- Siege of Pembroke
The Siege of Pembroke took place in
1648 during theSecond English Civil War .Background
In April 1648,
Parliamentarian troops inWales , who had not been paid for a long time, staged a Royalist rebellion under the command of the ColonelJohn Poyer , the Parliamentarian Governor ofPembroke Castle . He was joined by Major-GeneralRowland Laugharne , his district commander, and ColonelRice Powel . After the failure of his pre-emptive strike against the small Parliamentarian army of ColonelThomas Horton at theBattle of St. Fagans , Laugharne retreated with what was left of his army to join Colonel Poyer atPembroke .The Preamble
Colonel Horton marched his 3,000 well disciplined troops, about half of which were
dragoons , west toTenby and laid siege toTenby Castle which was held by about 500 Royalists under the command of Colonel Rice Powel.Oliver Cromwell with another Parliamentarian army consisting of three regiments of foot and two of horse had reachedGloucester on the day that the Royalist army was routed at the Battle of St. Fagans and proceeded to cross the south Welsh border shortly afterwards. He left ColonelIsaac Ewer in command of a small force to besiege the Royalist garrison ofChepstow Castle which was under the command of SirNicholas Kemeys and pressed on to join Horton atTenby arriving on the15 May . Leaving Horton with enough men to deal with Powel, Cromwell marched the rest of the army to lay siege to Pembroke.Kemoys was killed when Chepstow Castle was stormed on
25 May and Powel was taken prisoner when he surrendered Tenby Castle to Horton on31 May , butPembroke Castle was a very strongmedieval fortress which could not be taken as quickly. Pembroke Castle is on a rocky promontory surround on three sides by the sea and on the landward side its defences consisted of a deep ditch and walls up to 20 feet (6.1 metres) thick.The Siege
Ships carrying siege artillery to Cromwell were forced back up the
Bristol Channel to Gloucester by storms, so Cromwell tried a frontal assault. It failed because the ladders used toescalade the walls were too short. The defenders managed to surprise the besiegers in a suddensortie killing thirty of the besiegers and damaging thecircumvallation . The siege guns arrived in mid-June but over the next month they made little impact on the thick curtain walls.Eventually, the siege ended when Cromwell's forces discovered the conduit pipe which delivered water to the castle, and cut off the defenders' water supply. Poyer and Laugharne were forced to surrender on
11 July .Cromwell then ordered the castle slighted so that it could never again be used as a military fortress. Laugharne, Poyer and Powel were taken to London, tried and sentenced to death, but Poyer alone was executed on
April 25 ,1649 , being the victim selected by lot.References
1911GREAT REBELLION
* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/STUwalesCW.htm Wales and the Civil War]
* [http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/military/1648-wales.htm#pembroke Siege of Pembroke, May-July 1648]
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