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Timeline of the Peninsular War

The following tables show the sequence of events of the Peninsular War (1807–1814), including major battles, smaller actions, uprisings, sieges and other related events that took place during that period.[note 1]

For ease of reference using modern maps, the provinces/regions given for Spain and Portugal are those that correspond to the 20th century.[note 2] Events in Portugal and France are specified.

Overview edit

The Peninsular War was a military conflict for control of the Iberian Peninsula during the Napoleonic Wars, waged between France and the allied powers of Spain, the United Kingdom and Portugal. It started when French and Spanish armies, then allied, occupied Portugal in 1807, and escalated in 1808 when France turned on Spain, its former ally. The war on the peninsula lasted until the Sixth Coalition defeated Napoleon in 1814, and is regarded as one of the first wars of national liberation, and significant for the emergence of large-scale guerrilla warfare. British and Portuguese forces eventually secured Portugal, using it as a safe position from which to launch campaigns against the French army, while both Spanish and Portuguese guerrillas weakened the occupying forces.

The Peninsular War overlaps with what the Spanish-speaking world calls the Guerra de la Independencia Española (Spanish War of Independence), which began with the Dos de Mayo Uprising on 2 May 1808 and ended on 17 April 1814. Although Spain had been in upheaval since at least the Mutiny of Aranjuez (March 1808), May 1808 marks the start of the Spanish War of Independence. The French occupation destroyed the Spanish administration, which fragmented into quarrelling provincial juntas. In 1810, a reconstituted national government, the Cortes of Cádiz—effectively a government-in-exile—fortified itself in Cádiz but could not raise effective armies because it was besieged by up to 70,000 French troops. Cádiz would go on to hold the distinction of being the only city in continental Europe to survive a siege by Napoleon: thirty-one months—from 5 February 1810 to 25 August 1812.[1] The combined efforts of regular and irregular forces throughout the peninsula prevented Napoleon's marshals from subduing the rebellious Spanish provinces, and the war continued through years of stalemate.[2]

While the initial stages of the Peninsular War were fought on Portuguese soil, most of the war was fought on Spanish soil and, as the French army was pushed further back across the Pyrenees, the final stages of the war were fought on French soil.

List of events edit

1807 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
12–18 October 1807 French troops enter Spain en route to Portugal Irun, Basque Country Manoeuvres (French) Junot crosses into Spain with the 25,000[3]–28,000[1] troops of the Corps of Observation of the Gironde. The Treaty of Fontainebleau, to be signed later that month, stipulates that three columns of Spanish troops numbering 25,500 men will support the Invasion of Portugal.[3]
27 October 1807 Treaty of Fontaine­bleau signed by Charles IV of Spain and Napoleon I of France Fontaine­bleau Treaty The accord proposed the division of the Kingdom of Portugal and all Portuguese dominions between the signatories.[3]
12 November 1807 Junot's Army of the Gironde reaches Salamanca[3] Salamanca, Castile and León Manoeuvres (French)
19–30 November 1807 Invasion of Portugal Portugal Junot enters Portugal 19 November.
22 November 1807 Bayonne to Spain Manoeuvres (French) The 25,000 men of the French reserves, the Second Corps of Observation of the Gironde, under General Dupont, crossed into Spain.[3] The following month, when Marshal Moncey's troops also crossed the Pyrenees (see 8 January 1808, below), Dupont marched on towards Madrid, cantoning in Burgos, Valladolid, and other major cities of Old Castile.
29 November 1807 Transfer of the Portuguese Court to Brazil The Royal Court of Portugal, headed by the Prince Regent, Prince John and his mother, Maria I of Portugal, set sail for Brazil, escorted by the British Royal Navy, led by Sir Sidney Smith and Sir Graham Moore (younger brother of Sir John Moore).
30 November 1807 Junot occupies Lisbon[4] Lisbon Manoeuvres (French) Junot entered the city with only 1,500 troops; the rest of his troops arriving over the following ten days.[3]
1 December 1807 First anti-French riots[4] Lisbon
13 December 1807 Anti-French riots Lisbon Junot ordered the Portuguese flag be replaced by the tricolour on the public buildings in the city, which led to a fierce riot, dispersed with a cavalry charge.[3]

