983, pp. 54–55.
- ^ Ward & Leathes 2010, p. 385.
- ^ Ingrao 2010, p. 105.
- ^ Kamen 2001, p. 3.
- ^ a b Rule 2017, pp. 91–108.
- ^ Falkner 2015, pp. 508–510.
- ^ Gregg 2001, p. 126.
- ^ Somerset 2012, p. 166.
- ^ Falkner 2015, p. 96.
- ^ Thompson 1973, pp. 158–160.
- ^ Israel 1990, pp. 197–199.
- ^ Somerset 2012, p. 167.
- ^ Somerset 2012, p. 168.
- ^ a b Wolf 1974, p. 514.
- ^ Nimwegen 2020, p. 261.
- ^ Schmidt Voges & Solana Crespo 2017, p. 2.
- ^ Rothbard 2010.
- ^ Schaeper 1986, p. 1.
- ^ a b Nimwegen 1995, p. 9.
- ^ Childs 2013, p. 2.
- ^ Falkner 2015, p. 37.
- ^ a b Kamen 2002, p. 435.
- ^ a b Kamen 2002, p. 440.
- ^ Cowans 2003, pp. 26–27.
- ^ Kamen 2002, pp. 442–444.
- ^ Rowlands 2013, p. 24.
- ^ Ingrao 1979, p. 220.
- ^ Hattendorf 1979, pp. 50–54.
- ^ Ingrao 1979, pp. 39–40.
- ^ Burke.
- ^ Shinsuke 2013, pp. 37–40.
- ^ Ostwald 2014, pp. 100–129.
- ^ Rowen 1954, p. 3.
- ^ a b Lesaffer.
- ^ Nimwegen (2020), pp. 184, 262, 306.
- ^ Van Alphen et al. 2021, p. 86.
- ^ Symcox 1985, pp. 146–147.
- ^ Symcox 1985, p. 149.
- ^ Dhondt 2015, pp. 16–17.
- ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 270–271.
- ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 276–277.
- ^ Falkner 2015, p. 1302.
- ^ Sundstrom 1992, p. 196.
- ^ Symcox 1985, p. 155.
- ^ Lynn 1999, p. 275.
- ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 280–281.
- ^ Ingrao 1979, p. 123.
- ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 286–294.
- ^ a b Lynn 1999, pp. 298–299.
- ^ Nimwegen 2020, p. 285.
- ^ Holmes 2008, pp. 347–349.
- ^ a b Lynn 1999, pp. 320–323.
- ^ a b Veenendaal 1950, pp. 34–41.
- ^ a b Nimwegen 2020, p. 354.
- ^ a b Atkinson 1944, pp. 233–233.
- ^ Francis 1965, pp. 71–93.
- ^ Lynn 1999, p. 296.
- ^ Lynn 1999, p. 302.
- ^ Nicholson 1955, pp. 124–125.
- ^ Bromley 1979, p. 446.
- ^ a b Ward & Leathes 2010, pp. 422–423.
- ^ Nimwegen 2020, p. 307.
- ^ Nimwegen 2020, pp. 307–308 & 321.
- ^ Kamen 2001, pp. 70–72.
- ^ Ward & Leathes 2010, p. 424.
- ^ Holmes 2008, p. 433.
- ^ a b c Gregg 2001, p. 289.
- ^ Veendendaal 1970, p. 438–439.
- ^ Veendendaal 1970, p. 439.
- ^ Kamen 2001, p. 101.
- ^ Hattendorf 1978, p. 304.
- ^ Onnekink & Bruin 2013, p. 65–66.
- ^ Simms 2008, pp. 60–64.
- ^ Bromley 1979, pp. 459–460.
- ^ Elliott 2014, p. 63.
- ^ Somerset 2012, p. 470.
- ^ Gregg 2001, p. 354.
- ^ Somerset 2012, p. 477.
- ^ Holmes 2008, p. 462.
- ^ Myers 1917, pp. 799–829.
- ^ Nimwegen 2002, p. 29.
- ^ Somerset 2012, pp. 494–495.
- ^ Frey & Frey 1995, pp. 374–375.
- ^ Lesaffer 2014.
- ^ Vives 1969, p. 591.
- ^ Fernández-Xesta y Vázquez 2012, p. 244.
- ^ Colville 1935, p. 149.
- ^ a b Lynn 1999, pp. 361–362.
- ^ McKay & Scott 1983, pp. 138–140.
- ^ Falkner 2015, pp. 4173–4181.
- ^ Lindsay 1957, p. 420.
- ^ Pincus 2012, pp. 7–8.
- ^ Szechi 1994, pp. 93–95.
- ^ Carlos, Neal & Wandschneider 2006, p. 2.
- ^ Elliott 2014, p. 8.
- ^ Nimwegen 2002, pp. 31–35.
- ^ Ward & Leathes 2010, p. 57.
- ^ Kubben 2011, p. 148.
- ^ Wijn 1964, p. 703.
- ^ Nimwegen 2002, pp. 31–33.
- ^ "Golden Age of Piracy – Post Spanish Succession Period". goldenageofpiracy.org. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
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Further reading
[edit]- de Bruin, Renger E. (2011). Performances of Peace: Utrecht 1713. Brill. JSTOR 10.1163/j.ctt1w76w4b.
- Gilbert, Arthur N. (1976). "Army Impressment During the War of the Spanish Succession". The Historian. 38 (4): 689–708. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1976.tb00057.x. JSTOR 24444302.
- Thomson, M.A. (1954). "Louis XIV and the Origins of the War of the Spanish Succession". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 4: 111–134. doi:10.2307/3678854. JSTOR 3678854. S2CID 159533647.
External links
[edit]- Media related to War of the Spanish Succession at Wikimedia Commons
- War of the Spanish Succession
- 1700s conflicts
- 1700s in the Habsburg monarchy
- 1700s in France
- 1700s in Italy
- 1700s in Spain
- 1700s in the Caribbean
- 1710s conflicts
- 1710s in the Habsburg monarchy
- 1710s in France
- 1710s in Italy
- 1710s in Spain
- 1710s in the Caribbean
- Anglo-French wars
- History of the Royal Marines
- Pretenders to the Spanish throne
- Wars of succession involving the states and peoples of Africa
- Wars of succession involving the states and peoples of Asia
- Wars of succession involving the states and peoples of Europe
- Wars of succession involving the states and peoples of North America
- Wars involving the Holy Roman Empire