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A34352 Count Taaffe's letters from the imperial camp to his brother the Earl of Carlingford here in London giving an account of the most considerable actions, both before, and at, the raising of the siege at Vienna, together with several remarkable passages afterward, in the victorious campagne against the Turks in Hungary : with an addition of two other letters from a young English nobleman, a voluntier in the imperial army. Carlingford, Francis Taaffe, Earl of, 1639-1704. 1684 (1684) Wing C592; ESTC R20027 16,653 38

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Count of the Empire to shew the consideration he has for brave Men and although it cannot add any thing to the Lustre of his noble Family yet his Posterity will have no reason to be displeased at his having gain'd it upon so glorious an occasion nevertheless I desire you to publish nothing of this without the permission of my Lord of Bathe We have now by the taking of Gran otherwise Str●gonium finifh'd our Campagne notwithstanding the opposition of the Poles who did all that was possible to divert us from it in a Season which in truth was not so proper to make War The Easiness that the Duke of Loraine found in making a Bridge convinc't him of the Consternation the Enemy was in and that he ought to make the best use of it His Highness passed the Danube without the Poles and in spight of the Rain that fell continually he push't on the Siege with that Vigour that at the end of five days he made himself Master of the Town it is a place not strong save only by its scituation nor considerable but for passing the Danube and commanding a great extent of the Country It is the Metropolis of Hungary and in the last Age cost the Christians as well as Turks a Siege of several Months This taking of Gran was soon followed by a Reducement of the Rebels who of themselves came in and begged Pardon The Poles for their Quarters chose the upper Hungary promising to reduce C●sha● and Esperies but finding greater opposition then they imagined they rather chose to leave it then run the Riscue of so troublesome a Quarter but the Imperialists made sure of theirs by the taking of Dutsch and many other Castles from whence they drove the Rebels There are who suspect an understanding betwixt some of the Polish Officers and the Rebels but for my own part I believe nothing of it and the reason why I suppose they did not reduce Caschaw was because they wanted both Foot and Provisions thinking that by the sole Reputation of their Arms and presence of the King they might have carryed it and besides that besieging of Towns is not their business My Lord Lansdowne will bear me Witness that I did all was possible even before your sending to me to find out a Couple of fine Turkish Horses for you but upon my word we could find none worth the trouble for all that were better then ordinary were taken by the Poles and other of our Generals who were more eager after plunder than my self I have bought a Turkish Tent without seeing it but they say it is very fine with some Turkish Arms which are also curious in the kind which I intend to send by way of Hamburg and you may make a Present of them to the King or Duke if you think it worth their Acceptance or other wise dispose of them as you think best I will send you when you please the Duke of Loraine's Picture and I will if I can procure that of the King of Polands too My Lord Lansdowne's Courrier is just a going so that I cannot now say any thing of the business of Newheusell but will by the first send you an Account of that as well as other matters which I purpose to write you I am for ever Yours c. Lintz Jan. 5. 1684. For the Earl of Bathe at London My Lord I Know not what my Lord Lansdowne can have written to your Lordship in my Favour to draw from you such obliging Expressions of Civility and Goodness to me as I find all your Letters fill'd with the Truth is it is I who have a Thousand Obligations to my Lord your Son for making his Campagne with me and giving me so distinct a mark of his Friendship as there is not a gallant Man of the greatest consideration in all the Army but would think himself honoured with it He found us in a Condition which would have discouraged any man but himself Our Army by reason of the great Garrisons which we were forced to leave in Raab and Vienna reduced to a flying Body of Seven Thousand Horse the Court in Retreat which might have justifyed him if he had followed so great an Example but he would finish what he had begun and the truth is we may date our good Fortune from the time that he came amongst us He had a part in the defeat of the Turks at Presburg Korneigburg Vienna and Barrakan and in the taking of Gran He hath signalized himself every where and done like the Son of such a Father and