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Battle of the Bidassoa

In the Battle of the Bidasoa (or the Battle of Larrun) on 7 October 1813 the Allied army of Arthur Wellesley, Marquess of Wellington wrested a foothold on French soil from Nicolas Soult's French army. The Allied troops overran the French lines behind the Bidassoa River on the coast and along the Pyrenees crest between the Bidasoa and La Rhune (Larrun). The nearest towns to the fighting are Irun on the lower Bidassoa and Bera on the middle Bidasoa. The battle occurred during the Peninsular War, part of the wider Napoleonic Wars.

Battle of the Bidassoa (1813)
Part of War of the Sixth Coalition

Battle of the Bidassoa, 9 October 1813.
Date7 October 1813
Location43°20′16″N 1°43′7″W / 43.33778°N 1.71861°W / 43.33778; -1.71861 (Mont Calvaire)
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
French Empire United Kingdom
Portugal
Spain
Commanders and leaders
Nicolas Soult Duke of Wellington
Strength
62,000[1] 89,000[2]
Casualties and losses
1,676[3]
17 cannons[4]
825[5]-1,600[6]
class=notpageimage|
Location within Europe
  current battle

Wellington aimed his main assault at the lower Bidasoa, while sending additional troops to attack Soult's centre. Believing his coastal sector secure, Soult held the right flank with a relatively weak force while concentrating most of his strength on his left flank in the mountains. However, the British general obtained local intelligence that indicated that water levels on the lower river were much lower than the French suspected. After careful planning, Wellington launched a surprise assault which easily overran the French left flank defences. In the centre, his army also won through the French defenses, though his Spanish allies were repulsed in one attack. At the beginning of the fighting, Soult realised that his left flank was in no danger, but it was too late to reinforce his positions on the right. Some French generals were shocked at how poorly their soldiers fought.

Background edit

Operations edit

In the Battle of San Marcial on 31 August and 1 September 1813, Soult's army was repelled in its final bid to advance into Spain. After a costly assault followed by a brutal sack of the city, the Allies also brought the Siege of San Sebastián to a successful conclusion in early September. A French garrison held out in the Siege of Pamplona which would end in a surrender on October 31. Wellington determined to create a bridgehead across the Bidassoa River. If successful, his army would be the first Allied army to establish itself on French soil.[citation needed] The British commander also wanted to capture French positions that overlooked the Allied lines on the west side of the Bidassoa.[7]

Preparations edit

Because the French troops had begun to plunder their fellow citizens, Emperor Napoleon's Minister of War, Henri Jacques Guillaume Clarke ordered Marshal Soult to defend a position as close to the frontier as possible. He had to hold a 48 km (30 mi) front in the Pyrenees mountains. The area was highly defensible, but lateral communications were poor.[7]

 
Marshal Jean-de-Dieu Soult

Deciding that the coastal sector was the strongest part of his line, Soult posted General of Division Honoré Charles Reille and 10,550 men to defend that sector.[8] Reille's command included General of Division Antoine Louis Popon de Maucune's 3,996-strong 7th Division and General of Division Pierre François Xavier Boyer's 6,515-strong 9th Division. Maucune held the lower Bidassoa on the Bay of Biscay, while Boyer defended the stream farther inland.[9] Behind them was the entrenched camp of Bordagain and the port of St-Jean-de-Luz[8] which were held by General of Division Eugene-Casimir Villatte's 8,018-man Reserve Division.[9]

General of Division Bertrand Clausel held the centre with 15,300 men under Generals of Division Nicolas François Conroux, Jean-Pierre Maransin, and Eloi Charlemagne Taupin. On the right, near the Bidassoa, stood the La Bayonette redoubt. Mont La Rhune (Larrun) rose in the center of Clausel's sector. His left touched the Nivelle River near Ainhoa.[8] Conroux's 4th Division numbered 4,962 men; Maransin's 5th Division counted 5,575 troops; Taupin's 8th Division had 4,778 soldiers and held the area just north of Bera. Soult's gunners, sappers, and other troops added up to 2,000 and his total forces numbered 55,088 effectives. His cavalry was stationed in the Nive valley.[9]

