Siege of York

53°57′29″N 1°04′55″W / 53.958°N 1.082°W / 53.958; -1.082

Siege of York
Part of First English Civil War

Micklegate Bar and part of the City walls. In 1644, there was a barbican in front of the gate
Date22 April – 16 July 1644
Location
York, North Yorkshire
Result Decisive Parliamentarian/Covenanter victory
Belligerents
Royalists
Commanders and leaders
Strength
800 horse
5,000-foot
14,000 +
up to 80 guns
Casualties and losses
1,000 killed and wounded
1,000 paroled
Unknown
Siege of York is located in North Yorkshire
York
York
North Yorkshire and York

The siege of York in 1644 was a prolonged contest for York during the First English Civil War, between the Scottish Covenanter army and the Parliamentarian armies of the Northern Association and Eastern Association, and the Royalist Army under the Marquess of Newcastle. It lasted from 22 April until 1 July when the city was relieved by Prince Rupert of the Rhine. Rupert and Newcastle were defeated the next day at the decisive Battle of Marston Moor, and the siege resumed until the city was surrendered on easy terms on 16 July.

Campaign

Early years of the Civil War

During the 17th century, York was often referred to as the "capital of the north" and sometimes as the "second city in England" (although Bristol had a larger population[citation needed]). It had great prestige as the seat of the Archbishop of York, and as the centre of much of the region's trade.

When civil war broke out in 1642, the Royalists in Yorkshire were briefly besieged in the city, until the Earl of Newcastle (later elevated to marquess) came to their aid with an army from the northern counties.

During the following year, Newcastle defeated the Parliamentarian northern army under Lord Fairfax and his son Sir Thomas Fairfax at the Battle of Adwalton Moor and drove the survivors into Hull. The Royalists laid siege to Hull, but could not prevent Parliament resupplying the city from the sea. An attempt to suborn the governor, Sir John Hotham, was thwarted. Newcastle also sent detachments southward into Lincolnshire, but these were defeated at Gainsborough and Winceby by Parliamentarian cavalry under Oliver Cromwell and Sir Thomas Fairfax.

Campaign of 1644

Late in 1643, Parliament signed a treaty, the Solemn League and Covenant, with Scotland. On 19 January 1644, a Scottish army under the Earl of Leven invaded Northumberland. Newcastle took the bulk of his army north to face this new threat, leaving John Belasyse as Governor of York with 1,500 horse and 1,800 foot. Since the autumn of 1643, Sir Thomas Fairfax's cavalry had moved into Cheshire, where they had fought at the Battle of Nantwich. Now, they began moving back across the Pennines into Yorkshire. To prevent them rejoining Lord Fairfax's army in Hull, Belasyse occupied the town of Selby, which lay between them. On 11 April, Thomas Fairfax and Parliamentarian infantry under Sir John Meldrum stormed Selby, capturing Belasyse and most of his army.

On hearing the news, the Marquess of Newcastle realised that York was threatened and hastily retreated there, entering the city on 19 April. The Scots army followed him, and linked up with the Fairfaxes. They moved to the city and appeared before it on 22 April.

Siege – April to June

Newcastle sent most of his cavalry out of the city to join other Royalist armies. Although closely pursued, they escaped. Under Newcastle's Lieutenant General of Horse, Lord Goring, they moved south into Derbyshire and subsequently crossed the Pennines into Lancashire. A garrison of 800 horse and 5,000 foot remained in York under Newcastle and his Lieutenant General of Foot, Lord Eythin.

York lies at the confluence of the River Ouse and the smaller River Foss, and at the time it possessed the only bridges over the Ouse between Selby and Boroughbridge, making investment difficult. The Scots occupied the sector west of the city, the Fairfaxes that to the east. The Foss had been dammed close to its confluence with the Ouse shortly after the Norman conquest, causing the river behind to form a large lake that protected the northeastern approaches into the city. By the 17th century, however, the lake had begun to silt up to the point that it could have been possible to cross on foot. The Parliamentarians constructed a bridge of boats over the Ouse at Acaster Malbis several miles south of York to allow communications between their two armies. The sector to the north between the Ouse and Foss was left open, except for occasional patrols, and the garrison could easily pass messengers to and fro, and even obtain some victuals via this unguarded sector.