so illustrious Ancestors and if he have suffer'd in this Campagne which was one of the r●dest that we have made a long time he returns loaded with Glory and the marks of a particular esteem from His Imperial Majesty and leaves a memory of his Person behind him which will ever do honour to his Family and Country I pray God my Lord that you may long enjoy one another and that I may enjoy you both I will seek all occasions of meriting by my most humble to that part in the honour of your Favour which you allow me before-hand by a meer effect of your Generosity and that I may have the means to do it I 〈◊〉 you as soon as may be to send us back to our Lord Lansdowne The King can employ no Person in this Court who will be more acceptable 〈…〉 him I am with respect My Lord Your 〈…〉 obedient Servant TAAFFE
least as many drown'd The taking of Barrakan was a consequence of this Victory our Men entring it vvithout Opposition though there vvere several Janizaries and many others retired into it But the Poles having first sackt and pillaged seeing some of their Comrades heads vvhich the Turks had pitch'd in Parade all along the Pallizadoes of the Fort did brutally in Revenge burn that place of Importance vvhich vve vvould have preserved Let us however give thanks to God vvho has thus so visibly shewn himself in his ovvn and our Cause by delivering our Enemies into our hands I shall continue to Give you a Faithful Relation of vvhat passes here and do intreat you to communicate it to His Majesty and the Duke A Letter from an English Nobleman a Voluntier in the Imperial Army to his Father at LONDON 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oct. 5. ● 1683. My Lord THE same day that we delivered Vienna I sent your Lord Lordship the News by an Express that was dispatched to the Marquiss of Grana and have since given your Lordship a larger Account thereof since which we have without opposition advanced in Hungary and some six days ago with the German and Polish Horse crossed the Danube at Gomora leaving our Canon and Infantry behind us resolving after one days march it leading us into a Country of Forage to stay for them but the King of Poland having Advice that Four Thousand Turks had passed the River at Gran by break of day next Morning without giving any notice to the Duke of Loraine marched with his Dragoons and Hussars towards them but finding them much stronger than he was informed they were his Majesty was beaten and his Troops in great disorder and his person in danger and pursued by the Enemy till they saw our Horse appear which by good luck marched some two hours after the Pelanders by the Duke of Lorains Command who was in the head of them upon which the Turks ceased their pursuit and retired under the Canon of Gran and we encamped within sight of them till the next day the Eight instant that our Infantry came up to us upon which yesterday we marched in Battaile towards them and found them posted in the same posture to receive us the first Line of our Left Wing a bout'noon charged their Right with so much vigour Success that the Infidels were forced to give way and not long afterwards their whole Army betook themselves to slight and were pursued by ours to the River side into which they precipitated themselves insomuch that very few of them escaped after this the same night we attacked Barrakan a Fort on this side of the Danube at the head of the Bridge of Gran and have taken it by Assault Our Prisoners tell us they were Sixteen Thousand Men chosen out of the best of their Troops and sent thither by the Grand Visier to hinder us from ruining that Bridg by which they had their Communication with the Rebels Caramamett Bassa lately made Visier of Buda who commanded there in chief was kill'd upon the place Ali Bassa of Aleppo and the Bassa of Silestria are taken Prisoners another Bassa is drown'd and their loss to speak modestly of it exceeds the number of Eight Thousand Men. The frequent occasions of Action we meet with hinders me from quitting the Army as yet altho most Voluntiers of any Consideration except our Countrymen are already returned and that the season in this Country is very troublesom nay not supportable were it not for the continual Favours I do dayly receive from my Lord Taaff and as occasion offers from his Highness and all the chief Officers of the Army some of my Servants being dead and almost all sick I am with utmost respect My Lord Your c. Another Letter from the same hand directed as the former From Presburg Novemb. the 7th 1683. My Lord IN My last to your Lordship I gave an Account of the Battle we gain'd over the Turks near Gran and our taking Barrakan by Assault the same day since which we have crossed the River besieged and taken Gran it self and that without any great loss they having within three days after our Batteries were