Battle of Bonchurch

Battle of Bonchurch
Part of the French invasion of the Isle of Wight during the Italian War of 1542–1546.

Monks Bay in 2008. French troops advanced from the bay before they reached St. Boniface Down, the location where the fighting took place.
DateJuly, 1545
LocationBonchurch, The Isle of Wight, England
50°36′12.46″N 1°11′55.43″W / 50.6034611°N 1.1987306°W / 50.6034611; -1.1987306Coordinates: 50°36′12.46″N 1°11′55.43″W / 50.6034611°N 1.1987306°W / 50.6034611; -1.1987306
Result English victory[1][2]
Belligerents
France England
Commanders and leaders
Le Seigneur de Tais[1][3] Robert Fyssher[2]
Strength
Approx 500 soldiers[2] 300[2]-2800[3] militiamen
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

The Battle of Bonchurch took place in late July 1545 at Bonchurch on the Isle of Wight.[2] No source gives the precise date, although 21 July is possible from the sequence of events. The battle was a part of the wider Italian War of 1542–1546, and took place during the French invasion of the Isle of Wight. Several landings were made, including at Bonchurch.[3][2] England won the battle, and the French advance across the island was halted.[2]

The battle was between French regular soldiers, and local English militiamen.[3] The number of French soldiers involved is believed to be about 500,[2] with the number of militiamen uncertain, with one source stating 300 and another 2,800.[2][3] The English forces are believed to have been commanded by Captain Robert Fyssher, and the French by Le Seigneur de Tais.[1][2][3]

The battle was one of several fought between English and French on the Isle of Wight.[3] The majority of sources state that the English won,[1][2] although one suggests that the French were victorious.[3] The battle was fought as part of the French attempt to cause enough damage to force English ships to leave their defensive positions and attack in less favourable conditions.[3] Other French landings were made at Sandown, Bembridge and St Helens.[3]

Background

The Italian War of 1542-1546 occurred because the dispute between Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and Francis I of France had not been settled by the Italian War of 1535-1538, which led to war between France, backed by the Ottoman Empire and Jülich-Cleves-Berg, and the Holy Roman Empire, backed by the Kingdom of England, Spain, Saxony, and Brandenburg. After two years of fighting Charles V, and Henry VIII invaded France. In September 1544, English forces captured Boulogne. France attempted to re-capture the city by force, but failed. Peace talks between England and France were unsuccessful, partly because Henry VIII refused to return Boulogne.[4] As a result, Francis I decided to invade England, hoping that Henry VIII would return Boulogne in return for his leaving England. Thirty thousand French troops and a fleet of some 400 vessels were assembled,[5] and sailed from Le Havre on 16 July.

On 18 July, an engagement between French and English ships off the English coast marked the beginning of the Battle of the Solent. On that day, the outnumbered English ships withdrew.[3] The English hoped to lure French ships into the shallows of Spithead, but the French wanted to attack in the more open waters of the eastern Spithead where the English could be encircled.[3] To entice the English to abandon their defensive position and engage the larger French fleet, they decided to invade the Isle of Wight and burn buildings and crops.[3] France also hoped that the residents of the island might support them and rebel against England, so that it could be used a base.[6] French troops landed on 21 July.

During the Hundred Years War, society had become militarised. Every male adult was obliged to fight if needed, and they participated in regular military training. The Captain of the Isle, Sir Richard Worsley of Appuldurcombe House, is considered to have been a “capable and energetic commander”. He was assisted by Sir Edward Bellingham, an officer in the regular army, along with a headquarters staff. The English militiamen were equipped with "long pikes topped with a bill hook, and daggers, knives and clubs for close fighting", as well as the Welsh longbow. French soldiers were equipped with firearms, and steel blades. The militiamen had the advantage of superior morale, speed and agility.[3]

The French plan at Bonchurch may have been to burn Wroxall and Appuldurcombe, capture and consolidate a position on the heights of St. Boniface Down, and then move towards Sandown to link up with another French landing.[2] The area around Bonchurch was important because nearby Dunnose Point offered safe anchorage, and had a fresh water source.[3]

Prelude

2000 French troops landed at three locations on the coast,[7] including about 500 at Bonchurch.[2] The landing was unopposed and the French began to advance inland, up the steep and thickly wooded slopes.[3] The Isle of Wight militia learned of the French invasion quickly; 300 of them, under the command of Captain Robert Fyssher, were already waiting at St. Boniface Down for the French to advance from Monks Bay.[2]

Battle

There is no comprehensive account of the battle. However, it could have taken place at dawn and lasted until midday.[2] Some accounts suggest that local women participated by shooting arrows at the French.[2]

Did the French win?

One source claims that the French won the battle at Bonchurch, and that the English were not local militiamen, but from Hampshire. The English forces took up a defensive position flanked by cliffs and screened by woods. According to this account, the English numbered 2,800. The first French attack was apparently repelled but the French commander Le Seigneur de Tais rallied his troops. A second attack was launched, with the French forces in the 'array' fighting formation. The account concludes by claiming that, after heavy casualties on both sides, the English line broke and the militia routed, and that Captain Robert Fyssher shouted an offer of £100 for anyone who could bring him a horse to escape, his being too fat to run. Sir John Oglander is claimed to have said: “but none could be had even for a kingdom”. The captain was never heard from again, and the account suggests he was either killed, or captured and buried at sea.[3]

Aftermath

Casualties on both sides were heavy.[3][2] Another skirmish took place several days later, when the English engaged Frenchmen who had disembarked from ships retreating from Portsmouth, looking for fresh water,[2] and a senior French commander, Chevalier D'Aux, was killed. The assumed English victory at Bonchurch only had a marginal impact on the course of the war, because it only involved a fraction of the forces engaged throughout. Had the French captured the island, it is unlikely this would have drastically affected the course of the war, because there was more significant territory being contested. However, the island could have been used to support French operations against England; Claude d'Annebault, commander of the French armada, recorded: “having it [the Isle of Wight] under our control, we could then dominate Portsmouth... and so put the enemy to extraordinary expense in maintaining a standing army and navy to contain us.”[3] Although some sources do claim that the victory at Bonchurch was responsible for the French withdrawal, the source that claims a French victory says that fighting at Bembridge was ultimately responsible for forcing the French to leave.[3]

Sources

  • Goodwin, John. Bonchurch from A-Z. Bonchurch: The Bonchurch Trading Company, 1992. ISBN 1-873009-00-3
  • Knecht, Robert J. Renaissance Warrior and Patron: The Reign of Francis I. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-521-57885-X.
  • Scarisbrick, J. J. Henry VIII. London: The Folio Society, 2004.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 False Prophets, archived from the original on 5 December 2004, retrieved 2 January 2008
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Goodwin, Bonchurch from A-Z, 7.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 The Last Invasion of the Isle of Wight, archived from the original on 13 July 2011, retrieved 14 February 2008
  4. Robert Knecht, Renaissance Warrior, 501; Scarisbrick, Henry VIII, 397–398.
  5. Knecht, Renaissance Warrior, 502; Phillips, "Testing the 'Mystery'", 50–51.
  6. Mary Rose Dossier disaster, archived from the original on 13 May 2006, retrieved 2 January 2007
  7. Isle of Wight Heritage, archived from the original (– Scholar search) on 6 May 2007, retrieved 18 October 2007

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