fbpx
Wikipedia

Battle of Roliça

At the Battle of Roliça (17 August 1808), the first battle fought by the British army during the Peninsular War,[5] an Anglo-Portuguese army under Sir Arthur Wellesley defeated an outnumbered Imperial French division under General of Division Henri François Delaborde, near the village of Roliça in Portugal. The French retired in good order.

Battle of Roliça
Part of the Peninsular War

Batalha da Roliça (William Heath, 1815. Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal)
Date17 August 1808
Location39°18′49″N 9°11′01″W / 39.3136°N 9.1836°W / 39.3136; -9.1836
Result Coalition victory[1]
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Henri Delaborde Arthur Wellesley
Strength
4,000–4,930[1][2]
5 guns
14,800–15,700[1][2]
Casualties and losses
600–700 killed, wounded or captured[1][3]
3 guns lost
70 killed
335 wounded
81 missing[4]
class=notpageimage|
Peninsular war: Portugal
1807 1808 1809 1810 1811

Background edit

British intervention on the Iberian Peninsula started with the Battle of Roliça.

In the months after occupying Portugal, Napoleon attempted the conquest and control of Spain. He met much resistance but it was disorganised even when it was effective. By the end of July the Spanish had met the French a dozen times, winning, or at least not losing, at seven of those meetings. Their most spectacular victory was in southern Spain on 23 July 1808, when General Castaños surrounded and forced 18,000 French under General Dupont to surrender at Baylen. On 30 July 1808, the French division of General Loison massacred the population, men, women, and children, of Évora. Both of these events were to have an effect on the future of each nation's relationships with British troops.

On the same day, Wellesley received a letter from Viscount Castlereagh, the Secretary of War, that informed him that General Junot's forces numbered more than 25,000. Castlereagh forwarded his plans to augment the British Army in Portugal by another 15,000 men. General Sir John Moore was to arrive with an army from Sweden, and another force would be forwarded from Gibraltar. The command of this larger force would pass to Sir Hew Dalrymple (the Governor of Gibraltar, a 60-year-old general who had seen active service only in a failed campaign in Flanders in 1793–1794). Dalrymple would be seconded by Sir Harry Burrard, attended by five other generals, all senior to Wellesley (Dalrymple, Burrard, Moore, Hope, Fraser, and Lord Paget). The ambitious General Wellesley hoped to make something happen during the time he still commanded the army in Portugal.[6]

On 30 July 1808, General Wellesley remet Admiral Cotton's convoy with Wellesley's troops at Mondego bay. Wellesley chose this as his landing point because students from Coimbra University had seized the fort making this a safer landing than any place nearer Lisbon. The disembarking of Wellesley's original 16,000 troops and supplies with the 6,000 they met off Portugal lasted from 1 to 8 August. Some landing craft capsized in the rough surf making the first British casualties in the Peninsula victims of drowning.[6]

The army marched off on the 10th on the hot and sandy 12-mile (19 km) march to Leiria. Wellesley arrived on the 11th and soon argued with General Bernardim Freire de Andrade, the commander of 6,000 Portuguese troops, about supplies and the best route to Lisbon. The result had Wellesley taking his preferred route, close to the sea and his supplies, with 1,700 of the Portuguese under the command of Colonel Nicholas Trant, a British officer in service with the Portuguese Army.[6]

The army then began its march toward Lisbon following a force of the French army. The French were under the command of General Delaborde. These troops had been sent by Junot to harass and hold the British while he brought his larger army into position to oppose the Anglo-Portuguese forces.[6]

By 14 August the British reached Alcobaça and moved on to Óbidos. Here the British vanguard, consisting of riflemen from 5th/60th and 95th Rifles, met pickets and the rearguard of the French forces. The 4,000 French were outnumbered approximately four to one.[6]

Composition of forces edit

British edit

The Anglo-Portuguese were formed in six brigades under Major General Hill, Major General Ferguson, Brigadier General Nightingall, Brigadier General Bowes, Brigadier General Catlin Craufurd, and Brigadier General Fane with the Portuguese under Trant. Trant with the Portuguese and 50 cavalry formed the right and were to turn the French left. Fergusson and Bowes with three companies of riflemen and some light artillery were to force the French right and hold against the possible arrival of French troops under Loison. Hill, Nightingall, Craufurd, Fane with the remaining Portuguese, and the rest of the guns and cavalry were to push the centre. British forces involved in the battle included:[7][8]