finished asked to capitulate and surrender the Place with their Cannon Munition c. up to us After this there being no prospect of any more Action this year upon the first instant I left the Army with the Elector of Bavaria and waited on him as far as Gomorra where I left his Electoral Highness and went my self to Raab not being willing to leave unseen a place which all over this part of the World is called Propugnaculum Christianitatis from whence yesterday through a burnt and desolate Country I came hither where I found my Brother John and Mr. Alman whom I was surprized to find at this time of the year making towards the Army I must confess I am heartily sorry that my Brothers Sickness did hinder him from meeting me going to the Army in July instead of coming from it in November for then he might have seen three ranged Battles sought besides skirmishes with the Infidels the famous Siege of Vienna raised a Fort stormed a Town antiently of great Note the Metropolis of Hungary and long in Possession of the Turks besieged and taken at the later end of October and several other Places and Castles of Importance rendred to the victorious Arms of the Christians which is more than has been or than probably will be seen in any three Months this hundred years from hence I intend to set out tomorrow for Vienna and from thence to Lintz to wait upon his Imperial Majsty before my return from whence I will immediately in obedience to your Lordships commands dispatch Mr. Alman for England And as for my Brother whom you are pleased to commit to my care do assure your Lordship that as I have nothing but what I hold from your Goodness so all that I have shall be in common between us and believe me ever with utmost respect My Lord Your c. Lintz Jan. 4. 1684. For the Earl of Carlingford at London ABout two days since I received two of your most welcome Letters one whereof had in seems first made the Tour of Hungary I am overjoyed to hear that the King and his Royal Highness seem satisfied with my Relations because they are two Persons whom I Infinitely Love and Reverence as I ought and whom I very well know to be of most discerning Judgments I confess I am proud to think that I have some part in their good Opinions My Lord Lansdowne hath been pleased to set too great a value upon those little Services I have done him he is a very brave Cavalier and the most obliging best conditioned Man I know and as he does me the Honour to love me so he would procure me the like Favour with my Lord his Father whom I most highly honour The Emperor sends him into England with the quality of a
Count Taaffe's LETTERS FROM THE Imperial Camp To his BROTHER the Earl of Carlingford HERE IN LONDON Giving an Account of the most Considerable Actions both before and at the Raising of the Siege at VIENNA together with several Remarkable Passages afterward in the Late Victorious Campagne against the TURKS in HUNGARY With an Addition of two other LETTERS from a Young English Nobleman a Voluntier in the IMPERIAL ARMY LONDON Printed for T. B. and are to be sold by William Abbington near the Wonder Tavern on Lud-gate-Hill 1684. TO THE READER THE Siege of Vienna and the War of Hungary being at present the common Subject of Discourse I presume it will not be unpleasing to you if I give you a more faithful and distinct Account of those Successes of the Christian Arms against the Turks than hath yet been published an Account not collected from Fame or Transcribed out of Mercuries and Gazetts but Original Letters themselves which have been already seen and approv'd off by his MAJESTY and his ROYAL HIGHNESS and those written by a Cavalier of a high Reputation who was not only present in the Actions of which he writes but being a general Officer in the Imperial Army bore a considerable Part in them himself This is the Lord Taaffe a Subject of His Majesties who to his Elder Brother the Earl of Carlingford and to the Marquiss of Grana Governor of Flanders sends these Letters in which you may not only discern a vein of Truth but a certain Modesty and Nobleness of Nature since without arrogating any thing to himself he does not omit to do Justice to others By these Qualities and his prudent Conduct in a Forreign COURT he hath acquir'd much Esteem and Trust with the Emperor whom he serves the Affection and Confidence of his Highness the Duke of Loranie and a great Name over all the Empire So that he does honour not only to himself but to his Country and to his Loyal Family and Noble Ancestors of which he is descended An Example to awake the Vertue of the English Nation and make all Gentlemen sensible how much more it would be both for their Interest and Honour to imploy their Swords in this Occasion for the Defence of Christendom than to wast their Youth in Gaming-houses and Taverns and kill one another as they do in senseless and brutal Quarrels Passaw July 24. 