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British Legions

The British Legion (Spanish: Legión británica) or British Legions were foreign volunteer units that fought under Simón Bolívar against Spain for the independence of Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and José de San Martín for the independence of Peru in the Spanish American wars of independence.[4]: 217–220  Venezuelans generally called them the Albion Legion. They were composed of over seven thousand volunteers, mainly Napoleonic War veterans from Great Britain and Ireland, as well as some German veterans and some locals recruited after arriving in South America. Volunteers in the British Legion were motivated by a combination of both genuine political conviction and mercenary motives.[3]

British Legions
Rifle regiments similar to those who would have fought under Bolivar
Active1817–1824
Country United Kingdom
Allegiance Venezuela (1817-1819)
Gran Colombia (1819-1824)
TypeInfantry
Cavalry
Artillery
Size~6,500[1]
Motto(s)"Morir o vencer (Die or Conquer)"
March"Ye Gentlemen of England"
EngagementsSpanish American wars of independence
Commanders
Supreme commanderSimón Bolívar
Notable commandersJames Rooke
Arthur Sandes
Insignia
The Union Flag carried throughout the campaigns.[2]
Flag of the Irish Legion carried by General Devereux[3]

Their greatest achievements were at the Boyacá (1819), Carabobo (1821), Pichincha (1822) and Battle of Ayacucho (1824) which secured independence for Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Peru from Spanish rule respectively.

Background Edit

At the end of the Napoleonic Wars the British Empire no longer required a large standing army. In April 1817, The Times calculated that there were 500,000 ex-soldiers in a British population of 25 million. After a quarter-century of Continental wars—both the wars against Revolutionary France and the Napoleonic Wars—these men had no other employment history or trade and, therefore, often found themselves in poverty.

South America's wars of independence from Spain provided many of them with an opportunity to continue their military careers and escape from the prospect of inactivity and poverty at home. Many Britons were still concerned by the threat that Spain, as a restored world power, potentially posed to Britain. Despite Spain and Britain having been allies in the Peninsular War just a few years before, many Britons' image of the Spanish in the Americas was influenced by the now-disputed Black Legend.

The motivations of volunteers for the British Legions varied. Volunteers were also motivated by the liberal propaganda of Simon Bolívar's supporters that portrayed the war as bringing freedom and rights to people under Spanish tyranny. For these reasons, particularly the former, the recruiting of British volunteers received tacit government support, even if in principle the British Crown discontinued its support to the insurgents after the Congress of Vienna in 1814. Mercenary interests also played a large part in motivating potential recruits, who were often unemployed, and perceived South America as a place where they would be able to continue to earn a living.[5]

Formation Edit

From May 1817, the British volunteers were mainly recruited in London by Bolivar's agent, Luis Lopez Mendez with the probable approval of the Duke of Wellington.[6] The recruits were encouraged by promises of pay equivalent to the British army and by promotion to one rank above that which they had held in the army. Pay was to commence upon arrival in Venezuela and when the call was heard on the streets of London thousands began to volunteer for the expedition and soon the first five detachments were formed as follows:[6]

Early Formation Number
1st Venezuelan Hussars: Colonel Gustavus Hippisley 30 officers and 160 NCOs
2nd Venezuelan Hussars (Red Hussars): Colonel Henry Wilson 20 officers and 100 NCOs
1st Venezuelan Lancers: Colonel Robert Skeene 20 officers and 200 NCOs
1st Venezuelan Rifles: Colonel Donald Campbell 37 officers and 200 NCOs
Brigade of Artillery: Colonel Joseph Gilmour 10 officers and 80 NCOs
5 6-pounders, 1 5½ howitzer

Campaigns Edit

The soldiers used Margarita Island as their base. Conditions there were poor and some died of disease. To replace losses they recruited 100 locals into their ranks.[7]

Expedition embarked
Under command:
Number of Soldiers
Colonel Hippisley 720
Colonel James Towers English 1,200
Colonel Elson 572
General John D’Evereux 1,729
General Gregor MacGregor 600
Colonel Meceroni 300
Colonel James Rooke 200
Others 387
Total 5,508

