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Sancho d'Avila

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Sancho d'Avila
Born21 September, 1523
Ávila, Spain
Died1583
Lisbon, Portugal
Allegiance Spanish Empire
Service / branchArmy
RankCaptain
Battles / wars

Don Sancho Dávila y Daza (21 September 1523 – 1583) was a Spanish general.[1]

Born at Ávila, he first served as the commander of the Duke of Alba's bodyguard. It was in this function that Dávila arrested the Count of Egmont.

When the Eighty Years' War started, Dávila suffered a defeat in the Battle of Le Quesnoy. He was also involved in the 1572 Siege of Middelburg and the Battle of Flushing a year later. In 1574, Dávila defeated Louis and Henry, brothers of William the Silent, in the Battle of Mookerheyde.

In 1576, as commander of the Spanish troops in the Citadel of Antwerp, he was the main instigator of the Sack of Antwerp in which between 7,000 and 18,000 lives and a great deal of property were lost.[2] Four years later, he participated with the Duke of Alba at the Battle of Alcântara.

In 1580, he captured the key Portuguese city of Porto which secured Spain's personal union with Portugal for more than 60 years and finished off António, Prior of Crato's army in the War of the Portuguese Succession.

Dávila later died in Lisbon of a wound infection, which he got during a raid in Portugal.

References

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  1. ^ Manuel Pando Fernández de Pinedo Alava y Dávila Miraflores (1857). Vida del general español D. Sancho Dávila y Daza: conocido en el siglo XVI con el nombre de El Rayo de la Guerra (in Spanish). D. F. Sanchez.
  2. ^ Kamen, Henry (2005). Spain, 1469-1714: A Society of Conflict. Pearson/Longman. p. 139. ISBN 978-0-582-78464-2. As a result the troops mutinied and in November 1576 sacked the great commercial city of Antwerp at a cost of some 8,000 lives and a great amount of property

Further reading

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Protagonists of War