1683 For the Earl of Carlingford at London I Had the Honour to hear from you by my Lord Lansdowne who had he not been very full of Courage and Bravery the Unhappy State of Affairs here had certainly diverted him from so generous a Design but since he is resolv'd to try his Fortune with us the Duty I owe to the King and his Royal Highness ' s Commands the pleasure I have in obliging so gallant a Gentleman as my Lord Lansdowne and the Interest you take therein ingages me to omit nothing for his Service as well as to seek an opportunity to acquire a Friend of his merit Instead of Seventy thousand Men which was promis'd the Duke of Loraine to carry on this Terrible War he never muster'd yet above Thirty Thousand and for these two Months we have lain in Hungary we have been Idle attempting little for fear of lessening our Strength before the Arrival of the Ottoman Forces having already what through Sickness and necessary Detachments reduced our Army to Three and Twenty Thousand Men and that was the utmost of our Force when the Grand Visier on the Seventh Instant with an Army of at least One Hundred and Threescore Thousand Fighting Men posted himself within Cannon-shot of us the small River Raab running between neither do I speak the most but on the contrary all the Prisoners we have taken as well as other Advices make them above Two hundred Thousand besides the Tartars and the Hungarian Rebels You may easily imagine my Lord whether this Appearance did not surprize us having always pleas'd our selves with the hopes That our Alliance with Poland might have obliged the Turk to divide his Forces however tho we sound the contrary we yet maintain'd our Post that day and repuls'd Twenty Thousand Tartars who forded the River under our very Noses The Enemy thus finding how difficult it was to force his way to us ordered out a Detachment of Thirty Thousand Horse to spread themselves all along the River over against our Right Wing with a Reserve of Hungarians commanded by the Count Budiani a Nobleman of that Country lately revolted and being inform'd at night that the Turks were come over the River without any difficulty Budiani with the said Hungarian Rebels joyning with them and declaring for the Rebel Teckeley as also considering the disproportion in our Numbers that the River was fordable in several Places the Enemy possest of all the advantageous Grounds and able when they pleas'd under protection of their Canon to force this Passage and at the same time a great Body of their Horse who being already on this side were in a posture to charge us either in Flank or Rear his Highness judg'd that Post not safe quitting it that night having first put Six Thousand Men into Raab which of all Places seemed most in danger to be besieged Our Foot marched towards Presburgh by the Isle of Schutz where they were out of the reach of their insulting numbers and our Horse through the Plains which extend from Raab to Presburgh The Thirteenth Instant I commanded the Rear Guard of Four hundred Horse when I was attack'd by Two Thousand Tartars upon the Plains of Peternel and at the same time as ill luck would have it they had Alarm'd our Avaunt-Guard with a Party falling upon our Baggage and his Highness fearing least the Enemy might cut us off from Vienna where the Emperor with the whole Courtas yet was made the Horse march with all possible speed thither leaving only behind one Regiment to Mount the Guard this Regiment seeing the hasty march of the other Troops supposing it was occasion'd by the Terror of those that fell upon us in the Rear under that apprehension in the most shameful manner in the World fled without once drawing a Pistol or offering to stand the least shock of the Enemy whereupon those Four hundred Horse of the Rear Guard under my Command were surrounded and I cannot tell by what Providence I was deliver'd having for at least half an hour marcht pesle mesle amongst the Enemy there was at this time so great a dust that those who fled could not as yet discern the coming of their Succours and in that confusion disordered several of our own Squadrons that were wheeling to their Relief The first that rallyed were Five Troops of my Regiment one Squadron being wholely broken by the Regiment which fled the other behaved themselves so bravely that the poor Prince of Aremberg and Count Millini Brother to a Cardinal of that Name and at present Nuntio in Spain both Captains in my Regiment with
