Battle of Dungeness (1666)

Battle of Dungeness (1666)
Part of the Second Anglo-Dutch War
Date17 September 1666
Location
Result English victory
Belligerents
 France
 Dutch Republic
Kingdom of England England
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of France Job Forant Kingdom of England Thomas Allin
Strength
14 ships 24 ships
Casualties and losses
116 killed or wounded
400 captured
1 ship captured[1]
70 casualties[1]

The Battle of Dungeness or the Battle of Cape Dungeness (French: Bataille du cap Dungeness) (17 September 1666) was a naval battle that took place during the Second Anglo-Dutch War. A combined French and Dutch fleet under Job Forant encountered a larger English fleet commanded by Admiral Sir Thomas Allin, 1st Baronet. The English attacked and in poor visibility a series of encounters left several French and Dutch ships badly damaged. The battle ended with the English having captured the French ship Le Rubis.[2]

  1. ^ a b Calendar of State Papers: Of the Reign of Charles II. Domestic series, Volume 6. Burlington, Ont.: TannerRitchie. 2010 [1666]. p. 147. ISBN 9781441685797.
  2. ^ Harding, Edward (1805). Naval Biography; Or, The History and Lives of Distinguished Characters in the British Navy: From the Earliest Period of History to the Present Time, Volume 1. London: John Scott. p. 462. OCLC 656751426.