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		<title>NINA  DE VRIES</title>
		<link>http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/2008/05/06/nina-de-vries/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 May 2008 04:57:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>eryc9</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CATEGORY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CHIEFTAIN THE ORC'S]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[LOVE POEMS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WARS]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Nina de Vries (born 1961) is a Dutch sex worker who offers erotic massages to mentally disabled men and women in Berlin and other parts of Germany. She also trains others to do the same. De Vries is nude when she massages her clients; these massages include embracing and caressing and sometimes culminate in her [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=lembangjr.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2005149&amp;post=12&amp;subd=lembangjr&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><strong>Nina de Vries </strong></em>(born 1961) is a Dutch sex worker who offers erotic massages to mentally disabled men and women in Berlin and other parts of Germany. She also trains others to do the same.</p>
<p>De Vries is nude when she massages her clients; these massages include embracing and caressing and sometimes culminate in her masturbating her clients to orgasm. She does not offer vaginal or oral sex. When needed her clients are accompanied by a caregiver or relative; these chaperons wait next door and may afterwards discuss the session with de Vries. Some of her typical clients have Down&#8217;s syndrome, autism or suffered brain damage after an accident. Some of them are so severely limited that they communicate mainly by smiling or frowning. The services are not covered by German health insurers, but the welfare agency has occasionally paid for destitute clients. The price (in 2003) was € 80 per hour and € 110 when she visits clients in institutions (in Berlin) for handicapped persons.</p>
<p>De Vries does not reject the label &#8220;prostitute&#8221;; she herself uses the term &#8220;sexual assistant&#8221; (German: Sexualbegleiterin). Prostitution is legal in Germany (see prostitution in Germany), and sexual services for physically disabled persons are accepted and readily available; since 1995 the agency Sensis in Wiesbaden has connected clients and providers.</p>
<p>Sexual services for the severely mentally disabled are controversial, however: some think that these people should be treated as equivalent to children, and therefore cannot give valid permission, or do not need, to engage in sexual behavior. Others fear that de Vries might misinterpret the often very subtle communication attempts of her clients. She maintains that although her clients may not be able to communicate verbally they usually are very clear in their communication; they do have a need for sexuality, and denial of this essential human need may lead to aggression or auto-aggression. She says the art is to relate in a careful and gentle way to establish a contact and to find out exactly what somebody wants and what he or she does not want. In her opinion and experience it is possible to work in a respectful way also with people who cannot communicate verbally.</p>
<p>De Vries trained as a therapist in the Netherlands and has lived in Berlin since 1990. In 1994 she started to offer erotic massages to regular clients, beginning in 1997 also to the disabled. Since 1999 she has worked almost exclusively with mentally disabled men; she appears to be the first person in Germany to do so. German newspapers have repeatedly covered her work and several documentaries were broadcasted on German, Austrian and Swiss television.</p>
<p>In April 2003, she was asked to train sexual assistants for the disabled in Zürich. These attempts faltered when the sponsoring organization, Pro Infirmis, encountered resistance and suffered a considerable drop in donations. A separate organization was founded in November 2003 to pursue the project, and de Vries trained 6 women and 4 men as Sexualbegleiter from January until June 2004. Erotic massages have since been provided to the disabled in the German speaking parts of Switzerland. The Swiss organization announced in August 2006 that it was planning to offer full sexual intercourse to its clients, including to homosexuals.</p>
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		<title>EROTIC MASSAGE</title>
		<link>http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/2008/05/06/erotic-massage/</link>
		<comments>http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/2008/05/06/erotic-massage/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 May 2008 04:56:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>eryc9</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CHIEFTAIN THE ORC'S]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Erotic massage is the use of massage techniques for erotic ends that is widely practiced by couples as part of lovemaking. For example, instead of draping the subject&#8217;s body with towels, an erotic massage is usually conducted with the subject naked and undraped. Areas of the body such as the areas around the groin and [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=lembangjr.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2005149&amp;post=11&amp;subd=lembangjr&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Erotic massage is the use of massage techniques for erotic ends that is widely practiced by couples as part of lovemaking. For example, instead of draping the subject&#8217;s body with towels, an erotic massage is usually conducted with the subject naked and undraped. Areas of the body such as the areas around the groin and intimate parts of the body, which are normally not touched in therapeutic massage, will be touched in ways that increase sexual arousal.</p>
<p>Erotic massage may be utilized as a means of stimulating the libido, or increasing the ability of a person to respond positively to sensual stimulus. In some cases, erotic massage can be a form of foreplay without sexual gratification, intended to heighten the sensitivity of an individual prior to another engagement where sexual arousal and fulfillment is intended. In other cases, erotic massage may be used professionally to help men address issues of premature ejaculation. Methods employed may teach the recipient to relax the musculature of his pelvis and thus prolong arousal and increase pleasure.[citation needed]</p>
<p>It is also offered as a service by some massage parlors (known as the &#8216;happy ending&#8217;). In this case, erotic massage may be considered to be a form of sex work, or a form of sex therapy.</p>
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		<title>A Persian Philosopher in Damascus</title>
		<link>http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/2008/05/06/a-persian-philosopher-in-damascus/</link>
		<comments>http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/2008/05/06/a-persian-philosopher-in-damascus/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 May 2008 04:54:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>eryc9</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I CANNOT TELL the fate of this man, nor can I say what shall befall His disciples. A seed hidden in the heart of an apple is an orchard invisible. Yet should that seed fall upon a rock, it will come to naught. But this I say: The ancient God of Israel is harsh and [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=lembangjr.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2005149&amp;post=10&amp;subd=lembangjr&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I CANNOT TELL the fate of this man, nor can I say what shall befall His disciples.<br />
A seed hidden in the heart of an apple is an orchard invisible. Yet should that seed fall upon a rock, it will come to naught.<br />
But this I say: The ancient God of Israel is harsh and relentless. Israel should have another God; one who is gentle and forgiving, who would look down upon them with pity; one who would descend with the rays of the sun and walk on the path of their limitations, rather than sit for ever in the judgment seat to weigh their faults and measure their wrong-doings.<br />
Israel should bring forth a God whose heart is not a jealous heart, and whose memory of their shortcomings is brief; one who would not avenge Himself upon them even to the third and the fourth generation.<br />
Man here in Syria is like man in all lands. He would look into the mirror of his own understanding and therein find his deity. He would fashion the gods after his own likeness, and worship that which reflects his own image.<br />
In truth man prays to his deeper longing, that it may rise and fulfil the sum of his desires.<br />
There is no depth beyond the soul of man, and the soul is the deep that calls unto itself; for there is no other voice to speak and there are no other ears to hear.<br />
Even we in Persia would see our faces in the disc of the sun and our bodies dancing in the fire that we kindle upon the altars.<br />
Now the God of Jesus, whom He called Father, would not be a stranger unto the people of Jesus, and He would fulfil their desires.<br />
The gods of Egypt have cast off their burden of stones and fled to the Nubian desert, to be free among those who are still free from knowing.<br />
The gods of Greece and Rome are vanishing into their own sunset. They were too much like men to live in the ecstasy of men. The groves in which their magic was born have been cut down by the axes of the Athenians and the Alexandrians.<br />
And in this land also the high places are made low by the lawyers of Beirut and the young hermits of Antioch.<br />
Only the old women and the weary men seek the temples of their forefathers; only the exhausted at the end of the road seek its beginning.<br />
But this man Jesus, this Nazarene, He has spoken of a God too vast to be unlike the soul of any man, too knowing to punish, too loving to remember the sins of His creatures. And this God of the Nazarene shall pass over the threshold of the children of the earth, and He shall sit at their hearth, and He shall be a blessing within their walls and a light upon their path.<br />
But my God is the God of Zoroaster, the God who is the sun in the sky and fire upon the earth and light in the bosom of man. And I am content. I need no other God. </p>
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		<title>KAMA SUTRA</title>
		<link>http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/2008/05/06/kama-sutra/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 May 2008 04:43:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>eryc9</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Kama Sutra (Sanskrit: कामसूत्र), (alternative spellings Kamasutram or simply Kamasutra), is an ancient Indian text widely considered to be the standard work on love in Sanskrit literature. It is said to be authored by Mallanaga Vatsyayana. A portion of the work deals with human sexual behavior. The Kama Sutra is most notable of a group [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=lembangjr.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2005149&amp;post=8&amp;subd=lembangjr&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><strong>Kama Sutra (Sanskrit: कामसूत्र), </strong></em>(alternative spellings Kamasutram or simply Kamasutra), is an ancient Indian text widely considered to be the standard work on love in Sanskrit literature. It is said to be authored by Mallanaga Vatsyayana. A portion of the work deals with human sexual behavior.</p>
<p>The Kama Sutra is most notable of a group of texts known generically as Kama Shastra (Sanskrit: Kāma Śhāstra).[2] Traditionally, the first transmission of Kama Shastra or &#8220;Discipline of Kama&#8221; is attributed to Nandi the sacred bull, Shiva&#8217;s doorkeeper, who was moved to sacred utterance by overhearing the lovemaking of the god and his wife Parvati and later recorded his utterances for the benefit of mankind.</p>
<p>Historian John Keay says that the Kama Sutra is a compendium that was collected into its present form in the second century CE.[4]</p>
<p>The Mallanaga Vatsyayana&#8217;s Kama Sutra has 36 chapters, organized into 7 parts[5]. According to both the Burton and Doniger[6] translations, the contents of the book are structured into 7 parts like the following:</p>
<p>1. Introductory<br />
Chapters on contents of the book, three aims and priorities of life, the acquisition of knowledge, conduct of the well-bred townsman, reflections on intermediaries who assist the lover in his enterprises (5 chapters).<br />
2. On sexual union<br />
Chapters on stimulation of desire, embraces types, caressing and kisses, marking with nails, biting and marking with teeth, on copulation (positions), slapping by hand and corresponding moaning, virile behavior in women, superior coition and oral sex, preludes and conclusions to the game of love. It describes 64 types of sexual acts (10 chapters).<br />
Artistic depiction of a sex position. Although Kama Sutra did not originally have illustrative images, part 2 of the work describes different sex positions.3. About the acquisition of a wife<br />
Chapters on forms of marriage, relaxing the girl, obtaining the girl, managing alone, union by marriage (5 chapters).<br />
4. About a wife<br />
Chapters on conduct of the only wife and conduct of the chief wife and other wives (2 chapters).<br />
5. About the wives of other people<br />
Chapters on behavior of woman and man, encounters to get acquainted, examination of sentiments, the task of go-between, the king&#8217;s pleasures, behavior in the gynoecium (6 chapters).<br />
6. About courtesans<br />
Chapters on advice of the assistants on the choice of lovers, looking for a steady lover, ways of making money, renewing friendship with a former lover, occasional profits, profits and losses (6 chapters).<br />
7. On the means of attracting others to one&#8217;s self<br />
Chapters on improving physical attractions, arousing a weakened sexual power (2 chapters). </p>
<p><em><strong> Pleasure and Spirituality</strong></em><br />
Some Indian philosophies following the &#8220;four main goals of life&#8221;,[7][8] known as the purusharthas:[9]</p>
<p>1). Dharma: Virtuous living. 2). Artha: Material prosperity. 3). Kama: Aesthetic and erotic pleasure.[10][11] 4). Moksha: Liberation.</p>
<p>Dharma, Artha and Kama are aims of everyday life, while Moksha is release from the cycle of death and rebirth. The Kama Sutra (Burton translation) says:</p>
<p>&#8220;Dharma is better than Artha, and Artha is better than Kama. But Artha should always be first practised by the king for the livelihood of men is to be obtained from it only. Again, Kama being the occupation of public women, they should prefer it to the other two, and these are exceptions to the general rule.&#8221; (Kama Sutra 1.2.14)[12]</p>
<p>Of the first three, virtue is the highest goal, a secure life the second and pleasure the least important. When motives conflict, the higher ideal is to be followed. Thus, in making money virtue must not be compromised, but earning a living should take precedence over pleasure, but there are exceptions.</p>
<p>In childhood, Vātsyāyana says, a person should learn how to make a living; youth is the time for pleasure, and as years pass one should concentrate on living virtuously and hope to escape the cycle of rebirth.</p>
<p>The Kama Sutra is sometimes wrongly thought of as a manual for tantric sex. While sexual practices do exist within the very wide tradition of Hindu tantra, the Kama Sutra is not a tantric text, and does not touch upon any of the sexual rites associated with some forms of tantric practice.</p>
<p>Also the Buddha preached a Kama Sutra, which is located in the Atthakavagga (sutra number 1). This Kama Sutra, however, is of a very different nature as it warns against the dangers that come with the search for pleasures of the senses.</p>
<p><em><strong>Translations</strong></em><br />