1808 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
8 January 1808 Bayonne – Spain Manoeuvres (French) Following General Dupont's entry into Spain the previous month (see 22 November 1807, above), a third army corps, Marshal Moncey's 30,000-strong Corps of Observation of the Ocean Coast, crossed the border via Bayonne, occupying all the major towns of Biscay and Navarre.[3]
February 1808 Junot dissolves the Regency Council and disbands the Portuguese army.[4] Manoeuvres (French) The Portuguese Legion, comprising 6,000 Portuguese soldiers, sent to France.[4]
10 February 1808 French troops enter Catalonia Barcelona, Catalonia Manoeuvre (French) General Duhesme, at the head of 14,000 troops, half French, half Italians, enters Catalonia and moves towards Barcelona.[3]
16 February 1808 Citadel of Pamplona (Capture of) Pamplona, Navarre Manoeuvres (French) The French troops quartered in the town surprised the Spanish garrison at the Citadel. Oman (1902) refers to this coup de main, the first of a series of similar actions, as the "infamous seizure by surprise of the Spanish frontier fortresses, which would pass for the most odious act of the Emperor's whole career, if the kidnapping at Bayonne were not to follow".[3]
29 February 1808 Citadel of Barcelona (Capture of) Barcelona, Catalonia Manoeuvres (French) General Lecchi, commanding the French troops passing through Barcelona, marched his division through the city to the gate of the citadel and suddenly entered the fortress, before the Spanish garrison realised what was happening and, without a fight, evicted the Spanish troops.[3]
5 March 1808 Fortress of San Sebastian (Capture of) San Sebastian Manoeuvres (French) One of Spain's frontier fortresses, this one at the Atlantic end of the Pyrenees, was surrendered when orders from Madrid forbade its governor to resist an assault.[3]
10 March 1808 Joachim Murat crosses into Spain from Bayonne Manoeuvres (French) Napoleon's brother-in-law, the new Grand-Duke of Berg, as 'Lieutenant of the Emperor', was to take command of all the French forces in Spain.[3]
17–19 March 1808 Mutiny of Aranjuez Aranjuez, Madrid Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, announced that the King was displeased with Godoy, the Prince of the Peace, and had determined to dismiss him. The following morning, a royal decree was issued, declaring Godoy relieved of all his posts and duties and banished from the court.[3]
18 March 1808 Sant Ferran Castle (Capture of) Figueras, Catalonia Manoeuvres (French) The citadel at Figueras, on the Mediterranean coast, yet another of Spain's frontier fortresses, was seized by a coup de main similar to the one carried out a month earlier at Pamplona.[3] (See 16 February 1808, above.)
18 March 1808 Joachim Murat Burgos Manoeuvres (French) With the arrival at Burgos of the newly appointed Lieutenant of the Emperor and Napoleon's brother-in-law, Murat, commissioned to take command of all the French forces in Spain, together with the news that more than 30,000 troops, under Marshal Bessières, had already started to cross the Pyrenees, bringing up the total of French troops on the Peninsula to more than 100,000 men, Godoy ordered the departure of the King for Seville.[3]
19 March 1808 Charles IV of Spain abdicates Aranjuez, Madrid Abdication Charles IV of Spain abdicated in favour of his son, Ferdinand VII[5]
23 March 1808 Murat enters Madrid[5] Madrid Manoeuvres (French) In his letter to his brother Louis, dated 27 March 1808, offering him the throne of Spain, Napoleon stated that he had 100,000 troops in Spain, and that 40,000 of them had entered Madrid with Murat on 23 March 1808.[6]
24 March 1808 Ferdinand VII enters Madrid[5] Madrid Manoeuvres (French)
2 May 1808 Dos de Mayo Uprising Madrid Uprising: French victory Following the fighting at the Royal Palace, rebellion spread to other parts of the city, with street fighting in different areas including heavy fighting around the Puerta del Sol, the Puerta de Toledo and at the barracks of Monteleón. Martial law was imposed on the city. Hundreds of people died in the fighting, including around 150 French soldiers. The uprising was depicted by the Spanish artist Goya in The Second of May 1808 (The Charge of the Mamelukes) and The Third of May 1808.
6 May 1808 Ferdinand VII abdicates Abdication
9 May 1808 Uprising in Oviedo Oviedo, Asturias Uprising On 13 May, the president of the Junta of Asturias, the Marquis of Santa Cruz, declared that "when and wherever one single Spaniard took arms against Napoleon, he would shoulder a musket and put himself at that man's side".[3]
23 May 1808 Uprising in Valencia[7] Valencia Uprising Valencia acknowledges Fernando as King of Spain. The governor,[8] Miguel de Saavedra, Baron Albalat[9] is killed by the crowds. Bertrán de Lis and his brothers arm the population.
24 May 1808 Uprising in Zaragoza[8] Zaragoza Uprising
24 May 1808 – 5 June 1808 Dupont marches from Toledo ToledoAndújar, Andalusia Manoeuvres (French) After having originally received orders from Murat to head for Cádiz, which were countermanded by Napoleon, thinking that his troops might be needed in Madrid, Dupont finally left Toledo with 13,000 second-line troops. After crossed Sierra Morena and encountering no hostility along the way, he occupied Andujar on 5 June.[3]
26 May 1808 Uprising in Seville<[3] Seville Uprising
30 May 1808 Uprisings in Corunna and Ferrol[3] Galicia Uprising
5 June 1808 Despeña­perros Jaén, Andalusia Spanish victory (guerrillas) Two squadrons of French dragoons were attacked by insurgents at the northern entrance to the pass of Despenaperros, a steep gorge (defile) in the Sierra Morena that separates Castile-La Mancha (including Madrid) from Andalusia. The French were forced to retreat to the nearby town of Almuradiel.
5 June 1808 Uprising of Santa Cruz de Mudela Ciudad Real, Castile-La Mancha Uprising: Spanish victory The 700 French troops stationed in the village of Santa Cruz de Mudela are attacked by the population. 109 French soldiers are killed and 113 taken prisoner, while the rest flee back in the direction of Madrid, to Valdepeñas. (See 6 June 1808, below.)
5–6 June 1808 Valencia (Massacre of) Valencia Massacre Canon (clergy) Baltasar Calvo instigated the massacre of 300–400 French citizens, half of whom were inside the city's citadel, where the local authorities were protecting them against popular reprisals following the killings in Madrid.[9] After having declared himself the only representative of King Ferdinand and was about to issue orders for dismissing the captain-general, Conde de Cervellon, and dissolving the Junta, Calvo was arrested, tried as a traitor and executed. Some two hundred of his followers were also executed and their bodies exposed in public.[8]
6 June 1808 Uprising of Valdepeñas Ciudad Real, Castile-La Mancha Uprising: Spanish victory Following the previous day's uprising in Santa Cruz de Mudela, Liger-Bélair and Roize, at the head of some 800 troops, together with some 300 soldiers that had escaped from the Santa Cruz uprising the previous day, prepare to march through the town of Valdepeñas. The population attack the leading column and Liger-Bélair sends in the dragoons, who are also forced to retreat. The resulting truce stipulates that, in return for a day's worth of food supplies, the French troops will not pass through the village. These actions at Santa Cruz (see 5 June 1808, above) and Valdepeñas, together with more isolated actions in the Sierra Morena, effectively cut French military communications between Madrid and Andalusia for around a month.
6 June 1808 Porto (Uprising of) Porto (Portugal) Uprising: Portuguese victory On hearing of the rebellion in Spain, Spanish general Belesta, having participated in the Invasion of Portugal, and stationed at Porto with 6,000 Spanish troops, captures the French general Quesnel, and marches to Coruña to join the fight against the French troops, sparking off a series of uprisings throughout the north of Portugal.
6 June 1808 Coronation of Joseph I Madrid Napoleon's elder brother, Joseph Bonaparte, proclaimed King of Spain.[10] His reign lasted until 11 December 1813, when he abdicated and returned to France after the French defeat at the Battle of Vitoria in 1813.
6 June 1808 First battle of Bruch Barcelona, Catalonia Spanish victory See also Second battle of Bruch (14 June 1808). Often grouped together as one battle, there were in fact two separate battles, separated by more than a week, with different armies and commanders involved: of the 12 French regiments that participated, only one of them fought at both battles.
7 June 1808 Battle of Alcolea Bridge Córdoba, Andalusia French victory At Alcolea, 10 km from Córdoba, Dupont's troops engaged in their first battle in Andalusia against 3,000 regular troops under Pedro Agustín de Echávarri who tried to protect the bridge over the Guadalquivir. The same day, Dupont captured Córdoba.
7 June 1808 Córdoba Córdoba, Andalusia French victory/sack On their way to Seville, and ultimately to Cádiz, Dupont's 18,000 troops capture Córdoba, ransacking the city over four days. However, damaging guerrilla actions force Dupont to withdraw towards Madrid to meet up with Gobert's division, that had set out from Madrid on 2 July to reinforce Dupont. Only one brigade of this division ultimately reached Dupont, the rest being needed to hold the road north (to Madrid) against the guerrillas.
9–10 June 1808 Sack of L'Arboç L'Arboç, Tarragona, Catalonia Manoeuvres (French)/sack On retreating back from Tarragona towards Barcelona,[3] General Chabran's vanguard was attacked and chased away by some 1,200 sometents from El Vendrell and 200 Swiss regulars. When Chabran's emissary returned to negotiate, the villagers met them with gunfire and the French troops retaliated, sacking the village.[11]
9–14 June 1808 Capture of the Rosily Squadron Cádiz, Andalusia Spanish victory
11 June 1808 Arrest of Spanish troops in Portugal Lisbon, Portugal Manoeuvres (French) Following General Belesta's escape from Porto (See 6 June 1808, above), Junot arrested General Carrafa and rounded up most of his 7,000 troops,[note 3] the only Spanish troops now left in Portugal, were disarmed and kept prisoners on pontoons moored under the guns of the Lisbon forts, until the English released them after the battle of Vimiero, ten weeks later,[3] under the terms of the Convention of Cintra.
12 June 1808 Battle of Cabezón Valladolid, Castile and León French victory
14 June 1808 Second battle of Bruch Barcelona, Catalonia Spanish victory See also First battle of Bruch (6 June 1808)
15 June 1808 – 14 August 1808 First Siege of Zaragoza Zaragoza, Aragón Spanish victory
16 June 1808 Uprising of Olhão Olhão (Portugal) Uprising: Portuguese victory Portuguese civilians revolted and expelled the French forces from Olhão.[3] By 23 June, all French forces had been expelled from the region of Algarve.
17 June 1808 Skirmish of Mongat Montgat, Barcelona, Catalonia French victory On his way to Girona, with four French and three Italian squadrons of cuirassiers and chasseurs, almost the whole of his cavalry, that is, some 5,900 men, nearly half his corps, and a battery of eight guns, Duhesme was met at the Castle of Montgat by some 8,000 or 9,000 somatenes who fled after suffering severe losses.[3]
17 June 1808 Sack of Mataró Mataró, Barcelona, Catalonia Manoeuvres (French)/sack Met with barricades, and two or three cannon, Milosewitz's Italian brigade easily stormed the town, which Duhesme's troops entered that same afternoon, and were given permission by their general to sack the town.[3] After leaving Mataró the following day, the French troops then destroyed every other village on the road to Girona.[3]
18 June 1808 Uprising of Faro Faro (Portugal) Uprising: Portuguese victory On 18 June the civilians in the city of Faro captured 70 French soldiers and General Maurin, the Governor of Algarve.[3] Colonel Maransin, Maurin's second-in-command, having lost his communications with Lisbon, evacuated his 1,200 men, a battalion each of the 26th of the line and the Légion du Midi, from the province. He withdrew first to Mertola and then to Beja, in the Alemtejo, before heading to Lisbon.[3] (See 26 June 1808, below)
19 June 1808 Vedel marches from Toledo ToledoLa Carolina Manoeuvres (French) Vedel, with the 6,000 men, 700 horse, and 12 guns of the 2nd Division, set out south from Toledo to force a passage over the Sierra Morena, hold the mountains from the guerrillas, and link up with Dupont, pacifying Castile-La Mancha along the way. Vedel was joined during the march by small detachments under Roize and Liger-Bélair.
20–21 June 1808 Battle of Girona Girona, Catalonia Spanish victory
21 June 1808 Manoeuvres (French)/Portuguese victory Loison, based at Almeida, left for Porto with two battalions, some 2,000 men, and a few guns to garrison the city. Crossing the Douro at the ferry of Pezo-de-Ragoa, his troops were attacked on all sides by the local population, which fired on his troops from above, and rolled rocks down the slopes at them. Loison retreated back to Almeida.
26–28 June 1808 Battle of Valencia Valencia, Valencia Spanish victory
26 June 1808 Sack of Villa Viciosa Villa Viciosa, District of Évora, Portugal Manoeuvres (French)/sack Avril, based at Estremoz, near Elvas, relieved the French garrison at Villa Viciosa, where the townsfolk had besieged the company of the 86th Regiment. The French force sacked the town.[3]
26 June 1808 Sack of Beja Beja, Portugal Manoeuvres (French)/sack Isolated in the centre of the insurrection in Portugal, Maransin had left Mertola to withdraw towards Lisbon with his 1,200 men. At Beja, a mass of citizens fired upon the French troops from the town's walls. The French force sacked the town.[3] (See 18 June 1808, above.)