Colombia and Venezuela Edit

They took part in the campaign of the Venezuelan Llanos in 1818 and fought at the battles of El Sombrero, El Semén, Ortiz, Rincón de los Toros and Calabozo.[8] These first recruits from Britain made a good impression on Bolivar who was anxious to secure the services of more British volunteers. In March 1819, Bolivar combined most of his foreign volunteers into a brigade of 250 men named the British Legions, with James Rooke as commander. George Elsom, who had formerly been an ensign with a militia regiment near London and who had sailed with Hippisley's expedition, returned to London to recruit. Amongst his recruits were some 110 Hanoverians, who were commanded by John Uslar who saw action at Waterloo with the King's German Legion.[9]

In June 1819 Elsom arrived at the mouth of the Orinoco with the first wave of British troops. They numbered some 2,200 men equipped and uniformed, under the command of Captain George Gibson and twenty officers.[7] This Second British Legion’ as it became known consisted of the 1st British Legion led by Colonel James Towers English, the 2nd British Legion led by Colonel John Blossett, and the Irish Legion, led by Colonel William Aylmer (1772–1820).

 
Colonel Arthur Sandes who commanded the Rifles

The Legion adopted the motto Morir o vencer (Die or Conquer), as well as an anthem, composed to the tune of Ye Gentlemen of England which was continually played by the Legion's band.[10] The uniforms were similar to those worn by the British army which had been supplied by the firm of Herring and Richardson who had also fitted out the ships.[11] In Ireland a similar recruiting process took place. Led by John D’Evereux who enlisted 1700 men which became known as the Irish Legion.[7]

The Rifle Battalion joined the same month which saw Bolivar reorganise his forces. The Rifles, reinforced by another 350 British troops who had recently arrived in South America, were then formed into two battalions. The first was to be commanded by Colonel Arthur Sandes and the second by Major John Mackintosh who would later become a military aide-de-camp to Simon Bolivar and Antonio Jose de Sucre.[7]

The British Legions after months of inactivity joined Bolivar's army on the Plains of Apure towards the end of 1818 but saw no serious action until March 19, 1819, in a skirmish in the woods of Gamarra.[12] They would soon become an important part of Bolívar's army. They had to endure the secretive and brutal crossing of the Andes from May to June during which the Patriot army suffered greatly including the British.[13]

They played a pivotal role however in the Battle of Vargas Swamp on July 25. During this action Bolivar found himself in a difficult position; the left flank of the Patriot army was outflanked and withdrew in disorder. Rooke then led the 2nd Rifles against the Spanish positions on the hills. A ferocious bayonet charge regained the positions for the Patriots. Rooke fell mortally wounded while Sandes was also wounded twice. Despite heavy casualties the British troops distinguished themselves.[7][14]

At the Battle of Boyacá on August 7, 1819, Sandes' Rifles Battalion led a bayonet charge on the royalist artillery which turned the tide of the battle.[15] Bolivar credited them with the victory saying "those soldier-liberators are the men who deserve these laurels" [16] They were awarded with the ‘Order of the Liberator’ one of the rare occasions during the war when this decoration was bestowed onto an entire unit.

At the victory of Carabobo the legion troops were led by Colonel Thomas Ilderton Ferrier. They fought in the battle as part of the 1st Division, led by General Jose Antonio Paez.[17] They defended strategically important hills while being greatly outnumbered and low on supplies; their heroic stand was the decisive moment of the day. They suffered 119 casualties, of those were two officers with Ferrier among the dead. Bolívar described the Legions and all who served in them as "the saviours of my country". As a reward for their service, they were given the Carabobo battle honour by the general staff of the Patriot forces, and all its personnel rewarded with the Liberators' Star by Bolívar himself, 20 days after the battle.[18]

Ecuador and Perú Edit

With the independence of Colombia and Venezuela secured, Bolivar and his patriot army along with the British Legions moved South to drive the Spanish out of Peru and Ecuador. They marched over the mountains again this time to a land of high volcanoes where they managed to force the Spanish to withdraw at the Battle of Bomboná on April 7, 1822. The following month the Legions assisted Sucre's army and marched higher still to Quito standing at 9,300 feet in the mountains. There on 24 May 1822, they fought on the flanks of a volcano at the Battle of Pichincha. The battle could have turned into a rout if the British and Irish troops had not thwarted a dangerous flank attack by the veteran Spanish Aragón battalion.[19] The victory at Pichincha for the Patriot army secured independence for Ecuador.[20]

They took part in the last major campaign of the Independence wars in Peru during 1824; British volunteers, including the 1st Rifles under Sandes, were present at the Battle of Junin in August and the Battle of Ayacucho in December which marked the end of Spanish rule in South America.[21]