The most widely known English translation of the Kama Sutra was made by the famous traveler and author Sir Richard Francis Burton and compiled by his colleague Forster Fitzgerald Arbuthnot in 1883. Historian Burjor Avari has criticized Burton&#8217;s translation as &#8220;inadequate,&#8221; having had the result that the book gained a reputation in the West of being a pornographic work.</p>
<p>A recent translation is that of Indra Sinha, published in 1980. In the early 1990s its chapter on lovemaking positions began circulating on the internet as an independent text and today is often assumed to be the whole of the Kama Sutra.</p>
<p>Alain Daniélou contributed a translation called The Complete Kama Sutra[16] in 1994. This translation featured the original text attributed to Vatsayana, along with a medieval and modern commentary. Unlike Burton’s version, Alain Danielou’s new translation preserves the numbered verse divisions of the original and includes two essential commentaries: the Jayamangala commentary, written in Sanskrit by Yashodhara during the Middle Ages, and a modern Hindi commentary by Devadatta Shastri. Another noteworthy difference is the preservation of the full explicitness of the original text. All aspects of sexual life have been mentioned &#8212; including marriage, adultery, prostitution, group sex, sadomasochism, male and female homosexuality, and transvestism.</p>
<p>It was translated again in 2002 by Wendy Doniger, the professor of the history of religions at the University of Chicago, and Sudhir Kakar, the Indian psychoanalyst and senior fellow at Center for Study of World Religions at Harvard University. Their translation provides a psychoanalytic interpretation of the text.</p>
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		<title>KHALIL GIBRAN</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 May 2008 04:29:09 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Khalil Gibran Born Gibran Khalil Gibran bin Mikhael bin Saâd January 6, 1883(1883-01-06) Bsharri, Lebanon Died April 10, 1931 (aged 48) New York City, United States Occupation Poet, Painter, Sculptor, Writer, Philosopher, Theologian, Visual Artist Nationality Lebanese Genres Poetry, Parable, Short Story Literary movement Mahjar, New York Pen League Notable work(s) The Prophet Khalil Gibran [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=lembangjr.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2005149&amp;post=5&amp;subd=lembangjr&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Khalil Gibran</p>
<p>Born Gibran Khalil Gibran bin Mikhael bin Saâd<br />
January 6, 1883(1883-01-06)<br />
Bsharri, Lebanon<br />
Died April 10, 1931 (aged 48)<br />
New York City, United States<br />
Occupation Poet, Painter, Sculptor, Writer, Philosopher, Theologian, Visual Artist<br />
Nationality Lebanese<br />
Genres Poetry, Parable, Short Story<br />
Literary movement Mahjar, New York Pen League<br />
Notable work(s) The Prophet<br />
Khalil Gibran (full name Gibran Khalil Gibran bin Mikhael bin Saâd, Arabic: جبران خليل جبران بن ميخائيل بن سعد, Syriac: ܟ݂ܠܝܠ ܔܒܪܢ) (born January 6, 1883 in Bsharri, Lebanon; died April 10, 1931 in New York City, United States) was a Lebanese American artist, poet, writer, philosopher and theologian. He was born in Lebanon (at the time the Mount Lebanon Province of the Ottoman Empire) and spent most of his life in the United States. He is the third bestselling poet in history after William Shakespeare and Lao Tse.[1]</p>
<p> Youth</p>
<p> In Lebanon<br />
Gibran was born in the Christian Maronite town of Bsharri in today&#8217;s northern Lebanon &#8211; at the time, part of the Ottoman Empire. He grew up in the region of Bsharri. His maternal grandfather was a Maronite Catholic priest[2]. His mother Kamila was thirty when Gibran was born; his father, also named Khalil, was her third husband.[3] As a result of his family&#8217;s poverty, Gibran did not receive any formal schooling during his youth in Lebanon. However, priests visited him regularly and taught him about the Bible, as well as the Syriac and Arabic languages.</p>
<p>After Gibran&#8217;s father, a tax collector, went to prison for alleged embezzlement,[1] Ottoman authorities confiscated his family&#8217;s property. Authorities released Gibran&#8217;s father in 1894, but the family had by then lost their home. Gibran&#8217;s mother decided to follow her brother, Gibran&#8217;s uncle, and emigrated to the United States. Gibran&#8217;s father remained in Lebanon. Gibran&#8217;s mother, along with Khalil, his younger sisters Mariana and Sultana, and his half-brother Peter left for New York on June 25, 1895.</p>
<p> In the United States</p>
<p>Khalil Gibran, Photograph by Fred Holland Day, c. 1898The Gibrans settled in Boston&#8217;s South End, at the time the second largest Lebanese-American community in the United States. His mother began working as a pack peddler, selling lace and linens that she carried from door to door. Gibran started school on September 30, 1895. He had had no formal schooling in Lebanon, and school officials placed him in a special class for immigrants to learn English. Gibran&#8217;s English teacher suggested that he Anglicise the spelling of his name in order to make it more acceptable to American society. Kahlil Gibran was the result.</p>
<p>Gibran also enrolled in an art school at a nearby settlement house. Through his teachers there, he was introduced to the avant-garde Boston artist, photographer, and publisher Fred Holland Day,[1] who encouraged and supported Gibran in his creative endeavors. A publisher used some of Gibran&#8217;s drawings for book covers in 1898.</p>
<p>At 15, Gibran went back to Lebanon to study at a Maronite-run preparatory school and higher-education institute in Beirut. He started a student literary magazine with a classmate, and was elected &#8220;college poet&#8221;. He stayed there for several years before returning to Boston in 1902. Two weeks before he got back, his sister, Sultana, age 14, died of tuberculosis. The next year, his brother Bhutros died of the same disease, and his mother died of cancer. His sister Marianna then supported Gibran and herself, working at a dressmaker&#8217;s shop.[1]</p>
<p>Art and poetry<br />
Gibran held his first art exhibition, of drawings, in 1904 in Boston, at Day&#8217;s studio.[1] During this exhibition, Gibran met Mary Elizabeth Haskell, a respected headmistress ten years his senior. The two formed an important friendship that lasted the rest of Gibran&#8217;s life. Though publicly discreet, their correspondence reveals an exalted intimacy. Haskell influenced not only Gibran&#8217;s personal life, but also his career. In 1908, Gibran went to study art with Auguste Rodin in Paris for two years. This is where he met his art study partner and lifelong friend Youssef Howayek. He later studied art in Boston.</p>
<p>While most of Gibran&#8217;s early writings were in Syriac and Arabic, most of his work published after 1918 was in English. His first book for the publishing company Alfred Knopf, in 1918, was The Madman, a slim volume of aphorisms and parables written in biblical cadence somewhere between poetry and prose. Gibran also took part in the New York Pen League, also known as the &#8220;immigrant poets&#8221; (al-mahjar), alongside important Lebanese American authors such as Ameen Rihani (&#8220;the father of Lebanese American literature&#8221;), Elia Abu Madi and Mikhail Naimy, a close friend and distinguished master of Arabic literature, whose descendants Gibran declared to be his own children, and whose nephew, Samir, is a godson of Gibran. Much of Gibran&#8217;s writings deal with Christianity, especially on the topic of spiritual love. His poetry is notable for its use of formal language, as well as insights on topics of life using spiritual terms.</p>
<p>Gibran&#8217;s best-known work is The Prophet, a book composed of 26 poetic essays. During the 1960s, The Prophet became especially popular with the American counterculture and New Age movements. The Prophet remains famous to this day, having been translated into more than 20 languages.</p>
<p>One of his most notable lines of poetry in the English speaking world is from &#8216;Sand and Foam&#8217; (1926), which reads : &#8216;Half of what I say is meaningless, but I say it so that the other half may reach you&#8217;. This was taken by John Lennon and placed, though in a slightly altered form, into the song Julia from The Beatles&#8217; 1968 album The Beatles (a.k.a. The White Album).</p>
<p>Juliet Thompson, one of Khalil Gibran&#8217;s acquaintances, said that Gibran told her that he thought of `Abdu&#8217;l-Bahá, the leader of the Bahá&#8217;í Faith in his lifetime, all the way through writing The Prophet. `Abdu&#8217;l-Bahá&#8217;s personage also influenced Jesus, The Son of Man, another book by Gibran. It is certain that Gibran did two portraits of him during this period.[4]</p>
<p>Death and legacy</p>
<p>Khalil Gibran memorial in Washington, D.C.<br />
The Gibran Museum and Gibran&#8217;s final resting place, located in Bsharri, LebanonGibran died in New York City on April 10, 1931: the cause was determined to be cirrhosis of the liver and tuberculosis. Before his death, Gibran expressed the wish that he be buried in Lebanon. This wish was fulfilled in 1932, when Mary Haskell and his sister Mariana purchased the Mar Sarkis Monastery in Lebanon.</p>
<p>Gibran willed the contents of his studio to Mary Haskell. There she discovered her letters to him spanning 23 years. She initially agreed to burn them because of their intimacy, but recognizing their historical value she saved them. She gave them, along with his letters to her which she had also saved, to the University of North Carolina Library before she died in 1964. Excerpts of the over six hundred letters were published in &#8220;Beloved Prophet&#8221; in 1972.</p>
<p>Mary Haskell Minis (she wed Jacob Florance Minis after moving to Savannah, Georgia in 1923) donated her personal collection of nearly one hundred original works of art by Gibran to the Telfair Museum of Art in Savannah in 1950. Haskell had been thinking of placing her collection at the Telfair as early as 1914. In a letter to Gibran, she explained, &#8220;&#8230;I am thinking of other museums&#8230;the unique little Telfair Gallery in Savannah, Ga., that Gari Melchers chooses pictures for. There when I was a visiting child, form burst upon my astonished little soul.&#8221; Haskell&#8217;s extraordinary gift to the Telfair is the largest public collection of Kahlil Gibran’s visual art in the country, consisting of five oils and numerous works on paper rendered in the artist’s lyrical style, which reflects the influence of symbolism. The future American royalties to his books were willed to his hometown of Bsharri, to be &#8220;used for good causes&#8221;, however, this led to years of controversy and violence over the distribution of the money[5]; eventually, the Lebanese government became the overseer.</p>
<p>Works<br />
In Arabic:</p>
<p>Nubthah fi Fan Al-Musiqa (1905)<br />
Ara&#8217;is al-Muruj (Nymphs of the Valley, also translated as Spirit Brides, 1906)<br />
al-Arwah al-Mutamarrida (Spirits Rebellious, 1908)<br />
al-Ajniha al-Mutakassira (Broken Wings, 1912)<br />
Dam&#8217;a wa Ibtisama (A Tear and A Smile, 1914)<br />
al-Mawakib (The Processions, 1919)<br />
al-‘Awāsif (The Tempests, 1920)<br />
al-Bada&#8217;i&#8217; waal-Tara&#8217;if (The New and the Marvellous,1923)<br />
In English, prior to his death:</p>
<p>The Madman (1918) (downloadable free version)<br />
Twenty Drawings (1919)<br />
The Forerunner (1920)<br />
The Prophet, (1923)<br />
Sand and Foam (1926)<br />
Kingdom Of The Imagination (1927)<br />
Jesus, The Son of Man (1928)<br />
The Earth Gods (1931)<br />
Posthumous, in English:</p>
<p>The Wanderer (1932)<br />
The Garden of the Prophet(1933)<br />
Lazarus and his Beloved (1933)<br />
Prose and Poems(1934)<br />
A Self-Portrait (1959)<br />
Thought and Meditations (1960)<br />
Spiritual sayings (1962)<br />
Voice of the master (1963)<br />
Mirrors of the Soul (1965)<br />
Death Of The Prophet (1979)<br />
The Vision (1994)<br />
Eye of the Prophet (1995)<br />
Other:</p>
<p>Beloved Prophet, The love letters of Kahlil Gibran and Mary Haskell, and her private journal (1972, edited by Virginia Hilu) </p>
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		<title>THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, BAVARIA</title>
		<link>http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/2008/05/06/the-battle-of-blenheim-bavaria/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 May 2008 04:16:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[BLENHEIM  BAVARIA, GERMANY =================== Battle of Blenheim Part of the War of the Spanish Succession The Duke of Marlborough Signing the Despatch at Blenheim. Oil by Robert Alexander Hillingford. Date 13 August 1704 Location Blenheim,  Bavaria Result Decisive Allied victory Belligerents Allied forces of: England Dutch Republic Denmark Austria Kingdom of France Bavaria Commanders Duke of [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=lembangjr.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2005149&amp;post=3&amp;subd=lembangjr&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1 class="firstHeading">
<div class="metadata topicon" style="display:none;right:10px;"><em>BLENHEIM  BAVARIA, GERMANY</em></div>
<div class="metadata topicon" style="display:none;right:10px;"><em></em></div>
<div class="metadata topicon" style="display:none;right:10px;"><em>===================</em></div>
<div class="metadata topicon" style="display:none;right:10px;"><em></em></div>
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<th colspan="2">Battle of Blenheim</th>
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<td style="background:lightsteelblue;vertical-align:middle;text-align:center;" colspan="2">Part of the <a title="War of the Spanish Succession" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/War_of_the_Spanish_Succession">War of the Spanish Succession</a></td>
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<td style="font-size:90%;line-height:1.25em;border-bottom:#aaa 1px solid;text-align:center;" colspan="2"><a class="image" title="Duke-of-Marlborough-signing-Despatch-Blenheim-Bavaria-1704.jpg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Duke-of-Marlborough-signing-Despatch-Blenheim-Bavaria-1704.jpg"></p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/45/Duke-of-Marlborough-signing-Despatch-Blenheim-Bavaria-1704.jpg/300px-Duke-of-Marlborough-signing-Despatch-Blenheim-Bavaria-1704.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="300" height="226" /></p>
<p></a><br />
<em>The Duke of Marlborough Signing the Despatch at Blenheim</em>. Oil by <a title="Robert Alexander Hillingford" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Robert_Alexander_Hillingford">Robert Alexander Hillingford</a>.</td>
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<th>Date</th>
<td><a title="August 13" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_13">13 August</a> <a title="1704" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/1704">1704</a></td>
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<th>Location</th>
<td><span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/20/Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg/22px-Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of Bavaria" width="22" height="13" /></a></span> <a title="Blindheim" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Blindheim">Blenheim</a>,<sup> </sup> <a title="Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Bavaria">Bavaria</a></td>
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<th>Result</th>
<td>Decisive <a title="Grand Alliance" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Grand_Alliance">Allied</a> victory</td>
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<th colspan="2">Belligerents</th>