Fearing an allied thrust over the Maya Pass and down the Nivelle River to the sea, Soult gave General of Division Jean-Baptiste Drouet, Comte d'Erlon 19,200 men to hold his left flank. D'Erlon's corps included the soldiers of Generals of Division Maximilien Sebastien Foy, Jean Barthélemy Darmagnac, Louis Jean Nicolas Abbé, and Augustin Darricau. These troops held a line from Ainhoa to the mountain fortress of St-Jean-Pied-de-Port, covering the Maya and Roncevaux Passes.[8] Darricau's 4,092-man 6th Division was deployed between Ainhoa and Sare; Abbé's 6,051-strong 3rd Division was west of Ainhoa; Darmagnac's 4,447-man 2nd Division held Ainhoa; Foy's 4,654-strong 1st Division held the fortress at the extreme left flank.[9]

 
The Guards entering France, 7th Oct. 1813 by Robert Batty.

Wellington had 64,000 Anglo-Portuguese infantry and artillery, plus 25,000 Spanish soldiers from the Army of Galicia. Since cavalry was of little use in the mountains, the British commander sent most of his horse regiments to the rear, keeping a few light dragoons for patrolling. In order to gain his bridgehead, Wellington had to force a crossing of the Bidassoa estuary. The river was 910 metres (1,000 yards) wide and 6 metres (20 feet) deep at the high-water mark below the Île de la Conference. The French never suspected that there was only 4 feet (1.2 m) of water over the lower fords at certain low tides, a fact that the Allies gleaned from Basque fishermen. Allied intelligence knew that the next low tide was 7 October.[2]

The crossing was meticulously planned. Near the lower fords, British engineers built a turf wall near the river. This would shelter Andrew Hay's 5th Division during the time before it crossed the river. Wellington positioned five field batteries and three 18-pound siege cannon to provide fire support to the attacking infantry.[10]

Battle edit

Allied Army edit

Arthur Wellesley, Marquess of Wellington (89,000, 24,000 engaged)[11]

Coastal Sector[a] La Rhune Sector[a]

French Army edit

Soult's Army defending the Bidassoa River in October 1813[9]
Corps Division Battalions Strength
Right
General of Division Honoré Charles Reille
7th Division: General of Division Antoine Louis Popon de Maucune 8 3,996
9th Division: General of Division Pierre François Joseph Boyer 12 6,515
Center
General of Division Bertrand Clausel
4th Division: General of Division Nicolas François Conroux 9 4,962
5th Division: General of Division Jean-Pierre Maransin 9 5,575
8th Division: General of Division Eloi Charlemagne Taupin 10 4,778
Left
General of Division Jean-Baptiste Drouet, Comte d'Erlon
1st Division: General of Division Maximilien Sebastien Foy 8 4,654
2nd Division: General of Division Jean Barthélemy Darmagnac 9 4,447
3rd Division: General of Division Louis Jean Nicolas Abbé 8 6,051
6th Division: General of Division Augustin Darricau 7 4,092
Reserve
General of Division Eugene-Casimir Villatte
8th Division: General of Division Eugene-Casimir Villatte 18 8,018
Artillery: - 2,000

Bidassoa edit

At 7:25 am the 5th Division launched its attack from near Hondarribia (Fuenterrabia). It came as a complete surprise to the French, who had deployed only Maucune's 4,000 men to defend six km (four miles) of river. Immediately, Hay's men gained a foothold at the village of Hendaye and swung two brigades to the right to assist the crossing of Kenneth Howard's 1st Division. At 8:00 am, Howard's men, Thomas Bradford's independent Portuguese brigade and Lord Aylmer's independent British brigade forded the river near a destroyed bridge at Béhobie. Three Spanish brigades from Manuel Freire's two divisions (Del Barco and Barcena) crossed farther to the right. Rapidly, the British overran the Croix des Bouquets position and the Spanish captured Mont Calvaire at 43°20′16″N 1°43′7″W / 43.33778°N 1.71861°W / 43.33778; -1.71861 (Mont Calvaire). The entire ridge on the French side of the river fell into Allied hands at the cost of only 400 casualties. With the high ground in his possession, Wellington suspended the attack.[12]

That morning Soult was absorbed in watching Henry Clinton's 6th Division advancing from the Maya Pass. The division's Portuguese brigade boldly seized the Urdax ironworks, losing 150 men in the combat. Soult suddenly realised the operation was only a demonstration. He rode off to his coastal sector but he was too late to help Reille.[2]

La Rhune edit

 
La Rhune, where the French repelled a Spanish attack.