Most of the activity over this period was undertaken by the garrison, who made a sortie to burn down several houses in the nearby village of Acomb (spelled Ackham in contemporary accounts), to deny shelter to the besiegers, and mounted other raids. The besiegers' chief concern during this period was to maintain their lines of communication with Hull, through which they received supplies and especially munitions.

Siege – June

The Parliamentarian army of the Eastern Association, under the Earl of Manchester had so far played little offensive part in the war. On 6 May, they stormed Lincoln, removing the last Royalist garrison in their area, which allowed them to operate further afield. They moved to join the besiegers of York on 3 June, taking the hitherto unguarded northern sector between the Ouse and Foss. Another bridge of boats was constructed across the Ouse at Poppleton to enable communications between them and the other armies. With the northern sector secure, large numbers of Parliamentarian horse could be spared to clear the area around the city. Several small Royalist garrisons nearby, such as Crayke Castle, were captured.

The besiegers now began determined operations. The city's inner ring of defences consisted of the mediaeval city walls. There was also an outer ring of several "sconces" (small detached earthwork forts, each with a garrison of perhaps a company of infantry and two or three cannon) at a distance from the walls. The Scots stormed two of these in the western sector on 6 June, but failed to capture another at The Mount, half a mile from Micklegate Bar, because reinforcements sallied from the bar to relieve the outwork. (Although the work has long since disappeared and the area has been built upon by hotels and offices, the sconce on the Mount commanded a very wide field of fire). The Royalists then abandoned the remaining outer works.

The besiegers next formally summoned the garrison to surrender. Newcastle opened negotiations for a treaty, but he was probably merely playing for time. Both sides appeared to be acting with bad faith during the parleys, which lasted from 8 to 15 June. On 10 June, parties of Royalist cavalry tried to sortie or to escape the city, but were forced back into York. Meanwhile, the besiegers had been constructing batteries and digging mines.

The English Parliament's Committee of Both Kingdoms had dispatched Sir Henry Vane the Younger as commissioner to the allied armies before York (referred to in the committee's papers as the "Army of Both Kingdoms"). Vane carried instructions to the generals at York to detach forces to resist the Royalists under Prince Rupert of the Rhine, who was threatening to overrun the Parliamentarian-held county of Lancashire. Leven and his commanders had already expressed their opposition to this, and when Vane arrived on 9 June, they maintained their resolve to capture York rather than dissipate their strength in half-measures. Vane (who was also instructed to sound out the allied leaders on their views as to whether King Charles was to be deposed) eventually agreed with the generals' strategy.

Storming attempt

With the sconce at the Mount still in Royalist hands, the besiegers concentrated their attack on two other sectors. To attack Walmgate Bar, they set up a battery of guns on a nearby rise, Lamel Hill, and also dug a mine beneath the Walmgate Bar barbican. The cannon caused scars in the bar which can be seen today, and ruined St Lawrence Parish Church, the old hospital church of St Nicholas (which was never rebuilt), and many domestic buildings in the area. A deserter warned the Royalists about the mine, and they successfully flooded it through a countermine.

Bootham Bar in the shadow of York Minster

Meanwhile, at Saint Mary's Tower (outside Bootham Bar, on the north-west corner of the walls of the former St Mary's Abbey), Manchester's men had dug another mine. On 16 June, this was fired and the explosion demolished the tower. A regiment of foot stormed the breach, but no reinforcements were available. Some Royalists emerged from the abbey's postern gate by the river and recaptured the breach from behind, trapping the attackers. The Parliamentarians suffered 300 casualties. Manchester's Sergeant-Major General, Lawrence Crawford, was blamed for the rashness which led to the failure. Although the breach was the site of constant bickering between the attackers and the garrison (as the Earl of Manchester wrote, "We are now so near them that we are very ill neighbours one to another"), the Parliamentarians did not renew the assault.

Relief

At around the same time, two armies were approaching. Rupert was gathering a large Royalist army in Lancashire to relieve York. Although reinforcements for the besiegers were coming from the Midlands under Meldrum and the Earl of Denbigh, they could not arrive in time to intercept Rupert. On 28 June the besiegers learned that Rupert was holding a final muster and "fixing arms" at Skipton and on 30 June, they temporarily abandoned the siege and moved to Marston Moor to confront him.