French edit

The French forces under Delaborde consisted of five battalions, including one Swiss, and five guns. The small French/Swiss force included:

  • 70éme Régiment d'Infanterie de Ligne (2 Battalions)
  • 4éme Régiment Suisse d'Infanterie (1 Battalion)
  • 2éme Régiment Légère (1 Battalion)
  • 4éme Régiment Légère (1 Battalion)
  • 26éme Bataillon de Chasseurs[8]

Battlefield edit

The village of Roliça is located in the centre of a horseshoe shape of steep hills approximately one mile wide and two deep. The open end opens north-northeast toward Óbidos where the 5/60th and 95th had met the French the day before. The hills around Óbidos and Roliça were well wooded.[11]

The French began the day to the north of Roliça backed up to the higher ground allowing them to block or protect the roads south toward Lisbon. On the hill about one mile to the south of the village where the French first fell back, there were four defiles, or gullies leading into the new French position. The field below these hills were grassy, but boulders and the steep sides to the gullies made attack in formation impossible. In the first stages of the battle, Delaborde pulled his troops back to the top of the hill.[11]

Battle edit

 
An 1873 map of the battle (British Battles on Land and Sea, vol. 2). British Library.

Wellesley arrived at Óbidos on 16 August and moved toward Roliça on the following day. At the beginning of the battle, Delaborde occupied a position to the north-northwest of the village of Roliça. Wellesley attempted to manoeuvre his forces into a double envelopment, moving to each flank of the French position with his main force organised into three fighting columns of brigades.[12] This could be attempted since the Anglo-Portuguese army outnumbered the French forces present by over 3 to 1.[11]

He sent Trant to the west, and a stronger force under Fergusson and Bowes with six guns to the east, while he distracted the French with a show of force and noise in the centre. Wellesley tried the manoeuvre twice starting at 9:00 a.m., but the French commander spotted this in time and fell back each. At this time the French final position was to the south and east of the village at the top of a steep hill that was littered with sharp rocks and the only way up was using narrow gullies.[12]

Colonel Lake of the 29th Regiment of Foot in the centre then made the mistake of dashing up a gully toward the French position. He arrived behind Delaborde, which cost Lake his life and most of the men in the 29th. This prompted a general attack in relief by the outnumbering British. The fight was rough and uphill with Delaborde hoping for support to arrive from Loison. He repulsed three assaults by the British until nearly 4:00 p.m. At this time Wellesley ordered a general advance to support the 29th & 9th Regiments of Foot. They swarmed up the rock face using their superior numbers to reach the French positions at the top of the hill[12] and Ferguson arrived over the hills to the east.

Delaborde began to withdraw in good order with effective aid from his cavalry until his army's discipline broke and his army ran. Without British cavalry to press the pursuit, they successfully withdrew to Montachique near Torres Vedras.[11]

Results edit

The Anglo-Portuguese won with 487 casualties, over half that number from the precipitate 29th. The French lost 700 men and three of their five guns. Delaborde himself was wounded.[11] The following day Wellesley found that the 4,000 additional British troops had arrived from England and were off the coast. He marched his men to cover their disembarkation rather than follow Delaborde.[13]

Aftermath edit

The British intervention proceeded with the Battle of Vimeiro on 21 August 1808.[14]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Bodart 1908, p. 389.
  2. ^ a b Baker 2006, p. 825.
  3. ^ Baker 2006, p. 826.
  4. ^ Burnham & McGuigan 2010, p. 214.
  5. ^ Longford 1970, pp. 148–152.
  6. ^ a b c d e Southey 1828b, pp. 190–193.
  7. ^ Fletcher 2005.
  8. ^ a b Hadaway 2020.
  9. ^ Duncan 1879, p. 207.
  10. ^ a b Smith & Black 2015, pp. 246–247.
  11. ^ a b c d e Southey 1828b, pp. 187–190.
  12. ^ a b c Cribb 2021.
  13. ^ Southey 1828b, p. 201.
  14. ^ Southey 1828b, pp. 205–213.