Aftermath Edit

The British Legions fought until the end of the wars, their number much depleted. Many of the survivors settled in the new states that they helped to create. For a long time they were largely forgotten to history.[22]

In the overall strategy British pressure by use of their navy and diplomacy was sufficient to prevent Spain from attempting any serious reassertion of its control over its lost colonies. At the same time British intervention between 1815 and 1819, was one of the key factors for the independence of South American states, in particular the role of the British Legions in Bolivar's campaigns.[23]

 
A monument honouring the British Legions at the Bridge of Boyacá.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Central Office of Information Reference Pamphlet, Issue 86. COII. 1973. p. 7.
  2. ^ Brown, Matthew (2006). Adventuring through Spanish Colonies: Simón Bolívar, Foreign Mercenaries and the Birth of New Nations. Liverpool University Press. p. 116. ISBN 9781846310447.
  3. ^ a b Brown p. 210
  4. ^ Arana, M., 2013, Bolivar, New York: Simon & Schuster, ISBN 9781439110195
  5. ^ Mitre, Bartolomé: Historia de Belgrano. Imprenta de Mayo, Buenos Aires, 1859. V. II, page 321. (in Spanish)
  6. ^ a b Howgego pp. 556-57
  7. ^ a b c d e Fletcher, Ian. . Ian Fletcher. Archived from the original on 2008-11-20.
  8. ^ Rodriguez p. 300
  9. ^ Hughes p. 187
  10. ^ Rodriguez p. 131
  11. ^ Studies in History, Economics, and Public Law Issue 303 of Columbia Studies in the Social Sciences. Columbia University Press. 1928. p. 114.
  12. ^ Rodriguez p. 878
  13. ^ Hughes pp.169-71
  14. ^ Rodriguez p. 259, 354
  15. ^ Issue 303 of Columbia Studies in the Social Sciences. Columbia University Press. 1928. p. 202 & 221.
  16. ^ Grant p. 560
  17. ^ John Lynch (2007). Simón Bolívar: A Life. Yale University Press. p. 124ff. ISBN 978-0-300-12604-4.
  18. ^ Hughes p. 308
  19. ^ Mackenzie p. 66
  20. ^ Studies, Volume 42. 1953. p. 394.
  21. ^ Rodriguez p. 363
  22. ^ Britain and Latin America, Volume 9, Issue 3. H.M. Stationery Office. 1968. p. 9. ISBN 9780117000605.
  23. ^ Webster, Charles Kingsley (1938). Britain and the Independence of Latin America, 1812-1830: Select Documents from the Foreign Office Archives, Volume 1. Ibero-American institute of Great Britain. pp. 75–78.

Bibliography Edit

  • Boyd, Bill; Boyd, William Young (1998). Bolivar: Liberator of a Continent : a Dramatized Biography. SP Books. ISBN 9781561719945.
  • Brown, Matthew. Adventuring through Spanish Colonies: Simón Bolívar, Foreign Mercenaries and the Birth of New Nations (Liverpool University Press, 2006). ISBN 1-84631-044-X
  • Fanning, Tim (2018). Paisanos: The Irish and the Liberation of Latin America. University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 9780268104924.
  • Grant, R. G (2017). 1001 Battles That Changed the Course of History. Book Sales. ISBN 9780785835530.
  • Hasbrouck, Alfred. Foreign Legionnaires in the Liberation of Spanish South America (Columbia University Press: New York, 1928; and New York: Octagon Books, 1969).
  • Hughes, Ben, Conquer or Die!: British Volunteers in Bolivar's War of Extermination 1817-21 Osprey (2010) ISBN 1849081832
  • Lambert, Eric. Voluntarios británicos e irlandeses en la gesta bolivariana, 3 vols. (Caracas: Ministerio de Defensa, 1980 and 1993)
  • Mackenzie, S.P (2013). Revolutionary Armies in the Modern Era: A Revisionist Approach The New International History. Routledge. ISBN 9781135091194.
  • Rodríguez, Moises Enrique. Freedom's Mercenaries: British Volunteers in the Wars of Independence of Latin America, 2 vols. (Lanham MD: Hamilton Books, University Press of America, 2006). ISBN 978-0-7618-3438-0
  • Slatta, Richard W; De Grummond, Jane Lucas (2003). Simón Bolívar's Quest for Glory Volume 86 of Texas A & M University military history series. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 9781585442393.

