Villars claims that a few more such …
Years: 1709 - 1709
October
Villars claims that a few more such French defeats will destroy the allied armies; and the historian John A. Lynn in his book The Wars of Louis XIV 1667-1714 terms the battle a Pyrrhic victory, but the attempt to save Mons fails, and the fortress falls on October 20.
Nonetheless, news of Malplaquet, the bloodiest battle of the eighteenth century, stuns Europe.
The rumor that even Marlborough had died becomes one of the most popular French folk songs, Marlbrough s'en va-t-en guerre.
Marlborough receives no personal letter of thanks from Queen Anne for the last of his four great battlefield victories.
Richard Blackmore's Instructions to Vander Beck is virtually alone among English poems in attempting to celebrate the "victory" of Marlborough at Malplaquet, while it moves the English Tory party to begin agitating for a withdrawal from the alliance as soon as they form a government the next year.
Locations
People
- Anne, Queen of Great Britain
- Claude Louis Hector de Villars
- John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough
- Louis François, Duc de Boufflers, Comte de Cagny
- Louis XIV of France
Groups
- Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