References edit

  • Baker, Ralph (2006). Gregory Fremont-Barnes (ed.). The Encyclopedia of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-7548-1571-6.
  • Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618-1905). Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  • Burnham, Robert; McGuigan, Ron (2010). The British Army against Napoleon. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1-84832-562-3.
  • Cribb, Marcus (2021). "The Battle of Roliça 17th August 1808. Wellington's first Peninsular Attack and Victory". Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  • Duncan, Major Francis (1879). History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery. Vol. II. London: Murray. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  • Fletcher, Ian (2005). . Archived from the original on 12 October 2007. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  • Hadaway, Stuart (2020). . Archived from the original on 31 October 2020. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  • Longford, Elizabeth (1970). Wellington. New York, Harper & Row. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  • Smith, Digby; Black, Jeremy (2015). An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Uniforms of the Napoleonic Wars. London: Lorenz Books. ISBN 978-0-7548-1571-6.
  • Southey, Robert (1828b). History of the Peninsular War. Vol. II (New, in 6 volumes ed.). London: John Murray. Retrieved 6 May 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Harris, Benjamin (2011). The Recollections of Rifleman Harris. Retrieved 15 May 2021.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Battle of Roliça at Wikimedia Commons
Preceded by
Battle of Bailén
Napoleonic Wars
Battle of Roliça
Succeeded by
Battle of Vimeiro