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<td style="border-right:#aaa 1px dotted;" width="50%">Allied forces of:<br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of England" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_England.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/be/Flag_of_England.svg/22px-Flag_of_England.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of England" width="22" height="13" /></a></span> <a title="England" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/England">England</a><br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of the Netherlands" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Prinsenvlag.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5a/Prinsenvlag.svg/22px-Prinsenvlag.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of the Netherlands" width="22" height="15" /></a></span> <a title="Dutch Republic" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Dutch_Republic">Dutch Republic</a><br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of Denmark" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_Denmark.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9c/Flag_of_Denmark.svg/22px-Flag_of_Denmark.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of Denmark" width="22" height="17" /></a></span> <a title="Denmark–Norway" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Denmark%E2%80%93Norway">Denmark</a><br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of Habsburg Monarchy" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.png"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Flag_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.png/22px-Flag_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.png" border="0" alt="Flag of Habsburg Monarchy" width="22" height="15" /></a></span> <a title="Habsburg Monarchy" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Habsburg_Monarchy">Austria</a></td>
<td style="padding-left:0.25em;" width="50%"><span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of France" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Pavillon_royal_de_France.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0f/Pavillon_royal_de_France.svg/22px-Pavillon_royal_de_France.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of France" width="22" height="15" /></a></span> <a title="Kingdom of France" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Kingdom_of_France">Kingdom of France</a><br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/20/Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg/22px-Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of Bavaria" width="22" height="13" /></a></span> <a title="Kingdom of Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Kingdom_of_Bavaria">Bavaria</a></td>
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<th colspan="2">Commanders</th>
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<td style="border-right:#aaa 1px dotted;" width="50%"><span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of England" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_England.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/be/Flag_of_England.svg/22px-Flag_of_England.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of England" width="22" height="13" /></a></span> <a title="John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/John_Churchill%2C_1st_Duke_of_Marlborough">Duke of Marlborough</a><br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of Habsburg Monarchy" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.png"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Flag_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.png/22px-Flag_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.png" border="0" alt="Flag of Habsburg Monarchy" width="22" height="15" /></a></span> <a title="Prince Eugene of Savoy" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Prince_Eugene_of_Savoy">Prince Eugene of Savoy</a></td>
<td style="padding-left:0.25em;" width="50%"><span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of France" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Naval_Ensign_of_the_Kingdom_of_France.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a9/Naval_Ensign_of_the_Kingdom_of_France.svg/22px-Naval_Ensign_of_the_Kingdom_of_France.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of France" width="22" height="15" /></a></span> <a title="Camille d'Hostun, duc de Tallard" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Camille_d%27Hostun%2C_duc_de_Tallard">Duc de Tallard</a><br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of France" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Naval_Ensign_of_the_Kingdom_of_France.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a9/Naval_Ensign_of_the_Kingdom_of_France.svg/22px-Naval_Ensign_of_the_Kingdom_of_France.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of France" width="22" height="15" /></a></span> <a title="Ferdinand de Marsin" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Ferdinand_de_Marsin">Ferdinand de Marsin</a><br />
<span class="flagicon"><a class="image" title="Flag of Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg"><img class="thumbborder" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/20/Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg/22px-Flag_of_Bavaria_%28lozengy%29.svg.png" border="0" alt="Flag of Bavaria" width="22" height="13" /></a></span> <a title="Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Maximilian_II_Emanuel%2C_Elector_of_Bavaria">Maximilian II Emanuel</a></td>
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<th colspan="2">Strength</th>
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<td style="border-right:#aaa 1px dotted;" width="50%">52,000 men,<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-2">[3]</a></sup><br />
66 guns</td>
<td style="padding-left:0.25em;" width="50%">56,000 men,<br />
90 guns</td>
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<th colspan="2">Casualties and losses</th>
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<td style="border-right:#aaa 1px dotted;" width="50%">4,542 killed,<br />
7,942 wounded</td>
<td style="padding-left:0.25em;" width="50%">20,000 killed, drowned, or wounded,<br />
14,190 captured</td>
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<p><span style="font-size:110%;"><a title="War of the Spanish Succession" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/War_of_the_Spanish_Succession"><em>War of the Spanish<br />
Succession</em></a></span></th>
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<div style="padding:0 0.25em;"><a title="Battle of Carpi" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Carpi">Carpi</a> – <a title="Battle of Chiari" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Chiari">Chiari</a> – <a title="Battle of Cremona" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Cremona">Cremona</a> – <a title="Battle of Luzzara" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Luzzara">Luzzara</a> – <a title="Battle of Cádiz (1702)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_C%C3%A1diz_%281702%29">Cádiz</a> – <a title="Battle of Friedlingen" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Friedlingen">Friedlingen</a> – <a title="Battle of Vigo Bay" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Vigo_Bay">Vigo Bay</a> – <a title="Battle of Ekeren" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Ekeren">Ekeren</a> – <a title="Battle of Höchstädt" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_H%C3%B6chst%C3%A4dt">Höchstädt</a> – <a title="Battle of Schellenberg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Schellenberg">Schellenberg</a> – <strong>Blenheim</strong> – <a title="Battle of Vélez-Málaga" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_V%C3%A9lez-M%C3%A1laga">Málaga</a> – <a title="Battle of Elixheim" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Elixheim">Elixheim</a> – <a title="Battle of Cassano (1705)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Cassano_%281705%29">Cassano</a> – <a title="Battle of Calcinato" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Calcinato">Calcinato</a> – <a title="Battle of Ramillies" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Ramillies">Ramillies</a> – <a title="Battle of Turin" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Turin">Turin</a> – <a class="new" title="Battle of Castiglione (1706) (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Battle_of_Castiglione_%281706%29&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Castiglione</a> – <a title="Battle of Almansa" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Almansa">Almansa</a> – <a title="Battle of Toulon (1707)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Toulon_%281707%29">Toulon</a> – <a title="Battle of Oudenarde" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Oudenarde">Oudenarde</a> – <a title="Siege of Lille (1708)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Siege_of_Lille_%281708%29">Lille</a> – <a title="Battle of Malplaquet" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Malplaquet">Malplaquet</a> – <a title="Battle of Almenara" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Almenara">Almenara</a> – <a title="Battle of Saragossa" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Saragossa">Saragossa</a> – <a title="Battle of Brihuega" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Brihuega">Brihuega</a> – <a title="Battle of Villaviciosa" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Villaviciosa">Villaviciosa</a> – <a title="Siege of Bouchain" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Siege_of_Bouchain">Bouchain</a> – <a title="Battle of Denain" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Denain">Denain</a> – <a title="Siege of Barcelona" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Siege_of_Barcelona">Barcelona</a></div>
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<p>The <strong>Battle of Blenheim</strong> (referred to in some countries as the <strong>Second Battle of Höchstädt</strong>) was a major battle of the <a title="War of the Spanish Succession" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/War_of_the_Spanish_Succession">War of the Spanish Succession</a> fought on <a title="August 13" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_13">13 August</a> <a title="1704" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/1704">1704</a>.<sup> </sup> <a class="mw-redirect" title="King Louis XIV" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/King_Louis_XIV">King Louis XIV</a> sought to knock <a title="Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Leopold_I%2C_Holy_Roman_Emperor">Emperor Leopold</a> out of the war by seizing <a title="Vienna" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Vienna">Vienna</a>, the <a class="mw-redirect" title="Habsburg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Habsburg">Habsburg</a> capital, and gain a favourable peace settlement. The dangers to Vienna were considerable: the <a title="Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Maximilian_II_Emanuel%2C_Elector_of_Bavaria">Elector of Bavaria</a> and <a title="Ferdinand de Marsin" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Ferdinand_de_Marsin">Marshal Marsin</a>&#8216;s forces in <a title="Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Bavaria">Bavaria</a> threatened from the west, and <a title="Louis Joseph de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Louis_Joseph_de_Bourbon%2C_duc_de_Vend%C3%B4me">Marshal Vendôme</a>&#8216;s large army in northern Italy posed a serious danger with a potential offensive through the <a title="Brenner Pass" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Brenner_Pass">Brenner Pass</a>. Vienna was also under pressure from <a title="Francis II Rákóczi" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Francis_II_R%C3%A1k%C3%B3czi">Rákóczi</a>&#8216;s <a title="Rákóczi's War for Independence" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/R%C3%A1k%C3%B3czi%27s_War_for_Independence">Hungarian revolt</a> from its eastern approaches. Realising the danger, the <a title="John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/John_Churchill%2C_1st_Duke_of_Marlborough">Duke of Marlborough</a> resolved to alleviate the peril to Vienna by marching his forces south from <a title="Bedburg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Bedburg">Bedburg</a> and help maintain Emperor Leopold within the Grand Alliance.</p>
<p>A combination of deception and brilliant administration – designed to conceal his true destination from friend and foe alike – enabled Marlborough to march 250 miles (400 km) unhindered from the <a title="Low Countries" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Low_Countries">Low Countries</a> to the <a class="mw-redirect" title="River Danube" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/River_Danube">River Danube</a> in five weeks. After securing <a title="Donauwörth" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Donauw%C3%B6rth">Donauwörth</a> on the Danube, the English Duke sought to engage the Elector&#8217;s and Marsin&#8217;s army before <a title="Camille d'Hostun, duc de Tallard" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Camille_d%27Hostun%2C_duc_de_Tallard">Marshal Tallard</a> could bring reinforcements through the <a title="Black Forest" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Black_Forest">Black Forest</a>. However, with the Franco-Bavarian commanders reluctant to fight until their numbers were deemed sufficient, the Duke enacted a policy of spoliation in Bavaria designed to force the issue. The tactic proved unsuccessful, but when Tallard arrived to bolster the Elector&#8217;s army, and <a title="Prince Eugene of Savoy" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Prince_Eugene_of_Savoy">Prince Eugene</a> arrived with reinforcements for the Allies, the two armies finally met on the banks of the Danube in and around the small village of <a title="Blindheim" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Blindheim">Blindheim</a>.</p>
<p>Blenheim has gone down in history as one of the turning points of the War of the Spanish Succession. The overwhelming Allied victory ensured the safety of Vienna from the Franco-Bavarian army, thus preventing the collapse of the Grand Alliance. Bavaria and Cologne were knocked out of the war, and King Louis’ hopes for a quick victory came to an end. France suffered over 30,000 casualties including the commander-in-chief, Marshal Tallard, who was taken captive to England. Before the 1704 campaign ended, the Allies had taken <a title="Landau" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Landau">Landau</a>, and the towns of <a title="Trier" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Trier">Trier</a> (Trèves) and <a title="Traben-Trarbach" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Traben-Trarbach">Trarbach</a> on the <a title="Moselle" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Moselle">Moselle</a> in preparation for the following year&#8217;s campaign into France itself.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline"><em>Background</em></span></h2>
<p>By 1704 the War of the Spanish Succession was in its fourth year. The previous year had been one of success for France and her allies, most particularly on the <a title="Danube" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Danube">Danube</a> where <a class="mw-redirect" title="Claude-Louis-Hector de Villars" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Claude-Louis-Hector_de_Villars">Marshal Villars</a> and the Elector of Bavaria had created a direct threat to Vienna – the capital of the <a title="Holy Roman Empire" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Holy_Roman_Empire">Holy Roman Empire</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler124-3">[4]</a></sup> Vienna had been saved by the dissension between the two commanders, leading to the brilliant Villars being replaced by the less dynamic Marshal Marsin. Nevertheless, by 1704, the threat was still real: Rákóczi&#8217;s Hungarian revolt was already threatening the Empire&#8217;s eastern approaches, and Marshal Vendôme&#8217;s forces threatened an invasion from northern <a title="Italy" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Italy">Italy</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-4">[5]</a></sup> In the Courts of <a title="Palace of Versailles" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Palace_of_Versailles">Versailles</a> and <a title="Madrid" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Madrid">Madrid</a>, Vienna&#8217;s fall was confidently anticipated which would almost certainly lead to the collapse of the <a title="Grand Alliance" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Grand_Alliance">Grand Alliance</a>.</p>
