Nota Perang Warisan Sepanyol

  1. England (1701–6); Great Britain (1707–14) The Acts of Union of 1707 united the crowns of England and Scotland, forming the Kingdom of Great Britain. For much of the war, Scottish units were under Dutch pay and operated as part of the army of the Dutch Republic.
  2. Lynn, The Wars of Louis XIV: 1667–1714, p.271. The Allied figure is the strength in 1702: The Empire (90,000), the Dutch Republic (60,000 + 42,000 garrison troops), and England (40,000). It does not include minor German states or navies.
  3. Simon Barton, "A History of Spain", p.136: "But with her own military strength now but a pale shadow of its former self - at the beginning of the war the Spanish could barely muster 13,000 infantry and 5,000 cavalry"
  4. Lynn, The Wars of Louis XIV: 1667–1714, p.271. Though larger on paper, the French Army's actual combat strength was approximately 255,000. To this must be added, initially, Bavarian and Savoyard contingents
  5. In the case of England, the country also wished to safeguard its own Protestant line of succession. Second Hundred Years' War Tombs, That Sweet Enemy, p.24.
  6. Statistics of Wars, Oppressions and Atrocities of the Eighteenth Century, Matthew White
  7. Wolf, The Emergence of the Great Powers: 1685–1715. p.92