The toughest fighting of the day occurred in Clausel's sector. John Colborne's brigade of Charles Alten's Light Division attacked La Bayonette at 43°18′35″N 1°42′12″W / 43.30972°N 1.70333°W / 43.30972; -1.70333 (Le Bayonette Redoute). The French charged downhill and drove back the green-jacketed skirmishers of the 95th Rifles Foot. Suddenly the 1/52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot (Light Infantry) appeared out of the trees and quickly turned the tables. Following closely behind the retreating French, the redcoats of the 52nd overran the redoubt with surprising ease.[13]

Meanwhile, James Kempt's other Light Division brigade and Francisco de Longa's Spanish division attacked up two spurs of La Rhune to secure some positions. To their right, Pedro Girón's two Andalusian divisions (Virues and La Torre) attacked the summit of La Rhune. Though the Spanish attacked repeatedly, they were defeated. However, the next day the French abandoned the position to avoid encirclement.[14][15][16]

Results edit

The Allies were victorious for the first time on French soil. In Reille's sector, the French lost 390 killed and wounded, plus 60 men and eight cannons captured. In Clausel's sector, the French suffered 600 killed and wounded, plus 598 men and nine cannons captured. The British lost 82 killed, 486 wounded, and five missing, or a total of 573. The Portuguese lost 48 killed, 186 wounded, and eight missing, or a total of 242.[4] The Spanish suffered the balance of the 1,600 total Allied casualties.[14] The defeat lowered morale in Soult's army. Except at La Rhune, French troops did not obstinately defend their positions. Villatte commented, "with troops like these we can expect only disgrace".[17] Soult made Maucune the scapegoat, dismissed him from his division, and sent him to the rear.[12] After the battle, some of the Allied troops indulged themselves in the looting of French homes and towns. Wellington came down harshly on British troops caught plundering. He felt sympathetic to the Spanish, who had seen their nation ravaged by French soldiers, but he determined to tolerate no looting for fear of provoking a guerilla war.[18]

During the follow-up to this victory, Spanish troops seized the Sainte-Barbe Redoubt at 43°18′1″N 1°34′55″W / 43.30028°N 1.58194°W / 43.30028; -1.58194 (Sainte-Barbe Redoute), 1.4 kilometres (0.9 mi) south of the village of Sare. On 12 October, Conroux's division recaptured the fort from its garrison of La Torre's division and drove off a five-battalion Spanish counterattack. French casualties are estimated at 300, while the Spanish lost 300 killed and wounded, plus 200 captured.[19] The next engagement was the Battle of Nivelle on 10 November 1813.[20]

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ a b Only the engaged units are listed in the order of battle.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Glover's text states 61,000, but his order of battle footnote adds up to 62,170 (Glover 2001, p. 281).
  2. ^ a b c Glover 2001, p. 283.
  3. ^ Oman 1930, p. 536.
  4. ^ a b Smith 1998, pp. 459–460.
  5. ^ Oman 1930, p. 535.
  6. ^ Bodart 1908, p. 460.
  7. ^ a b Glover 2001, p. 280.
  8. ^ a b c d Glover 2001, p. 281.
  9. ^ a b c d e Gates 2002, p. 523.
  10. ^ Glover 2001, pp. 283–284.
  11. ^ Glover's Nivelle order of battle was used (Glover 2001, pp. 385–387).
  12. ^ a b Glover 2001, p. 285.
  13. ^ Glover 2001, pp. 285–286.
  14. ^ a b Glover 2001, p. 286.
  15. ^ Smith specified Girón as the Spanish commander (Smith 1998, p. 460).
  16. ^ Although Glover does not mention Girón in his account of the La Rhune attacks (Glover 2001, p. 386); Girón's division commanders are inferred from the Nivelle order of battle.
  17. ^ Glover 2001, p. 287.
  18. ^ Glover 2001, pp. 286–287.
  19. ^ Smith 1998, p. 460.
  20. ^ Smith 1998, p. 476.

