Quick Facts
Date:
June 14, 1658
Location:
Dunkirk
France
Participants:
France
Spain
England

Battle of the Dunes, (June 14, 1658), during the Franco-Spanish War of 1648–59, a victory of French and British forces led by Henri de La Tour d’Auvergne, vicomte de Turenne, over Spanish forces near Dunkirk (then just north of the French frontier in the Spanish Netherlands). The victory led to the surrender of Dunkirk by Spain and eventually to the conclusion of the war with the Peace of the Pyrenees between France and Spain (1659).

The battle occurred during a siege of Spanish-held Dunkirk by French troops under Turenne. The British, to whom the French had promised Dunkirk in return for forming an alliance against Spain, blockaded the port with their warships by sea. In addition, Britain’s lord protector, Oliver Cromwell, sent his envoy William Lockhart with 6,000 infantrymen, veterans of the English Civil Wars, to reinforce Turenne on land. On June 13, 1658, a Spanish force led by Juan José de Austria arrived to relieve Dunkirk. Under Juan José was a rebel French force commanded by the renowned fighter Louis II de Bourbon, 4th prince de Condé, and several regiments of English, Scottish, and Irish royalists commanded by the duke of York (later James II). Juan José had a strong superiority in cavalry, but he had left his artillery behind so as not to delay his advance. He took up a position on the dunes with his right on the sea and his left on the Bruges canal. Turenne at once understood the difficult ground that Juan José had occupied and attacked him.

The severest part of the fighting was borne by the British contingents on either side. In the centre, Lockhart’s veterans directly assaulted a fortified dune held by the Spanish and succeeded in taking it after considerable losses. They then fended off counterattacks by their royalist foes. Meanwhile, Turenne’s French cavalry swept around the Spanish right wing on firm sandy beach exposed by the ebb tide, while British warships bombarded the Spanish reserves from the sea. On the Spanish left wing, Condé’s cavalry charged with great resolution and despite heavy losses gained the upper hand, but their success was nullified by the failure of the Spanish centre and right to resist the Anglo-French troops. When the rest of the Spanish army retreated, one small body of royalists, about 300 strong, held out stubbornly and laid down their arms only on terms that they be allowed to rejoin their king, Charles II, at Ypres. The surrender of Dunkirk by the Spanish quickly followed; it was presented to the British by France.

Louis IX of France (St. Louis), stained glass window of Louis IX during the Crusades. (Unknown location.)
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World Wars
This article was most recently revised and updated by Robert Curley.
Quick Facts
Also called:
Dutch Wars
Dutch:
Engelse Oorlogen
Date:
March 1665 - July 1667
1672 - 1674
July 8, 1652 - April 1654
December 20, 1780 - May 1784
Participants:
Dutch Republic
France
England
Context:
Dutch War

Anglo-Dutch Wars, four 17th- and 18th-century naval conflicts between England and the Dutch Republic. The first three wars, stemming from commercial rivalry, established England’s naval might, and the last, arising from Dutch interference in the American Revolution, spelled the end of the republic’s position as a world power.

The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652–54) began during a tense period following England’s institution of the 1651 Navigation Act, which was aimed at barring the Dutch from involvement in English sea trade. An incident in May 1652 resulting in the defeat of a Dutch force under Adm. Maarten Tromp led England to declare war on July 8 (June 28, old style). The Dutch under Tromp won a clear victory off Dungeness in December, but most of the major engagements of the following year were won by the larger and better armed men-of-war of England. In the summer of 1653 off Texel (Terheide), in the last battle of the war, the Dutch were defeated and Tromp killed, with both sides suffering heavy losses. The war was ended by the Treaty of Westminster (April 1654).

The commercial rivalry of the two nations again led to war in 1665 (the Second Anglo-Dutch War of 1665–67), after hostilities had begun the previous year and the English had already captured New Amsterdam (New York). England declared war in March 1665 and won a decisive victory over the Dutch off Lowestoft in June. After the destruction of the Dutch flagship, only hasty action by Vice Adm. Cornelis Tromp, Maarten Tromp’s son, prevented the defeat at Lowestoft from descending into a total rout. The English failed to capitalize on their initial success, however, and most subsequent battles (which occurred in the following year) were won by the Dutch. England’s ally, the principality of Münster, sent troops into Dutch territory in 1665 but was forced out of the war in the following year by France, which took the Dutch side in January 1666. A plague epidemic in 1665 and the Great Fire of London in 1666 contributed to England’s difficulties, which culminated in the destruction of its docked fleet by the Dutch at Chatham in June 1667. The war was ended the following month by the Treaty of Breda.

The Third Anglo-Dutch War (1672–74) formed a part of the general European war of 1672–78 (see Dutch War).

England and the Dutch Republic had been allied for a century when they again went to war (the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War of 1780–84) over secret Dutch trade and negotiations with the American colonies, then in revolt against England. The English declared war on December 20, 1780, and in the following year quickly took key Dutch possessions in the West and East Indies while imposing a powerful blockade of the Dutch coast. In the only significant engagement of the war, a small Dutch force attacked a British convoy in an indecisive clash off Dogger Bank in August 1781. The republic was never able to assemble a proper fleet for combat, however. When the war ended in May 1784, the Dutch were at the nadir of their power and prestige.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.