<p>To isolate the Danube from any Allied intervention, <a title="François de Neufville, duc de Villeroi" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois_de_Neufville%2C_duc_de_Villeroi">Marshal Villeroi</a>&#8216;s 46,000 troops were expected to pin the 70,000 Dutch and English troops around <a title="Maastricht" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Maastricht">Maastricht</a> in the Low Countries, whilst General de Coignies protected <a title="Alsace" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Alsace">Alsace</a> against surprise with a further corps.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler124-3">[4]</a></sup> The only forces immediately available for Vienna&#8217;s defence were <a title="Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Louis_William%2C_Margrave_of_Baden-Baden">Prince Louis of Baden&#8217;s</a> force of 36,000 stationed in the Lines of Stollhofen<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-6">[7]</a></sup> to watch Marshal Tallard at Strasbourg; there was also a weak force of 10,000 men under <a title="Hermann Otto II of Limburg Stirum" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Hermann_Otto_II_of_Limburg_Stirum">Count Styrum</a> observing <a title="Ulm" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Ulm">Ulm</a>.</p>
<p>Both the Imperial Austrian Ambassador in <a title="London" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/London">London</a>, <a class="new" title="John Wenzel, Count Wratislaw (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=John_Wenzel%2C_Count_Wratislaw&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Count Wratislaw</a>, and the Duke of Marlborough realised the true implications of the situation on the Danube. The Dutch, however, who clung to Marlborough&#8217;s army for their own protection, were against any adventurous military operation as far south as the Danube, and would never willingly permit any major weakening of the forces in the <a class="mw-redirect" title="Spanish Netherlands" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Spanish_Netherlands">Spanish Netherlands</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler127-7">[8]</a></sup> Marlborough, realising the only way to overcome Dutch obstruction was by the use of secrecy and guile, set out to deceive his Dutch allies by pretending to simply move his troops to the <a title="Moselle River" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Moselle_River">Moselle</a> – a plan approved of by <a title="The Hague" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/The_Hague">The Hague</a> – but once there, he would slip the Dutch leash and link up with Austrian forces in southern Germany.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler127-7">[8]</a></sup> &#8220;My intentions&#8221;, wrote the Duke from The Hague on <a title="April 29" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/April_29">29 April</a> to his governmental confidant, <a title="Sidney Godolphin, 1st Earl of Godolphin" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Sidney_Godolphin%2C_1st_Earl_of_Godolphin">Sidney Godolphin</a>, &#8220;are to march with the English to <a title="Koblenz" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Koblenz">Coblenz</a> and declare that I intend to campaign on the Moselle. But when I come there, to write to the Dutch States that I think it absolutely necessary for the saving of the Empire to march with the troops under my command and to join with those that are in Germany … in order to make measures with Prince Lewis of Baden for the speedy reduction of the Elector of Bavaria.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Falkner1-8">[9]</a></sup></p>
<p><a id="Prelude" name="Prelude"></a></p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline"><em>PRELUDE&#8217;S</em></span></h2>
<p><a id="Protagonists_march_to_the_Danube" name="Protagonists_march_to_the_Danube"></a></p>
<h4><span class="mw-headline"><em>Protagonists March to the Danube</em></span></h4>
<p><em>A scarlet caterpillar, upon which all eyes were at once fixed, began to crawl steadfastly day by day across the map of Europe, dragging the whole war with it.</em> – <a title="Winston Churchill" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Winston_Churchill">Winston Churchill</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-9">[10]</a></sup></p>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:252px;"><a class="image" title="The Duke of Marlborough's march from Bedburg (near Cologne) to the Danube. His 250 mile (400 km) march to save Vienna falling into enemy hands was a masterpiece of deception, meticulous planning and organisation." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:March_to_the_Danube_1704.png"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/6/6b/March_to_the_Danube_1704.png/250px-March_to_the_Danube_1704.png" border="0" alt="The Duke of Marlborough's march from Bedburg (near Cologne) to the Danube. His 250 mile (400 km) march to save Vienna falling into enemy hands was a masterpiece of deception, meticulous planning and organisation." width="250" height="176" /></a></p>
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<div class="magnify"><a class="internal" title="Enlarge" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:March_to_the_Danube_1704.png"><img src="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/skins-1.5/common/images/magnify-clip.png" alt="" width="15" height="11" /></a></div>
<p>The Duke of Marlborough&#8217;s march from Bedburg (near <a title="Cologne" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Cologne">Cologne</a>) to the Danube. His 250 mile (400 km) march to save Vienna falling into enemy hands was a masterpiece of deception, meticulous planning and organisation.</div>
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<p>         Marlborough&#8217;s march commenced on <a title="May 19" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/May_19">19 May</a> from Bedburg, 20 miles north-west of Cologne. The army (assembled by the Duke&#8217;s brother General <a class="new" title="Charles Churchill (British army officer) (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Charles_Churchill_%28British_army_officer%29&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Charles Churchill</a>) consisted of 66 <a class="mw-redirect" title="Squadrons" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Squadrons">squadrons</a>, 31 <a class="mw-redirect" title="Battalions" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battalions">battalions</a> and 38 guns and mortars totalling 21,000 men (16,000 of whom were <a title="Kingdom of Great Britain" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Kingdom_of_Great_Britain">British</a> troops).<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler128-10">[11]</a></sup> This force was to be augmented <em>en route</em> such that by the time Marlborough reached the Danube, it would number 40,000 (47 battalions, 88 squadrons). Whilst Marlborough led his army, <a title="Henry de Nassau, Lord Overkirk" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Henry_de_Nassau%2C_Lord_Overkirk">General Overkirk</a> would maintain a defensive position in the <a title="Dutch Republic" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Dutch_Republic">Dutch Republic</a> in case Villeroi mounted an attack. The Duke had assured the Dutch that if the French were to launch an offensive he would return in good time, but Marlborough calculated that as he marched south, the French commander would be drawn after him.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-11">[12]</a></sup> In this assumption Marlborough was correct: Villeroi shadowed the Duke with 30,000 men comprising of 60 squadrons and 42 battalions.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-12">[13]</a></sup></p>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:152px;text-align:center;"> <a class="image" title="The Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722) by Sir Godfrey Kneller." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:John_Churchill_Marlborough_portr%C3%A4tterad_av_Adriaen_van_der_Werff_%281659-1722%29.jpg"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a4/John_Churchill_Marlborough_portr%C3%A4tterad_av_Adriaen_van_der_Werff_%281659-1722%29.jpg/150px-John_Churchill_Marlborough_portr%C3%A4tterad_av_Adriaen_van_der_Werff_%281659-1722%29.jpg" border="0" alt="The Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722) by Sir Godfrey Kneller." width="150" height="184" /></a></p>
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<p>The Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722) by <a class="mw-redirect" title="Sir Godfrey Kneller" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Sir_Godfrey_Kneller">Sir Godfrey Kneller</a>.</div>
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<p>The military dangers in such an enterprise were numerous: Marlborough’s lines of communication along the Rhine would be hopelessly exposed to French interference, for Louis’ generals controlled the left bank of the river and its central reaches. Such a long march would almost certainly involve a high wastage of men and horses through exhaustion and disease. However, Marlborough was convinced of the urgency – &#8220;I am very sensible that I take a great deal upon me,&#8221; he had earlier written to Godolphin, &#8220;but should I act otherwise, the Empire would be undone …&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler128-10">[11]</a></sup></p>
<p>Whilst Allied preparations had progressed, the French were striving to maintain and re-supply Marshal Marsin. Marsin had been operating with the Elector of Bavaria against the Imperial commander, Prince Louis of Baden, and was somewhat isolated from France whose only lines of communication lay through the rocky passes of the Black Forest. However, on <a title="May 14" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/May_14">14 May</a>, with considerable skill Marshall Tallard managed to bring 10,000 reinforcements and vast supplies and munitions through the difficult terrain, whilst outmanoeuvring Baron Thüngen, the Imperial general who sought to block his path.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-13">[14]</a></sup> Tallard then returned with his own force to the Rhine, once again side-stepping Thüngen&#8217;s efforts to intercept him. The whole operation was an outstanding military achievement.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-14">[15]</a></sup></p>
<p>On <a title="May 26" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/May_26">26 May</a>, Marlborough reached Coblenz, where the Moselle meets the Rhine. If he intended an attack along the Moselle the Duke must now turn west, but, instead, the following day the army crossed to the right bank of the Rhine, (pausing to add 5,000 waiting <a class="mw-redirect" title="Hanoverians" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Hanoverians">Hanoverians</a> and <a title="Prussia" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Prussia">Prussians</a>).<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-15">[16]</a></sup> &#8220;There will be no campaign on the Moselle&#8221;, wrote Villeroi who had taken up a defensive position on the river, &#8220;the English have all gone up into Germany.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner22-16">[17]</a></sup> A second possible objective now occurred to the French – an Allied incursion into Alsace and an attack on the city of <a title="Strasbourg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Strasbourg">Strasbourg</a>. Marlborough skilfully encouraged this apprehension by constructing bridges across the Rhine at <a title="Philippsburg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Philippsburg">Philippsburg</a>, a ruse that not only encouraged Villeroi to come to Tallard&#8217;s aid in the defence of Alsace, but one that ensured the French plan to march on Vienna remained paralysed by uncertainty.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-17">[18]</a></sup></p>
<p>With Villeroi shadowing Marlborough&#8217;s every move, Dutch anticipation of an immediate French counter-offensive against their weakened position in the Netherlands thus proved illusory.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler129-18">[19]</a></sup> In any case, Marlborough had promised to return to the Netherlands if a French attack developed there, transferring his troops down the Rhine on barges at a rate of 80 miles (130 km) a day.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler129-18">[19]</a></sup> Encouraged by this sense of security the <a title="States-General" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/States-General">States-General</a> promptly agreed to release the Danish contingent of seven Battalions and 22 squadrons as a reinforcement.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler129-18">[19]</a></sup> Marlborough reached <a title="Ladenburg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Ladenburg">Ladenburg</a>, in the plain of the Neckar and the Rhine, and there halted for three days to rest his cavalry and allow the guns and infantry to close up. <sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-19">[20]</a></sup> On <a title="June 6" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/June_6">6 June</a>, Marlborough arrived at <a title="Wiesloch" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Wiesloch">Wiesloch</a>, south of <a title="Heidelberg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Heidelberg">Heidelberg</a>. The following day, the Allied army swung away from the Rhine towards the hills of the <a class="mw-redirect" title="Swabian Jura" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Swabian_Jura">Swabian Jura</a> and the Danube beyond. At last Marlborough&#8217;s destination was established without doubt.</p>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:152px;text-align:center;"><a class="image" title="Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663–1736) by Jacob van Schuppen. Prince Eugene met Marlborough for the first time in 1704. It was the start of a lifelong personal and professional friendship." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Prinz-Eugen-von-Savoyen1.jpg"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/39/Prinz-Eugen-von-Savoyen1.jpg/150px-Prinz-Eugen-von-Savoyen1.jpg" border="0" alt="Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663–1736) by Jacob van Schuppen. Prince Eugene met Marlborough for the first time in 1704. It was the start of a lifelong personal and professional friendship." width="150" height="186" /></a></p>
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<p>Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663–1736) by <a title="Jacob van Schuppen" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Jacob_van_Schuppen">Jacob van Schuppen</a>. Prince Eugene met Marlborough for the first time in 1704. It was the start of a lifelong personal and professional friendship.</div>
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<p><a id="Strategy" name="Strategy"></a></p>
<h4><span class="mw-headline"><em>THE  STRATEGY</em></span></h4>
<p>On <a title="June 10" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/June_10">10 June</a>, the Duke met for the first time the President of the Imperial War Council, Prince Eugene – accompanied by Count Wratislaw – at the village of <a title="Mundelsheim" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Mundelsheim">Mundelsheim</a>, half-way between the Danube and the Rhine.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-20">[21]</a></sup> By the <a title="June 13" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/June_13">13 June</a>, the Imperial Field Commander, Prince Louis of Baden, had joined them in <a class="new" title="Gross Heppach (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Gross_Heppach&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Gross Heppach</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-21">[22]</a></sup> The three generals commanded a force of nearly 110,000 men. At conference it was decided that Eugene would return with 28,000 men to the Lines of Stollhofen on the Rhine to keep an eye on Villeroi and Tallard, and prevent them going to the aid of the Franco-Bavarian army on the Danube. Meanwhile, Marlborough&#8217;s and Baden&#8217;s forces would combine, totalling 80,000 men, for the march on the Danube to seek out the Elector and Marsin before they could be reinforced.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-22">[23]</a></sup></p>