Prince Aremberg's Cornet and Eighty Cavaliers were kill'd upon the place The Duke of Lorrain at length having with much difficulty drawn up the rest of the Horse hastned himself to us where finding the foremost Squadrons yet under a panick Fear alighted from his Horse at the Head of his Men to let them see there was no danger this Example gave fresh Courage to our Troops and the Dust being somewhat abated we discovered that all this Disorder was only occasion'd by Six Thousand Turks and Tartars We made up then to them his Highness being in the Head of us but they would not endure the very sight of our Troops and 't was in vain to follow them with our heavy German Horse since our Light Horse was wanting the Enemy flying with an incredible Swiftness But we learn'd from this that which we since found that these Six Thousand Horse were only to cover the gross of their Army with the which they thinking it not so much for their purpose to Attacque Raab as suppos'd was first design'd were marching directly to Vienna You will perhaps think it very strange that we should be no better inform'd of the Design and Marches of the Enemy but not so much when you hear that all Hungary was against us and not so much as a Peasant but for Teckeley And as for the Party that we sent out to scout on the Plains between Raab and Vienna there could not a Man of them ha've escaped had they been discovered such is the Number and Swiftness of the Enemy To conclude my Lord we are in a very desperate Condition All Hungary is against us the Court removed to Passaw All Austria round Vienna from Newstat and St. Hippolitt in flames and we not able to hinder it having now only a Body of Ten Thousand Horse at most left with the Duke of Lorrain Vienna has been besieged these ten Days and had not his Highness out of his great Prudence and Conduct clapt in Ten or Eleven Thousand Men into the Town in that nick of Time and the which was all the Foot he had in his Army by this time the Place had certainly been lost Bavaria is sending us Ten Thousand brave but unexperienced Souldiers and we shall be reinforced with Ten Thousand more from the Emperor The King of Poland is obliged by our Treaty to march himself in Person at the Head of his Army to the Relief of Vienna and the least Delay is lookt upon as most dangerous Saxony Franconia and Brandenburgh promise us their Troops God grant they may all come in time If Vienna should be taken I cannot see the end of our miseries but I hope God will not forsake his Cause nor the House of Austria that has been ever so devoted to him From the Camp at Angrem Aug. 17. 1683. For the Earl of Carlinford at London I Received yours of the Seventeenth of July from London and render God a thousand Thanks for saving our Royal Master the King and the Duke from that execrable Design of those wicked Assassines Good God! What Madness is this Let us view all Europe and see if we can find any Subjects so well treated or who do enjoy so blessed a Peace as those of England Or if there be any Nations in the World that do not envy the Happiness of ours I have so great a Detestation for those Infamous Villains that I shall henceforth look upon Turks and Tartars as the most honest Men. You have by this time doubtless received the Account I sent you of our Campagne from Passaw The Lord Lansdowne delivered it to the Spanish Ambassadour who promised to send it in his Pacquet to Don Petro de Ronquillio into England The Duke of Lorrain has since had the good Fortune with Fourteen Thousand Horse to give a Defeat to Tcckeley's Army consisting of Twenty Thousand Hungarians and Six Thousand Turks near Presburgh where he was going to possess himself of the Town and to be Crowned King of Hungary We marcht up towards them by a Defile i. e. Narrow Passage which they had lined with Dragoons and though the Enemy were drawn up in good Order they had not the Courage to make any opposition Our Avaunt Guard was scarcely past when a Panick Fear so seized those Rebels that they presently fled leaving the Turks to shift for themselves who for a time retreated orderly but the Poles seconded by some Regiments of our Curiasiers fell so furiously upon them that at last they were routed leaving a Thousand of their Men dead behind them with Twelve Hundred Wagons of Baggage whereof our Men had the plunder the Rebels Cavalry saving themselves by the Swiftness of their Horses and the few Foot they had in Woods and Mountains which were inaccessible to our Horse this blow was such a Terror to Teckeley that we saw him no more Vienna has now been five weeks besieged and although the Enemy took their Post the First day at the Foot of the Glassis under protection of the Suburbs which we neglected to demolish they have spent four weeks in only gaining one Point of the Counterscarp betwixt the Bastion of the Pallace and that of Lebell Five days ago they sprung a Mine under the Point of the Ravelin betwixt the said two Bastions where they gave a furious Assault in hopes to have made a Lodgment of it but they were repuls'd with great Loss and we have it from the Prisoners themselves as well as Spies we have in their Camp that they have already lost above