References edit

  • Gates, David (2002), The Spanish Ulcer: A History of the Peninsular War, London: Pimlico, ISBN 0-7126-9730-6
  • Glover, Michael (2001), The Peninsular War 1807-1814, London: Penguin, ISBN 0-14-139041-7
  • Oman, Sir Charles William Chadwick (1930). A History of the Peninsular War: August 1813 – April 14, 1814. Vol. VII. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  • Smith, Digby (1998), The Napoleonic Wars Data Book, London: Greenhill, ISBN 1-85367-276-9
  • Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618-1905). Retrieved 8 June 2023.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Battle of the Bidassoa at Wikimedia Commons
Preceded by
Battle of Wartenburg
Napoleonic Wars
Battle of the Bidassoa
Succeeded by
Battle of Leipzig

battle, bidassoa, battle, bidasoa, battle, larrun, october, 1813, allied, army, arthur, wellesley, marquess, wellington, wrested, foothold, french, soil, from, nicolas, soult, french, army, allied, troops, overran, french, lines, behind, bidassoa, river, coast. In the Battle of the Bidasoa or the Battle of Larrun on 7 October 1813 the Allied army of Arthur Wellesley Marquess of Wellington wrested a foothold on French soil from Nicolas Soult s French army The Allied troops overran the French lines behind the Bidassoa River on the coast and along the Pyrenees crest between the Bidasoa and La Rhune Larrun The nearest towns to the fighting are Irun on the lower Bidassoa and Bera on the middle Bidasoa The battle occurred during the Peninsular War part of the wider Napoleonic Wars Battle of the Bidassoa 1813 Part of War of the Sixth CoalitionBattle of the Bidassoa 9 October 1813 Date7 October 1813LocationNear Hendaye France and La Rhune43 20 16 N 1 43 7 W 43 33778 N 1 71861 W 43 33778 1 71861 Mont Calvaire ResultAllied victoryBelligerentsFrench EmpireUnited Kingdom Portugal SpainCommanders and leadersNicolas SoultDuke of WellingtonStrength62 000 1 89 000 2 Casualties and losses1 676 3 17 cannons 4 825 5 1 600 6 class notpageimage Location within Europe Peninsular War Campaign in south west France50km30miles Bayonne7Toulouse6543 2 Bidassoa1 current battle Wellington aimed his main assault at the lower Bidasoa while sending additional troops to attack Soult s centre Believing his coastal sector secure Soult held the right flank with a relatively weak force while concentrating most of his strength on his left flank in the mountains However the British general obtained local intelligence that indicated that water levels on the lower river were much lower than the French suspected After careful planning Wellington launched a surprise assault which easily overran the French left flank defences In the centre his army also won through the French defenses though his Spanish allies were repulsed in one attack At the beginning of the fighting Soult realised that his left flank was in no danger but it was too late to reinforce his positions on the right Some French generals were shocked at how poorly their soldiers fought Contents 1 Background 1 1 Operations 1 2 Preparations 2 Battle 2 1 Allied Army 2 2 French Army 2 3 Bidassoa 2 4 La Rhune 3 Results 4 Explanatory notes 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBackground editOperations edit In the Battle of San Marcial on 31 August and 1 September 1813 Soult s army was repelled in its final bid to advance into Spain After a costly assault followed by a brutal sack of the city the Allies also brought the Siege of San Sebastian to a successful conclusion in early September A French garrison held out in the Siege of Pamplona which would end in a surrender on October 31 Wellington determined to create a bridgehead across the Bidassoa River If successful his army would be the first Allied army to establish itself on French soil citation needed The British commander also wanted to capture French positions that overlooked the Allied lines on the west side of the Bidassoa 7 Preparations edit Because the French troops had begun to plunder their