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Battle of Pantelleria (1586)
Part of the Anglo–Spanish War
Pantelleria Costa
Island of Pantelleria coast: The English ships came close to shore for their protection.
Date13 July 1586
LocationOff Pantelleria, Mediterranean
Result English victory[1][2]
Belligerents
Flag of Cross of Burgundy Spain

England England

  • Levant Company
Commanders and leaders
Pedro de Leyva Edward Wilkinson
Strength
11 galleys
2 Frigates
5 armed merchant galleons & vessels
Casualties and losses
Many galleys severely damaged,
Heavy casualties[3]
2 killed & 15 wounded[3]


The Battle of Pantelleria (1586) also known as the Fight at Pantalarea[4] was a naval engagement that took place during the Anglo–Spanish War off the island of Pantelleria on the 13 July 1586. The encounter was between an English armed merchant fleet of five ships of the Levant Company in convoy under Edward Wilkinson and a fleet of eleven Spanish and Maltese galleys under Don Pedro de Leyva. The English managed to repel all the attacks and returned home unmolested.[5][6] Although minor the battle had significant consequences in testing English firepower of which was to be used at the during the Spanish armada two years later when England was under threat of invasion.[7][8]

Background[]

The Company of Merchants of the Levant (or the Turkey Company) had been trading in the Mediterranean since 1580 after a successful petition to Queen Elizabeth I. They had established "factories" in Aleppo (its headquarters), as well as Constantinople, Alexandria and Smyrna. After the Treaty of Nonsuch in 1585 and the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots in February 1587, Philip II of Spain decided that it was time to invade England and war was declared.[9] As a result the Levant company armed their ships as part of an investment by the English crown.[10] Philip II's maritime force lay within the Straits of Gibraltar where two squadrons of galleys were cruising under Giovanni Andrea Doria. Further in was the Sicilian squadron, composed of Spanish and Maltese galleys, under Captain-General Don Pedro de Leyva (who had replaced Don Alonso Martinez de Leyva the previous year). Both Doria and Leyva had orders to intercept any English merchant fleets which would have to sail through them.[11]

Five of the Levant company's ships left London in November of 1585 - the 300 ton galleon Merchant Royal (being head of the fleet) under 'acting Admiral' Edward Wilkinson and the William and John were bound for Tripoli, the Toby for Constantinople, and the Susan and the Edward Bonaventure (previously owned by famed explorer Richard Chancellor but in 1586 owned by Edward de Vere) for Venice.. After completing their trading ventures, the ships met at Zante and after provisioning for the voyage home they set out together.[12]

Encounter[]

On July 13, 1586 near the island of Pantelleria, between Tunis and Sicily, they soon sighted a number of ships that turned out to be galleys eleven in all supported by two frigates.[4] Wilkinson ordered the ships to venture close to the coast of the island so that they could not be surrounded and then ordered the ships ready for action.[13] The sakarins, culverins and demi culverins would show how well they fared since in ship to ship combat they had yet to be tested at sea in English service.[5][14]

16th century galley

A Spanish galley of the 16th century

The Spanish admiral Don Pedro de Leyva closed in but did not attack instead sending a messenger aboard the Merchant Royal; they asked what they were doing and where they had come from. The English explained that trade had bought them to Turkey and were returning home to England. De Leyva then demanded to acknowledge their duty and obedience to the Spanish king but this was flatly refused by Wilkinson.[13] After more demands were refused De Leyva then sent an ultimatum they would, 'either be sunk or be escorted into port' but he was rebuffed once more and the two fleets prepared for battle.[4][5]

Battle[]

The admiral's galley fired the first shot which was responded by a culverin from the Merchant Royal and the action began.[8] Each English ship matched itself with two Spanish galleys and fighting became bitter, the Spanish attempted to board which was the galleys principal military function.[4] The English however kept up a steady rate of fire from their recently applied twenty pounder culverins (of which there were four in each ship) and twelve pounder demi-culverins (ten in each ship) as well as short range perriers which had an effect in terms of accuracy and long range damage infliction.[5][8]