battle, roliça, august, 1808, first, battle, fought, british, army, during, peninsular, anglo, portuguese, army, under, arthur, wellesley, defeated, outnumbered, imperial, french, division, under, general, division, henri, françois, delaborde, near, village, r. At the Battle of Rolica 17 August 1808 the first battle fought by the British army during the Peninsular War 5 an Anglo Portuguese army under Sir Arthur Wellesley defeated an outnumbered Imperial French division under General of Division Henri Francois Delaborde near the village of Rolica in Portugal The French retired in good order Battle of RolicaPart of the Peninsular WarBatalha da Rolica William Heath 1815 Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal Date17 August 1808LocationNear Rolica Portugal39 18 49 N 9 11 01 W 39 3136 N 9 1836 W 39 3136 9 1836ResultCoalition victory 1 BelligerentsFrench Empire Swiss ConfederationUnited Kingdom PortugalCommanders and leadersHenri DelabordeArthur WellesleyStrength4 000 4 930 1 2 5 guns14 800 15 700 1 2 Casualties and losses600 700 killed wounded or captured 1 3 3 guns lost70 killed335 wounded81 missing 4 LisbonRolicaVimeiroChavesBragaGrijoPortoAlmeidaBussacoTorresVedrasRedinhaSabugalFuentesDeOnoroclass notpageimage Peninsular war Portugal 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 Contents 1 Background 2 Composition of forces 2 1 British 2 2 French 3 Battlefield 4 Battle 5 Results 6 Aftermath 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground editBritish intervention on the Iberian Peninsula started with the Battle of Rolica In the months after occupying Portugal Napoleon attempted the conquest and control of Spain He met much resistance but it was disorganised even when it was effective By the end of July the Spanish had met the French a dozen times winning or at least not losing at seven of those meetings Their most spectacular victory was in southern Spain on 23 July 1808 when General Castanos surrounded and forced 18 000 French under General Dupont to surrender at Baylen On 30 July 1808 the French division of General Loison massacred the population men women and children of Evora Both of these events were to have an effect on the future of each nation s relationships with British troops On the same day Wellesley received a letter from Viscount Castlereagh the Secretary of War that informed him that General Junot s forces numbered more than 25 000 Castlereagh forwarded his plans to augment the British Army in Portugal by another 15 000 men General Sir John Moore was to arrive with an army from Sweden and another force would be forwarded from Gibraltar The command of this larger force would pass to Sir Hew Dalrymple the Governor of Gibraltar a 60 year old general who had seen active service only in a failed campaign in Flanders in 1793 1794 Dalrymple would be seconded by Sir Harry Burrard attended by five other generals all senior to Wellesley Dalrymple Burrard Moore Hope Fraser and Lord Paget The ambitious General Wellesley hoped to make something happen during the time he still commanded the army in Portugal 6 On 30 July 1808 General Wellesley remet Admiral Cotton s convoy with Wellesley s troops at Mondego bay Wellesley chose this as his landing point because students from Coimbra University had seized the fort making this a safer landing than any place nearer Lisbon The disembarking of Wellesley s original 16 000 troops and supplies with the 6 000 they met off Portugal lasted from 1 to 8 August Some landing craft capsized in the rough surf making the first British casualties in the Peninsula victims of drowning 6 The army marched off on the 10th on the hot and sandy 12 mile 19 km march to Leiria Wellesley arrived on the 11th and soon argued with General Bernardim Freire de Andrade the commander of 6 000 Portuguese troops about supplies and the best route to Lisbon The result had Wellesley taking his preferred route close to the sea and his supplies with 1 700 of the Portuguese under the command of Colonel Nicholas Trant a British officer in service with the Portuguese Army 6 The army then began its march toward Lisbon following a force of the French army The French were under the command of General Delaborde These troops had been sent by Junot to harass and hold the British while he brought his larger army into position to oppose the Anglo Portuguese forces 6 By 14 August the British reached Alcobaca and moved on to obidos Here the British vanguard consisting of riflemen from 5th 60th and 95th Rifles met pickets and the rearguard of the French forces The 4 000 French were outnumbered approximately four to one 6 Composition of forces editBritish edit The Anglo Portuguese were formed in six brigades under Major General Hill Major General Ferguson Brigadier General Nightingall Brigadier General Bowes Brigadier General Catlin Craufurd and Brigadier General Fane with the Portuguese under Trant Trant with the Portuguese and 50 cavalry formed the right and were to turn the French left Fergusson and Bowes with three companies of riflemen and some light artillery were to force the French right and hold against the possible arrival of French troops under Loison Hill Nightingall Craufurd Fane with the remaining Portuguese and the rest of the guns and cavalry were to push the centre British forces involved in the battle included 7 8 Artillery commanded by Colonel Robe 9 6 Artillery Guns detached to Left division 12 Artillery Guns detached to Centre Division Left Division commanded by General Ferguson Ferguson s Brigade 36th Herefordshire Regiment of Foot 1 40th the 2nd Somersetshire Regiment of Foot and 1 71st Highland Regiment of Foot Bowes Brigade 1 6th 1st Warwickshire Regiment of Foot and 1 32nd Cornwall Regiment of Foot Centre Division 20th Regiment of Light Dragoons detachment 6th Braganca Portuguese Cavalry 12th Miranda Portuguese Cavalry and 6th Oporto Portuguese Cacadores in reserve Brigade taken from Portuguese 3rd Northern Division 10 Fane s Brigade 5 60th Royal American Regiment and 2 95th Rifles on the left Nightingale s Brigade 29th Worcestershire Regiment of Foot and 82nd Regiment of Foot Prince of Wales s Volunteers in the centre Hill s Brigade 5th Regiment of Foot Northumberland Fusiliers 9th East Norfolk Regiment of Foot and 38th 