fellow citizens Emperor Napoleon s Minister of War Henri Jacques Guillaume Clarke ordered Marshal Soult to defend a position as close to the frontier as possible He had to hold a 48 km 30 mi front in the Pyrenees mountains The area was highly defensible but lateral communications were poor 7 nbsp Marshal Jean de Dieu SoultDeciding that the coastal sector was the strongest part of his line Soult posted General of Division Honore Charles Reille and 10 550 men to defend that sector 8 Reille s command included General of Division Antoine Louis Popon de Maucune s 3 996 strong 7th Division and General of Division Pierre Francois Xavier Boyer s 6 515 strong 9th Division Maucune held the lower Bidassoa on the Bay of Biscay while Boyer defended the stream farther inland 9 Behind them was the entrenched camp of Bordagain and the port of St Jean de Luz 8 which were held by General of Division Eugene Casimir Villatte s 8 018 man Reserve Division 9 General of Division Bertrand Clausel held the centre with 15 300 men under Generals of Division Nicolas Francois Conroux Jean Pierre Maransin and Eloi Charlemagne Taupin On the right near the Bidassoa stood the La Bayonette redoubt Mont La Rhune Larrun rose in the center of Clausel s sector His left touched the Nivelle River near Ainhoa 8 Conroux s 4th Division numbered 4 962 men Maransin s 5th Division counted 5 575 troops Taupin s 8th Division had 4 778 soldiers and held the area just north of Bera Soult s gunners sappers and other troops added up to 2 000 and his total forces numbered 55 088 effectives His cavalry was stationed in the Nive valley 9 Fearing an allied thrust over the Maya Pass and down the Nivelle River to the sea Soult gave General of Division Jean Baptiste Drouet Comte d Erlon 19 200 men to hold his left flank D Erlon s corps included the soldiers of Generals of Division Maximilien Sebastien Foy Jean Barthelemy Darmagnac Louis Jean Nicolas Abbe and Augustin Darricau These troops held a line from Ainhoa to the mountain fortress of St Jean Pied de Port covering the Maya and Roncevaux Passes 8 Darricau s 4 092 man 6th Division was deployed between Ainhoa and Sare Abbe s 6 051 strong 3rd Division was west of Ainhoa Darmagnac s 4 447 man 2nd Division held Ainhoa Foy s 4 654 strong 1st Division held the fortress at the extreme left flank 9 nbsp The Guards entering France 7th Oct 1813 by Robert Batty Wellington had 64 000 Anglo Portuguese infantry and artillery plus 25 000 Spanish soldiers from the Army of Galicia Since cavalry was of little use in the mountains the British commander sent most of his horse regiments to the rear keeping a few light dragoons for patrolling In order to gain his bridgehead Wellington had to force a crossing of the Bidassoa estuary The river was 910 metres 1 000 yards wide and 6 metres 20 feet deep at the high water mark below the Ile de la Conference The French never suspected that there was only 4 feet 1 2 m of water over the lower fords at certain low tides a fact that the Allies gleaned from Basque fishermen Allied intelligence knew that the next low tide was 7 October 2 The crossing was meticulously planned Near the lower fords British engineers built a turf wall near the river This would shelter Andrew Hay s 5th Division during the time before it crossed the river Wellington positioned five field batteries and three 18 pound siege cannon to provide fire support to the attacking infantry 10 Battle editAllied Army edit Arthur Wellesley Marquess of Wellington 89 000 24 000 engaged 11 Coastal Sector a La Rhune Sector a 1st Division Major General Kenneth Howard 1st Brigade Colonel Peregrine Maitland 1 1st Foot Guards 3 1st Foot Guards 1 company coy 5 60th Foot 2nd Brigade Major General Edward Stopford 2 24th Foot 1 42nd Foot 2 58th Foot 1 79th Foot 1 coy 5 60th 3rd Brigade Major General Heinrich von Hinuber de 1st 2nd and 5th King s German Legion KGL Line battalions bns British Brigade Major General Matthew Whitworth Aylmer Lord Aylmer attached 76th Foot 2 84th Foot 85th