Raid on Málaga (1656)

The Raid on Malaga was a military action by the English against the Spanish city of Málaga on July 21, 1656 as part of the Anglo–Spanish War (1654–1660).[1]

Raid on Malaga
Part of the Anglo–Spanish War (1654–1660)
DateJuly 21, 1656
Location
Result English victory
Belligerents
 Spain  England
Commanders and leaders
Marquis of Mondéjar Captain Smith
Strength
Various shore defenses
10 ships
five ships
1 fireship
Casualties and losses
9 ships sunk
Guns spiked
Unknown.

Five English ships, HMS Henry, HMS Ruby, HMS Antelope, HMS Greyhound and HMS Bryan, appeared at six in the morning in the Bay of Málaga, without that the Marquis of Mondéjar, governor of the city, raised the alarm. At 13:00 the English frigates approached the harbor and attacked a Genoese and a Sicilian galley. The Sicilian galley succeeded in escaping at the cost of 2 killed and the captain being wounded. The Genoese galley was less lucky: it was seized and set on fire, together with all other ships found in the harbor.

After this, the English started shelling the city and its defenses during 4 hours, seriously damaging Málaga Cathedral. Meeting little resistance, the English went ashore and destroyed the greater part of the city's munition supply. All the harbor guns were spiked as well.[1] There were at least 14 killed and many wounded in the city. A large part of the population fled to the countryside.

Sources

  1. Thurloe, John (1742). A Collection of the State Papers - May 1656 to January 1657. F. Gyles. p. 257.
gollark: AMD's drivers are at least open-source now.
gollark: In my experience they weren't really particularly stable across kernel updates.
gollark: The way Nvidia handles Linux seems to basically just be "provide some drivers which mostly work in certain configurations, and never support any newer interfaces for several years".
gollark: Or, well, *this* issue.
gollark: The issue isn't with Nvidia's GPUs themselves, just their attitude towards Linux.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.