At first the garrison was unaware that the besiegers had departed, but sentries later reported that their Scots and Parliamentarian opposite numbers were no longer answering calls and shouting insults as they usually did. Patrols were sent out from the city, which found the besiegers had left. (There was a brief clash between these patrols and a Parliamentarian rearguard at Fulford). After it became common knowledge within the city that the siege was lifted, Newcastle's men swarmed out from their defences and acquired large amounts of plunder, including cannon, ammunition and 4,000 pairs of shoes, from the abandoned siege lines and encampments.

Meanwhile, Rupert had bypassed the Scots and Parliamentarian armies in a highly successful flanking manoeuvre, and gained touch with the city from the north. Rupert claimed that he had orders from the King which required him to defeat the Scots and Parliamentarians in battle before returning to the south of England, and sent peremptory demands to Newcastle that he reinforce Rupert's army for an immediate battle. This was not possible because Newcastle's troops, who had received no pay for some time, had mutinied and were demanding pay or discharge. Several were still looting, and it was said that some were drunk. Eventually, when Rupert and Newcastle had appealed to them, 3,000 men (with a mounted troop of 100 "gentleman volunteers") rejoined their colours and marched off about midday on 2 July, leaving 1,000 (the regiments of Belasyse, Sir Thomas Glemham and Sir Henry Slingsby of Red House) to hold the city.

That evening, the Royalist army was defeated at the Battle of Marston Moor, with stragglers and fugitives making their way to York. Sir Henry Slingsby later wrote in his 'Memoirs'; "We came late to York, which made a great confusion: for at the bar, none were suffer'd to come in but such as were of the town, so the whole street was throng'd up with wound'd and lame people, which made a pitiful cry among them".[1]

End of the siege

Although the Royalists still had other troops and garrisons in the north which might have been used to reform the Royalist armies, Rupert considered that he was needed with the King's main "Oxford Army" in the south of England, and led the troops he had rallied (5,000 horse, and a few hundred foot) out through Monk Bar on the eastern side of the city on 4 July.[2] Newcastle considered the situation hopeless, and sailed from Scarborough with his senior officers to go into exile on the Continent.

Sir Thomas Glemham was left as governor of the city. The Scots and Parliamentarian armies (now reinforced by Meldrum's and Denbigh's forces) resumed the siege on 5 July. Glemham had only 1,000 troops (although Rupert had left several cannon, in addition to those the Royalists had recovered on 1 July), and there was no longer any hope of relief. Glemham could only negotiate honourable terms for surrender. On 16 July, his men marched out of the city, with their arms and colours, heading for Richmond and Carlisle. Most deserted within a few days.

Lord Fairfax was made Governor of York by Parliament. He earned the thanks of the city by refusing to allow religious zealots in the victorious Scots and Parliamentarian armies to vandalise the many churches (including York Minster.)

See also

References

  1. ^ Slingsby & Hodgson 1806, p. 51.
  2. ^ Young, Peter (1997). Marston Moor 1644. Windrush Press. p. 200. ISBN 9781900624091.

Sources

  • Rodgers, H.C.B. (1968). Battles and Generals of the Civil Wars. Seeley Service & Co. Ltd.
  • Slingsby, Sir Henry; Hodgson, J (1806). Original Memoirs, written during The Great Civil War Being The Life of Sir Henry Slingsby And Memoirs of Capt Hodgson. Ballantyne & Co.
  • Wenham, Leslie Peter (1994) [1970]. The great and close siege of York, 1644. William Sessions. ISBN 1-85072-147-5..

Read other articles:

Town of Narrogin Local Government Area van Australië Locatie van Town of Narrogin in West-Australië Situering Staat West-Australië Hoofdplaats Narrogin Coördinaten 32°56'10ZB, 117°10'41OL Algemene informatie Oppervlakte 13,1 km² Inwoners 4.565 (juni 2007)[1] Overig Wards geen Portaal    Australië Town of Narrogin was een Local Government Area (LGA) in Australië in de staat West-Australië. Town of Narrogin telde 4.565 inwoners in 2007. De hoofdplaats was Narrogin. O...

 

Machine gun adaptable for several light and medium roles This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article is missing information about general development, date of use, non-military use etc. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (July 2011) This article's factual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date informa...