<p>Knowing Marlborough&#8217;s destination, Tallard and Villeroi met at Landau in Alsace on <a title="June 13" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/June_13">13 June</a> to rapidly construct an action plan to save Bavaria, but the rigidity of the French command system was such that any variations from the original plan had to be sanctioned by <a title="Versailles" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Versailles">Versailles</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Chandler1-23">[24]</a></sup> The Count of Mérode-Westerloo, commander of the <a title="Flemish people" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Flemish_people">Flemish</a> troops in Tallard&#8217;s army wrote – &#8220;One thing is certain: we delayed our march from Alsace for far too long and quite inexplicably.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Chandler1-23">[24]</a></sup> Approval from <a class="mw-redirect" title="King Louis XIV" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/King_Louis_XIV">Louis</a> arrived on <a title="June 27" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/June_27">27 June</a>: Tallard was to reinforce Marsin and the Elector on the Danube via the Black Forest, with 40 battalions and 50 squadrons; Villeroi was to pin down the Allies defending the Lines of Stollhofen, or, if the Allies move all their forces to the Danube, he was to join with Marshal Tallard; and General de Coignies with 8,000 men, would protect Alsace. On <a title="July 1" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/July_1">1 July</a> Tallard’s army of 35,000 re-crossed the Rhine at <a title="Kehl" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Kehl">Kehl</a> and began its march.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Chandler1-23">[24]</a></sup></p>
<p>Meanwhile, on <a title="June 22" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/June_22">22 June</a>, Marlborough&#8217;s forces linked up with Baden&#8217;s Imperial forces at <a class="new" title="Launsheim (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Launsheim&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Launsheim</a>. A distance of 250 miles (400 km) had been covered in five weeks.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-24">[25]</a></sup> Thanks to a carefully planned time-table, the effects of wear and tear had been kept to a minimum. Captain Parker described the march discipline – &#8220;As we marched through the country of our Allies, commissars were appointed to furnish us with all manner of necessaries for man and horse … the soldiers had nothing to do but pitch their tents, boil kettles and lie down to rest.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler131-25">[26]</a></sup> In response to Marlborough&#8217;s manoeuvres, the Elector and Marsin, conscious of their numerical disadvantage with only 40,000 men, moved their forces to the entrenched camp at <a title="Dillingen an der Donau" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Dillingen_an_der_Donau">Dillingen</a> on the north bank of the Danube; (Marlborough could not attack Dillingen because of a lack of siege guns – he was unable to bring any from the Low Countries and Baden had failed to supply any despite assurances to the contrary).<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-26">[27]</a></sup></p>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:252px;"><a class="image" title="Allied assault on the Schellenberg – taken by coup de main on 2 July – provided the Allies with an excellent river crossing." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Marlborough%27s_assault_on_Schellenberg%2C_2_July_1704.gif"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f5/Marlborough%27s_assault_on_Schellenberg%2C_2_July_1704.gif/250px-Marlborough%27s_assault_on_Schellenberg%2C_2_July_1704.gif" border="0" alt="Allied assault on the Schellenberg – taken by coup de main on 2 July – provided the Allies with an excellent river crossing." width="250" height="227" /></a></p>
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<p>Allied assault on the Schellenberg – taken by <a title="Coup de main" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Coup_de_main">coup de main</a> on <a title="July 2" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/July_2">2 July</a> – provided the Allies with an excellent river crossing.</div>
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<p>The Allies, nevertheless, needed a base for provisions and a good river crossing. On <a title="July 2" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/July_2">2 July</a>, therefore, Marlborough stormed the key fortress of <a title="Battle of Schellenberg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Battle_of_Schellenberg">Schellenberg</a> on the heights above the town of <a title="Donauwörth" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Donauw%C3%B6rth">Donauwörth</a>. <a title="Jean Baptist, Comte d'Arco" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Jean_Baptist%2C_Comte_d%27Arco">Count Jean d&#8217;Arco</a> had been sent with 12,000 men from the Franco-Bavarian camp to hold the town and grassy hill, but after a ferocious and bloody battle, inflicting enormous casualties on both sides, Schellenberg finally succumbed, forcing Donauwörth to surrender shortly afterwards. The Elector, knowing his position at Dillingen was now not tenable, took up a position behind the strong fortifications of <a title="Augsburg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Augsburg">Augsburg</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-27">[28]</a></sup></p>
<p>Tallard&#8217;s march, meanwhile, presented a dilemma for Eugene. If the Allies were not to be outnumbered on the Danube, Eugene realised he must either try to cut Tallard off before he could get there, or, he must hasten to reinforce Marlborough.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-henderson103-28">[29]</a></sup> However, if he withdrew from the Rhine to the Danube, Villeroi might also make a move south to link up with the Elector and Marsin. Eugene compromised. Leaving 12,000 troops behind guarding the Lines of Stollhofen, he marched off with the rest of his army to forestall Tallard.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-henderson103-28">[29]</a></sup></p>
<p>Lacking in numbers, Eugene could not seriously disrupt Tallard&#8217;s march; nevertheless, the French Marshal&#8217;s progress was proving pitifully slow. Tallard&#8217;s force had suffered considerably more than Marlborough&#8217;s troops on their march – many of his cavalry&#8217;s horses were suffering from <a title="Glanders" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Glanders">glanders</a>, and the mountain passes were proving tough for the 2,000 wagons of provisions. Local German peasants, angry at French plundering, compounded Tallard&#8217;s problems, leading Mérode-Westerloo to bemoan – &#8220;the enraged peasantry killed several thousand of our men before the army was clear of the Black Forest.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler131-25">[26]</a></sup> Additionally, Tallard had insisted on besieging the little town of <a class="mw-redirect" title="Villingen" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Villingen">Villingen</a> for six days (<a class="mw-redirect" title="16 July" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/16_July">16</a>–<a title="July 22" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/July_22">22 July</a>), but abandoned the enterprise on discovering the approach of Eugene.</p>
<p>The Elector in Augsburg was informed on <a title="July 14" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/July_14">14 July</a> that Tallard was on his way through the Black Forest. This good news bolstered the Elector&#8217;s policy of inaction, encouraging him further to wait for the reinforcements.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-29">[30]</a></sup> But this reticence to fight induced Marlborough to undertake a controversial policy of spoliation in Bavaria, burning buildings and crops throughout the rich lands south of the Danube. This had two aims: firstly to put pressure on the Elector to fight or come to terms before Tallard arrived with reinforcements; and secondly, to ruin Bavaria as a base from which the French and Bavarian armies could attack Vienna, or, pursue the Duke into <a title="Franconia" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Franconia">Franconia</a> if, at some stage, he had to withdraw northwards.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-30">[31]</a></sup> But this destruction, coupled with a protracted siege of <a title="Rain (Lech)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Rain_%28Lech%29">Rain</a> (<a class="mw-redirect" title="9 July" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/9_July">9</a>–<a title="July 16" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/July_16">16 July</a>), had cause Prince Eugene to lament – &#8221; … since the Donauwörth action I cannot admire their performances.&#8221; Later concluding – &#8220;If he has to go home without having achieved his objective, he will certainly be ruined.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-31">[32]</a></sup> Nevertheless, strategically the Duke had been able to place his numerically stronger forces between the Franco-Bavarian army and Vienna.</p>
<p><a id="Final_positioning" name="Final_positioning"></a></p>
<h4><em>THE  FINAL REPOSITIONING </em></h4>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:252px;"><a class="image" title="Manoeuvres before the battle 9–13 August." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Maneuvers_before_the_Battle_of_Blenheim%2C_6-13_August_1704.gif"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/de/Maneuvers_before_the_Battle_of_Blenheim%2C_6-13_August_1704.gif/250px-Maneuvers_before_the_Battle_of_Blenheim%2C_6-13_August_1704.gif" border="0" alt="Manoeuvres before the battle 9–13 August." width="250" height="192" /></a></p>
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<p>Manoeuvres before the battle <a class="mw-redirect" title="9 August" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/9_August">9</a>–<a title="August 13" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_13">13 August</a>.</div>
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<p>Marshal Tallard, with 34,000 men, reached Ulm, joining with the Elector and Marsin in Augsburg on the <a title="August 5" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_5">5 August</a> (although Tallard was not impressed to find that the Elector had dispersed his army in response to Marlborough&#8217;s campaign of ravaging the region).<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-32">[33]</a></sup> Also on the <a title="August 5" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_5">5 August</a> Eugene reached <a title="Höchstädt" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/H%C3%B6chst%C3%A4dt">Höchstädt</a>, riding that same night to meet with Marlborough at <a title="Schrobenhausen" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Schrobenhausen">Schrobenhausen</a>.</p>
<p>Marlborough knew it was necessary that another crossing point over the Danube would be required in case Donauwörth fell to the enemy. On <a title="August 7" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_7">7 August</a>, therefore, the first of Baden&#8217;s 15,000 Imperial troops (the remainder following two days later) left Marlborough&#8217;s main force to besiege the heavily defended city of <a title="Ingolstadt" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Ingolstadt">Ingolstadt</a>, 20 miles (~30 km) farther down the Danube.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-33">[34]</a></sup> Marlborough was not confident Baden could take the city, but with the prospect of the Elector breaking cover and coming to its rescue, Marlborough and Eugene were relieved to have an excuse to be rid of their irascible, and possibly unreliable, colleague.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-34">[35]</a></sup></p>
<p>With Eugene&#8217;s forces at Höchstädt on the north bank of the Danube, and Marlborough&#8217;s at Rain on the south bank, Tallard and the Elector debated their next move. Tallard preferred to bide his time, replenish supplies and allow Marlborough&#8217;s Danube campaign to flounder in the colder weeks of Autumn; the Elector and Marsin, however, newly reinforced, were keen to push ahead. The French and Bavarian commanders eventually agreed on a plan and decided to attack Eugene&#8217;s smaller force. On <a title="August 9" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_9">9 August</a>, the Franco-Bavarian forces began to cross to the north bank of the Danube.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-35">[36]</a></sup></p>
<p>On <a title="August 10" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_10">10 August</a>, Eugene sent an urgent dispatch reporting that he was falling back to Donauwörth – &#8220;The enemy have marched. It is almost certain that the whole army is crossing the Danube at <a title="Lauingen" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Lauingen">Lauingen</a> … The plain of Dillingen is crowded with troops … Everything, milord, consists in speed and that you put yourself forthwith in movement to join me tomorrow, without which I fear it will be too late.&#8221; By a series of brilliant marches Marlborough concentrated his forces on Donauwörth and, by noon <a title="August 11" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_11">11 August</a>, the link-up was complete.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler141-36">[37]</a></sup></p>
<p>During <a title="August 11" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_11">11 August</a>, Tallard pushed forward from the river crossings at Dillingen; by <a title="August 12" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_12">12 August</a>, the Franco-Bavarian forces were encamped behind the small river Nebel near the village of Blenheim on the plain of Höchstädt. That same day Marlborough and Eugene carried out their own reconnaissance of the French position from the church spire at <a title="Tapfheim" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Tapfheim">Tapfheim</a>, and moved their combined forces to <a title="Münster, Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/M%C3%BCnster%2C_Bavaria">Münster</a> – five miles from the French camp. A French reconnaissance under the <a class="new" title="Marquis de Silly (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Marquis_de_Silly&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Marquis de Silly</a> went forward to probe the enemy, but were driven off by Allied troops who had deployed to cover the pioneers of the advancing army, labouring to bridge the numerous streams in the area and improve the passage leading westwards to Höchstädt.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-37">[38]</a></sup> Marlborough quickly moved forward two brigades under the command of General Wilkes and Brigadier Rowe to secure the narrow strip of land between the Danube and the wooded Fuchsberg hill, at the <a title="Schwenningen, Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Schwenningen%2C_Bavaria">Schwenningen</a> defile.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-coxe188-38">[39]</a></sup></p>