1st Staffordshire Regiment of Foot on the right Caitlin Craufurd s Brigade 45th Nottinghamshire Sherwood Foresters Regiment of Foot 50th Queen s Own Regiment of Foot and 91st Argyllshire Highlanders Regiment of Foot in reserve Right Division commanded by Colonel Trant 20th Regiment of Light Dragoons detachment 11th Almeida Portuguese Cavalry Regiment 50 men from 2nd Central Division 12th Chaves Portuguese Infantry Regiment 21st Valenca Portuguese Infantry Regiment and 24th Braganca Portuguese Infantry Regiment Brigade taken from the 3rd Northern Division 10 French edit The French forces under Delaborde consisted of five battalions including one Swiss and five guns The small French Swiss force included 70eme Regiment d Infanterie de Ligne 2 Battalions 4eme Regiment Suisse d Infanterie 1 Battalion 2eme Regiment Legere 1 Battalion 4eme Regiment Legere 1 Battalion 26eme Bataillon de Chasseurs 8 Battlefield editThe village of Rolica is located in the centre of a horseshoe shape of steep hills approximately one mile wide and two deep The open end opens north northeast toward obidos where the 5 60th and 95th had met the French the day before The hills around obidos and Rolica were well wooded 11 The French began the day to the north of Rolica backed up to the higher ground allowing them to block or protect the roads south toward Lisbon On the hill about one mile to the south of the village where the French first fell back there were four defiles or gullies leading into the new French position The field below these hills were grassy but boulders and the steep sides to the gullies made attack in formation impossible In the first stages of the battle Delaborde pulled his troops back to the top of the hill 11 Battle edit nbsp An 1873 map of the battle British Battles on Land and Sea vol 2 British Library Wellesley arrived at obidos on 16 August and moved toward Rolica on the following day At the beginning of the battle Delaborde occupied a position to the north northwest of the village of Rolica Wellesley attempted to manoeuvre his forces into a double envelopment moving to each flank of the French position with his main force organised into three fighting columns of brigades 12 This could be attempted since the Anglo Portuguese army outnumbered the French forces present by over 3 to 1 11 He sent Trant to the west and a stronger force under Fergusson and Bowes with six guns to the east while he distracted the French with a show of force and noise in the centre Wellesley tried the manoeuvre twice starting at 9 00 a m but the French commander spotted this in time and fell back each At this time the French final position was to the south and east of the village at the top of a steep hill that was littered with sharp rocks and the only way up was using narrow gullies 12 Colonel Lake of the 29th Regiment of Foot in the centre then made the mistake of dashing up a gully toward the French position He arrived behind Delaborde which cost Lake his life and most of the men in the 29th This prompted a general attack in relief by the outnumbering British The fight was rough and uphill with Delaborde hoping for support to arrive from Loison He repulsed three assaults by the British until nearly 4 00 p m At this time Wellesley ordered a general advance to support the 29th amp 9th Regiments of Foot They swarmed up the rock face using their superior numbers to reach the French positions at the top of the hill 12 and Ferguson arrived over the hills to the east Delaborde began to withdraw in good order with effective aid from his cavalry until his army s discipline broke and his army ran Without British cavalry to press the pursuit they successfully withdrew to Montachique near Torres Vedras 11 Results editThe Anglo Portuguese won with 487 casualties over half that number from the precipitate 29th The French lost 700 men and three of their five guns Delaborde himself was wounded 11 The following day Wellesley found that the 4 000 additional British troops had arrived from England and were off the coast He marched his men to cover their disembarkation rather than follow Delaborde 13 Aftermath editThe British intervention proceeded with the Battle of Vimeiro on 21 August 1808 14 See also editTimeline of the Peninsular WarNotes edit a b c d Bodart 1908 p 389 a b Baker 2006 p 825 Baker 2006 p 826 Burnham amp McGuigan 2010 p 214 Longford 1970 pp 148 152 a b c d e Southey 1828b pp 190 193 Fletcher 2005 a b Hadaway 2020 Duncan 1879 p 207 a b Smith amp Black 2015 pp 246 247 a b c d e Southey 1828b pp 187 190 a b c Cribb 2021 Southey 1828b p 201 Southey 1828b pp 205 213 References editBaker Ralph 2006 Gregory Fremont Barnes ed The Encyclopedia of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars Santa Barbara ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 7548 1571 6 Bodart Gaston 1908 Militar historisches Kriegs Lexikon 1618 1905 Retrieved 15 May 2021 Burnham Robert McGuigan Ron 2010 The British Army against Napoleon Barnsley South Yorkshire Frontline Books ISBN 978 1 84832 562 3 Cribb Marcus 2021 The Battle of Rolica 17th August 1808 Wellington s first Peninsular Attack and Victory Retrieved 15 May 2021 Duncan Major Francis 1879 History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Vol II London Murray Retrieved 15 May 2021 Fletcher Ian 2005 The Peninsular War 1808 1814 Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2021 Hadaway Stuart 2020 Rolica A Most Important Affair Archived from the original on 31 October 2020 Retrieved 24 July 2020 Longford Elizabeth 1970 Wellington New York Harper amp Row Retrieved 15 May 2021 Smith Digby Black Jeremy 2015 An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Uniforms of the Napoleonic Wars London Lorenz Books ISBN 978 0 7548 1571 6 Southey Robert 1828b History of the Peninsular War Vol II New in 6 volumes ed London John Murray Retrieved 6 May 2021 Further reading editHarris Benjamin 2011 The Recollections of Rifleman Harris Retrieved 15 May 2021 External links edit nbsp Media related to Battle of Rolica at Wikimedia Commons Preceded byBattle of Bailen Napoleonic WarsBattle of Rolica Succeeded byBattle of Vimeiro Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Rolica amp oldid 1219938790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.