26 June 1808 Puerta del Rey (mountain pass) Jaén, Andalusia French victory Vedel's column faced Lieutenant-Colonel Valdecaños's detachment of Spanish regulars and guerrillas with six guns blocking the mountain pass. The following day, Vedel met up with Dupont at La Carolina, reestablishing military communications with Madrid after a month of disruption. With the reinforcements from Vedel and Gobert, Dupont now had 20,000 men, albeit short of supplies.[12]
27 June 1808 Gijón: Arrival of British officers Asturias Delegation In response to the Junta General of Asturias' request to London, the Portland administration sent three British Army officers, led by a lieutenant colonel, to Gijón to assess the state of affairs. Following the Spanish victory at Bailén the following month, the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, Viscount Castlereagh sent a second delegation, led by General Sir James Leith, who arrived in Gijón on 30 August 1808 charged with seeing how the north of Spain could be reinforced to prevent Napoleon sending in more troops through Irun, and isolating him in Madrid or Burgos. Leith would join Baird's forces in November 1808.[13]
30 June 1808 Balearic Islands to mainland Spain Manoeuvres (Spanish) The corps of 10,000 men stationed in the Balearic Islands was the nearest force able to succour Catalonia. Faced with the open mutiny of the Aragonese and Catalan battalions of his army, the Captain-General at Palma, General Vives, in charge of the garrisons of Majorca and Minorca finally agreed to send troops from Port Mahon to the mainland.[note 4] The Aragonese regiment landed near Tortosa, and marched for Saragossa, while the bulk of the expeditionary force, nearly 5,000 strong, was put ashore in Catalonia between 19 and 23 July.
2–3 July 1808 Sack of Jaen Jaen, Jaén, Andalusia Manoeuvres (French) Dupont ordered Vedel, based at Baylen, to send a brigade, which sacked the city.[3]
4 July 1808 Sack of Guarda Guarda, District of Guarda, Portugal Manoeuvres (French) Loison left a garrison of 1,200 men at Almeida, having formed a provisional battalion of soldiers not deemed fit for forced marching, and spent a week moving through the mountains of Beira, skirmishing with insurgents along the way and sacking the town of Guarda. By the time he reached Abrantes he had lost 200 men, mostly stragglers killed by peasantry. His cruelty led to his nickname, "Maneta" (‘One-Hand’), being accursed for many years in Portugal.
13 July 1808 – 1 August 1808 Expeditionary force (British) Cork, Ireland – Mondego Bay, Coimbra District, Portugal Manoeuvres (British) Wellington's expeditionary force, comprising thirteen battalions of infantry plus cavalry and artillery,[14] 9,000 men in all,[2] sailed from Cork, landing in Portugal on 1 August.[14]
14 July 1808 Battle of Medina de Rioseco Valladolid, Castile and León French victory Also known as the Battle of Moclín, from the name of a nearby hill held by Spanish infantry.
16–19 July 1808 Battle of Bailén Jaén, Andalusia Spanish victory (decisive) Having lost some 2,000 men on the battlefield, together with some 800 Swiss troops that had gone over to Reding's Swiss regiment, Dupont called for a truce, formally surrendered his remaining 17,600 men on 23 July. Under the terms of surrender, Dupont, Vedel and their troops were to be repatriated to France. However, with the exception of the most senior officers, most of the French rank and file were confined on hulks in Cádiz, before being transported to the uninhabited island of Cabrera, where half of the 7,000 men starved to death.[5]
24 July 1808 – 16 August 1808 Second Siege of Girona Girona, Catalonia Spanish victory
29 July 1808 Battle of Évora Alentejo (Portugal) French victory The following day, the French General Loison massacred the men, women, and children, of Évora, marking the future of the relationships between the different nations.
1 August 1808 – 17 December 1808 Blockade of Barcelona Barcelona, Catalonia French victory
7 August 1808 – 11 October 1808 Evacuation of the La Romana Division Denmark–Spain by sea Manoeuvres (Spanish) Some 9,000 men stationed in Denmark, belonging to the 15,000-strong Division of the North, comprising Spanish troops commanded by Pedro Caro, 3rd Marquis of la Romana, defected from the armies of the First French Empire under the leadership of Marshal Bernadotte. Transported aboard British navy ships, on reaching Santander, they reinforced Blake's Army of Galicia. Entering into battle at Valmaseda, on 5 November 1808, they defeated Victor's army, only to be defeated by the same forces a few days later at the Battle of Espinosa.
17 August 1808 Battle of Roliça Leiria (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory,
tactical French retreat
The first battle fought by the British army during the Peninsular War.[15]
21 August 1808 Battle of Vimeiro Lisbon (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory Wellesley (not yet Wellington) was superseded in command by Generals Sir Harry Burrard and Sir Hew Dalrymple.[15] This defeat for the French led to the signing of the Convention of Sintra on 30 August 1808, putting an end to Napoleon's invasion of Portugal.
27 August 1808 Alfaro (Bridge of) & Tudela Alfaro, La Rioja, Tudela, Navarre & Miranda de Ebro Manoeuvres (Spanish)/skirmishes On 27 August, following Palafox's instructions to push as far up the Ebro as he could, Eugenio Eulalio Palafox Portocarrero, Count of Montijo, at the head of a column of the Army of Aragón reached the bridge at Alfaro, almost opposite the left flank of the French forces at Milagro. When attacked there by Lefebvre-Desnouettes's cavalry, the Spanish column retreated to Tudela, where Marshal Moncey met them with an infantry division. Again, Montijo retreated. Thinking that these skirmishes must be mere diversions, and under the impression that the attack would be coming from that side, King Joseph moved his reserves up the river to Miranda. Montijo, however, had given way simply because his troops were raw levies, and because his nearest support was Saragossa.[3] It would not be until some three weeks later that Spanish forces made another offensive move.
30 August 1808 Convention of Sintra Lisbon (Portugal) French troops abandon Portugal Following his victory at the Battle of Vimeiro (21 August) Sir Arthur Wellesley, against his wishes, was ordered by his immediate superiors, Sir Harry Burrard and Sir Hew Dalrymple, to sign the preliminary Armistice. The subsequent convention, the Convention of Cintra, agreed between Dalrymple and Kellerman, and despite the protests of the Portuguese commander, Freire,[16] allowed the evacuation of Junot's 20,900 troops from Portugal to France with all their equipment and 'personal property' (mostly loot) aboard Royal Navy ships. The public outcry in Britain led to an inquiry, held 14 November to 27 December 1808, which cleared all three British officers. Shortly after, George Woodward would caricature Wellesley in The Convention of Cintra, a Portuguese Gambol for the amusement of Iohn Bull, London, 1809[16] Lieutenant-General Sir John Moore took over command of the army in Portugal.[15]
10–20 September 1808 Bilbao (Relief of) Bilbao, Basque Country Spanish victory Contrary to the plan of operations decided on at Madrid on 5 September, by which he was to meet up with the armies of Castaños and of Eguia, neither of which were ready, on 10 September Blake set in motion his own plan to threaten Burgos with a small portion of his army of some 32,000 Galicians and Asturians, while with the main body he would march on Bilbao.[3] Having sent his 'vanguard' and 'reserve' brigades towards Burgos, Blake moved on Bilbao with four complete divisions, with the Marquis of Portazgo's division routing General Monthion's garrison there on 20 September.[17][18]
26 September 1808 Bilbao (Retreat from) Bilbao, Basque Country Manoeuvres (Spanish) Having routed General Monthion's garrison the previous week, Marquis of Portazgo's division was forced to abandon the city as Ney approached. Although Portazgo occupied it again 12 October, he was forced to abandon the place once again.[18][17]
12 October 1808 Combat of San Cugat Sant Cugat del Vallès, Barcelona, Catalonia Spanish victory[3]
16 October 1808 Almeida, Portugal Manoeuvres (British) Having left 9,000 troops at Almeida, as well as sending 4,000 troops, under Lt Gen Sir John Hope towards Madrid via Elvas, LtGen Sir John Moore, the commander of British forces in Portugal, entered Spain with 17,000 troops to meet up with Sir David Baird's 12,300 troops then marching towards Leon from Coruña.[19]
31 October 1808 Battle of Zornoza Biscay, Basque Country Indecisive Although a tactical victory for the French, it was considered a strategic blunder
5 November 1808 Battle of Valmaseda Biscay, Basque Country Spanish victory
7 November 1808 – 5 December 1808 Siege of Roses Girona, Catalonia French victory
10 November 1808 Battle of Gamonal Burgos, Castile and León[note 5] French victory The Conde de Belvedere, at the head of the 1st Division (4,000 foot, 400 horse and twelve guns) of the army of Estremadura, plus the greater part of the 2nd Division (about 3,000 infantry and two regiments of hussars) of the same army, had arrived to reinforce the 1,600 men (plus four guns) of the Burgos garrison. The Spanish forces therefore totalled some 8,600 bayonets, 1,100 sabres, and sixteen guns which would face Napoleon's French forces,[note 6] under Soult,[note 7] of some 70,000 men (although of these, only around 18,000 bayonets and 6,500 sabres would be deployed for the battle).[3]
10–11 November 1808 Battle of Espinosa Burgos, Castile and León French victory
23 November 1808 Battle of Tudela Tudela, Navarre French-Polish victory
30 November 1808 Battle of Somosierra Mountain pass 60 miles north of Madrid separating the provinces of Madrid and Segovia French victory Famous for the Polish light cavalry's uphill charge, in columns of four, against Spanish artillery positions. The heavily outnumbered Spanish detachment of conscripts and artillery were unable to stop the Grande Armée's advance on Madrid, and Napoleon entered the capital of Spain on 4 December, a month after having entered the country.[10]
4 December 1808 Napoleon entered Madrid with 80,000 troops.[10] Madrid French victory Napoleon turned his troops against Moore's British forces, who were forced to retreat back towards Galicia three weeks later and, after a last stand at the Battle of Corunna in January 1809, withdrew from Spain.
9–11 December 1808 General St. Cyr sets off to relieve Duhesme at Barcelona RosesBarcelona Manoeuvres (French) Having captured Rosas (See 7 November 1808, above), General St. Cyr was now able to return to his initial task of relieving Duhesme at Barcelona. Leaving Reille's division of 5,000–5,500 soldiers to hold Figueras and Rosas, watch Girona, and protect the high-road to Perpignan, St. Cyr headed south with the divisions of Souham, Pino, and Chabot, a force of some 15,000 infantry and 1,500 horse. Realising that Girona would be able to hold out longer than the timeline available (Duhesme had reported that their provisions would only last until the end of that month), and after failing to draw its commanders, Lazán and Álvarez to meet him in the open, and as the place commanded the high-road, St. Cyr chose the inland by-paths, meaning that he was forced to send his guns and heavy baggage back to Figueras.[20]
15 December 1808 Skirmish at fortress of Hostalrich Hostalric, Girona, Catalonia French victory The Spanish garrison came out and skirmished with the rearguard of St. Cyr's column (See 9 December 1808, above), but without doing much harm.[20]
15 December 1808 Combat at San Celoni Sant Celoni, Catalonia French victory St. Cyr's column (See 9 December 1808, above), proceeding in single file, with the dragoons dismounted and leading their horses, descended into the Barcelona chaussée near San Celoni, where it was attacked by four battalions of miqueletes, sent by Vives.[20]
16 December 1808 Battle of Cardadeu Barcelona, Catalonia French victory
20 December 1808 – 20 February 1809 Second Siege of Zaragoza Zaragoza, Aragón French victory
21 December 1808 Battle of Molins de Rey Barcelona, Catalonia French victory
21 December 1808 Battle of Sahagún León, Castile and León British victory
24 December 1808 Combat of Tarancón Tarancón, Cuenca, Castilla–La Mancha Spanish victory/Manoeuvres The Duke of the Infantado sent General Venegas, with the vanguard of the Army of the Centre, together with greater part of his cavalry, to surprise the French brigade of dragoons at Tarancón. The two French regiments escaped the town with the loss of fifty or sixty men and the Spanish cavalry arrived too late to give chase. The vanguard of the Spanish forces planning to evict King Joseph from Madrid remained at Tarancón until 11 January, when they withdrew to Uclés.[20] (See 13 January 1809, below.)
25 December 1808 Retreat to Corunna British retreat John Moore started a 250-mile (400 km) retreat (reaching La Coruña on 14 January).
29 December 1808 Massacre of Chinchón Chinchón, New Castile (now Community of Madrid) Massacre/sack In retaliation for the murder of four French soldiers in the town two day previously, the French troops based at Aranjuez executed 86 people, both in the town itself and on the road to Aranjuez, and set fire to numerous buildings. Goya, whose brother was a priest in Chinchón during that period,[21] makes a reference to this, and other tragedies of war in his etching "This is worse" ("Esto es peor"), part of the series The Disasters of War.[21]
29 December 1808 Battle of Benavente Zamora, Castile and León British victory
30 December 1808 Battle of Mansilla León, Castile and León French victory