External links Edit

  • Ian Fletcher. (1999).
  • Lino Duarte Level. "El motín de la Legión Británica" (The Mutiny of the British Legion) from Historia patria. Caracas, H. Pérez Marchelli, 1995. (in Spanish) ISBN 978-980-07-2607-5
  • Moises Enrique Rodríguez. "English, James Towers (1782-1819)" in "Irish Migration Studies in Latin America" (2007).

british, legions, this, article, about, volunteer, units, fighting, south, america, current, veterans, organisation, royal, british, legion, world, british, free, corps, other, uses, british, legion, disambiguation, british, legion, spanish, legión, británica,. This article is about volunteer units fighting in South America For the current veterans organisation see The Royal British Legion For World War II see British Free Corps For other uses see British Legion disambiguation The British Legion Spanish Legion britanica or British Legions were foreign volunteer units that fought under Simon Bolivar against Spain for the independence of Colombia Venezuela Ecuador and Jose de San Martin for the independence of Peru in the Spanish American wars of independence 4 217 220 Venezuelans generally called them the Albion Legion They were composed of over seven thousand volunteers mainly Napoleonic War veterans from Great Britain and Ireland as well as some German veterans and some locals recruited after arriving in South America Volunteers in the British Legion were motivated by a combination of both genuine political conviction and mercenary motives 3 British LegionsRifle regiments similar to those who would have fought under BolivarActive1817 1824Country United KingdomAllegianceVenezuela 1817 1819 Gran Colombia 1819 1824 TypeInfantry Cavalry ArtillerySize 6 500 1 Motto s Morir o vencer Die or Conquer March Ye Gentlemen of England EngagementsSpanish American wars of independenceCommandersSupreme commanderSimon BolivarNotable commandersJames Rooke Arthur SandesInsigniaThe Union Flag carried throughout the campaigns 2 Flag of the Irish Legion carried by General Devereux 3 Their greatest achievements were at the Boyaca 1819 Carabobo 1821 Pichincha 1822 and Battle of Ayacucho 1824 which secured independence for Colombia Venezuela Ecuador and Peru from Spanish rule respectively Contents 1 Background 1 1 Formation 2 Campaigns 2 1 Colombia and Venezuela 2 2 Ecuador and Peru 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksBackground EditFurther information British Intervention in Spanish American Independence At the end of the Napoleonic Wars the British Empire no longer required a large standing army In April 1817 The Times calculated that there were 500 000 ex soldiers in a British population of 25 million After a quarter century of Continental wars both the wars against Revolutionary France and the Napoleonic Wars these men had no other employment history or trade and therefore often found themselves in poverty South America s wars of independence from Spain provided many of them with an opportunity to continue their military careers and escape from the prospect of inactivity and poverty at home Many Britons were still concerned by the threat that Spain as a restored world power potentially posed to Britain Despite Spain and Britain having been allies in the Peninsular War just a few years before many Britons image of the Spanish in the Americas was influenced by the now disputed Black Legend The motivations of volunteers for the British Legions varied Volunteers were also motivated by the liberal propaganda of Simon Bolivar s supporters that portrayed the war as bringing freedom and rights to people under Spanish tyranny For these reasons particularly the former the recruiting of British volunteers received tacit government support even if in principle the British Crown discontinued its support to the insurgents after the Congress of Vienna in 1814 Mercenary interests also played a large part in motivating potential recruits who were often unemployed and perceived South America as a place where they would be able to continue to earn a living 5 Formation Edit From May 1817 the British volunteers were mainly recruited in London by Bolivar s agent Luis Lopez Mendez with the probable approval of the Duke of Wellington 6 The recruits were encouraged by promises of pay equivalent to the British army and by promotion to one rank above that which they had held in the army Pay was to commence upon arrival in Venezuela and when the call was heard on the streets of London thousands began to volunteer for the expedition and soon the first five detachments were formed as follows 6 Early Formation Number1st Venezuelan Hussars Colonel Gustavus Hippisley 30 officers and 160 NCOs2nd Venezuelan Hussars Red Hussars Colonel Henry Wilson 20 officers and 100 NCOs1st Venezuelan Lancers Colonel Robert Skeene 20 officers and 200 NCOs1st Venezuelan Rifles Colonel Donald Campbell 37 officers and 200 NCOsBrigade of Artillery Colonel Joseph Gilmour 10 