Twelve Thousand Janizaries The Bavarian Succours of Nine Thousand Men are already arrived at the Bridge of Crembs those of Franconia being Eight Thousand will be here to Morrow The Elector of Saxony with Ten Thousand Men more is upon his March but can hardly be with us before the end of the Month. The King of Poland is also coming with Three or Four and Twenty Thousand Men and we are now about Three and Twenty Thousand Imperialists with which Troops we are resolved towards the end of this Month to succour Vienna or dye in the Attempt but if the King of Poland delay coming and we find the Town much press'd we shall endeavour the Relief of it without him they assure us that the Emperor intends to be with us in Person and I heartily wish it for his greater Glory We think to pass the Danube at Crembs a little Town about Ten Leagues up the River from Vienna the Country thereabouts is very Mountainous and Woody till you come within a little League of the place We shall have a Body of Thirty Thousand Foot if the Enemy come to meet us they must then forsake some of their Posts if they do not we shall have them betwixt us and the Town and the Scituation thereof is such that their Horse will be of little use to them in which consists their greatest Force My Lord Lansdowne is in great esteem with his Highness the Duke of Lorraine and
and deserves a Reward for the News he carries in the which he bore a very particular Part but less than he hoped through the Cowardise of the Enemy and I beg he may receive some Mark of your Favour I have heretofore told you that the King of Poland is le plus honeste homme of his Kingdom and I must now tell you again that there are few Kings now in the World who deserve better to be so than himself and that his Competitor our Duke of Loraine hath performed all the Parts of a great Captain and excellent Soldier and hath withal so managed Matters and found the way in this Conjunction of our Troops to accommodate so many Majesties and Electoral Highnesses and Soveraign Princes together that there hath not been the least dispute or difference arisen amongst them I take the Freedom to send you some of our Plunder from the Turks being a very small present We have taken all the Enemies Tents in general and you will admire the moderation of our Troops who amidst so great a booty pursu'd the Infidels from Camp to Camp neither Officer nor Souldier once offering to touch any thing till they had first made sure of the Victory I cannot yet learn the number of the Canon taken nor how many were kill'd on the right Wing against whom the King of Poland fought in Person Monsieur Preudhomme will tell you the rest 'T was night before we got hither which hindred us from pursuing them farther but to morrow early we shall be at their heeles I am for ever Yours c. From the Camp near Presburg Septemb. 22. 1683. For the Earl of Carlingford at London I Did my self the Honour my Lord to give you a rough Draught of the Action of Vienna the very same night that it happen'd by an Officer of the Marquiss of Grana's whom he sent Express from Flanders to bring him that great News and I must add that never Victory of so great Importance cost so little blood There were no Officers kill'd on our side but the Brother of the Prince de Crouy the Count de Trantmanstorf Major the Count de Batzi Captain of Dragoons and some people of quality amongst the Poles who stood the shock of a very rude Encounter with a Transcendent Bravery If the Grand Visier had been Master of his Trade we could never have past from the Hills of Kalemberg to Vienna without a bloody and desperate Engagement and upon very disadvantageous Terms we having three terrible Defiles to pass from the Mountains to the City But God did so infatuate them that they let our Foot and Dragoons quietly post themselves in such manner as to secure our Cavalry who passing but one and two at a time posted themselves under their very Noses Their Retreat was so hasty that they left us all their Artillery in general and the Account being made they are found what in their Approaches and Camp to amount to above One hundred and Twenty Pieces of Canon with a prodigious quantity of Provisions both of Ammunition and Victuals and all their Camp without giving themselves so much Time as to take down a Tent. The Field was covered every where with all sorts of rich booty Our German Troops marching through the middle of all this Spoyl and not a Soldier either Foot or Horse went one Step out of his Rank to pillage and we value the glory of this Continence and Exactness of military Discipline more than all the Booty of the Poles which was incredible All the Grand Visier's Treasure fell to their share the King confesseth he hath gotten great Riches and the Equipage of the Grand Visier's alone which fell to his Lot is valued at One Hundred