<p>Tallard&#8217;s army numbered 56,000 men and 90 guns; the army of the <a title="Grand Alliance" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Grand_Alliance">Grand Alliance</a>, 52,000 men and 66 guns. Some Allied officers who were acquainted with the superior numbers of the enemy, and aware of their strong defensive position, ventured to remonstrate with Marlborough about the hazards of attacking. &#8220;I know the danger,&#8221; replied the Duke, &#8220;yet a battle is absolutely necessary, and I rely on the bravery and discipline of the troops, which will make amends for our disadvantages.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-coxe188-38">[39]</a></sup> Marlborough and Eugene decided to risk everything, and agreed to attack on the following day.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler141-36">[37]</a></sup></p>
<p><a id="Battle" name="Battle"></a></p>
<h2><em>BATTLE</em></h2>
<p><a id="The_battlefield" name="The_battlefield"><em></em></a></p>
<h4><span class="editsection"><em>THE  BATTLEFIELDS</em></span></h4>
<p>The battlefield stretched for nearly 4 miles. The extreme right flank of the Franco-Bavarian army was covered by the Danube; to the extreme left flank lay the undulating pine-covered hills of the Swabian Jura. A small stream, the Nebel, (the ground either side of which was soft and marshy and only fordable intermittently), fronted the French line. The French right rested on the village of Blenheim near where the Nebel flows into the Danube; the village itself was surrounded by hedges, fences, enclosed gardens, and meadows. Between Blenheim and the next village of Oberglau the fields of wheat had been cut to stubble and were now ideal to deploy troops. From Oberglau to the next hamlet of Lutzingen the terrain of ditches, thickets and brambles was potentially difficult ground for the attackers.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-39">[40]</a></sup></p>
<p><a id="Initial_manoeuvres" name="Initial_manoeuvres"></a></p>
<h4><span class="mw-headline"><em>INITIAL  MANOEUVRES</em>  <em>(BRITISH  COMPANY)</em></span></h4>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:252px;"><a class="image" title="The position of the forces at noon, 13 August. Marlborough took control of the left arm of the Allied forces including the attacks on Blenheim and Oberglau, whilst Eugene commanded the right including the attacks on Lutzingen." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Battle_of_Blenhiem_-_Situation_about_noon%2C_13_August_1704.gif"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3e/Battle_of_Blenhiem_-_Situation_about_noon%2C_13_August_1704.gif/250px-Battle_of_Blenhiem_-_Situation_about_noon%2C_13_August_1704.gif" border="0" alt="The position of the forces at noon, 13 August. Marlborough took control of the left arm of the Allied forces including the attacks on Blenheim and Oberglau, whilst Eugene commanded the right including the attacks on Lutzingen." width="250" height="193" /></a></p>
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<p>The position of the forces at noon, <a title="August 13" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_13">13 August</a>. Marlborough took control of the left arm of the Allied forces including the attacks on Blenheim and Oberglau, whilst Eugene commanded the right including the attacks on Lutzingen.</div>
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<p>At 02:00 on <a title="August 13" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/August_13">13 August</a>, 40 squadrons were sent forward towards the enemy, followed at 03:00, in eight columns, by the main Allied force pushing over the Kessel. At about 06:00 they reach Schwenningen, two miles from Blenheim. The British and German troops who had held Schwenningen through the night joined the march, making a ninth column on the left of the army. Marlborough and Eugene made their final plans. The Allied commanders agreed that Marlborough would command 36,000 troops and attack Tallard&#8217;s force of 33,000 on the left (including capturing the village of Blenheim), whilst Eugene, commanding 16,000 men would attack the Elector and Marsin&#8217;s combined forces of 23,000 troops on the right wing; if this attack was pressed hard the Elector and Marsin would have no troops to send to aid Tallard on their right.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-40">[41]</a></sup> <a class="mw-redirect" title="John Cutts, 1st Baron Cutts of Gowran" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/John_Cutts%2C_1st_Baron_Cutts_of_Gowran">Lieutenant-General John Cutts</a> would attack Blenheim in concert with Eugene&#8217;s attack. With the French flanks busy, Marlborough could cross the Nebel and deliver the fatal blow to the French at their centre. However, Marlborough would have to wait until Eugene was in position before the general engagement could begin.</p>
<p>For Tallard, the very last thing he was expecting that morning was to be attacked by the Allies – deceived by intelligence gathered from prisoners taken by de Silly the previous day, and assured in their strong natural position, Tallard and his colleagues were convinced that Marlborough and Eugene were about to retreat north-eastwards towards <a title="Nördlingen" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/N%C3%B6rdlingen">Nördlingen</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-41">[42]</a></sup> Tallard wrote a report to this effect to King Louis that morning, but hardly had he sent the messenger when the Allied army began to appear opposite his camp. &#8220;I could see the enemy advancing ever closer in nine great columns&#8221;, wrote Mérode-Westerloo, &#8221; &#8230; filling the whole plain from the Danube to the woods on the horizon.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-42">[43]</a></sup> Signal guns were fired to bring in the foraging parties and <a title="Picquet" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Picquet">picquets</a> as the French and Bavarian troops tried to draw into battle-order to face the unexpected threat.</p>
<p>At about 08:00 the French artillery on their right wing opened fire, answered by Colonel Blood&#8217;s <a title="Artillery battery" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Artillery_battery">batteries</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-43">[44]</a></sup> The guns were heard by Baden in his camp before Ingolstadt, &#8220;The Prince and the Duke are engaged today to the westward.&#8221; He wrote to the Emperor. &#8220;Heaven bless them.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-44">[45]</a></sup> An hour later Tallard, the Elector, and Marsin climbed Blenheim&#8217;s church tower to finalise their plans. It was settled that the Elector and Marsin would hold the front from the hills to Oberglau, whilst Tallard would defend the ground between Oberglau and the Danube. The French commanders were, however, divided as to how to utilise the Nebel: Tallard&#8217;s tactic – opposed by Marsin and the Elector who felt it better to close their infantry right up to the stream itself – was to lure the allies across before unleashing their cavalry upon them, causing panic and confusion; whilst the enemy was struggling in the marshes, they would be caught in crossfire from Blenheim and Oberglau. The plan was sound if all its parts were implemented, but it allowed Marlborough to cross the Nebel without serious interference and fight the battle he had in mind.</p>
<p><em><strong>THE FORCES DEPLOYMENT (HADD&#8217;S)</strong></em></p>
<p>The Franco-Bavarian commanders deployed their forces. In the village of Lutzingen, Count Maffei positioned five Bavarian battalions with a great battery of 16 guns at the village&#8217;s edge. In the woods to the left of Lutzingen, seven French battalions under the Marquis de Rozel moved into place. Between Lutzingen and Oberglau the Elector placed 27 squadrons of cavalry – Count d&#8217;Arco commanded 14 Bavarian squadrons and Count Wolframsdorf had 13 more in support nearby. To their right stood Marsin&#8217;s 40 French squadrons and 12 battalions. The village of Oberglau was packed with 14 battalions commanded by the Marquis de Blainville (including effective Irish mercenaries known as the &#8216;<a title="Flight of the Wild Geese" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Flight_of_the_Wild_Geese">Wild Geese</a>&#8216;). Six batteries of guns were ranged alongside the village.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner61-46">[47]</a></sup> On the right of these French and Bavarian positions, between Oberglau and Blenheim, Tallard deployed 64 French and Walloon squadrons (16 drawn from Marsin) supported by nine French battalions standing near the Höchstädt road. In the cornfield next to Blenheim stood three battalions from the Regiment de Roi. Nine battalions occupied the village itself, commanded by the Marquis de Clérambault. Four battalions stood to the rear and a further 11 were in reserve. These battalions were supported by Hautefeuille&#8217;s 12 squadrons of dismounted dragoons.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner61-46">[47]</a></sup> By 11:00 Tallard, the Elector, and Marsin were in place. Many of the Allied generals were hesitant to attack such a relatively strong position. The Earl of Orkney later confessed that, &#8220;had I been asked to give my opinion, I had been against it.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-47">[48]</a></sup></p>
<p>Prince Eugene was expected to be in position by 11:00, but due to the difficult terrain and enemy fire, progress was slow.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-48">[49]</a></sup> Lord John Cutts’ column – who by 10:00 had expelled the enemy from two water mills upon the Nebel – had already deployed by the river against Blenheim, enduring, over the next three hours, severe fire from a heavy six-gun battery posted near the village. The rest of Marlborough’s army, waiting in their ranks on the forward slope, were also forced to bear the cannonade from the French artillery, suffering 2,000 casualties before the attack could even be begun.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-49">[50]</a></sup> Meanwhile engineers repaired a stone bridge across the Nebel, and constructed five additional bridges or causeways across the marsh between Blenheim and Oberglau. Marlborough&#8217;s anxiety was finally allayed when, just past noon, <a title="William Cadogan, 1st Earl Cadogan" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/William_Cadogan%2C_1st_Earl_Cadogan">Colonel Cadogan</a> reported that Eugene&#8217;s <a title="Kingdom of Prussia" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Kingdom_of_Prussia">Prussian</a> and <a title="Denmark" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Denmark">Danish</a> infantry were in place – the order for the general advance was given. At 13:00, Cutts was ordered to attack the village of Blenheim whilst Prince Eugene was requested to assault Lutzingen on the Allied right flank.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-50">[51]</a></sup></p>
<p><a id="Blenheim" name="Blenheim"></a></p>
<h4><span class="editsection">BLEINHEIM ( BAVARIA ) // GERMANY (FED.S)</span></h4>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:252px;"><a class="image" title="Part of the Battle of Blenheim tapestry at Blenheim Palace by Judocus de Vos. In the background is the village of Blenheim, in the middle ground are the two water mills that Rowe had to take to gain a bridgehead over the Nebel. The foreground shows a British grenadier with a captured French colour." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Battle_of_Blenheim_Tapestry.jpg"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/08/Battle_of_Blenheim_Tapestry.jpg/250px-Battle_of_Blenheim_Tapestry.jpg" border="0" alt="Part of the Battle of Blenheim tapestry at Blenheim Palace by Judocus de Vos. In the background is the village of Blenheim, in the middle ground are the two water mills that Rowe had to take to gain a bridgehead over the Nebel. The foreground shows a British grenadier with a captured French colour." width="250" height="228" /></a></p>
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<p>Part of the Battle of Blenheim tapestry at <a title="Blenheim Palace" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Blenheim_Palace">Blenheim Palace</a> by <a title="Judocus de Vos" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Judocus_de_Vos">Judocus de Vos</a>. In the background is the village of <a title="Blindheim" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Blindheim">Blenheim</a>, in the middle ground are the two water mills that Rowe had to take to gain a bridgehead over the Nebel. The foreground shows a British grenadier with a captured French colour.</div>
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<p>Cutts ordered Brigadier-General Archibald Rowe&#8217;s brigade to attack. The British infantry rose from the edge of the Nebel, and silently marched towards Blenheim, a distance of some 150 yards (~130 metres). John Ferguson&#8217;s British brigade supported Rowe’s left, and moved in perfect order towards the barricades between the village and the river, defended by Hautefeuille&#8217;s dragoons. As the range closed to within 30 yards, the French fired a deadly volley. Rowe had ordered that there should be no firing from his men until he struck his sword upon the <a title="Palisades" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Palisades">palisades</a>, but as he stepped forward to give the signal, he fell mortally wounded.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-51">[52]</a></sup> The survivors of the leading companies closed up the gaps in their torn ranks and rushed forward. Small parties penetrated the defences, but repeated French volleys forced the British back towards the Nebel, sustaining heavy casualties. As the attack faltered, eight squadrons of elite Gens d&#8217;Armes, commanded by the veteran Swiss officer, Beat-Jacques von Zurlauben, fell upon the British troops, cutting at the exposed flank of <a title="Royal Scots Fusiliers" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Royal_Scots_Fusiliers">Rowe&#8217;s own regiment</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-52">[53]</a></sup> However, Wilkes’ <a title="Hessian" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Hessian">Hessian</a> brigade, lying nearby in the marshy grass at the water&#8217;s edge, stood firm and repulsed the Gens d&#8217;Armes with steady fire, enabling the British and Hessians to re-order and launch another attack.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-53">[54]</a></sup></p>
<p>Although the Allies were again repulsed, these persistent attacks on Blenheim eventually bore fruit, panicking Clérambault into making the worst French error of the day.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler145-54">[55]</a></sup> Without consulting Tallard, Clérambault ordered his reserve battalions into the village, upsetting the balance of the French position and nullifying the French numerical superiority. &#8220;The men were so crowded in upon one another&#8221;, wrote Mérode-Westerloo, &#8220;that they couldn’t even fire – let alone receive or carry out any orders.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-chandler145-54">[55]</a></sup> Marlborough, spotting this error, now countermanded Cutts’ intention to launch a third attack, and ordered him simply to contain the enemy within Blenheim; no more than 5,000 Allied soldiers were able to pen in twice the number of French infantry and dragoons.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-55">[56]</a></sup></p>
<div class="thumb tleft"><span class="mw-headline"><strong><em>LUTZINGEN,  MEMORIAL PARK</em></strong></span></div>
<p><em>… Prince Eugene and the Imperial troops had been repulsed three times – driven right back to the woods – and had taken a real drubbing.</em> – Mérode-Westerloo.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-56">[57]</a></sup></p>