 

Direktorat Jenderal Perhubungan Laut Kementerian Perhubungan Republik IndonesiaGambaran umumDasar hukumPeraturan Presiden Nomor 40 Tahun 2015Susunan organisasiDirektur Jenderal-Situs webhubla.dephub.go.id/Default.aspx Direktorat Jenderal Perhubungan Laut merupakan unsur pelaksana pada Kementerian Perhubungan Republik Indonesia yang berada di bawah dan bertanggung jawab kepada Menteri Perhubungan Republik Indonesia.[1] Referensi ^ Peraturan Presiden Nomor 40 Tahun 2015[pranala...

Petit Véhicule Protégé PVP dipamerkan pada hari terbuka di 18ème Régiment de Transmissions (Resimen sinyal ke 18) pada tanggal 15 Juni 2009 Jenis Kendaraan lapis baja ringan Negara asal  France Sejarah pemakaian Digunakan oleh Lihat Operators Sejarah produksi Produsen Panhard Biaya produksi €167,000<ref name=Francebudget2012 > (FY 2012) Diproduksi 2008–2012 Jumlah produksi 1133 Varian Lihat Variants Spesifikasi Berat 4,390 kg Panjang 4,599 mm Lebar 2,27...

 

الأمل الرياضي بالرقبة الاسم الكامل الأمل الرياضي بالرقبة(بالفرنسية:Espoir sportif de Rogba) الاسم المختصر ESRT الألوان           أزرق، أبيض تأسس عام 2011 الملعب الملعب البلدي المقدميني، الرقبة، ولاية تطاوين(السعة: 2,000 متفرج) البلد  تونس الدوري الرابطة التونسية الثالث

 

Santo KasparKaspar bersama dengan Melkior dan Baltasar - dari ensiklopedia bergambar Hortus Deliciarum karya Herrad dari Landsberg yang direproduksi oleh Christian Maurice EngelhardtTiga Orang Majus, Tiga Raja, Tiga Pria BijakDihormati diGereja Katolik RomaGereja Ortodoks TimurKomuni AnglikanGereja LutheranKanonisasiPra-KongregasiTempat ziarahKuil Tiga Raja, Katedral KolnPesta6 Januari (Epifani)11 Januari23 Juli (terjemahan relik)24 Juli (Koln, Jerman)AtributRaja yang memberikan hadiah, raja ...

Massacre in Utah, US in 1857 The Mountain Meadows massacre was a series of attacks on the Baker–Fancher emigrant wagon train, at Mountain Meadows in southern Utah. The attacks culminated on September 11, 1857 in the mass slaughter of the emigrant party by the Iron County district of the Utah Territorial Militia and some local Indians. Initially intended to be an Indian massacre,[1] two men with leadership roles in local military, church and government organizations,[2] Isaac...

 

Territoire de Masi-Manimba Administration Pays République démocratique du Congo Province Kwilu Nombrede députés 6 Démographie Population 1 571 503 hab. (2016) Densité 110 hab./km2 Langue nationale kikongo Géographie Coordonnées 4° 46′ sud, 17° 54′ est Superficie 14 327 km2 Localisation Géolocalisation sur la carte : République démocratique du Congo Territoire de Masi-Manimba Géolocalisation sur la carte : Républiqu...

 

Soviet military commander (1897–1955) In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions, the patronymic is Aleksandrovich and the family name is Govorov. Leonid Aleksandrovich GovorovGovorov in 1950Born(1897-02-22)22 February 1897Butyrki, Vyatka Governorate, Russian EmpireDied19 March 1955(1955-03-19) (aged 58)Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet UnionBuriedKremlin Wall NecropolisAllegiance Russian Empire (1916–1917) Soviet Russia (1920–1922)  Soviet Union (1922

As of November 2023[update], the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) comprised 99 Member States, two of which are suspended because of their lapsed annual financial contribution. The IHO identifies its representative member organisations as the respective national hydrographic office(s). These organisations may themselves be part of wider national maritime or other administrations covering a larger range of tasks – such as the national organisations for transport...

 

Carte des communes urbaines de l'Aisne par unité urbaine en 2010. Plus de 50 000 habitants Entre 20 000 et 50 000 habitants Entre 10 000 et 20 000 habitants Entre 5 000 et 10 000 habitants Moins de 5 000 habitants La liste des unités urbaines de l'Aisne regroupe les unités urbaines du département de l'Aisne dont la mise à jour est effectuée par l'Insee lors de la révision du zonage ou du périmètre des unités urbaines e...

