lost in Glennagiveny Bay, near Inishowen Head,[1] and again De Leyva barely escaped with his life, only to lose it a little later in the Girona. The N. S. de la Rosa went to pieces among the Blaskets.[2] The San Marcos,[3] the San Juan,[4] of the squadron of Diego Flores, the Trinidad Valencera,[5] and the Falcon Blanco Mediano,[6] also left their bones in Ireland. And the San Pedro Mayor,[7] after having escaped the perils of Scotland and Ireland, lost her way in the mouth of the Channel, and met her end in Bigbury Bay, Devonshire. These are about all that can be identified, but they are by no means all that perished. Writing on October 1st, to Walsyngham, Sir Richard Bingham, Governor of Connaught, said: —[8]
The cruelties practised on the shipwrecked Spaniards, whose miserable situation should have given them a claim to protection, were as bad as any practised by Alva in the Low Countries. There were other wrecks, both in Munster and in Ulster. The ships must have been in terrible straits for lack of provisions, and especially of water. The San Juan, flagship of Juan Martinez de Recalde, seems to have landed a party at Dingle and to have obtained water by force.[10] A prisoner, taken in a skirmish there, said, when examined,[11] that in the San Juan three or four men a day had died of hunger or thirst, although she was one of the best furnished ships in the Armada; and that men had been dying daily of sickness. Another prisoner averred that two hundred persons in the San Juan had died.
Of the one hundred and twenty-eight or one hundred and
- ↑ S. P. Ireland, Eliz. cxxxvi. 36, iii.
- ↑ Ib. cxxxvi. 41, v.
- ↑ Duro, i. 125.
- ↑ With Don Diego Enriquez. Duro, ii. 342.
- ↑ S. P. Ireland, Eliz. cxxxvii. 15.
- ↑ Duro, ii. 332.
- ↑ 'Arch. Nat. de la France,' K. 1592, doss. B. 81. This wreck was on October 28th, 1588.
- ↑ S. P. Ireland, Eliz. cxxxvii. 3.
- ↑ A few, however, escaped, in spite of Bingham and his people.
- ↑ Duro, i. 210.
- ↑ S. P. Dom. ccxvi. 17.