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Antonio de Oquendo

Spanish Navy officer

Antonio de Oquendo

Spanish Navy officer

FieldValue
nameAntonio de Oquendo
imageFile:Antonio de Oquendo2.jpg
birth_dateOctober 1577
death_date7 June 1640
birth_placeSan Sebastián, Guipúzcoa
death_placeA Coruña
allegianceSpain
branchSpanish Navy
serviceyears1594–1640
rankCaptain General
battles
relationsMiguel de Oquendo (father)
  • Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604)
    • Battle of the Gulf of Cádiz
  • Eighty Years' War
    • Battle of St. Kitts (1629)
    • Battle of Albrolhos (1631)
    • Battle of the Downs (1639)

Antonio de Oquendo y Zandategui (October 1577 – 7 June 1640) was a Spanish Navy officer best known for commanding the Spanish fleet which was decisively defeated at the Battle of the Downs in 1639.

Role in the Battle of the Downs

Main article: Battle of the Downs

In 1639, the situation of Spain in the Thirty Years War strongly deteriorated. France had blocked the so called Spanish road via land to the Army of Flanders by the capture of Breisach. Because of this, the Army of Flanders had to resupplied by sea. In August, De Oquendo was made a viscount and given command of a large transport fleet to ship reinforcements from Cádiz to Dunkirk. On 15 September he was intercepted near the Strait of Dover by the squadron of Dutch Lieutenant-Admiral Maarten Tromp, who was reinforced two days later by a flotilla of Vice-Admiral Witte de With.

Though the Dutch force was rather small, consisting of only seventeen vessels, it managed by a clever use of the line-of-battle to severely damage the larger and crowded Spanish ships. De Oquendo feared that if he entered the narrow channel to Dunkirk, he would be trapped in that port, so he opted to take refuge in The Downs, in neutral English waters at the coast of Kent. As Charles I of England had concluded a secret treaty with Spain against the Dutch, De Oquendo hoped to move his troops to Flanders by means of English shipping. On 31 October the Dutch fleet, grown to over a hundred ships, violated English neutrality and attacked the Spanish fleet, succeeding in destroying or capturing many enemy vessels. De Oquendo himself escaped but was heavily wounded and morally broken. He never fully recovered. After his return to Spain he soon died in A Coruña.

References

References

  1. Sada, Javier M. (2002).''Historia de la ciudad de San Sebastián''. Alberdania, p. 307. {{ISBN. 8495589559 {{in lang. es
  2. Arzamendi Orbegozo, Ignacio (1981). ''El Almirante D. Antonio de Oquendo''. Sociedad Guipuzcoana de Ediciones y Publicaciones, p. 130 {{in lang. es
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