The Leading Facts of English History eBook

David Henry Montgomery
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about The Leading Facts of English History.

The Leading Facts of English History eBook

David Henry Montgomery
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about The Leading Facts of English History.

[1] The whole of the Netherlands at one time belonged to Spain, but the northern part, or Holland, had succeeded in establishing its independence, and was protected on the southern frontier by a line of fortified towns.

Not long afterwards, the King of Spain died and bequeathed the crown to Philip of Anjou.  When Philip left Paris for Madrid, Louis XIV exultingly exclaimed, “The Pyrenees no longer exist.”  That was simply his short way of saying, Now France and Spain are made one, and FRANCE is that one.[2]

[2] When Philip of Anjou went to Spain, Louis XIV, by letters patent, conditionally reserved the succession to the Spanish throne to France, thus virtually uniting the two countries, so that the Pyrenees Mountains would no longer have any political meaning as a boundary between the two countries.

Louis at once put French garrisons in the border towns of the Spanish Netherlands, and he thus had a force ready at any moment to march across the frontier into Holland.  Finally, on the death of the royal refugee, James II (S9491), which occurred shortly before King William’s death, Louis XIV publicly acknowledged the exiled monarch’s son, James Edward, the so-called “Old Pretender” (SS490, 491), as rightful sovereign of England, Scotland, and Ireland.

This effectually roused the English people; they were prepared for hostilities when William’s sudden death occurred (S504).  Immediately after Anne came to the throne (1702) war with France was declared, and since it had grown out of Louis’s designs on the crown of Spain, it was called the “War of the Spanish Succession.”

The contest was begun by England, mainly to prevent the French King from carrying out his threat of placing the so-called “Pretender,” son of the late James II, on the English throne and so overturning the Bill of Rights (S497) and the Act of Settlement (S497), and thereby restoring the country to the Roman Catholic Stuarts.  Later, the war came to have two other important objects.  The first of these was to defend Holland, now a most valuable ally; the second was to protect the colonies of Virginia and New England against the power of France, which threatened, through its own American colonies and through the extensive Spanish possessions it expected to acquire, to get control of the whole of the New World.[1]

[1] At this time England had twelve American colonies extending from New England to South Carolina, inclusive, with part of Newfoundland.  France and Spain claimed all the rest of the continent.

Thus England had three objects at stake: 
  (1) The maintenance of Protestant government at home.
  (2) The maintenance of the Protestant power of Holland.
  (3) The retention of a large part of the American continent.

For this reason the War of the Spanish Succession may be regarded as the beginning of a second Hundred Years’ War between England and France (S237),[2] one destined to decide which was to build up the great empire of the future in the western hemisphere.[3]

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The Leading Facts of English History from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.