*** Welcome to piglix ***

Thirteenth Siege of Gibraltar (1727)

Thirteenth Siege of Gibraltar
Part of Anglo-Spanish War
German print of the 1727 Gibraltar Siege.jpg
Detail from a German print of the 1727 Siege of Gibraltar
Date 11 February – 12 June 1727 (OS)
Location Gibraltar
36°09′08″N 5°20′43″W / 36.152336°N 5.345199°W / 36.152336; -5.345199Coordinates: 36°09′08″N 5°20′43″W / 36.152336°N 5.345199°W / 36.152336; -5.345199
Result

British victory

  • Called off by Spain
  • British retention of Gibraltar
Belligerents
 Great Britain Spain Spain
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of Great Britain Earl of Portmore
Kingdom of Great Britain Charles Wager
Spain Count de las Torres
Spain Marquis of Verboom
Strength
1,500 (later increased to ~5,500) 12,000 (later increased to ~17,500)
Casualties and losses
118 killed,
207 wounded
392 killed,
1019 wounded

British victory

The Siege of Gibraltar of 1727 (thirteenth siege of Gibraltar, second by Spain) saw Spanish forces besiege the British garrison of Gibraltar as part of the Anglo-Spanish War. Depending on the sources, Spanish troops numbered between 12,000 and 25,000. British defenders were 1,500 at the beginning of the siege, increasing up to about 5,000. After a five-month siege with several unsuccessful and costly assaults, Spanish troops gave up and withdrew. Following the failure the war drew to a close, opening the way for the 1728 Treaty of El Pardo and the Treaty of Seville signed in 1729.

On 1 January 1727 (N.S.) the Marquis of Pozobueno, Spanish ambassador to the Court of St. James's, sent a letter to the Duke of Newcastle explaining why the Spanish Crown believed that Article X of the Treaty of Utrecht (the Article which granted Britain perpetual control of Gibraltar under certain conditions) had been nullified by infractions by the British:

The cession which his Majesty [King Philip V] made precedently of that Place is become null, because of the infractions made in the conditions on which it was permitted that the English garrison should remain in the possession of Gibraltar; seeing that contrary to all the protestations made, they have not only extended their fortifications by exceeding the limits prescribed and stipulated, but what is more, contrary to the express and literal tenour of the Treaties, they receive and admit the Jews and Moors, in the same manner of the Spaniards, and other nations confounded and mixed, contrary to our holy religion; not to mention the frauds and continual contrabands which are carried on there to the prejudice of his majesty's Revenues.

The letter was tantamount to a declaration of war. Spain, however, was not in a particularly advantageous position to capture Gibraltar in 1727. At the last attempt to retake Gibraltar in 1704, Spain had a strong Navy and the additional assistance of French warships. However, following their defeat at the battle of Cape Passaro and the capture of Vigo and Pasajes, the Spanish Navy was severely weakened. The Royal Navy had complete naval supremacy in the Straits, ruling out a Spanish landing in the south, and ensuring that the British garrison would be well supplied through a siege. Also, any attempt to scale the Rock from the east (as five hundred men under Colonel Figueroa, led by a local goatherd named Susarte, had done in 1704) was now impossible as the British had destroyed the path. The only option of attack open to the Spanish was along a narrow funnel (reduced in width by an inundation) that ran between the sea and the western side of the North Face of the Rock. This narrow strip of land would come under fire from three sides: Willis's battery to the east, the Grand Battery to the south, and the Devil's Tongue Battery on the Old Mole to the west.


...
Wikipedia

...