Заметки
The dancers are arranged as two, side by side, 3 couple sets, i.e. 4M, 5M and 6M are back to back with 1L 2L and 3L. The first set, couples 1, 2 and 3 represents the English fleet, the second set with couples 4, 5 and 6 represents the French and Spanish fleet.
Devised by Keith Rose for a Scottish Dancing holiday to Conil de la Frontera on the Costa de la Luz, Spain which is about 8 miles from Cape Trafalgar. The Battle of Trafalgar was fought on 21 October 1805 when Admiral Nelson attacked the larger combined French and Spanish fleets using a new strategy of attacking perpendicularly to the line of enemy ships.
Battle of Trafalgar
“England expects that every man will do his duty.” In the year 1805, the
War of the Third Coalition
is raging: The United Kingdom, the empires of Austria and Russia, and Sweden, Naples, and Sicily stand against France and her client states under Napoleon Bonaparte and Spain (Prussia remains neutral). On 21 October 1805, near Cape Trafalgar in south-west Spain – immediately outside the Straits of Gibraltar –, a British fleet under the vice-admirals Horatio, Lord Nelson and Cuthbert Collingwood meets a combined French-Spanish fleet under the admiral, Pierre-Charles Villeneuve. The French and Spanish’s goal is to break the British blockade of Brest and, reinforced by the ships shut in there, to take control of the English channel and cover an invasion of Britain – to the British, an unthinkable catastrophe. Nelson’s and Collingwood’s task is to avert this at all costs.
With 33 “ships of the line”, i.e., large sailing ships suitable for the usual tactic where two opposing fleets sail alongside each other in two long queues to make the most efficient use of their “broadsides” – including the largest man-o’-war afloat at the time, the Spanish 130-gun
Santísima Trinidad
–, the French and Spanish command superior numbers compared to the 27 British ships of the line. On the other hand, the British crews, after years at sea and on blockade duty, are much better trained and more experienced than their enemies, who spent most of the time in port. Nelson uses a novel strategy: He splits his fleet into two squadrons, which are supposed to break the French-Spanish line in two different places – a daring maneuver during which his ships are, at first, subject to enemy fire, but will be able to “rake” their opponents when crossing the line, i.e., fire their guns one after the other to shoot through the enemy ships lengthwise, with disastrous consequences for their crews and fighting capability. This plan pans out – while the vanguard of the French-Spanish fleet sails away before it can turn around and join the battle, the British are temporarily of superior strength –, and in the ensuing chaos, the British take or destroy 18 enemy ships without losing any themselves. Nelson’s flagship,
Victory
, leads one of the British squadrons and takes heavy damage. Nelson himself is hit by a French sharp-shooter, gravely injured, and dies shortly before the battle is finished.
Even so, the strategic goal has been reached and an invasion of Great Britain has been successfully foiled. Nelson, a celebrity already in his lifetime in spite of his notorious conduct, posthumously becomes the nation’s greatest war hero ever (even today this has not changed). Villeneuve is taken prisoner. The battle of Trafalgar cements the predominance of the Royal Navy on the seas and therefore represents an important stepping stone towards the British Empire.
From “Anselm's Notes on Dances”, by Anselm Lingnau
(Used by permission.)