1809 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
1 January 1809 Battle of Castellón Girona, Catalonia Spanish victory This Castellón refers to Castelló d'Empúries, in Catalonia, not the town or province in Valencia.
3 January 1809 Battle of Cacabelos León, Castile and León British victory
13 January 1809 Battle of Uclés Cuenca, Castile-La Mancha French victory
14 January 1809 Treaty between Great Britain and Spain London Treaty "Treaty of peace, friendship, and alliance" by which Britain recognises Fernando as King of Spain.[22]
16 January 1809 Battle of Corunna A Coruña, Galicia Different analyses:

British tactical victory[23][2]
French strategic victory[note 8][24]

The British troops were able complete their embarkation, but left the port cities of Corunna and Ferrol, as well as the whole of northern Spain, to be captured and occupied by the French. During the battle, Sir John Moore, the British commander, was mortally wounded.[15] The battle is also referred to as the Battle of Elviña.
18 January 1809 Corunna (Surrender of) A Coruña, Galicia French victory Alcedo, whose garrison of two Spanish regiments had protected Sir John Moore's troops during the embarkation, surrendered to Marshal Soult, who was able to refit with the ample military stores available. A week later Soult's forces also captured Ferrol, a major Spanish naval base with an even greater arsenal than that of Corunna, and taking eight ships of the line.
18 January 1809 Combat of Tortola Tórtola, Guadalajara, Castile-La Mancha French victory Following the defeat at Uclés (See 13 January 1809, above), battle at which he was not present, Infantado, withdrawing towards Chinchilla, in the kingdom of Murcia, via his base at Cuenca, went ahead of his artillery. Fifteen guns, escorted by a single cavalry regiment, were captured by Digeon's dragoons at Tortola, a few miles to the south of Cuenca.[20]
31 January 1809 French troops garrison Vigo[25] Vigo, Galicia Manoeuvres (French) On his way to Portugal, Marshal Soult left a garrison of 700 men at Vigo to prevent the British using its harbour to supply the Galician insurgents. As soon as Soult had moved on to Orense, the Galicians, headed by Pablo Morillo, a lieutenant of the regular army, and Manuel Garcia del Barrio, a colonel dispatched by the Central Junta from Seville, blockaded the city.[20] (See 27 March 1809, below.)
25 February 1809 Battle of Valls Tarragona, Catalonia French victory
6 – 7 March 1809 Battle of Monterey Monterrey, Orense, Galicia French victory
7 March 1809 British General William Beresford appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Portuguese Army.
10 March 1809 Aguilar de Campoo (Capture of) Aguilar de Campóo, Palencia, Castile and León Spanish victory Juan Díaz Porlier's irregular troops captured the French battalion garrisoned at Aguilar, taking prisoner nine officers, 400 soldiers and seizing two 4-pounder guns, which were taken to Oviedo and handed over to the Junta. For this action, Porlier was promoted to brigadier and his second-in-command, Amor, to captain.[26]
10–12 March 1809 First Siege of Chaves Norte (Portugal) French victory Francisco da Silveira would later recapture the town at the Second Siege of Chaves (21–25 March 1809).
17 March 1809 Battle of Villafranca León, Castile and León Spanish victory
17 March 1809 Combat of Mesas de Ibor Mesas de Ibor, Cáceres, Extremadura French victory Despite his strong position, with six guns and 5,000 troops, on the heights of the other side of the ravine at the river Ibor, Duke del Parque was forced to retreat, pushing his guns over the precipice, by Leval's eight battalions.[20]
20 March 1809 Battle of Braga Braga (Portugal) French victory Also known as the Battle of Póvoa de Lanhoso or Battle of Carvalho d'Este.
20 March 1809 Combat of Berrocal Cáceres, Extremadura Spanish victory Henestrosa, as the rearguard of Cuesta's Army of Estremadura and faced with Lasalle pressing him, made a sudden halt and drove in the leading squadron of the French by a charge of his Royal Carbineers. The skirmish at Miajadas the following day would be an even greater Spanish victory.[20] (See 21 March 1809, below.)
21 March 1809 Battle of Miajadas Miajadas, Cáceres, Extremadura Spanish victory
21–25 March 1809 Second Siege of Chaves Norte (Portugal) Portuguese victory
24 March 1809 Battle of Los Yébenes Toledo, Castile-La Mancha Spanish victory
27 March 1809 Battle of Ciudad Real Ciudad Real, Castile-La Mancha French-Polish victory
27 March 1809 Capitulation of Vigo[20] Vigo, Galicia Anglo-Spanish victory Articles of Capitulation signed between Chalot, the Governor and Commandant of the French troops garrisoned in the town and forts of Vigo, on the one part; and Crawford, captain of the British frigate, Venus, deputed by George McKinley, captain of HMS Lively and Commanding Officer before Vigo, and Morillo, Colonel Commandant of the Spanish troops before the town, on the other.[20] (See 31 January 1809, above.)
28 March 1809 Battle of Medellín Medellín, Extremadura French victory
28 March 1809 First Battle of Porto Porto (Portugal) French victory
18 April 1809 – 2 May 1809 Battle of the Bridge of Amarante Amarante, Porto, Portugal French victory Oman (1902, p. 250.) refers to it as the defence of Amarante.[3] Following Francisco da Silveira's victory at Chaves (see 21 March 1809, above), Soult, in Porto, sent General Delaborde, Lorge, and Heudelet to assist Loison in opening up the route back to Spain. At Amarante, the Portuguese troops were able hold Loison, with 9,000 French troops, nearly half the army of Portugal, concentrated on the west bank of the Tâmega Riverfor almost two weeks.[3]
22 April 1809 Creation of Anglo-Portuguese Army Having arrived at Lisbon on the 29th,[14] Wellesley, Commander-in-Chief of the British Army, was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Portuguese Army and integrated the two armies into mixed British-Portuguese divisions, normally on a basis of two British and one Portuguese brigades.[citation needed]
6 May 1809 – 12 December 1809 Third Siege of Girona Girona, Catalonia French victory Depicted in The Great Day of Girona, by Ramon Martí Alsina.
10 May 1809 – 11 May 1809 Battle of Grijó Porto (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory
12 May 1809 Second Battle of Porto Porto (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory (decisive) Also known as the Battle of the Douro. Wellesley's British troops, reinforced by Portuguese units under Beresford's command, beat Soult at Oporto, forcing the French out of the country.[15]
14 May 1809 Battle of Alcantara Cáceres, Extremadura French victory
22 May 1809 Combat at Campo de Estrella Santiago de Compostela, Galicia Spanish victory General La Carrera, having rested his 2000-strong detachment of regulars at Puebla de Sanabria, then marched them, plus six guns, up to form the core of the Division of the Minho, the newly raised insurrectionary army that Morillo and Garcia del Barrio had been training. The combined force of 10,000 men, of whom 7,000 had firearms, then approached Santiago, where Maucune's four battalions and a regiment of chasseurs met them outside the city and were repulsed, with Carrera forcing the French troops back into the town and chasing them for a league beyond it. Maucune, himself wounded, and having lost 600 men—a fifth of his whole force—and two guns, retreated in disorder to La Coruña.[20]
23 May 1809 Battle of Alcañiz Teruel, Aragón Spanish victory
7 June 1809 – 9 June 1809 Battle of Puente Sanpayo Pontevedra, Galicia Spanish victory
15 June 1809 Battle of María Zaragoza, Aragón French victory
18 June 1809 Battle of Belchite Zaragoza, Aragón French victory
27–28 July 1809 Battle of Talavera Toledo, Castile-La Mancha Anglo-Spanish victory
Strategic French victory
Wellesley, who, together with Spanish troops under General Cuesta, had defeated the French army at this battle then had to return to Portugal when Marshal Soult's army threatened his lines of communication.[15]
8 August 1809 Battle of Arzobispo Toledo, Castile-La Mancha French victory
11 August 1809 Battle of Almonacid Toledo, Castile–La Mancha French victory
12 August 1809 Battle of Puerto de Baños Cáceres, Extremadura French victory Mountain pass
9 October 1809 Combat of Astorga León, Castile and León Spanish victory Apparently unaware that the town had recently been heavily garrisoned, Kellerman sent Carrié with 1,200 infantry and two regiments of dragoons to attack the town.[27]
18 October 1809 Battle of Tamames Salamanca, Castile and León Spanish victory
25 October 1809 Battle of Maguelone Gulf of Roses, Girona, Catalonia British victory A running naval battle
26 October 1809[28] Wellington orders construction of the Lines of Torres Vedras Lisbon, Portugal Fortification (Anglo-Portuguese) Wellington orders construction of the Lines. Under the direction of Sir Richard Fletcher, the first line was completed one year later, around the time of the Battle of Sobral.
11 November 1809 Combat of Ocaña Toledo, Castile-La Mancha French victory Ocaña is a small town 65 km from Madrid, defended by five regiments of Milhaud's dragoons and Sebastiani's division (six battalions) of Polish infantry. Aréizaga sent his cavalry force, 5,700 strong, which outnumbered the French cavalry by three-to-one, and forced them to retreat behind the Polish infantry. After attempting to attack the squares, Aréizaga realised that they would have to wait for Zayas's infantry to arrive and attack the following day. The French, however, retreated overnight to Aranjuez. Aréizaga entered the town the following day.[29]
18 November 1809 Combat of Ontigola Ontigola (near Ocaña) French victory The cavalry of Milhaud and Paris (who was killed in the battle),[30] made up of eight regiments, numbering almost 3,000 men, and riding at the head of the French army, crossed the Tagus river at Aranjuez and met Freire's four divisions of horsemen, over 4,000 sabres, moving at the head of Aréizaga's column. According to Oman (1908), "the collision of Milhaud and Freire brought about the largest cavalry fight which took place during the whole Peninsular War".[30]
19 November 1809 Battle of Ocaña Toledo, Castile-La Mancha French victory At Ocaña, 65 km from Madrid, French forces under Soult and King Joseph Bonaparte caused the greatest single defeat of Spanish army, leaving twenty-six thousand out of the fifty-four thousand Spanish troops, under Aréizaga, dead, wounded, or imprisoned.[1]
23 November 1809 Battle of Carpio Valladolid, Castile and León Spanish victory El Carpio, some 20 km southwest of the town of Medina del Campo, is about 4 km from Fresno el Viejo. Both villages border the province of Salamanca at the southwestern tip of the province of Valladolid. The village, including its strategic 10th-century fortress was completely destroyed by the French troops on 25 November.
26 November 1809 Battle of Alba de Tormes Salamanca, Castile and León French victory