Foot Portuguese Brigade Major General Thomas Bradford attached 13th and 24th Line Regiments Regts 5th Cacadores bn 5th Division Major General Andrew Hay 1st Brigade Colonel Charles Greville 3 1st Foot 1 9th Foot 1 38th Foot 1 coy Brunswick Oels 2nd Brigade Major General Frederick P Robinson 1 4th Foot 2 47th Foot 2 59th Foot 1 coy Brunswick Oels Portuguese Brigade Brigadier General Luis do Rego 3rd and 15th Line Regts 8th Cacadores bn Spanish Corps Lieutenant General Manuel Alberto Freire de Andrade y Armijo 3rd Division Major General Del Barco 4th Division Major General Barcena Artillery Royal Artillery Royal Horse Artillery Light Division Major General Charles Alten 1st Brigade Major General James Kempt 1 43rd Foot 1 95th Rifles 3 95th Rifles 3rd Cacadores bn 2nd Brigade Lieutenant Colonel John Colborne 1 52nd Foot 2 95th Rifles 17th Portuguese Line Regt 1st Cacadores bn 6th Division Lieutenant General Henry Clinton Portuguese Brigade Major General George Allan Madden 8th and 12th Line Regts 8th Cacadores bn Reserve of Andalusia Lieutenant General Pedro Agustin Giron 1st Division Major General Virues 2nd Division Major General La Torre 6th Galician Division Brigadier General Francisco de Longa Artillery Royal Artillery Royal Horse Artillery Lawson s Company RAFrench Army edit Soult s Army defending the Bidassoa River in October 1813 9 Corps Division Battalions StrengthRightGeneral of Division Honore Charles Reille 7th Division General of Division Antoine Louis Popon de Maucune 8 3 9969th Division General of Division Pierre Francois Joseph Boyer 12 6 515CenterGeneral of Division Bertrand Clausel 4th Division General of Division Nicolas Francois Conroux 9 4 9625th Division General of Division Jean Pierre Maransin 9 5 5758th Division General of Division Eloi Charlemagne Taupin 10 4 778LeftGeneral of Division Jean Baptiste Drouet Comte d Erlon 1st Division General of Division Maximilien Sebastien Foy 8 4 6542nd Division General of Division Jean Barthelemy Darmagnac 9 4 4473rd Division General of Division Louis Jean Nicolas Abbe 8 6 0516th Division General of Division Augustin Darricau 7 4 092ReserveGeneral of Division Eugene Casimir Villatte 8th Division General of Division Eugene Casimir Villatte 18 8 018Artillery 2 000Bidassoa edit At 7 25 am the 5th Division launched its attack from near Hondarribia Fuenterrabia It came as a complete surprise to the French who had deployed only Maucune s 4 000 men to defend six km four miles of river Immediately Hay s men gained a foothold at the village of Hendaye and swung two brigades to the right to assist the crossing of Kenneth Howard s 1st Division At 8 00 am Howard s men Thomas Bradford s independent Portuguese brigade and Lord Aylmer s independent British brigade forded the river near a destroyed bridge at Behobie Three Spanish brigades from Manuel Freire s two divisions Del Barco and Barcena crossed farther to the right Rapidly the British overran the Croix des Bouquets position and the Spanish captured Mont Calvaire at 43 20 16 N 1 43 7 W 43 33778 N 1 71861 W 43 33778 1 71861 Mont Calvaire The entire ridge on the French side of the river fell into Allied hands at the cost of only 400 casualties With the high ground in his possession Wellington suspended the attack 12 That morning Soult was absorbed in watching Henry Clinton s 6th Division advancing from the Maya Pass The division s Portuguese brigade boldly seized the Urdax ironworks losing 150 men in the combat Soult suddenly realised the operation was only a demonstration He rode off to his coastal sector but he was too late to help Reille 2 La Rhune edit nbsp La Rhune where the French repelled a Spanish attack The toughest fighting of the day occurred in Clausel s sector John Colborne s brigade of Charles Alten s Light Division attacked La Bayonette at 43 18 35 N 1 42 12 W 43 30972 N 1 70333 W 43 30972 1 70333 Le Bayonette Redoute The French charged downhill and drove back the green jacketed skirmishers of the 95th Rifles Foot Suddenly the 1 