Raid on Santiago de Cuba (1603)

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Capture of Santiago de Cuba
Part of the
Anglo–Spanish War

Map of the Bay of Santiago de Cuba
Date12 May 1603
Location
Santiago de Cuba (Present-day Cuba
)
Result English victory[1]
Belligerents
 Spain England England
Commanders and leaders
Pedro de Valdés Christopher Cleeve
Strength
Militia & fortification 2 ships
200[2]
Casualties and losses
4 vessels burned Unknown

The Capture of Santiago de Cuba was a minor military event that took place towards the end of the

Anglo–Spanish War in May 1603. Santiago de Cuba was attacked and sacked by English privateers led by Christopher Cleeve.[3]

Events

Background

In late February 1603 Christopher Cleeve, in the large armed merchant galleon Elizabeth and Cleeve along with a pinnace left England on a privateering expedition to raid the Spanish Main, funded largely by a number of London Merchants.[3]

Cleeve arrived in the Caribbean in April. Cleeve's main target was Santiago de Cuba, which had not been attacked by the English since the outbreak of the Anglo-Spanish war. Santiago de Cuba was the second largest town in Cuba, having been founded in 1515. The town had been targeted by pirates and privateers before, notably in 1553.[4]

Raid

On 12 May 1603 the English landed in a bay near Santiago de Cuba and met no resistance.

Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the Assumption, and a considerable amount of booty was acquired.[2]

The city was occupied for a few days before a ransom was attempted, but having no response with this, Cleeve ordered his men to set fire to many buildings including the cathedral.[5] All the fortifications were dismantled or destroyed and four vessels in the city harbour were plundered and burnt.[2] Most of Santiago de Cuba was destroyed, and the English left with their booty unmolested after having been in the city for just under a week.[1]

Aftermath

Cleeve then descended on Spanish Jamaica but left, finding supplies and booty too few.[2] On his way back home past Cuba, he intercepted and captured two small galleons in the Old Bahama Channel on 28 August that conveyed the new Spanish governor of Florida, Pedro de Ibarra, who was taken prisoner.[3]

The raid on Santiago was to be the last major attack on the Spanish Main by the English after nearly thirty years. Soon after, James I ordered all privateers to cease while peace negotiations with the Spanish were being held in London, resulting in the Treaty of London.[3]

The English returned in 1662 for another strike at the city led by Christopher Myngs; this led to the destruction of the city as well as the destruction of the Castillo de San Pedro de la Roca.[6]

References

Citations
  1. ^ a b Bradley p 131
  2. ^ a b c d e Marely pg 77-78
  3. ^ a b c d Andrews pp 253-54
  4. ^ Latimer p 46
  5. ^ a b Syemour p 49
  6. ^ Latimer p 246

Bibliography

  • Andrews, Kenneth R (1964). Elizabethan Privateering 1583-1603. Cambridge: .
  • Bradley, Peter T (2010). British Maritime Enterprise in the New World: From the Late Fifteenth to the Mid-eighteenth Century. .
  • Latimer, Jon (2009). The Buccaneers of the Caribbean: How Piracy Forged an Empire, 1607-1697. Hachette UK. .
  • Marley, David (2008). Wars of the Americas: A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the Western Hemisphere. ABC CLLO. .
  • Seymour, Jean-Jacques (2010). Les chemins des proies: une histoire de la flibuste. Ibis rouge. . (French)