1810 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
21 January 1810 Battle of Mollet Barcelona, Catalonia Spanish victory
31 January 1810 Capture of Oviedo Oviedo, Asturias French victory The captain-general of Asturias, Antonio Arce, with some 4,000 men to cover the whole of Asturias,[note 9] plus some new levies, little more than 2,000 strong, raised at Oviedo, evacuated that city without offering much resistance to General Bonet's 7,000 troops out of Santander.[30] However, by seizing Infiesto and Gijon, Juan Díaz Porlier effectively cut off Bonet's communication with Santander, forcing the French general to abandon Oviedo and head back towards Santander in order to clear his rear, whereby the Spanish general, Bárcena, was able to reoccupy the Asturian capital. (See 14 February 1810, below.)
1 February 1810 Seville (surrender of) Seville, Andalusia French victory King Joseph, accompanied by Marshals Soult and Victor, entered Seville, the Central Junta having abandoned the city to its fate.[30]
5 February 1810 – 24 August 1812 Siege of Cádiz Cádiz, Andalusia Spanish victory The reconstituted national government of Spain, known as the Cortes of Cádiz—effectively a government-in-exile—fortified itself in Cádiz, besieged by 70,000 French troops.
14 February 1810 Combat of Colloto & capture of Oviedo Colloto, Asturias French victory Bonet, having secured his line back to Santander, returned to take Oviedo, the capital of Asturias, again, (See 31 January 1810, above.) after defeating Bárcena—who had reoccupied the city—at Colloto,[30] just outside Oviedo. The Roman bridge of Colloto, crosses the Nora River on the Roman road that connected Cantabria with Gallaecia. It was declared a Cultural heritage monument in 2003.[31]
20 February 1810 Battle of Vich Barcelona, Catalonia French victory
19 March 1810 Skirmish at Grado Grado, Asturias Spanish victory José Cienfuegos, appointed by the Asturian junta to take command of Arce's Asturian troops, resumed the offensive operations against Bonet. Following the skirmish, and once again concerned with Juan Díaz Porlier's rear attacks, Bonet abandoned Oviedo, for the third time,[30] withdrawing to Cangas de Onis. (See 14 February 1810, above.)
21 March 1810 Battle of Vilafranca Vilafranca del Penedès, Catalonia Spanish victory
21 March 1810 – 22 April 1810 Siege of Astorga León, Castile and León French victory
29 March 1810 Capture of Oviedo Oviedo, Asturias French victory For the fourth time in three months,[30] Bonet took the capital of Asturias. (See 19 March 1810, above.) The Spanish troops once again retired without offering serious opposition, and were finally forced to retreat to Tineo in the mountains. Bonnet's 7,000 men were now immobilized for the rest of the year, having to garrison Oviedo, the ports of Gijon and Aviles, as well as all the central and eastern Asturias, and, moreover, to defend the communication with Santander from Juan Díaz Porlier's continued attacks.[30]
5 April 1810 Battle of Manresa Manresa, Catalonia Spanish victory
15 April 1810 Lleida: arrival of Suchet's troops Lleida, Catalonia Manoeuvres (French) Suchet's army of 13,000 French troops arrived in front of Lleida. The siege proper started on 29 April.
23 April 1810 Battle of Margalef Tarragona, Catalonia French victory On 22 April, a Spanish force of 8,000 infantry and 600 cavalry,[32] incorporated into two divisions led by Ibarrola and Pirez, under O’Donnell,[33] descended the Monblanc defile of the Prades Mountains to relieve Lleida. They were surprised by Musnier's seven infantry battalions and 500 cuirassieres which, together with Harispe's three infantry battalions and two squadrons of hussars that had been stationed at Alcoletge, a bridgehead three miles from Lleida, forced them to retreat to the ruined village of Margalef, some 10 miles from Lleida.[32]
26 April 1810 – 9 July 1810 First siege of Ciudad Rodrigo Salamanca, Castile and León French victory
29 April 1810 – 13 May 1810 Siege of Lleida Lleida, Catalonia French victory
15 May 1810 – 8 June 1810 Siege of Mequinenza Zaragoza, Aragon French victory
11 July 1810 Combat of Barquilla Salamanca, Castile and León French victory
11 July 1810 Landing at Santoña Santoña, Cantabria Manoeuvres (Anglo-Spanish) Captain Mends, on board HMS Arethusa off Bermeo, informed the commander-in-chief of the Western Squadron, Lord Gambier, that his squadron, also composed of HMS Medusa, under Captain Bowles; HMS Narcissus (1801), under Captain Aylmer, who would also lead the landing party; HMS Dryad (1795); HMS Amazon (1799);[note 10] and HMS Cossack (1806), had successfully participated in the landing of Brigadier-general Porlier's 500 men and that a brigade of British seamen and Marines had also been part of the landing party and had seen action onshore. Mends, as well as commending the officers and men serving under him, ends his dispatch by praising Porlier and the gallantry of his "small band of officers and soldiers".[34]
24 July 1810 Battle of the Côa Guarda, (Portugal) French victory After having blown up the Real Fuerte de la Concepción on 20 July, Craufurd positioned his Light Brigade, comprising five battalions of infantry, two light cavalry regiments, and one horse artillery battery (about 4200 infantry, 800 cavalry, and 6 guns)[35] east of the Côa River (disobeying Wellington's orders), near Castelo de Almeida and near the only bridge of an otherwise unfordable river. On the morning of the battle, they were surprised by Marshal Ney's 20,000 troops, on their way to besiege Almeida. Craufurd was able to defend the bridge against several attacks, but finally retreated at midnight. The Real Fuerte de la Concepción, in the province of Salamanca, was one of a series of star forts on the Spanish side of the border between Spain and Portugal. The Praça-forte de Almeida, 10 km away, in the Guarda District, was one of a series of Portuguese star forts.
25 July – 27 August 1810 First siege of Almeida Guarda, (Portugal) French victory
29 July 1810 Sanabria, Zamora French victory At the head of 5,000 troops,[30] General Seras attacked the castle at Puebla de Sanabria, near the border with Portugal, garrisoned by 3,000 Spanish troops.[36] When the Spanish general, Taboada, abandoned the place, the French took twenty pieces of artillery and enough provisions for 3,000 troops for six months.[36] Silveira, concerned, immediately prepared to defend the frontier. However, Seras unexpectedly turned back to Zamora, leaving a battalion of the 2nd Swiss Regiment and a squadron of horse to garrison the place.[30] Silveira and Taboada immediately united their forces, and routed the French from the castle, forcing it into the town on 4 August, where it was forced to surrender a week later, with some 20 officers and 350 men, of an original 600, taken prisoner.[30] Seras returned too late to succour his garrison, and retired to Benavente, whereupon Taboada reoccupied the place. Seras then had to head up to the north where Bonet was being bothered by Porlier's actions, with Bonet asking him to attack Porlier's force in the rear.[30]
11 August 1810 Combat of Villagarcia Villagarcía de la Torre, Extremadura French victory
10 September 1810 Combat at Bagur Bagur, Girona, Catalonia English victory An English landing-party stormed the coastal battery, capturing the garrison of 50 men.[30]
14 September 1810 Battle of La Bisbal Girona, Catalonia Anglo-Spanish victory
14 September 1810 Actions at Palamos, San Feliu & Calonje Palamos, San Feliu & Calonje, Girona, Catalonia Anglo-Spanish victory On the same day that O'Donnell was taking La Bisbal (see above), General Doyle (the British commissioner in Catalonia) and Captain Fane, having sailed from Tarragona on the British frigate Cambrian (Fane's ship) accompanying the Spanish frigate Diana, and a few transports, led a landing-force, numbering some 500 troops, to storm Palamos[30] while the Spanish troops under Colonel Fleires took San Feliu,[30] and Colonel Aldea cut off the French troops at Calonje.[30] That day, Anglo-Spanish forces captured General Schwartz, two colonels, fifty-six officers, and 1,183 rank and file, with seventeen guns, leaving Schwartz's brigade completely out of action.[30]
15 September 1810 Battle of Fuente de Cantos Fuente de Cantos, Extermadura French victory
24 September 1810 Cortes of Cádiz – opening session Cádiz, Andalusia The opening session of the Cortes was held eight months into the two-and-a-half-year Siege of Cádiz.
27 September 1810 Battle of Bussaco Serra do Bussaco mountain range, Aveiro District (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory Marshal Masséna, having captured the border fortresses of Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida, advanced into Portugal. At Bussaco, Wellington's Anglo-Portuguese army drove them off with the loss of about 1,250 killed or wounded, compared to French losses of 4,500 men.[15]
1–2 October 1810 Sack of Coimbra Coimbra, Coimbra District, Portugal Masséna's troops sacked the city over two days; the first division of the 8th Corps, consisting mainly of newly formed battalions of conscripts arriving on 1 October. No attempt was made to restore order until the 6th Corps entered the next day, although the plunder continued.[30]
6 October 1810 Trant's Raid Coimbra, Portugal Portuguese victory Coimbra is recaptured by Portuguese militia led by Nicholas Trant.
13–14 October 1810 Battle of Sobral Lisbon (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory
6 October 1810 Trant's Raid Coimbra, Portugal Portuguese victory Coimbra is recaptured by Portuguese militia led by Nicholas Trant.
14 October – 2 November 1810 Cantabrian Expedition La Coruña (Galicia)–Gijón (Asturias)–Santoña (Cantabria)–Viveiro (Galicia) Manoeuvres (Anglo-Spanish) Having previously collaborated on a joint mission (see 11 July 1810, above) another Anglo-Spanish landing operation set off to establish a base at Santoña, from which to free the western part of the coast of the Cantabrian Sea of French troops and then move on to free up the central and eastern coast of the region, effectively cutting off Irun as the main gateway for French supplies into Spain.[37] The squadron, under the command of Captain Joaquín Zarauz, sailed from La Coruña on 14 October 1810.[37] The British squadron, led by Captain Mends, on board the frigate HMS Arethusa (1781), was also composed of the frigates HMS Medusa, under Captain Bowles; HMS Narcissus (1801), under Captain Aylmer, HMS Amazon (1799); and the brig-sloop HMS Port Mahon (1798).[37] The landing party consisted of 1,200 Spanish troops, under Field Marshal Renovales and 800 British Marines.[37][30] After an initial landing at Gijón, from which they drove the French garrison and captured large amounts of supplies, the expedition then headed for Santoña, where a gale forced the expedition to turn back. On their way into port at Viveiro, two of the Spanish ships, the frigate Santa Maria Magdalena and the brig Palomo, were both destroyed with great loss of life, Magdalena having collided with HMS Narcissus (1801) shortly before foundering.[37] Of the 508 people on board the Magdalena, 500 perished in the storm,[37] including her captain, Blas Salcedo,[37] and the commander-in-chief of the Expedition, Zarauz.[38] Of the eight people who managed to reach shore, five later died of their injuries.[37] Of the 75 men on board the Palomo, 50 perished in the storm, while the remaining 25, including their captain, managed to reach the shore.[37]
15 October 1810 Battle of Fuengirola Málaga, Andalusia Polish-French victory
18 October 1810 Plunder of Solsona Solsona, Lleida, Catalonia Manouevre/plunder (French) The French Marshal Macdonald, at the head of two French and two Italian brigades, set off to do battle against the Marquis de Campoverde's Spanish troops. Stopping at Solsona, until then the seat of Junta of Upper Catalonia and finding the place deserted by its inhabitants, the French troops proceeded to plunder the town and burnt its cathedral.[30]
21 October 1810 Combat of Cardona Cardona, Barcelona, Catalonia Spanish victory The Marquis de Campoverde's division, together with several thousand somatenes, had manned the town, its castle, and the neighbouring heights. Without waiting for Marshal Macdonald and the reserve brigade, the Italian general Eugenio marched straight at the position, with Salme's French brigade in support, and was forced to retreat.[30]
31 October 1810 Combat at Alventosa Albentosa, Teruel, Aragon French victory General Chłopicki, in the first of two successive engagements, defeated the partisan forces of Carbajal and Villacampa.[30] (See 11 November 1810, below.)
4 November 1810 Battle of Baza Granada, Andalusia French victory
11 November 1810 Combat at Fuensanta (Sanctuary of Our Lady of Fuensanta) Villel, Teruel, Aragon French victory General Chłopicki, in the second of two successive engagements, defeated the partisan forces of Carbajal and Villacampa.[30] (See 31 October 1810, above.)
16 December 1810 – 2 January 1811 Siege of Tortosa Tortosa, Catalonia French victory
25 December 1810 Combat at Palamós Palamós, Girona, Catalonia French victory Two French gunboats and eight transports on their way from Cette with provisions for the garrison at Barcelona were destroyed by a landing party from the British frigates based along the Catalan coast. Although the initial British raid was a success, they were surprised by a French flying column, and driven back to their boats with a loss of over 200 men, including the commanding officer, Captain Fane of HMS Cambrian,[39] who was taken prisoner.
31 December 1810 Ponte do Abbade (Combat of) Ponte do Abbade, Guarda District, Portugal French victory Francisco da Silveira, with six militia regiments and the former garrison of Almeida, had orders to stay between General Claparède's force of 6,000 troops and Porto. The Portuguese had been following the French troops and, Claparède, based at Trancoso, which Silveira had initially retreated from on Claparède's approach, routed the Portuguese at Ponte do Abbade on 31 December. Having lost 200 men, Silveira retreated to Vila da Ponte, some seven miles away.[39]

