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  1. #1

    Default Battle of the Boyne

    I saw a show on PBS last night called the Battle of the Boyne.


    The Battle of the Boyne between King William III and his father-in-law, King James II, was fought on 1 July 1690 (11 July according to our modern calendar).

    Both kings commanded their armies in person. William had 36,000 men and James had 25,000 - the largest number of troops ever deployed on an Irish battlefield. English, Scottish, Irish, Dutch, Danish and Huguenots (French Protestants) made up William's army (Williamites) while James's men (Jacobites) were mainly Irish Catholics, reinforced by 6,500 French troops sent by King Louis XIV. At stake were the British throne, French dominance in Europe and Religious power in Ireland.

    William's camp was on the north side of the river. James's was on the south side with the two armies facing each other. William's battle plan was to trap the Jacobite army in a pincer movement. He sent 10,000 men towards Slane which drew the bulk of the Jacobites upstream in response. With 1,300 Jacobites posted in Drogheda, only 6,000 were left at Oldbridge to confront 26,000 Williamites. All the fighting took place on the south side of the river as the vastly outnumbered Jacobite forces defended their position against the advancing Williamites. William himself crossed at Drybridge with 3,500 mounted troops.

    The pincer movement failed. King James's army retreated across the river Nanny at Duleek and regrouped west of the Shannon to carry on the war.

    Approximately 1,500 soldiers were killed at the Boyne.

    .
    The show was really good and it was amazing how the Jacobite Cav kept charging the Williamintes and driving them back. What if James hadnt sent so many men to the left? Why didnt send men back when he had the bog between himself and the flanking army? Could James have won? Plus it said William was almost both just the day before the battle and the day of the battle. All this because at 50 he had a kid

    Lots of computer generated battle graphics





    Sorry for some reason my address bar isnt working so no links. Also this was part of a series called "Battlefield Britain"

    Battlefield Britain (DVD) 3 DVD Set

    Features


    Presenter Bios, War Walks: Bosworth - Prof. Richard Holmes traces the history of Henry Tudor's defeat of King Richard III in 1485.
    Episodes: Boudicca's Revolt, The Battle of Hastings, Battle for Wales, Spanish Armada, Battle of Naseby, Battle of the Boyne, Battle of Culloden and the Battle of Britain.
    Audio: Dolby Digital Stereo
    Video: Widescreen
    Captioned
    Production Year: 2004
    Packaging: Custom Case


    Product Details:
    –Length: 510 Minutes on 3 Discs
    –Country Of Origin : United States

    I gotta get this as thats the only episode ive seen. Anyone else catch any of this series?
    Last edited by Rush Limbaugh; September 01, 2006 at 11:03 PM.
    I have nothing against the womens movement. Especially when Im walking behind it.


  2. #2

    Default Re: Battle of the Boyne

    Heh, guess what I am writing an essay on right now. What a coincidence.
    The beauty of the Second Amendment is that it will not be used until they try and take it away.
    Staff Officer of Corporal_Hicks in the Legion of Rahl
    Commanding Katrina, Crimson Scythe, drak10687 and Leonidas the Lion

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