By Eric G. L. Pinzelli,
Michiel Adriaanszoon De Ruyter (1607-1676) was a famous Dutch seaman.
His brilliant naval victories in the Second and Third Anglo-Dutch wars
enabled the United Provinces to maintain a balance of power with
England.
Employed at sea at the age of nine, De Ruyter by 1635 had
become a merchant captain. After serving as rear admiral of a Dutch
fleet assisting Portugal against Spain in 1641,
he returned to the merchant service for the next 10 years, fighting
against the Barbary pirates off the north African coast. With the
outbreak of the First Anglo-Dutch War (1652–54), he accepted a naval
command, serving with distinction under Maarten Tromp and attaining the
rank of vice admiral in 1653 after his victory off Texel. De Ruyter’s
successes in battle have been attributed to his development of an
effective combat order, stressing fleet discipline.
In 1659 De
Ruyter supported Denmark against Sweden in the Baltic in the First
Northern War (1655–60). He fought against the English (1664–65) off the
Guinea Coast of Africa, helping to restore the Dutch West India
Company’s commercial dominance in the area, but he was unsuccessful in
subsequent campaigns against the English in the West Indies.
Returning to the United Provinces in 1665, De Ruyter was named
lieutenant admiral of Holland and worked closely with Johan De Witt to
strengthen the Dutch navy. In the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665–67), his
greatest victories were in the Four Days’ Battle (June 1666) and in the
raid on the Medway (June 1667), in which much of the English fleet was
destroyed; the latter victory accelerated the Anglo-Dutch peace
negotiations that had begun at Breda in April 1667. De Ruyter’s blaming
Admiral Cornelis Tromp for the defeat in the St. James’s Day battle in
August 1666 resulted in the withdrawal of Tromp’s commission and his
resignation from the navy until 1673, when the two distinguished
commanders were reconciled.
De Ruyter’s performance in the Third
Anglo-Dutch War (1672–74) has been considered his greatest achievement:
his victories over larger Anglo-French forces off Solebay (1672) and
Ostend and Kijkduin (1673) prevented an invasion of the Dutch Republic
from the sea. In 1675–76 he fought against the French in the
Mediterranean and was mortally wounded off Sicily. - Encyclopædia
Britannica.
Painting by Karel Dujardin in 1669.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
THE EIGHT-NATION ALLIANCE’S CAPTURE OF THE TAKU FORTS, June 16-17, 1900
During the Boxer Rebellion, an Eight-Nation gunboat squadron bombarded the Chinese forts situated at the mouth of the Hai (Peiho) river. ...
-
During the Boxer Rebellion, an Eight-Nation gunboat squadron bombarded the Chinese forts situated at the mouth of the Hai (Peiho) river. ...
-
The 28 cm (11 in) Howitzer L/10 was designed in 1884 by the British Armstrong company and 220 built by the Osaka Artillery Arsenal. It fi...
-
Bartolomé de Las Casas explained how the African transatlantic slave trade actually started in the West Indies: In August 1518, for 25,000...
No comments:
Post a Comment