1811 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
11 January 1811 Vila da Ponte (Combat of)[note 11] Aldeia da Ponte, Guarda District, Portugal French victory On 11 January, General Claparède made a second sortie from Trancoso, beating Francisco da Silveira's men even more decisively than at Ponte do Abbade the previous month, and pursued them to Lamego on the Douro. Silveira crossed the river on the 13th, and the news of his defeat brought terror to Oporto. Bacelar ordered the four battalions from Vizeu, Trant's seven battalions from Coimbra, and Wilson's four battalions from Peñacova, to join him. They concentrated at Castro Daire, ten miles south of Lamego, with a force of 14,000 bayonets, whereupon Claparéde, with less than half that number, and worried about being cut off, returned to Trancoso.[39]
15 January 1811 Battle of Pla Tarragona, Catalonia Spanish victory
19–22 January 1811 Siege of Olivenza Badajoz, Extremadura French victory
26 January 1811 – 11 March 1811 First Siege of Badajoz Badajoz, Extremadura French victory The Spanish fortress fell to the French forces under Marshal Soult.
19 February 1811 Battle of the Gebora Badajoz, Extremadura French victory
21 February 1811 Cádiz – Tarifa – Algeciras Cádiz, Andalusia Manoeuvres (Allied) A mixed force of 9,500 Spanish, 4,900 British and a few hundred Portuguese set sail from Cádiz towards Tarifa, fifty miles to the south, in order to move inland and attack the French besiegers from the rear. However, due to bad weather, the force had to land at Algeciras; further than planned.[14] (See 5 March 1811, below.)
5 March 1811 Battle of Barrosa Cádiz, Andalusia Anglo-Spanish victory Throughout February–March, an Anglo-Iberian relief force had tried to break the French blockade of Cádiz. On 5 March, Marshal Victor attacked this force near Barrosa and, although the Allies succeeded in routing Victor's army, they were not able to lift the siege of Cádiz.[15] (See 21 February 1811, above.)
11 March 1811 Battle of Pombal Leiria (Portugal) French victory
12 March 1811 Battle of Redinha Coimbra (Portugal) Indecisive/Manoeuvres (French retreat)
14 March 1811 Battle of Casal Novo Coimbra (Portugal) French victory
15 March 1811 Battle of Foz de Arouce Anglo-Portuguese victory Lousã, Coimbra District, Portugal
15 March 1811 – 21 March 1811 Siege of Campo Maior Castle Alentejo (Portugal) French victory 800 Portuguese militia and 50 old cannon held out against 4,500 troops belonging to the V Corps under Marshal Mortier.
25 March 1811 Battle of Campo Maior Alentejo (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory
3 April 1811 Battle of Sabugal Guarda (Portugal) Anglo-Portuguese victory
9 – 10 April 1811 Capture of Sant Ferran Castle Figueres, Girona Spanish victory/Manoeuvres In the early hours of 10 April, 700 miqueletes sent by Francesc Rovira i Sala entered through the vaults of the citadel and caught the French garrison asleep. Within the hour the place had been won. By dawn, over 2,000 Catalans had manned the fortress.[39] (See also 17 April 1811, below)
10 April – 19 August 1811 Siege of Figueras Sant Ferran Castle, Figueres, Girona French victory Following the miqueletes's capture of the citadel (see 10 April 1811, above), General Peyri, with 1,500 Italian troops, had reoccupied the town of Figueras, below the citadel, waiting for reinforcements. It would not be until a week later that General Baraguey d’Hilliers, with 6,500 infantry and 500 cavalry, started the blockade proper of the citadel.[39] (See also 19 August 1811, below)
14 April – 10 May 1811 Second siege of Almeida Guarda, (Portugal) Allied victory Also known as the Blockade of Almeida, since the Anglo-Portuguese Army had no heavy guns to breach the walls, they were forced to starve the garrison out. Because of this, it was technically a blockade rather than a siege. French troops abandoned the fort under cover of darkness and escaped. See Battle of Fuentes de Oñoro.
22 April – 12 May/18 May – 10 June 1811 Second Siege of Badajoz Badajoz, Extremadura French victory The siege was briefly lifted while the Battle of Albuera was fought on 16 May.
3–6 May 1811 Battle of Fuentes de Oñoro Salamanca, Castile and León Tactically indecisive[40][41][42]
Anglo-Portuguese victory
(strategic)[43]
Spanish village on the border with Portugal. French troops under Masséna failed to relieve the fortress at Almeida after being narrowly defeated by Wellington at Fuentes de Oñoro.[15] See Blockade of Almeida.
5 May 1811 –