 

This article is about the school in Connecticut. For other uses, see St. Bernard's School (disambiguation). This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Saint Bernard School – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Private, coeducationa...

German actress Katja BenrathKatja Benrath in 2019.Born (1979-09-01) 1 September 1979 (age 44)Erbach im Odenwald, GermanyOccupation(s)Actress, director, producer and writerYears active2000–presentWebsitewww.katjabenrath.com Katja Benrath (born September 1, 1979 in Erbach im Odenwald, Germany) is a German actress and filmmaker, best known for her film, Watu Wote/All of Us for which she received critical acclaim and was winner at Student Academy Award,[1][2] and recei...

 

American fantasy police procedural drama TV series GrimmGenre Occult detective fiction Police procedural Horror Supernatural Created by Stephen Carpenter Jim Kouf David Greenwalt Based onGrimm's Fairy Tales, by the Brothers GrimmStarring David Giuntoli Russell Hornsby Bitsie Tulloch Jacqueline Toboni Silas Weir Mitchell Sasha Roiz Reggie Lee Bree Turner Claire Coffee ComposerRichard MarvinCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo. of seasons6No. of episodes123 (list of episodes...

 

South African politician This article uses bare URLs, which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot. Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style. Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting, such as reFill (documentation) and Citation bot (documentation). (August 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Willem DomanMPShadow Minister of Cooperative Governance an...

Species of amphibian Giant banjo frog Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)[1] Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Amphibia Order: Anura Family: Limnodynastidae Genus: Limnodynastes Species: L. interioris Binomial name Limnodynastes interiorisFry, 1913 Distribution of the Giant Banjo Frog The giant banjo frog, giant pobblebonk frog, giant bullfrog, or great bullfrog (Limnodynastes interioris) is a species of frog, ende...

 

Metode loci (Latin: jamak dari lokus, tempat atau lokasi), juga disebut istana memori (memory palace atau mind palace), adalah perangkat mnemonik (hafalan) yang diperkenalkan di Romawi kuno dan risalah retorika Yunani kuno (dalam Rhetorica ad Herennium anonim, karya Cicero De Oratore, dan karya Quintilian Institutio Oratoria). Pada dasarnya, metode ini merupakan peningkatan memori yang menggunakan visualisasi untuk mengatur dan mengingat informasi. Banyak juara kontes memori mengaku menggunak...

 

Greek singer Nana MouskouriOQMouskouri in 1966Background informationBirth nameΙωάννα Μούσχουρη (Ioánna Moúschouri)Born (1934-10-13) 13 October 1934 (age 89)Chania, Crete, GreeceGenresJazz, pop, easy listening, folk, Greek folk, world musicOccupation(s)SingerInstrument(s)VocalsYears active1958–2008 2011–presentLabelsFontana, Polydor, Mercury, Verve, Philips, PolyGram, Universal Music FranceWebsiteUniversal Music France, Official site Nana MouskouriMember of the Europe...

Political party in Emilia-Romagna Lega Emilia SecretaryMatteo RancanFounded1989 (as LER) 1991 (as LNE) 2020 (as LE)IdeologyRegionalismFederalismPopulismNational affiliationLega Nord (1991–2020)Lega per Salvini Premier (2020–present)Legislative Assemblyof Emilia-Romagna7 / 50Chamber of Deputies (Emilia seats)10 / 35Senate (Emilia-Romagna seats)6 / 22Websitehttps://legaemiliasalvinipremier.itPolitics of Emilia-RomagnaPolitical partiesElections Proposed flag of Emilia by Lega Nord Emilia...

 

Stasiun Nijikken二十軒駅Stasiun Nijikken, Maret 2015Lokasi3 Chome Unumamitsuikechō, Kakamigahara-shi, Gifu-ken 509-0146JepangKoordinat35°24′00″N 136°53′22″E / 35.3999°N 136.8895°E / 35.3999; 136.8895Koordinat: 35°24′00″N 136°53′22″E / 35.3999°N 136.8895°E / 35.3999; 136.8895Pengelola MeitetsuJalur■Jalur Meitetsu KakamigaharaLetak dari pangkal12.4 km dari Meitetsu-GifuJumlah peron2 peron sampingInformasi lainStatusT...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!