Spain had lost all its possessions in …

Years: 1717 - 1717
July

Spain had lost all its possessions in Italy and the Low Countries in the Treaty of Utrecht ending the War of the Spanish Succession.

The Spanish Netherlands, the Duchy of Milan, the Kingdom of Naples and Sardinia had been given to Austria; Sicily to the Duke of Savoy.

These territories had been under Spanish rule for nearly two centuries, and their loss is perceived as a great blow to the country in both practical and prestige terms.

With the rise of Spain as an important military power again, and the ambitions of Philip V of Spain to regain the Spanish supremacy in Italy and the Mediterranean, the rest of the European powers, Great Britain, France and Austria, to strengthen the Treaty of Utrecht, are in 1717 contemplating ceding Sicily to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI, but this arrangement displeases Spain, who wants to recover the island.

With this background, and the arrest in Milan of Spanish Grand Inquisitor, Jose Molina, by the Austrians, Philip V obtains the pretext he seeks.

Philip begins hostilities against Austria, taking advantage of the fact that Austria is tied up in the Austro-Turkish War of 1716-18.

Spain assembles a fleet of one hundred transport ships, protected by fifteen warships, and carrying eighty-five hundred men infantry and five hundred cavalry under command of Don Juan Francisco de Bette, Marquis of Lede.

It sails in late July 1717 from Barcelona.

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