 29 June 1811

First siege of Tarragona Tarragona, Catalonia French victory
16 May 1811 Battle of Albuera Badajoz, Extremadura Allied victory Allied forces engaged the French Armée du Midi (Army of the South) some 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of Badajoz. Marshal Soult had set out to relieve Badajoz, besieged by Beresford. Soult outmanoeuvred his opponent at nearby Albuera but was forced to withdraw.[15] Three days later, Wellington arrived at Badajoz, having marched from Almeida.[15]
25 May 1811 First battle of Arlabán Mountain pass between Gipuzkoa and Álava Spanish victory Guerrilla ambush led by Francisco Espoz y Mina. Also referred to as the First Surprise of Arlabán to distinguish it from the Second Surprise of Arlabán (April 1812).
25 May 1811 Battle of Usagre Badajoz, Extremadura Allied victory
6 and 9 June 1811 Forts of Badajoz (two separate assaults) Badajoz, Extremadura French victory Wellington made two assaults against the forts but was beaten back.[15] French reinforcements forced him to abandon the siege.[15]
23 June 1811 Battle of Cogorderos León, Castile-León Spanish victory
30 June – 2 July 1811 Siege of Niebla Niebla, Huelva, Andalusia French victory Instead of marching on Seville, Joaquín Blake laid siege to the Castle of Niebla, whose garrison consisted of a battalion of 600 Spanish and British deserters.[39] However, an escalade having failed and having been unable to bring up artillery, due to the bad mountain roads, the Spanish troops were unable to take the place. Blake finally withdrew when Soult sent Conroux and Godinot to relieve the garrison. Although the siege itself was not successful, it did serve to draw 11,000 French troops into a remote corner of the region for some weeks.[39]
29 July 1811 Battle of Montserrat Barcelona, Catalonia French victory
9 August 1811 Battle of Zujar Granada, Andalusia French victory
19 August 1811 Sant Ferran Castle, Figueres, Girona Surrender With the fall of Figueras, which blocks the main road from Perpignan to Barcelona, Marshall Macdonald's troops, which had been detained for so long blockading the citadel, were now able to come to the assistance of Suchet's Army of Aragon to capture Valencia.[44] (See also 10 April 1811, above)
25 September 1811 Battle of El Bodón Salamanca, Castile and León French victory
28 September 1811 Aldeia da Ponte (Combat of)[note 12] Aldeia da Ponte, Guarda District, Portugal Wellington, having secured his ground at Alfayates, with his whole army, also considered Aldea da Ponte, to be too valuable to relinquish unless overwhelmed by a superior force. Even though it lay outside the intended line of battle, two miles away and on lower ground, it was a meeting-place of several roads and well placed for observation. Generals Thiébault and Souham Montbrun and Watier, under Marshal Marmont, had engaged the British troops there in skirmishes, but Marmont, on arriving, took the decision not to advance and ordered the retreat for Ciudad Rodrigo, while Wellington gave orders for his army to take up winter quarters.[39]
4–14 October 1811 Battle of Cervera Lleida, Catalonia Spanish victory
16 October 1811 Action at Ayerbe Ayerbe, Huesca, Aragón Spanish victory A column of 800 Italian infantry, belonging to Severoli's division at Zaragoza, marching to relieve the garrison of Ayerbe, was surprised by Mina's 4,000 troops. The column "was exterminated",[44] with two hundred Italians killed and six hundred (including many wounded) taken prisoner after a running fight between Ayerbe and Huesca. Mina then crossed 200 miles of French-occupied territory in Northern Spain to the Cantabrian coast at Motrico, where he handed over his prisoners to the British frigate HMS Isis.[44]
25 October 1811 Battle of Saguntum Valencia, Valencia French victory
28 October 1811 Battle of Arroyo dos Molinos Cáceres, Extremadura Allied victory
3 November 1811 – 9 January 1812 Siege of Valencia Valencia, Valencia French victory
5 November 1811 First battle of Bornos Cádiz, Andalusia Spanish victory
19 December 1811 – 5 January 1812 Siege of Tarifa Cádiz, Andalusia Allied victory
29 December 1811 Combat of Navas de Membrillo La Nava de Santiago, Badajoz French victory Hoping to surprise General Dembowski at Mérida, Hill's advanced cavalry chanced upon a troop of hussars at the head of a column of French infantry, three companies of the 88th regiment, some 400 men, who had been sent out to raise requisitions of food in the villages in the area. Hill sent two squadrons each of the 13th Light Dragoons and 2nd Hussars of the King's German Legion (KLG) in pursuit. The French captain formed his men in a square, and beat off five cavalry charges, with heavy loss to Hill's men: the KGL Hussars had two men killed and one officer and 17 men wounded, while the 13th Light Dragoons had one killed and 19 wounded. Dembowski, once warned of the approaching allied forces, evacuated Merida, where Hill, arriving the following day, found the French had abandoned 160,000 lb. of wheat.[44][45] In a letter to the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, the Earl of Liverpool, Wellington expressed his surprise at Dembowski being still alive, having thought that he had been killed at Arroyo dos Molinos the previous October.[46]