52nd Oxfordshire Regiment of Foot Light Infantry appeared out of the trees and quickly turned the tables Following closely behind the retreating French the redcoats of the 52nd overran the redoubt with surprising ease 13 Meanwhile James Kempt s other Light Division brigade and Francisco de Longa s Spanish division attacked up two spurs of La Rhune to secure some positions To their right Pedro Giron s two Andalusian divisions Virues and La Torre attacked the summit of La Rhune Though the Spanish attacked repeatedly they were defeated However the next day the French abandoned the position to avoid encirclement 14 15 16 Results editThe Allies were victorious for the first time on French soil In Reille s sector the French lost 390 killed and wounded plus 60 men and eight cannons captured In Clausel s sector the French suffered 600 killed and wounded plus 598 men and nine cannons captured The British lost 82 killed 486 wounded and five missing or a total of 573 The Portuguese lost 48 killed 186 wounded and eight missing or a total of 242 4 The Spanish suffered the balance of the 1 600 total Allied casualties 14 The defeat lowered morale in Soult s army Except at La Rhune French troops did not obstinately defend their positions Villatte commented with troops like these we can expect only disgrace 17 Soult made Maucune the scapegoat dismissed him from his division and sent him to the rear 12 After the battle some of the Allied troops indulged themselves in the looting of French homes and towns Wellington came down harshly on British troops caught plundering He felt sympathetic to the Spanish who had seen their nation ravaged by French soldiers but he determined to tolerate no looting for fear of provoking a guerilla war 18 During the follow up to this victory Spanish troops seized the Sainte Barbe Redoubt at 43 18 1 N 1 34 55 W 43 30028 N 1 58194 W 43 30028 1 58194 Sainte Barbe Redoute 1 4 kilometres 0 9 mi south of the village of Sare On 12 October Conroux s division recaptured the fort from its garrison of La Torre s division and drove off a five battalion Spanish counterattack French casualties are estimated at 300 while the Spanish lost 300 killed and wounded plus 200 captured 19 The next engagement was the Battle of Nivelle on 10 November 1813 20 Explanatory notes edit a b Only the engaged units are listed in the order of battle Notes edit Glover s text states 61 000 but his order of battle footnote adds up to 62 170 Glover 2001 p 281 a b c Glover 2001 p 283 Oman 1930 p 536 a b Smith 1998 pp 459 460 Oman 1930 p 535 Bodart 1908 p 460 a b Glover 2001 p 280 a b c d Glover 2001 p 281 a b c d e Gates 2002 p 523 Glover 2001 pp 283 284 Glover s Nivelle order of battle was used Glover 2001 pp 385 387 a b Glover 2001 p 285 Glover 2001 pp 285 286 a b Glover 2001 p 286 Smith specified Giron as the Spanish commander Smith 1998 p 460 Although Glover does not mention Giron in his account of the La Rhune attacks Glover 2001 p 386 Giron s division commanders are inferred from the Nivelle order of battle Glover 2001 p 287 Glover 2001 pp 286 287 Smith 1998 p 460 Smith 1998 p 476 References editGates David 2002 The Spanish Ulcer A History of the Peninsular War London Pimlico ISBN 0 7126 9730 6 Glover Michael 2001 The Peninsular War 1807 1814 London Penguin ISBN 0 14 139041 7 Oman Sir Charles William Chadwick 1930 A History of the Peninsular War August 1813 April 14 1814 Vol VII Oxford Clarendon Press Retrieved 1 June 2021 Smith Digby 1998 The Napoleonic Wars Data Book London Greenhill ISBN 1 85367 276 9 Bodart Gaston 1908 Militar historisches Kriegs Lexikon 1618 1905 Retrieved 8 June 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Battle of the Bidassoa at Wikimedia CommonsPreceded byBattle of Wartenburg Napoleonic WarsBattle of the Bidassoa Succeeded byBattle of Leipzig Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of the Bidassoa amp oldid 1214306456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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