Battle of Damme

Coordinates: 51°20′00.92″N 3°22′54.53″E / 51.3335889°N 3.3818139°E / 51.3335889; 3.3818139

Battle of Damme
Part of the Anglo-French War (1213–14)

Philip II awaits his fleet
Date30  31 May 1213
LocationDamme, County of Flanders
Result English victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of France Kingdom of England
County of Flanders
Commanders and leaders
Savari de Mauléon William Longespée, 3rd Earl of Salisbury
Strength
Unknown, but large Unknown
Casualties and losses
300 ships captured, over 100 burned; remaining ships scuttled. Unknown

The Battle of Damme was fought on 30 and 31 May 1213 during the 1213–1214 Anglo-French War. An English fleet led by William Longespée, Earl of Salisbury accidentally encountered a large French fleet under the command of Savari de Mauléon in the vicinity of the port of Damme. The English captured 300 French ships at anchor, and looted and fired a further hundred beached ships. Upon returning to Damme, King Philip II of France had the remainder of the French fleet burned to avoid capture. The success of the English raid yielded immense booty and ended the immediate threat of a French invasion of England.

Background

When King John of England came to the throne he attempted to expand his territory, launching a campaign in Normandy in 1200. He was defeated by King Philip II of France and had lost most of his overseas possessions by 1204. Subsequently, John repeatedly attempted to form alliances against Philip, with a view to recovering Normandy. In 1208 John's nephew, Otto IV, became Holy Roman Emperor. Prior to his accession Otto had promised to help John recover his lost possessions. By 1212 both John and Otto were engaged in power struggles against Pope Innocent III. Philip decided to take advantage of this situation, first in Germany, where he aided a German noble rebellion. John immediately threw England's weight behind Otto, and Philip saw an opportunity to launch an invasion of England. To secure the co-operation of all his vassals in his plans for the invasion, Philip denounced John as an enemy of the Church, thereby justifying his attack as motivated by religious scruples. He summoned an assembly of French barons at Soissons, which was well attended with the exception of Ferdinand, Count of Flanders, who refused to attend. Philip was encouraged in all of this by the papal legate, Pandulf Verraccio.[1]

Verraccio, however, was also holding secret discussions with King John, who agreed to accept the legate's decision in ecclesiastical disputes.[2] In return, the Pope offered John the Kingdom of England and the Lordship of Ireland as papal fiefs, which John would rule as the Pope's vassal, and for which John would do homage to the Pope. Once this treaty had been ratified in May 1213 Verraccio announced to Philip that he would have to abandon his expedition against John, since to attack a faithful vassal of the Holy See would constitute a mortal sin. He suggested that as the Count of Flanders had denied Philip's right to declare war on England while King John was still excommunicated, his disobedience needed to be punished. Philip accepted the advice, and marched with his army into the territory of Flanders.[3] It is possible that Philip saw this as a preliminary to an invasion of England.[4]

Prelude

At the time, galleys were used as purpose-built warships. They had long been used by the Mediterranean powers and were adapted by the northern countries for use in the English Channel. Galleys could penetrate shallow harbours and were highly manoeuvrable, making them effective for raiding and ship-to-ship combat in meeting engagements. Operating the galleys was a specialist activity and called for highly trained crews.[5] Both the English and the French relied on requisitioning cogs, the merchant vessels of the time, to supplement their navies. Cogs had a deep draught, a round hull and were propelled by a single large sail set on a mast amidships. Cogs were used as transports and could be converted into warships by the addition of wooden castles at the bow and stern and the erection of crow's nest platforms at the masthead. Cogs typically had a displacement of 200–300 long tons (203–305 t). Their high freeboard made them superior to the oared vessels in close combat, particularly when they were fitted with the castles, from which missiles could be fired or stones dropped on to enemy craft alongside.[6]

Chroniclers of the time reported the French fleet as numbering some 1,700 ships,[Note 1] and the English 500.[Note 2][2] These numbers are considered improbably high by modern historians, who simply describe both fleets as "large". F. W. Brooks describes the figure of 1,700 ships for the French as "hopelessly exaggerated" and suggests that the actual size was less than 500, but of unknown breakdown between fighting ships and transports.[4] Better figures are available for the English. In 1206 fifty galleys were recorded in royal service, operating in four squadrons. In 1211 there is a record of a fleet of over fifty ships, including twenty galleys. Building and maintaining fleets of this size was extremely expensive. In 1212 the fleet was costing over £3,500 per year; perhaps a quarter of the total royal revenue.[7] For the 1213 campaign John attempted to requisition every English merchant ship capable of carrying six or more horses.[4]

Battle

The French fleet, originally assembled to carry troops to invade England, instead operated in a supporting role. It assembled at Boulogne, where Savari de Mauléon, a French minor noble who had served John for the previous eight years, was appointed its commander.[8] Heavily laden with supplies, largely wine and bacon, the army's pay chests, and the personal goods of the French barons, it proceeded to Gravelines and then to the port of Damme, "among the most important commercial ports of Europe".[9] Damme is located on the estuary of the Zwyn, now largely silted up. At the time it was in the County of Flanders (now in Belgium) and was the port of the city of Bruges. Meanwhile, the army marched via Cassel, Ypres, and Bruges before laying siege to Ghent.[2] In England John had assembled his own fleet, which he sent to Flanders, under the command of William Longespée, Earl of Salisbury, to support his ally, the Count of Flanders, on 28 May 1213.[4]