Thousand Crowns The Poles have also taken the Great Standard of Mahomett and the Horse Tails which the Sultan himself gave the Grand Visier on this great Expedition Some of our Cavalry next day in rummaging their Tents found betwixt Five and Six Thousand Duckats in ready Money and amongst other things the Imperial Resident who following the Army was forgot behind their Camp who assured us that since the beginning of this Siege their Army was lessened Seventy Thousand Men and the Turkish Prisoners avow that of Forty Thousand Janizaries which came before the place there are not gone off Eighteen Thousand If night had not come on us at the very Suburbs of Vienna we had made it an entire Victory having already gain'd the Defiles and the Enemy was in an extream Confusion and had we but two hours more of Day-light we should have driven them to the little River of Shwechet where we might have had them at our Mercy but they past it in the night and though the Duke of Loraine would have next Morning pursued them at Break of Day yet the King of Poland thought it not fit because his Horse had not drank in Eight and Forty hours before But those who are given to detract say that the Polish Troops with whom the King is sometimes obliged to comply had demanded one day more to make an end of pillaging the Turkish Camp We hope before the end of this Campagne to take some Place on the Frontier Teckeley applys himself to the King of Poland for his Mediation The Grand Visier enrag'd at this shameful loss has since caused the Heads of the Visier of Buda of two Bassa's and Five hundred Officers to be cut off this will be a ready way to make an end of his Army if he kill thus on one side and we on the other Adieu In fine it was high time to succour Vienna there being two considerable Breaches in both the Bastions and half of the Curtain undermin'd the Garrison which consisted of Twelve Thousand Men reduced to Four Thousand and certainly never any Garrison behav'd it self better I am endeavouring to get a Draught of the Place and the Attacks to present to the King and his Royal Highness and here 's an Engineer upon the Place has promised to do it very well My Lord Lansdowne will have the Honour to see the closing of this Campagne as thinking it not sufficient to have bore his Part in the Relief of Vienna and defeating the Turk It were to be wisht the Elector of Saxe had taken the same consideration along with him but he quitted the Army the very day after the Succour of Vienna finishing his Campagne with the Glory of Relieving the Town The Elector of Bavaria with his Troops as well as those of Franconia march with us still being resolved to see the end of this Campagne From the Camp near Barrakan over against Gran Octob. 10. 1683. For the Earl of Carlingford at London I Sent you a short Account of the Relieving of Vienna and of the shameful flight of the Enemy from before it of which that advantage was not made that might otherwise have been by reason of the backwardness of the Poles to follow the pursuit next day But the Grand Visier
being enrag'd at this Disgrace discharged his Fury upon the Officers of his Army having strangled the Visier of Buda a Man of Eighty years of Age and as he was perhaps the most able Person of the Ottoman Empire so would he have prov'd the more dangerous Enemy to him with four other Bassa's and Four or Five Hundred other Officers upon pretence that they did not do their parts and disobeyed his Orders The Count Budiani an Hungarian Lord who after our Retreat at Raab revolted with a considerable Party of his Country-men to the Rebel Teckeley to give the Emperor a convincing Proof of his sincere Repentance cut in pieces two thousand Auxiliary Turks that the Grand Visier had sent to reinforce him and tho the advantage we got by his Treason was very great yet we could not but abhor the Traitor On the Fifth instant the Polish Army with our Cavalry past the Danube at Gomorra leaving our foot one days march behind but the Duke of Loraine having resolved to attack Barrakan was forc'd to stay some time for the Foot because those of Bavaria were for some unhappy Reasons six days march from us The King being told that there were not above Five Thousand Turks in Barrakan made his Troops hastily advance towards it without once acquainting his Highness with the Design and thinking himself sure and that his very Avaunt Guard would have carried it hè did not so much as march his Troops in Battalia but his Ambition and the great contempt he had of the Enemy upon the Success of Vienna cost him dear instead of the Five Thousand Men which he was told of he found in a bottom under the very Cannon of Barrakan a Body of Twelve Thousand who instantly attackt the Avaunt Guard of the Poles with such a Fury that though they behaved themselves bravely they were at last forc'd