officers and 80 NCOs5 6 pounders 1 5 howitzerCampaigns EditThe soldiers used Margarita Island as their base Conditions there were poor and some died of disease To replace losses they recruited 100 locals into their ranks 7 Expedition embarkedUnder command Number of SoldiersColonel Hippisley 720Colonel James Towers English 1 200Colonel Elson 572General John D Evereux 1 729General Gregor MacGregor 600Colonel Meceroni 300Colonel James Rooke 200Others 387Total 5 508Colombia and Venezuela Edit They took part in the campaign of the Venezuelan Llanos in 1818 and fought at the battles of El Sombrero El Semen Ortiz Rincon de los Toros and Calabozo 8 These first recruits from Britain made a good impression on Bolivar who was anxious to secure the services of more British volunteers In March 1819 Bolivar combined most of his foreign volunteers into a brigade of 250 men named the British Legions with James Rooke as commander George Elsom who had formerly been an ensign with a militia regiment near London and who had sailed with Hippisley s expedition returned to London to recruit Amongst his recruits were some 110 Hanoverians who were commanded by John Uslar who saw action at Waterloo with the King s German Legion 9 In June 1819 Elsom arrived at the mouth of the Orinoco with the first wave of British troops They numbered some 2 200 men equipped and uniformed under the command of Captain George Gibson and twenty officers 7 This Second British Legion as it became known consisted of the 1st British Legion led by Colonel James Towers English the 2nd British Legion led by Colonel John Blossett and the Irish Legion led by Colonel William Aylmer 1772 1820 nbsp Colonel Arthur Sandes who commanded the RiflesThe Legion adopted the motto Morir o vencer Die or Conquer as well as an anthem composed to the tune of Ye Gentlemen of England which was continually played by the Legion s band 10 The uniforms were similar to those worn by the British army which had been supplied by the firm of Herring and Richardson who had also fitted out the ships 11 In Ireland a similar recruiting process took place Led by John D Evereux who enlisted 1700 men which became known as the Irish Legion 7 The Rifle Battalion joined the same month which saw Bolivar reorganise his forces The Rifles reinforced by another 350 British troops who had recently arrived in South America were then formed into two battalions The first was to be commanded by Colonel Arthur Sandes and the second by Major John Mackintosh who would later become a military aide de camp to Simon Bolivar and Antonio Jose de Sucre 7 The British Legions after months of inactivity joined Bolivar s army on the Plains of Apure towards the end of 1818 but saw no serious action until March 19 1819 in a skirmish in the woods of Gamarra 12 They would soon become an important part of Bolivar s army They had to endure the secretive and brutal crossing of the Andes from May to June during which the Patriot army suffered greatly including the British 13 They played a pivotal role however in the Battle of Vargas Swamp on July 25 During this action Bolivar found himself in a difficult position the left flank of the Patriot army was outflanked and withdrew in disorder Rooke then led the 2nd Rifles against the Spanish positions on the hills A ferocious bayonet charge regained the positions for the Patriots Rooke fell mortally wounded while Sandes was also wounded twice Despite heavy casualties the British troops distinguished themselves 7 14 At the Battle of Boyaca on August 7 1819 Sandes Rifles Battalion led a bayonet charge on the royalist artillery which turned the tide of the battle 15 Bolivar credited them with the victory saying those soldier liberators are the men who deserve these laurels 16 They were awarded with the Order of the Liberator one of the rare occasions during the war when this decoration was bestowed onto an entire unit At the victory of Carabobo the legion troops were led by Colonel Thomas Ilderton Ferrier They fought in the battle as part of the 1st Division led by General Jose Antonio Paez 17 They defended strategically important hills while being greatly outnumbered and low on supplies their heroic stand was the decisive moment of the day They suffered 119 casualties of those were two officers with Ferrier among the dead Bolivar described the Legions and all who served in them as the saviours of my country As a reward for their service they were given the Carabobo battle honour by the general staff of the Patriot forces and all its personnel rewarded with the Liberators Star by Bolivar himself 20 days after the battle 18 Ecuador and Peru Edit With the independence of Colombia and Venezuela secured Bolivar and his patriot army along with the British Legions moved South to drive the Spanish out of Peru and Ecuador They marched over the mountains again this time to a land of high volcanoes where they managed to force the Spanish to withdraw at the Battle