An 1873 illustration of the English attack

The English ships were carrying 700 English and Flemish knights and their attendants, and a large force of mercenaries. They entered the estuary of the Zwyn on 30 May, where they found the French armada. Most of the ships were pulled up on the beach. The French army was besieging Ghent, and many of the crews were pillaging the surrounding area. The English were taken by surprise to discover the French fleet, at first believing them to be their Flemish allies. After scouting the roadstead to confirm the nationality and size of the fleet and discovering that the French ships were almost unmanned they attacked. They seized the 300 ships which were anchored and killed their crews. A further 100 ships were looted and then burnt on the beach after their crews had fled. The next day they attacked the rest of the ships as well as the town itself. English and French chroniclers of the time all agree that the French lost a total of approximately 400 ships.[4]

The Flemish forces which had accompanied the English now disembarked and reconnoitered Damme. Finding it strongly garrisoned they bypassed it and advanced on Bruges. When Philip heard the news of the disaster behind him he broke off the siege of Ghent and marched for Damme. Part of his army encountered the Flemish army near Bruges and drove them off. His army reached Damme on 2 June, in time to relieve the French garrison. There, Philip found that groups of English ships were looting and capturing or firing his remaining ships almost at will. Furious at the performance of the fleet, he suspected their loyalty; the crews were almost all from Poitiers or Normandy, until recently English possessions, and their commander had until recently led troops for the English. He had the rest of the ships burned to prevent them from falling into English hands, and ordered the town of Damme to be burned as well. Determined to make the Flemish pay for his retreat, Phillip ordered that all towns be razed in every district he passed through, and that the peasantry be either killed or taken prisoner and sold as slaves. He extracted 30,000 marks from the Flemish cities he had captured as a ransom for the release of the hostages he had taken.[2][4][10]

Aftermath

The English fleet returned to England with the seized ships and a large booty; a contemporary writer claimed "never had so much treasure come into England since the days of King Arthur".[11] The success at Damme dashed any French hopes of invading England that year and severely strained their resources, but did little to affect the their army or its operations. Nevertheless, John began preparing for an invasion of France and a reconquest of his lost provinces. The English barons were initially unenthusiastic about the expedition, which delayed his departure, so it was not until February 1214 that he disembarked at La Rochelle. John was to advance from the Loire, while his ally Otto IV made a simultaneous attack from Flanders, together with the Count of Flanders; the three armies proved unable to co-ordinate their efforts effectively. It was not until John had been driven from Roche-au-Moine and had retreated to his transports that the Imperial army assembled in the Low Countries, where it was decisively defeated on 27 July 1214 at Bouvines.[2][10] De Mauléon returned to English service and in 1216 was appointed by John to the council of regency which governed England in the name of the new nine-year-old king, Henry III.[8]

Notes

  1. According to William the Breton, the royal chaplain, who was in the French camp. Gesta Phillipi Augusti. ed, Delaborde, p. 251
  2. From Wendover, iii, p. 251

Footnotes

  1. Smedley 1836, pp. 69–70.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Smedley 1836, p. 71.
  3. Smedley 1836, p. 70.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Brooks 2017, pp. 263–71.
  5. Rose 2012, pp. 24–30.
  6. Williamson 1944, p. 115.
  7. Rodger 2004, pp. 51, 53.
  8. 1 2 Chisholm 1911a, p. 904.
  9. Chisholm 1911b, p. 789.
  10. 1 2 Rodger 2004, p. 54.
  11. Seel 2012, p. 70.

References

  • Brooks, F. W. (2017) [1st pub. 1930]. "The Battle of Damme  1213". In Rose, Susan. Medieval Ships and Warfare. London: Routledge. pp. 263–71. ISBN 978-1351918497.
  • Wikisource Chisholm, Hugh (1911a). "Mauléon, Savari de". In Chisholm, Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 904.
  • Wikisource Chisholm, Hugh (1911b). "Damme". In Chisholm, Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 789.
  • Rodger, N.A.M. (2004). The Safeguard of the Sea. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0140297249.
  • Rose, Susan (2012). Medieval Naval Warfare 1000–1500. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1134553105.
  • Seel, Graham (2012). King John: An Underrated King. India: Anthem Press. ISBN 978-0857285188.
  • Smedley, E. (1836). The History of France, from the final partition of the Empire of Charlemagne, A.D. 843, to the Peace of Cambray, A.D. 1529. 1. London: Baldwin and Cradock. hdl:2027/hvd.hnxdqz. OCLC 221589838.
  • Williamson, James Alexander (1944) [1931]. The Evolution of England:A Commentary on the Facts. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 493. OCLC 984703073. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
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