into their main Body and that in such confusion that the whole Army which had not then time to draw up into Battaile seized with a panick Fear had been entirely routed had not the Duke of Loraine who by this time heard of the Kings departure made his Troops hastily follow and so kept them from farther disorder My Brigade had this day the Avaunt Guard and his Highness ordering me to make haste tho we had a Defile to pass about half an hours march from the Enemy yet our Troops carryed on with a desire to redress the loss and repair the affront received by their Allies past it with all chearfulness and so in a very little time we drew up in a Line of Fifteen Squadrons The Arrival thus of our Troops put soon a stop to the Carriere of the TURKS and gave us an Opportunity thereby of passing the rest of our Men and to the Poles of knowing each other The Enemy thus contenting themselves with the advantage they had gotten over the Poles retired in good order into the bottom where they were first and we thought it not then safe to follow them farther with the Poles who were as it were stund with the blow they had received and under an apprehension that the Grand Visier's whole Army was there They thereupon encamp'd themselves about an hours distance from Barrakan near the Danube and the King was then of opinion to stay for the coming up of the Foot before they should attempt any thing farther There were about One Thousand Poles kill'd most of them Dragoons who having alighted from their Horses in a Plain were abandoned by the Horse and so cut in pieces by the Enemy the King ventur'd as far as any Man with his usual undaunted Courage and had it not been for a German Cavalier that serv'd him he had then certainly been either kill'd or taken Prisoner and his Majesty in Requital made him a Colonel The next day the Mareschal Comte de Staremberg who so bravely defended Vienna came with Eight Thousand Foot to us The Poles were so disheartened by their wounds which were yet bleeding and apprehending that the Grand Visier with the rest of his Army might be near at hand that they did endeavour to divert the King from any farther vigorous Action at that time but the Duke of Loraine did so strongly press the contrary that they were at last brought to it We march'd in Battalia the ninth instant towards the Enemy his Highness giving the Poles their choice where to post themselves but instead of the right wing which till then they always affected they divided themselves on both the Wings and on our Reserve The Enemy seeing us thus march towards them came out of their bottom ranging themselves in Battaile and by the Confession of those Prisoners that make them the most the Turks did not exceed Sixteen Thousand Men and certainly there never was committed a greater nor worse supported rashness but yet they stood us with that boldness at first that the whole Grand Visier's Army could not have done more and not being able to front our whole Line they drew up to the Right and without once attempting to attack the German Squadrons fell with an incredible Fury on those Poles they found on our Left hoping to find as cheap a business of 't as they had done the day before But the Great General of Poland Iablonouski receiv'd them so briskly that it stopt their Fury and at the same time we charging them with our first Line of Curiasseers put them totally into disorder The Defeat of those was immediately followed with a general Rout of all their Troops and the shock of the first Line of our said Left Wing was so vigorous and succesful that neither my Lord Lansdowne to whom I had given the Command of a Squadron in my Regiment nor I my self who commanded the Second Line of the Wing that was attacked had either of us occasion to fire a Pistol His Highness let loose the first Line of Curiasseers the Croats and some Poles to the pursuit of those that fled whom we chased with the points of our Swords in their backs to the very Fort of Barrakan making a most terrible Slaughter of them the Crowd of those that thought to save themselves by the Bridge was so great that the Bridge broak under them and there were abundance of them who threw themselves into the Danube rather than they would stand the Fury of our Men and the Revenge of the Poles It is most certain that with those who were slain and those who were drown'd the better half of their Number perished and one shall seldome find in a pitch'd Battle a greater loss of Men these were the very flower of the Turkish Army commanded by the new Visier of Buda Ali Bassa of Aleppo and Six other Bassa's the Visier of Buda was kill'd the Bassa's of Aleppo and Silestria are taken Prisoners and a third Bassa was drown'd We have also saved about six hundred Prisoners from the Fury of the Poles and there are certainly taken above three thousand Horses and at