Antonio de Oquendo (
San Sebastián, October 1577 –
A Coruña, 7 June 1640) was a Spanish admiral; in 1639 he was in command of the Spanish forces at the
Battle of the Downs.
Antonio was the son of
Captain-General Miguel de Oquendo. In 1594 he entered naval service. He first commanded the
Delfín de Escocia and later the
Dobladilla, both light ships. On 7 August 1604 he captured an English
privateer. In 1607 he was appointed commander of the
Biscay squadron, which was that year enlarged and renamed the squadron of the
Bay of Biscay. From the same year he also functioned as the General of the Fleet of the
Viceroyalty of New Spain.
In 1619 he temporarily replaced
Juan Fajardo, arrested for insubordination, as commander of the Squadron of the Ocean, the Atlantic high seas navy. Ordered to be Fajardo's successor he refused, at the same time trying to make the government aware of the many shortcomings in the naval organisation; as a result he was himself incarcerated. Soon his imprisonment was changed for a forced stay in a convent. After a while Prince Philbert arranged his release; De Oquendo was then given command for a few years of the yearly Spanish
treasure fleet, transporting the silver from the Andes to Spain.
In 1624 he was brought to trial on accusations of fraud and
nepotism but managed to show that the charges were fabricated by his enemies within the fleet. Nevertheless he was barred from command of the treasure fleet for four years and condemned to pay an indemnity of 12,000
ducats for having caused the loss of the galleons
Espíritu Santo and
Santísima Trinidad near Cuba through neglect of duty.
In 1626 De Oquendo became Admiral-General of the Ocean Fleet, under Captain-General
Frederico de Toledo. In 1628 by his own initiative he relieved
La Mármora, at the time besieged by the
Moors.
In 1631 he commanded a troop convoy destined for Brazil, to retake the city of
Pernambuco, the previous year conquered by the
Dutch West India Company. On 12 September he engaged and defeated a Dutch WIC fleet under Admiral
Adriaan Pater, allowing him to successfully land the troop contingent. The Spanish lost one vessel, the Dutch three. De Oquendo was now promoted to the highest rank, that of Captain-General.
In 1636 he was arrested for duelling an Italian nobleman in
Madrid. In 1637 he refused to reinforce the fleet of the
Kingdom of Naples because his squadron was undermanned and poorly supplied. He was punished by being appointed governor of
Mahon, the capital of the island of
Minorca.
Role in Naval Battle of the Downs
However in 1639 the situation of Spain in the
Thirty Years War strongly deteriorated.
France had blocked the usual land route to the Army of Flanders and in August De Oquendo was made a
viscount and given command of a large transport fleet to ship reinforcements from
Cadiz to
Dunkirk. On 15 September he was intercepted near the
Strait of Dover by the squadron of Dutch Lieutenant-Admiral
Maarten Tromp, who was reinforced two days later by a flotilla of Vice-Admiral
Witte de With. Though the Dutch force was rather small, consisting of only seventeen vessels, it managed by a clever use of the
line-of-battle to severely damage the larger and crowded Spanish ships. De Oquendo feared that if he would enter the narrow channel to Dunkirk, he would be trapped in that port, so he opted to take refuge in
The Downs, in neutral English waters at the coast of
Kent. As
Charles I of England had concluded a secret treaty with Spain against the Dutch, De Oquendo hoped to move his troops to Flanders by means of English shipping. On 31 October the Dutch fleet, grown to over a hundred ships, violated English neutrality and
attacked the Spanish fleet, succeeding in destroying or capturing many enemy vessels. De Oquendo himself escaped but was heavily wounded and morally broken. He never fully recovered. After his return to Spain he soon died in
La Coruña.
Category:1577 birthsCategory:1640 deathsCategory:Spanish admiralsCategory:17th-century Spanish peoplees:Antonio de Oquendoeu:Antonio Okendofr:Antonio de Oquendo