<p>On the Allied right, Eugene&#8217;s Prussian and Danish forces were desperately fighting the numerically superior forces of the Elector and Marsin. <a title="Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Leopold_I%2C_Prince_of_Anhalt-Dessau">Prince of Anhalt-Dessau</a> led forward four brigades across the Nebel to assault the well-fortified position of Lutzingen. Here, the Nebel was less of an obstacle, but the great battery positioned on the edge of the village enjoyed a good field of fire across the open ground stretching to the hamlet of Schwennenbach. As soon as the infantry crossed the stream, they were struck by Maffei&#8217;s infantry, and salvoes from the Bavarian guns positioned both in front of the village and in <a title="Enfilade and defilade" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Enfilade_and_defilade">enfilade</a> on the wood-line to the right. Despite heavy casualties the Prussians attempted to storm the great battery, whilst the Danes, under Count Scholten, attempted to drive the French infantry out of the copses beyond the village.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-57">[58]</a></sup></p>
<p>With the infantry heavily engaged, Eugene&#8217;s cavalry picked its way across the Nebel. After initial success his first line of cavalry, under the Imperial General of Horse, <a class="new" title="Prince Maximilien of Hanover (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Prince_Maximilien_of_Hanover&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Prince Maximilien of Hanover</a>, were pressed by the second line of Marsin&#8217;s cavalry, and were forced back across the Nebel in confusion. Nevertheless, the exhausted French were unable to follow up their advantage, and the two cavalry forces tried to regroup and reorder their ranks.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-58">[59]</a></sup> Without cavalry support, however, and threatened with envelopment, the Prussian and Danish infantry were in turn forced to pull back across the Nebel. Some panic gripped Eugene’s troops as they crossed the stream. Ten infantry colours were lost to the Bavarians, and hundreds of prisoners taken; it was only through the leadership of Eugene and the Prussian Prince, that kept the Imperialist infantry from quitting altogether.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-59">[60]</a></sup></p>
<p>After rallying his troops near Schwennenbach – well beyond their starting point – Eugene prepared to launch a second attack, led by the second-line squadrons under the <a title="Eberhard Ludwig, Duke of Württemberg" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Eberhard_Ludwig%2C_Duke_of_W%C3%BCrttemberg">Duke of Württemberg-Teck</a>. Yet again they were caught in the murderous cross-fire from the artillery in Lutzingen and Oberglau, and were once again thrown back in disarray. The French and Bavarians, however, were almost as disordered as their opponents, and they too were in need of inspiration from their commander, the Elector, who was seen – &#8221; … riding up and down, and inspiring his men with fresh courage.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-60">[61]</a></sup> Anhalt-Dessau’s Danish and Prussian infantry attacked a second time but could not sustain the advance without proper support. Once again they fell back across the stream.</p>
<p><a id="Centre_and_Oberglau" name="Centre_and_Oberglau"></a></p>
<h4><span class="mw-headline"><em>CENTRE  AND  OBERGLAU</em> </span></h4>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:152px;text-align:center;"><a class="image" title="Marshal Tallard (1652–1728). He should not have allowed Clérambault to shut most of the infantry of the French right wing into Blenheim leaving him short of infantry support when it most mattered." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Camille_d%27Hostun%2C_duc_de_Tallard.PNG"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/0/0b/Camille_d%27Hostun%2C_duc_de_Tallard.PNG/150px-Camille_d%27Hostun%2C_duc_de_Tallard.PNG" border="0" alt="Marshal Tallard (1652–1728). He should not have allowed Clérambault to shut most of the infantry of the French right wing into Blenheim leaving him short of infantry support when it most mattered." width="150" height="193" /></a></p>
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<p>Marshal Tallard (1652–1728). He should not have allowed Clérambault to shut most of the infantry of the French right wing into Blenheim leaving him short of infantry support when it most mattered.</p>
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<p><em>… they began to pass [the marshes and the Nebel] as fast as the badness of the ground would permit them.</em> – <em>Churchill&#8217;s chaplain</em>.</p>
<p>Whilst these events around Blenheim and Lutzingen were taking place, Marlborough was preparing to cross the Nebel. The centre, commanded by the Duke&#8217;s brother, General Charles Churchill, consisted of 28 battalions of infantry arranged in two lines: seven battalions in the front line to secure a foothold across the Nebel, and 11 battalions in the rear providing cover from the Allied side of the stream. Between the infantry were placed two lines, 72 squadrons of cavalry. The first line of foot was to pass the stream first and march as far to the other side as could be conveniently done. This line would then form and cover the passage of the horse, leaving gaps in the line of infantry large enough for the cavalry to pass through and take their position in front.</p>
<p>Marlborough ordered the formation forward. Once again Zurlauben&#8217;s Gens d&#8217;Armes charged, looking to rout <a title="Henry Lumley" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Henry_Lumley">Lumley</a>&#8216;s British cavalry who linked Cutts&#8217; column facing Blenheim with Churchill&#8217;s infantry. As these elite French cavalry attacked, they were faced by five British squadrons under Colonel Francis Palmes. To the consternation of the French, the Gens d&#8217;Armes were pushed back in terrible confusion, pursued well beyond the Maulweyer stream that flows through Blenheim.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner76-62">[63]</a></sup> &#8220;What? Is it possible?&#8221; exclaimed the Elector, &#8220;the gentlemen of France fleeing?&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-63">[64]</a></sup> Palmes, however, attempted to follow up his success but was repulsed in some confusion by other French cavalry, and musketry fire from the edge of Blenheim.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner76-62">[63]</a></sup></p>
<p>Nevertheless, Tallard was alarmed by the repulse of the elite Gens d&#8217;Armes and urgently rode across the field to ask Marsin for reinforcements; but on the basis of being hard pressed by Eugene – whose second attack was in full flood – Marsin refused.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner77-64">[65]</a></sup> As Tallard consulted with Marsin, more of his infantry was being taken into Blenheim by Clérambault. Fatally, Tallard, aware of the situation, did nothing to rectify this grave mistake, leaving him with just the nine battalions of infantry near the Höchstädt road to oppose the massed enemy ranks in the centre.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner77-64">[65]</a></sup> Zurlauben tried several more times to disrupt the Allies forming on Tallard&#8217;s side of the stream; his front-line cavalry darting forward down the gentle slope towards the Nebel. But the attacks lacked co-ordination, and the Allied infantry&#8217;s steady volleys disconcerted the French horsemen.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-65">[66]</a></sup> During these skirmishes Zurlauben fell mortally wounded, and died two days later. The time was just after 15:00.</p>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:252px;text-align:center;"><a class="image" title="Allied attack on Oberglau." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Allied_attack_on_Oberglau.PNG"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/e/e7/Allied_attack_on_Oberglau.PNG/250px-Allied_attack_on_Oberglau.PNG" border="0" alt="Allied attack on Oberglau." width="250" height="180" /></a></p>
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<p>Allied attack on Oberglau.</p>
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<p>The Danish cavalry, under the Duke of Württemberg (not to be confused with the Duke of Württemberg who fought with Eugene), had made slow work of crossing the Nebel near Oberglau; harassed by Marsin&#8217;s infantry near the village, the Danes were driven back across the stream. Count Horn&#8217;s Dutch infantry managed to push the French back from the water&#8217;s edge, but it was apparent that before Marlborough could launch his main effort against Tallard, Oberglau would have to be secured.</p>
<p>Count Horn directed the <a class="new" title="Prince of Holstein-Beck (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Prince_of_Holstein-Beck&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Prince of Holstein-Beck</a> to take the village, but his two Dutch brigades were cut down by the French and Irish troops, capturing and mortally wounding the Prince during the action.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-66">[67]</a></sup> The battle was now in the balance. If Holstein-Beck&#8217;s Dutch column was destroyed, the Allied army would be split in two: Eugene&#8217;s wing would be isolated from Marlborough&#8217;s, passing the initiative to the Franco-Bavarian forces now engaged across the whole plain.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-67">[68]</a></sup> Seeing the opportunity, Marsin ordered his cavalry to change from facing Eugene, and turn towards their right and the open flank of Churchill&#8217;s infantry drawn up in front of Unterglau. Marlborough (who had crossed the Nebel on a makeshift bridge to take personal control), ordered Hulsen&#8217;s Hanoverian battalions to support the Dutch infantry. A Dutch cavalry brigade under Averock was also called forward but soon came under pressure from Marsin&#8217;s more numerous squadrons.</p>
<p>Marlborough now requested Eugene to release Count Hendrick Fugger and his Imperial Cuirassier brigade to help repel the French cavalry thrust. Despite his own desperate struggle, the Imperial Prince at once complied, demonstrating the high degree of confidence and mutual co-operation between the two generals.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-68">[69]</a></sup> Although the Nebel stream lay between Fugger&#8217;s and Marsin&#8217;s squadrons, the French were forced to change front to meet this new threat, thus forestalling the chance for Marsin to strike at Marlborough&#8217;s infantry.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-69">[70]</a></sup> Fugger&#8217;s cuirassiers charged and, striking at a favourable angle, threw back Marsin&#8217;s squadrons in disorder.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-70">[71]</a></sup> With support from Colonel Blood&#8217;s batteries, the Hessian, Hanoverian and Dutch infantry – now commanded by Count Berensdorf – succeeded in pushing the French and Irish infantry back into Oberglau so that they could not again threaten Churchill&#8217;s flank as he moved against Tallard. The French commander in the village, the Marquis de Blainville, numbered amongst the heavy casualties.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner82-71">[72]</a></sup></p>
<p><a id="Breakthrough" name="Breakthrough"></a></p>
<h4><em>BREAKTHROUGH (THE TOUGH&#8217;S)</em></h4>
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<p>Breakthrough: Position of the battle at 17:30.</p>
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<p><em>The [French] foot remained in the best order I ever saw, till they were cut to pieces almost in rank and file.</em> – <a class="mw-redirect" title="George Hamilton, 1st Earl of Orkney" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/George_Hamilton%2C_1st_Earl_of_Orkney"><em>Lord Orkney</em></a></p>
<p>By 16:00, with the enemy troops besieged in Blenheim and Oberglau, the Allied centre of 81 squadrons (nine squadrons had been transferred from Cutt&#8217;s column), supported by 18 battalions was firmly planted amidst the French line of 64 squadrons and nine battalions of raw recruits. There was now a pause in the battle: Marlborough wanted to concert the attack upon the whole front, and Eugene, after his second repulse, needed time to reorganize.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-73">[74]</a></sup></p>
<p>Just after 17:00 all was ready along the Allied front. Marlborough’s two lines of cavalry had now moved to the front of the Duke’s line of battle, with the two supporting lines of infantry behind them. Mérode-Westerloo attempted to extricate some French infantry crowded in Blenheim, but Clérambault ordered the troops back into the village. The French cavalry exerted themselves once more against the first line – Lumley&#8217;s English and Scots on the Allied left, and Hompesch&#8217;s Dutch and German squadrons on the Allied right. Tallard&#8217;s squadrons, lacking infantry support, were tired and ragged but managed to push the Allied first line back to their infantry support. With the battle still not won, Marlborough had to rebuke one of his cavalry officers who was attempting to leave the field – &#8220;Sir, you are under a mistake, the enemy lies that way … &#8220;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner86-72">[73]</a></sup> Now, at the Duke’s command, the second Allied line under von Bulow and the Count of Ost-Friese was ordered forward, and, driving through the centre, the Allies finally put Tallard&#8217;s tired horse to rout. With their cavalry in headlong flight, the remaining nine French infantry battalions fought with desperate valour, trying to form square.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner86-72">[73]</a></sup> But it was futile. The French battalions were overwhelmed by Colonel Blood’s close-range artillery and platoon fire. Mérode-Westerloo later wrote – &#8220;[They] died to a man where they stood, stationed right out in the open plain – supported by nobody.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner86-72">[73]</a></sup></p>
<p>The majority of Tallard&#8217;s retreating troops headed for Höchstädt but most did not make the safety of the town, plunging instead into the Danube where upwards of 3,000 French horsemen drowned;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-74">[75]</a></sup> others were cut down by the pursuing cavalry. The Marquis de Gruignan attempted a counter-attack, but he was easily brushed aside by the triumphant Allies. After a final rally behind his camp&#8217;s tents, shouting entreaties to stand and fight, Marshal Tallard was caught up in the rout and pushed towards Sonderheim.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner90-75">[76]</a></sup> Surrounded by a squadron of <a title="Hesse" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Hesse">Hessian</a> troops, Tallard surrendered to Lieutenant-Colonel de Boinenburg, the <a class="new" title="Prince Frederick of Hesse-Cassel (page does not exist)" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/w/index.php?title=Prince_Frederick_of_Hesse-Cassel&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">Prince of Hesse-Cassel</a>&#8216;s <em><a title="Aide-de-camp" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Aide-de-camp">aide-de-camp</a></em> and sent under escort to Marlborough.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-76">[77]</a></sup> The Duke welcomed the French commander – &#8220;I am very sorry that such a cruel misfortune should have fallen upon a soldier for whom I have the highest regard.&#8221; With salutes and courtesies, the Marshal was escorted to Marlborough’s coach.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-falkner90-75">[76]</a></sup></p>
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<p>Pursuit</p>
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<p><a id="Fall_of_Blenheim" name="Fall_of_Blenheim"></a></p>
<h4><span class="mw-headline"><em>THE  FALL OF  BLENHEIM</em></span></h4>
<p><em>… our men fought in and through the fire … until many on both sides were burned to death.</em> – Private Deane, <a title="Grenadier Guards" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Grenadier_Guards">1st Regiment Foot Guards</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-77">[78]</a></sup></p>
