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Battle of Marston Moor

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Marquis of Newcastle's army was sandwiched between a Scottish army twice its ... the Tockwith/Marston road at the edge of Tockwith village up onto Bilton Bream. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Battle of Marston Moor


1
Battle of Marston Moor
  • 2 July 1644

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3
  • Situation before the battle
  • Marquis of Newcastles army was sandwiched
    between a Scottish army twice its size and the
    Eastern Association
  • Newcastles army were besieged in York
  • Rupert mounted a relief expedition but was
    concerned with the deteriorating military
    situation in the Thames valley
  • How might the concern over the situation in the
    south affect Ruperts strategic thinking?
  • Arrival of Manchesters Eastern Association made
    relieving the York from the south extremely
    difficult ? solution approach from the west

4
  • Charless orders were to relieve York as quickly
    as possible, to destroy the enemy armies that had
    been besieging it, and then to return south
    without delay.
  • Intelligence York was about to surrender!
  • Rupert reunited with northern cavalry under
    George Goring at Skipton
  • Rupert approached York from the north-east
    wrong-footing the allies who were guarding the
    approach to the city from the west
  • 1 July York was liberated
  • Instead of resting and awaiting reinforcements
    Rupert carried out the kings orders and sought
    to do battle as soon as possible

5
Problems with the evidence
  • Inconsistencies between the Parliamentary and
    Scottish accounts ? controversy over
    contributions of Scots and English Troops
  • E.g. Thomas Harrison claimed that the Eastern
    Association had done it all their own alone
  • Royalist accounts biased reflecting division
  • E.g. Sir Hugh Cholmneys account depicts the
    Marquis of Newcastles troops fighting bravely,
    while of Prince Rupert underperformed.

6
Royalist division events leading to up the
battle
  • Marquis of Newcastle opposed an immediate attack
  • Preferred to await reinforcements encouraged by
    intelligence about increasing differences between
    the Allied army officers
  • Rupert ignored these arguments followed the
    kings orders despite being heavily outnumbered
    (mostly in infantry)
  • Newcastle slow to move his Northern infantry onto
    the battlefield (why? Due to disagreement with
    Rupert? Refusing to leave the city until paid
    owing wages? Result of alcohol consumed
    celebrating the end of the siege?)

7
  • About Midday Rupert abandoned idea of attacking
    that day due to failure of the Northern infantry
    to arrive

8
Royalist cavalry
  • Rupert deployed his forces in a defensive
    formation
  • Small bodies of musketeers placed between the
    cavalry squadrons
  • Two infantry regiment placed on right-wing
    musketeers would be able to fire into the flank
    of the enemy force as they charged
  • Cavalry reserve placed at back of the field,
    making it easier for Rupert to move it wherever
    it was most needed as the battle progressed
  • How much can you remember how does this
    formation differ to the offensive formation used
    by Charles at Edgehill?

9
  • About 3000 horse (drawn up in two lines)
  • About 2000 horse (drawn up in two lines)
  • About 1000 horse

10
Parliamentarian cavalry
  • Eastern Association cavalry (drawn up in two
    lines), supported by a reserve of three regiments
    of Scottish cavalry
  • This was an attack formation where the lines of
    cavalry were to punch a hole in the enemy
    formation needed the reserve to be in close
    support!
  • Scots ideal for skirmishing/ rapid movement
    light armoured horses

Looking south from the moor ditch where it
crossed Moor Lane, towards the hilltop, with the
small group of trees known as Cromwell's Clump,
where the parliamentarian army deployed.
11
  • Fairfaxs wing also drawn up in three lines
    (including three Scottish cavalry regiments led
    by Lord Eglinton)
  • Both wings flanked by dragoons with a combined
    strength of about 8000 horse

12
Comparative strength of the infantry
  • The Royalist infantry was drawn up in two and a
    half lines
  • About 11,000 strong approx. 4,000 in each of
    the first two lines, 2,000 in the third and
    another 1,200 supporting the cavalry
  • The Allied army numbered between 15,000 and
    20,000 men.
  • It was drawn up in three full lines with the
    beginning of a fourth. This befitted its greater
    size and the constricting nature of the ridge.

13
Events of the Battle
  • Marston Moor biggest battle in the entire war
  • Unusual in being fought during the evening
  • Royalist generals were settling down for the
    night convinced nothing would happen until the
    following day
  • 7pm the whole Allied army moved down the slope
    with the Eastern Association horse in the lead.

14
  • It was alleged Lord Byron disobeyed orders and
    charged the enemy
  • Wanklyn defends Byron suggesting that he may have
    been sacrificing two regiments of horse to gain
    time and allow the rest of his command the chance
    to remount, as well as gain infantry support.
  • Byron killed in the battle an easy scapegoat?
    On the other hand, narrative after narrative of
    the battle criticises him for disobeying orders.

15
  • Because of the rabbit-warren in this area the
    cavalry had to proceed more cautiously and thus
    had less momentum. As a consequence the fighting
    on this wing tended to be brutal hand to hand
    sword fighting
  • After about half an hour the Royalist right wing
    was routed
  • Allied forces were able to regain their formation
  • (possibly thanks to their training or because the
    enemy broke suddenly all along the line rather
    than dispersing randomly)

Looking south from the Tockwith/Marston road at
the edge of Tockwith village up onto Bilton
Bream. This was the rabbit warren within which
most of Cromwell's cavalry were deployed.
16
  • During this time the Eastern Association brigades
    under Major General Crawford were pushing back
    the enemy in front of them.

17
  • Their opposing infantry were routed at about the
    same time as the cavalry
  • Fairfaxs regiments fled suddenly like Ruperts
    horse on the other wing.
  • Due to the combined effort of the royalist
    infantry and one of the reserve cavalry brigades
    many of the infantry formations in the centre and
    right of the parliamentarian army were fleeing
    the battlefield (over half the Allied infantry)
  • The panic in the second and third lines of
    infantry was made worse by Fairfaxs fleeing
    cavalry riding over them in their eagerness to
    flee.

18
  • By nightfall the victorious Allied left wing
    (Cromwell Leslies cavalry Crawfords infantry
    brigades) had destroyed the remaining royalist
    formations and taken thousands of prisoners, as
    well as the whole of Newcastles and Ruperts
    artillery and baggage.
  • Gorings troops were plundering the Allied
    baggage train on Braham Hill

19
Looking north from Church Field on the hilltop to
the south west of Marston village towards the
moor in the distance beyond the village. This
hilltop, close by the Wetherby to York road and
almost a mile from where the armies first
clashed, is probably the site there the
parliamentarian baggage train was attacked by
Goring's cavalry
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