Richard Chancellor in Edward Bonaventure

English Galleon Edward Bonaventure

The Spanish and Maltese galleys could not get in close enough range of the English ships to use their big fifty pounder guns, mounted in the waste line without being seriously damaged.[5] One galley did get in close enough to bravely fire off two shots which caused the only English causalities; in the Susan before being forced off by her guns. William and John was very nearly a casualty after briefly touching the bottom in the shallows as they were hugging the shoreline but the wind was strong enough to carry it forward to safety.[3]

Soon de Leyva realized the attack was producing far more harm to his galleys and frigates and hardly any on the English.[13] Even de Leyva's flag galley had sustained heavy damage and soon it warped from the fight, and after a few hours more fighting the rest of the Spanish ships had repeated the same feat.[5] Most of the them had sustained some form of damage and some were fighting to stay afloat, while the English edging away from the coast still in convoy formation, headed West.[4][15]

Aftermath[]

The battle, which had lasted nearly five hours had ended, and the galleys withdrew immediately to the nearest port in Sicily for repairs. In order to get keep his flagship afloat, Leyva had to lash three of his seriously damaged galleys together, including his own in order to keep them from sinking.[3]

After fending off the Spanish attack, the English counted the costs but found very little, they had only two killed and fifteen wounded principally from the Susan and there was no serious damage on any of their ships.[3] They put into Algiers for supplies, and then successfully ran the gauntlet of a second group of Spanish galleys which was waiting for them in the Gibraltar straits. No fight took place here as the English sailed through with the help of a heavy mist; as the galleys saw them they tried to catch up, but it was too late.[12] The English returned home safely and news of the battle soon reached Cairo where the Company men were in conference on agreeing trade there, they received the news with alarm but were ecstatic with the results. Learning from the battle they agreed to use exactly the same military strategy for every Levant Company trading mission.[3] The Levant company now knew what to do when entering hostile waters most notably in the Strait of Gibraltar. Here in 1590 an attempt was made by the Spanish on the same company ships but were repelled and again nearly a year later, that led to the same outcome. As a result of the battle the Royal Navy found heavy use of the Levant company ships.[12] Francis Drake used the Edward Bonaventure on his strike at Cadiz the following year and was later the Earl of Cumberland's flagship during the Spanish Armada campaign.[16] In terms of fighting it was a huge test for the future of the fighting ship of the line and the 'death knell' of the war galley.[5]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. Rowse pg 254
  2. Corbett, Julian Stafford (1899). Drake and the Tudor Navy, with a history of the rise of England as a maritime power, Volume 2. University of Michigan: Burt Franklin. p. 24. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=dGNnAAAAMAAJ&q=1586+wilkinson+leyva&dq=1586+wilkinson+leyva&hl=en&sa=X&ei=iwohU4GgEYbC7Abx84GwCA&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAQ. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Clare 62-3
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Hakluyt, Richard p. 499 The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of the English Nation
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 Bicheno p. 223
  6. Braudel p. 1188
  7. Pastor pg. 45
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Mattingly p. 98
  9. Elton (1906), p81.
  10. Epstein p. 27
  11. Fernández Duro, Cesáreo: Armada española desde la unión de los reinos de Castilla y de Aragón. Vol. II. Instituto de Historia y Cultura Naval, p. 458.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 :Edward De Vere Newsletter - The Oxford Authorship Site - Voyages of Exploration (Article 2).
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Forneron, Henri (1882). Histoire de Philippe II: Conquête de Portugal. Alexandre Farnèse. Invincible Armada Volume 3 of Histoire de Philippe II Original from the. University of Michigan (French): E. Plon et cie. p. 162. http://books.google.co.uk/books?ei=sDcbU7rgIseg4gT2g4CoCw&id=teVWAAAAMAAJ&dq=de+Leyva++pantelleria+wilkinson&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=pantellaria. 
  14. "Culverin". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9028171/culveri. Retrieved 2008-07-19. 
  15. Bell, Douglas Herbert (1936). Elizabethan seamen. University of Wisconsin: J. B. Lippincott. p. 250. http://books.google.co.uk/books/about/Elizabethan_seamen.html?id=I3_SAAAAMAAJ&redir_esc=y. 
  16. Mattingly p. 94

Bibliography[]

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