<p>Meanwhile the Allies had once again attacked the Bavarian stronghold at Lutzingen. Eugene, however, became exasperated with the performance of his Imperial cavalry whose third attack had failed: he had already shot two of his troopers to prevent a general flight. Then, declaring in disgust that he wished to, &#8220;fight among brave men and not among cowards&#8221;, Eugene went into the attack with the Prussian and Danish infantry, as did the Dessauer, waving a regimental colour to inspire his troops.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-78">[79]</a></sup> This time the Prussians were able to storm the great Bavarian battery, and overwhelm the guns crews.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-79">[80]</a></sup> Beyond the village, Scholten’s Danes defeated the French infantry in a desperate hand-to-hand bayonet struggle.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-80">[81]</a></sup> When they saw that the centre had broken, the Elector and Marsin decided the battle was lost and, like the remnants of Tallard&#8217;s army, fled the battlefield (albeit in better order than Tallard&#8217;s men). Attempts to organise an Allied force to prevent Marsin’s withdrawal failed owing to the exhaustion of the cavalry, and the growing confusion in the field.</p>
<p>Marlborough now had to turn his attention from the fleeing enemy to direct Churchill to detach more infantry to storm Blenheim. Orkney&#8217;s infantry, Hamilton&#8217;s British brigade and St Paul&#8217;s Hanoverians moved across the trampled wheat to the cottages. Fierce hand-to-hand fighting gradually forced the French towards the village centre, in and around the walled churchyard which had been prepared for defence. Hay and Ross&#8217;s dismounted dragoons were also sent, but suffered under a counter-charge delivered by the regiments of Artois and Provence under command of Colonel de la Silvière. Colonel Belville&#8217;s Hanoverians were fed into the battle to steady the resolve of the dragoons, and once more went into the attack. The Allied progress was slow and hard, and like the defenders, they suffered many casualties.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-81">[82]</a></sup></p>
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<div class="thumbinner" style="width:252px;"><a class="image" title="Diorama of the battle in the Höchstädt museum. In the middle ground the Allied cavalry are breaking through, pushing Tallard's squadrons from the battlefield. The foreground depicts the fierce fighting in and around Blenheim." href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Image:Battle_of_Blenheim_Diorama.jpg"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bb/Battle_of_Blenheim_Diorama.jpg/250px-Battle_of_Blenheim_Diorama.jpg" border="0" alt="Diorama of the battle in the Höchstädt museum. In the middle ground the Allied cavalry are breaking through, pushing Tallard's squadrons from the battlefield. The foreground depicts the fierce fighting in and around Blenheim." width="250" height="209" /></a></p>
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<p><a title="Diorama" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Diorama">Diorama</a> of the battle in the Höchstädt museum. In the middle ground the Allied cavalry are breaking through, pushing Tallard&#8217;s squadrons from the battlefield. The foreground depicts the fierce fighting in and around Blenheim.</div>
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<p>Many of the cottages were now burning, obscuring the field of fire and driving the defenders out of their positions. Hearing the din of battle in Blenheim, Tallard sent a message to Marlborough offering to order the garrison to withdraw from the field. &#8220;Inform Monsieur Tallard,&#8221; replied the Duke, &#8220;that, in the position in which he is now, he has no command.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-82">[83]</a></sup> Nevertheless, as dusk came the Allied commander was anxious for a quick conclusion. The French infantry fought tenaciously to hold on to their position in Blenheim, but their commander was nowhere to be found. Clérambault’s insistence on confining his huge force in the village was to seal his fate that day.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-83">[84]</a></sup> Realising his tactical mistake had contributed to Tallard&#8217;s defeat in the centre, Clérambault deserted Blenheim and the 27 battalions defending the village, and had reportedly drowned in the Danube whilst making his escape.</p>
<p>By now Blenheim was under assault from every side by three British generals: Cutts, Churchill, and Orkney. The French had repulsed every attack with heavy slaughter, but many had seen what had happened on the plain and what its consequences to them would be; their army was routed and they were cut off.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-84">[85]</a></sup> Orkney, attacking from the rear, now tried a different tactic – &#8220;… it came into my head to beat parley,&#8221; he later wrote, &#8220;which they accepted of and immediately their Brigadier de Nouville capitulated with me to be prisoner at discretion and lay down their arms.&#8221; Threatened by Allied guns, other units followed their example. However, it was not until 21:00 that the Marquis de Blanzac, who had taken charge in Clérambault&#8217;s absence, reluctantly accepted the inevitability of defeat, and some 10,000 of France&#8217;s best infantry had laid down their arms.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-85">[86]</a></sup></p>
<p>During these events Marlborough was still in the saddle conducting the pursuit of the broken enemy. Pausing for a moment he scribbled a note on the back of an old tavern bill addressed to his wife, <a title="Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Sarah_Churchill%2C_Duchess_of_Marlborough">Sarah</a>: &#8220;I have no time to say more but to beg you will give my duty to the Queen, and let her know her army has had a glorious victory.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-86">[87]</a></sup></p>
<p><a id="Aftermath" name="Aftermath"></a></p>
<h2><span class="editsection"><em>AFTERMATH</em></span></h2>
<p>French losses were immense: over 30,000 killed, wounded and missing.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-barnett122-87">[88]</a></sup> Moreover, the myth of French invincibility had been destroyed and Louis’ hopes of an early and victorious peace had been wrenched from his grasp. <sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-barnett122-87">[88]</a></sup> Mérode-Westerloo summarised the case against Tallard&#8217;s army: &#8220;The French lost this battle for a wide variety of reasons. For one thing they had too good an opinion of their own ability … Another point was their faulty field dispositions, and in addition there was rampant indiscipline and inexperience displayed … It took all these faults to lose so celebrated a battle.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Chandler149-88">[89]</a></sup> But it was a hard fought contest, leading Prince Eugene to observe – &#8220;I have not a squadron or battalion which did not charge four times at least.&#8221;<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-89">[90]</a></sup> Nevertheless, the Battle of Blenheim was probably the most decisive victory of the war: Marlborough and Eugene, working indivisibly together, had saved the Habsburg Empire and thereby preserved the Grand Alliance from collapse.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-90">[91]</a></sup> <a title="Munich" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Munich">Munich</a>, Augsburg, Ingolstadt, Ulm and all remaining territory of Bavaria soon fell to the Allies. By the <a title="Treaty of Ilbersheim" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Treaty_of_Ilbersheim">Treaty of Ilbersheim</a>, signed <a title="November 7" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/November_7">7 November</a>, 1704, Bavaria was placed under <a title="Austria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Austria">Austrian</a> military rule, allowing the Habsburgs to utilise its resources for the rest of the conflict.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-91">[92]</a></sup></p>
<p>The remnants of the <a class="mw-redirect" title="Maximilian II Emanuel, elector of Bavaria" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Maximilian_II_Emanuel%2C_elector_of_Bavaria">Elector of Bavaria&#8217;s</a> and Marshal Marsin&#8217;s wing limped back to Strasbourg, losing another 7,000 men through desertion.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Chandler149-88">[89]</a></sup> Despite being offered the chance to remain as ruler of Bavaria (under strict terms of an alliance with Austria), the Elector left his country and family in order to continue the war against the Allies from the Spanish Netherlands where he still held the post of governor-general. Their commander-in-chief that day, Marshal Tallard – who, unlike his subordinates, had not been ransomed or exchanged – was taken to England and imprisoned in <a title="Nottingham" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Nottingham">Nottingham</a> until his release in 1711.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Tincey1-92">[93]</a></sup></p>
<p>The 1704 campaign lasted considerably longer than usual as the Allies sought to wring out maximum advantage. Realising that France was too powerful to be forced to make peace by a single victory, however, Eugene, Marlborough and Baden met to plan their next moves. For the following year the Duke proposed a campaign along the valley of the River Moselle to carry the war deep into France. This required the capture of the major fortress of Landau which guarded the Rhine, and the towns of Trier and Trarbach on the Moselle itself.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-Tincey1-92">[93]</a></sup> Trier was taken on <a title="October 26" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/October_26">26 October</a> and Landau fell on <a title="November 23" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/November_23">23 November</a> to the Margrave of Baden and Prince Eugene; with the fall of Trarbach on <a title="December 20" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/December_20">20 December</a>, the campaign season for 1704 came to an end.</p>
<p>Marlborough returned to England on <a title="December 14" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/December_14">14 December</a> (<a title="Old Style and New Style dates" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Old_Style_and_New_Style_dates">O.S</a>) to the acclamation of <a title="Anne of Great Britain" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Anne_of_Great_Britain">Queen Anne</a> and the country. In the first days of January the 110 cavalry standards and the 128 infantry colours that were taken during the battle were borne in procession to <a title="Palace of Westminster" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Palace_of_Westminster#Westminster_Hall">Westminster Hall</a>.<sup><a href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#cite_note-93">[94]</a></sup> But there was still more to come. In February 1705, Queen Anne granted him the <a title="Woodstock, Oxfordshire" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Woodstock%2C_Oxfordshire">Park of Woodstock</a> and promised a sum of £240,000 to build a suitable <a title="Blenheim Palace" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Blenheim_Palace">house</a> as a gift from a grateful crown in recognition of his victory – a victory which British historian Sir <a class="mw-redirect" title="Edward Creasy" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Edward_Creasy">Edward Creasy</a> considered one of the pivotal battles in history, writing – &#8220;Had it not been for Blenheim, all Europe might at this day suffer under the effect of French conquests resembling those of <a title="Alexander the Great" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Alexander_the_Great">Alexander</a> in extent and those of the <a title="Roman Empire" href="http://lembangjr.wordpress.com/wiki/Roman_Empire">Romans</a> in durability</p>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of Bavaria</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of Habsburg Monarchy</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of France</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of Bavaria</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of England</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of Habsburg Monarchy</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of France</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of France</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Flag of Bavaria</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/6/6b/March_to_the_Danube_1704.png/250px-March_to_the_Danube_1704.png" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">The Duke of Marlborough&#039;s march from Bedburg (near Cologne) to the Danube. His 250 mile (400 km) march to save Vienna falling into enemy hands was a masterpiece of deception, meticulous planning and organisation.</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a4/John_Churchill_Marlborough_portr%C3%A4tterad_av_Adriaen_van_der_Werff_%281659-1722%29.jpg/150px-John_Churchill_Marlborough_portr%C3%A4tterad_av_Adriaen_van_der_Werff_%281659-1722%29.jpg" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">The Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722) by Sir Godfrey Kneller.</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663–1736) by Jacob van Schuppen. Prince Eugene met Marlborough for the first time in 1704. It was the start of a lifelong personal and professional friendship.</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f5/Marlborough%27s_assault_on_Schellenberg%2C_2_July_1704.gif/250px-Marlborough%27s_assault_on_Schellenberg%2C_2_July_1704.gif" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">Allied assault on the Schellenberg – taken by coup de main on 2 July – provided the Allies with an excellent river crossing.</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Manoeuvres before the battle 9–13 August.</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3e/Battle_of_Blenhiem_-_Situation_about_noon%2C_13_August_1704.gif/250px-Battle_of_Blenhiem_-_Situation_about_noon%2C_13_August_1704.gif" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">The position of the forces at noon, 13 August. Marlborough took control of the left arm of the Allied forces including the attacks on Blenheim and Oberglau, whilst Eugene commanded the right including the attacks on Lutzingen.</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Part of the Battle of Blenheim tapestry at Blenheim Palace by Judocus de Vos. In the background is the village of Blenheim, in the middle ground are the two water mills that Rowe had to take to gain a bridgehead over the Nebel. The foreground shows a British grenadier with a captured French colour.</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/0/0b/Camille_d%27Hostun%2C_duc_de_Tallard.PNG/150px-Camille_d%27Hostun%2C_duc_de_Tallard.PNG" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">Marshal Tallard (1652–1728). He should not have allowed Clérambault to shut most of the infantry of the French right wing into Blenheim leaving him short of infantry support when it most mattered.</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">Allied attack on Oberglau.</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ec/Battle_of_Blenheim_-_Penetration%2C_1730%2C_13_August_1704.gif/250px-Battle_of_Blenheim_-_Penetration%2C_1730%2C_13_August_1704.gif" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">30.</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/57/Battle_of_Blenhiem_-_Explotation%2C_13_August_1704.gif/250px-Battle_of_Blenhiem_-_Explotation%2C_13_August_1704.gif" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">Pursuit</media:title>
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		<media:content url="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bb/Battle_of_Blenheim_Diorama.jpg/250px-Battle_of_Blenheim_Diorama.jpg" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">Diorama of the battle in the Höchstädt museum. In the middle ground the Allied cavalry are breaking through, pushing Tallard&#039;s squadrons from the battlefield. The foreground depicts the fierce fighting in and around Blenheim.</media:title>
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