of Bombona on April 7 1822 The following month the Legions assisted Sucre s army and marched higher still to Quito standing at 9 300 feet in the mountains There on 24 May 1822 they fought on the flanks of a volcano at the Battle of Pichincha The battle could have turned into a rout if the British and Irish troops had not thwarted a dangerous flank attack by the veteran Spanish Aragon battalion 19 The victory at Pichincha for the Patriot army secured independence for Ecuador 20 They took part in the last major campaign of the Independence wars in Peru during 1824 British volunteers including the 1st Rifles under Sandes were present at the Battle of Junin in August and the Battle of Ayacucho in December which marked the end of Spanish rule in South America 21 Aftermath EditThe British Legions fought until the end of the wars their number much depleted Many of the survivors settled in the new states that they helped to create For a long time they were largely forgotten to history 22 In the overall strategy British pressure by use of their navy and diplomacy was sufficient to prevent Spain from attempting any serious reassertion of its control over its lost colonies At the same time British intervention between 1815 and 1819 was one of the key factors for the independence of South American states in particular the role of the British Legions in Bolivar s campaigns 23 nbsp A monument honouring the British Legions at the Bridge of Boyaca See also EditSpanish American wars of independence Latin American wars of independence William Miller Thomas CochraneReferences Edit Central Office of Information Reference Pamphlet Issue 86 COII 1973 p 7 Brown Matthew 2006 Adventuring through Spanish Colonies Simon Bolivar Foreign Mercenaries and the Birth of New Nations Liverpool University Press p 116 ISBN 9781846310447 a b Brown p 210 Arana M 2013 Bolivar New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781439110195 Mitre Bartolome Historia de Belgrano Imprenta de Mayo Buenos Aires 1859 V II page 321 in Spanish a b Howgego pp 556 57 a b c d e Fletcher Ian Bolivar British Legion Ian Fletcher Archived from the original on 2008 11 20 Rodriguez p 300 Hughes p 187 Rodriguez p 131 Studies in History Economics and Public Law Issue 303 of Columbia Studies in the Social Sciences Columbia University Press 1928 p 114 Rodriguez p 878 Hughes pp 169 71 Rodriguez p 259 354 Issue 303 of Columbia Studies in the Social Sciences Columbia University Press 1928 p 202 amp 221 Grant p 560 John Lynch 2007 Simon Bolivar A Life Yale University Press p 124ff ISBN 978 0 300 12604 4 Hughes p 308 Mackenzie p 66 Studies Volume 42 1953 p 394 Rodriguez p 363 Britain and Latin America Volume 9 Issue 3 H M Stationery Office 1968 p 9 ISBN 9780117000605 Webster Charles Kingsley 1938 Britain and the Independence of Latin America 1812 1830 Select Documents from the Foreign Office Archives Volume 1 Ibero American institute of Great Britain pp 75 78 Bibliography EditBoyd Bill Boyd William Young 1998 Bolivar Liberator of a Continent a Dramatized Biography SP Books ISBN 9781561719945 Brown Matthew Adventuring through Spanish Colonies Simon Bolivar Foreign Mercenaries and the Birth of New Nations Liverpool University Press 2006 ISBN 1 84631 044 X Fanning Tim 2018 Paisanos The Irish and the Liberation of Latin America University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 9780268104924 Grant R G 2017 1001 Battles That Changed the Course of History Book Sales ISBN 9780785835530 Hasbrouck Alfred Foreign Legionnaires in the Liberation of Spanish South America Columbia University Press New York 1928 and New York Octagon Books 1969 Hughes Ben Conquer or Die British Volunteers in Bolivar s War of Extermination 1817 21 Osprey 2010 ISBN 1849081832 Lambert Eric Voluntarios britanicos e irlandeses en la gesta bolivariana 3 vols Caracas Ministerio de Defensa 1980 and 1993 Mackenzie S P 2013 Revolutionary Armies in the Modern Era A Revisionist Approach The New International History Routledge ISBN 9781135091194 Rodriguez Moises Enrique Freedom s Mercenaries British Volunteers in the Wars of Independence of Latin America 2 vols Lanham MD Hamilton Books University Press of America 2006 ISBN 978 0 7618 3438 0 Slatta Richard W De Grummond Jane Lucas 2003 Simon Bolivar s Quest for Glory Volume 86 of Texas A amp M University military history series Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 9781585442393 External links EditIan Fletcher Bolivar s British Legion 1999 Lino Duarte Level El motin de la Legion Britanica The Mutiny of the British Legion from Historia patria Caracas H Perez Marchelli 1995 in Spanish ISBN 978 980 07 2607 5 Moises Enrique Rodriguez English James Towers 1782 1819 in Irish Migration Studies in Latin America 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British Legions amp oldid 1155331076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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