Tuesday, June 15, 2021

FOUR DAYS' BATTLE: DE RUYTER'S TURNS THE TIDE DURING THE 2nd ANGLO-DUTCH WAR (June 11-14, 1666)

Michiel De Ruyter, the "Terror of the Ocean" is the most illustrious Admiral of the Dutch Golden Age. In the 17th century, the Dutch Republic, the world’s dominant trade nation, was at war for sixty years because of commercial and maritime rivalry. Although the Dutch had the largest fleet in Europe, they would face England, a maritime power on the rise, allied with Portugal, Sweden, and later Louis XIV’s France. The Navy of the Republic had to protect overseas shipping lanes, but also repel any naval invasion of Dutch territory. Revered as savior of the nation, De Ruyter would become the most celebrated of Dutch seamen, and one of the most able commanders of the 17th century. 
Dutch Council of War on the De Zeven Provinciën, De Ruyter's flagship, June 10, 1666 (detail), art by Maarten Platje from the well-known engraving by Willem van de Velde the Elder.

 
After the catastrophic defeat at the Battle of Lowestoft (June 1665), Grand Pensionary Johan de Witt replaced the deceased Lieutenant-Admiral Jacob van Wassenaer by De Ruyter. This led to bitter rivalry with Lieutenant-Admiral Cornelis Tromp, a political enemy of De Witt. De Ruyter’s blaming Admiral Cornelis Tromp for the defeat at the St. James’s Day battle the following year resulted in Tromp’s resignation from the Navy until 1673, when the two commanders were reconciled.
 
De Ruyter worked closely with Johan De Witt to expand the Dutch Navy, building new, larger and better-armed ships, instead of relying on armed merchantmen, and improving their organization. The flagship of the Republic, De Zeven Provinciën, was fitted with 80 bronze guns. 
 
Until then, the favored Dutch tactic was of undisciplined mêlée, with individual ships boarding and attempting to capture their opponent, leaving the battle with their prize. With De Ruyter, fighting in line and ensuring fleet discipline became the basis of Dutch standard tactic in the new Fighting Instructions approved by the States General in August 1665. Faulty captains were trialed, some executed, others banned. 
 
The fleet was divided into three distinct squadrons, each with a clear chain of command. Signaling was improved, and the principle of the concentration of superior force against part of the enemy fleet was adopted. Finally, regiments of soldiers, the Korps Mariniers, were deployed aboard the ships.
These reforms soon paid off. During the rest of the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665–67), De Ruyter’s achieved victory at the Four Days’ Battle, soon followed by even more stunning successes... 
 
The English fleet was stronger than that of the Dutch, but on receiving intelligence that the Duc de Beaufort was preparing to land troops in Ireland, the English divided their fleet, sending the more powerful vessels into the Channel, still leaving 56 warships off the Kentish coast. De Ruyter, deploying his 84 warships to prevent the English breaking out into the North Sea, mauled the vessels off the Kent coast and then inflicted severe damage on the vessels returning from the Channel.
 


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