1812 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
8 January 1812 – 20 January 1812 Second siege of Ciudad Rodrigo Salamanca, Castile and León Allied victory Wellington laid siege to the town and by 19 January, his guns had opened up two gaps in its defences. That night, while the 3rd Division, attacking one breach, suffered heavily from a huge mine explosion, the Light Division assaulted the other and managed to force its way into the town. The French troops surrendered the town.[15]
18 January 1812 Combat of Villaseca Vila-seca, Tarragona, Catalonia Spanish victory Lafosse, the governor of Tortosa, on his way to relieve Tarragona with a battalion and a troop of dragoons, was surprised by Eroles, at the head of over 3,000 somatenes, at Villaseca. Lafosse managed to reach Tarragona, with only twenty-two of his dragoons, but his battalion, after resisting for several hours in the village, was forced to surrender. Eroles took nearly 600 prisoners, and left over 200 French troops dead.[44] Commodore Edward Codrington, then commanding a squadron in the Mediterranean Sea charged with harrying French shipping, was present at the combat, having come on shore to confer with Eroles, with whom he often collaborated,[44] regarding an action against Tarragona. The Spanish force managed to liberate two Royal Navy captains taken prisoner by Lafosse's men after having landed at Cape Salou the previous day.[44]
20 January 1812 Capture of Denia Denia, Province of Alicante Manoeuvres (French) Denia was an important centre of distribution for stores and munitions of war, and its fortifications had been newly repaired during Blake's time at Valencia. However, following Blake's surrender at Valencia, earlier that month, Mahy withdrew his garrison, neglecting to remove its magazines. On entering Denia, Harispe found sixty guns mounted on its walls, plus forty small merchant vessels in the harbour, some of them laden with stores. As well as garrisoning the place, the French fitted out some of the vessels as privateers. Mahy's carelessness in abandoning these resources was among the reasons he was removed from command by the Cadiz Regency.[44]
20 January 1812 – 2 February 1812 Siege of Peniscola Peniscola, Valencia, Valencia French victory Garrisoned by 1,000 veteran Spanish troops, under Garcia Navarro, the impregnable fortress at Peniscola, sitting atop a rock connected with the mainland by a narrow sand-spit 250 yards long, known as 'the little Gibraltar', was one of the strongest places in all Spain, and was regularly revictualled by Spanish and British vessels from Alicante, Cartagena, and the Balearic Isles. Suchet ordered Severoli, with two Italian and two French battalions, to besiege the place and on the 31st work began to erect five batteries.[44]
On February 2, Garcia Navarro capitulated under unusually favourable terms.[note 13] Having surrendered the place to the French troops, he was then appointed governor of the same place by the French.[47]
24 January 1812 Battle of Altafulla Tarragona, Catalonia French victory
16 March 1812 – 6 April 1812 Siege of Badajoz Badajoz, Extremadura Allied victory Having breached the city walls at great loss, Wellington's troops went on a rampage of rape and pillage for three days, massacring hundreds of civilians before being brought to order.[15]
3 April 1812 Combat at Fuente del Maestre Fuente del Maestre, Badajoz, Extremadura Anglo-Portuguese victory Lt Col Abercromby led a column of 2nd Hussars and 14th Portuguese Cavalry that routed a body of around 100 French dragoons.[48]
9 April 1812 Second battle of Arlabán Mountain pass between Gipuzkoa and Álava Spanish victory Also referred to as the Second Surprise of Arlabán to distinguish it from the First Surprise of Arlabán (May 1811).
11 April 1812 Battle of Villagarcia (also known as the Battle of Llerena) Badajoz, Extremadura British victory
18–19 May 1812 Battle of Almaraz Cáceres, Extremadura Allied victory Some 9,000 Allied troops under Rowland Hill destroyed the pontoon bridge the French had built at Almaraz in 1811. Hill then proceeded to repair the bridge at Alcantara, thereby allowing Wellington to move towards Salamanca.[49] The original bridge at Almaraz, dating from 1552, had been partially destroyed in January 1809 by the Spanish General Juan de Henestrosa, the vanguard of General Gregorio de la Cuesta's army. The following month, it had suffered further damage when another part of it collapsed, killing 26 soldiers, including the engineer officer.[50]
31 May 1812 Battle of Bornos Cádiz, Andalusia French victory
11 June 1812 Battle of Maguilla Badajoz, Extremadura French victory
13–17 June 1812 Ciudad RodrigoSalamanca Castile-León Manoeuvres (British) Wellington's troops moved from their cantonments towards Salamanca. The French troops abandoned the city and Wellington entered on the 17th.[49] (See 17 June 1812, below.)
17 June 1812 La Coruña North of Spain: Cantabria, Basque Country and Navarre Manoeuvres (British) Popham sailed from Corunna with his fleet comprising two line of battleships, five frigates, two sloops, and one or two smaller vessels, transporting two battalions of marines, a company of artillery,[14] and several thousand small-arms for the guerrilleros. Popham also carried credentials from Castaños, as captain-general of Galicia, for Mendizábal, the officer liaising with the bands of Cantabria and Biscay, including Porlier's brigades in the Eastern Asturias, and Longa's in Cantabria (both of which were considered part of the regular army) as well as the guerrilleros of el Pastor in Guipuzcoa, Renovales in Biscay, el Cura Merino, and others.[44]
17–27 June 1812 Siege of the Salamanca forts Salamanca, Castile-León Allied victory (See 13 June 1812, above.)
21–22 June 1812 Lequeitio: storming of defences: a fort and a fortified convent Basque Country Anglo-Spanish victory Popham landed a 24-pounder and marines, which met up with El Pastor's guerrillas and breached the fort. When the gun was brought up against the fortified convent, the commander surrendered without fighting. 290 prisoners were taken. Popham then sailed off to Bermeo and Plencia, both of which the French evacuated, leaving behind provisions and unspiked guns.[44]
29 June – 19 August 1812 Astorga, Second siege of León, Castile-León Spanish victory Spanish troops liberate Astorga, in French hands since the first Siege of Astorga in 1810.
6–8 July 1812 Castro Urdiales Cantabria (on the Bay of Biscay) Anglo-Spanish victory Popham was joined by Longa's brigade and drove off a small French column that had come to raise the siege. The governor of Castro surrendered with some 150 men, and 20 guns on his walls. Popham decided to use its castle as a temporary base, and garrisoned it with some of his marines.[44]
21 July 1812 Battle of Castalla Alicante, Valencia French victory
22 July 1812 Battle of Salamanca Salamanca, Castile and León Decisive Allied victory Also known as the Battle of Arapiles, for the name of the nearby village, Arapiles, which in turn takes its name from the two low, flat-topped hills, Arapil Chico (Lesser Arapile) and Arapil Grande (Greater Arapile), over and around which part of the battle took place. Having secured the Portuguese-Spanish frontier, Wellington was able to advance further into Spain. At Salamanca, his Allied army defeated a larger French force under Marshal Marmont.[15]
22 July – 2 August 1812 Santander (Capture of) Santander, Spain, Cantabria Anglo-Spanish victory Oman considered the capture of Santander "the most important event that had happened on the north coast of Spain since 1809",[44][note 14] Popham's initial attack, coordinated with Mendizábal and one of Porlier's lieutenants, Campillo, failed. However, the French governor, Dubreton, broke out of the place with his 1,600 men on the night of the 2nd-3rd, leaving eighteen spiked guns.
23 July 1812 Battle of Garcia Hernandez Salamanca, Castile and León Anglo-German victory
31 July 1812 SicilyPalamos Catalonia Manoeuvres (Allied) Wellington had suggested that an attack on the Catalonian coast would, by creating a diversion, prevent Suchet from intervening in the west. Maitland, sent by Lord William Bentinck to Spain, with three British, two German battalions plus several other foreign units and, having picked up some Spanish troops on the way, arrived off Palamos, on the Catalan coast with some ten thousand men in total, eventually landing further south.[note 15] Although the force achieved little in military terms, it did have the desired effect as it was clear that Suchet had been aware of the rumour of troops coming from Sicily and of the existence of the transports at Alicante and Majorca.[14]
11 August 1812 Battle of Majadahonda New Castile (now Community of Madrid)
14 August 1812[44] Surrender of the French garrison at the Citadel of Madrid Parque del Buen Retiro, Madrid, Madrid Allied victory King Joseph having evacuated Madrid on the 10th, General Lafon-Blaniac surrenders his 2,000-strong garrison. Following his victory at Salamanca the previous month, Wellington was able to liberate Madrid, before moving north to besiege Burgos,[15] the logistical hub for all reinforcements and supplies for the French armies in Spain.[49] (See 19 September 1812, below.)
25 August 1812 Cádiz (Siege of ends)[1] Cádiz, Andalusia Manoeuvres (French) French troops withdrew from Cádiz. Cádiz would be the only city in continental Europe to survive a siege by Napoleon: thirty-one months—from 5 February 1810 to 25 August 1812.[1]
19 September – 21 October 1812 Siege of Burgos Burgos, Castile and León French victory Wellington had to abandon the siege of Burgos and retreat back into Portugal once again[15] due to the risk of being encircled by the French forces which, following Wellington's victory at Salamanca, had themselves been forced to retreat from Andalusia in the south[15] to avoid being cut off, but still had enough troops in north and eastern Spain to launch a major counter-offensive.[15]
23 October 1812 Battle of Venta del Pozo Palencia, Castile and León Indecisive
French tactical victory[51]
Also known as the Battle of Villodrigo.
25–29 October 1812 Battle of Tordesillas Valladolid, Castile and León French victory Also known as the Battle of Villamuriel or Battle of Palencia.

1813 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
13 April 1813 Battle of Castalla Alicante, Valencia Anglo-Spanish victory
2 June 1813 Battle of Morales Zamora, Castile and León
3–11 June 1813 Second siege of Tarragona Tarragona, Catalonia French victory
18 June 1813 Battle of San Millan-Osma San Millan, Burgos, Castile and León / Osma, Álava, Basque Country Allied victory Mountain pass northwest of Miranda del Ebro, just off the BurgosBilbao road.
21 June 1813 Battle of Vitoria Álava, Basque Country Allied victory (decisive) Led to the abdication of Napoleon's brother, Joseph Bonaparte, King of Spain, 11 December 1813. Beethoven's Op. 91, "Wellingtons Sieg oder die Schlacht bei Vittoria", completed in the first week of October 1813, commemorates the victory. Originally composed for the panharmonicon, it was first performed with Beethoven himself conducting, together with the premiere of his Symphony No. 7.[52]
26 June 1813 Battle of Tolosa Gipuzkoa, Basque Country Allied victory (decisive) Led to the abdication of Napoleon's brother, Joseph Bonaparte, King of Spain, 11 December 1813. Beethoven's Op. 91, "Wellingtons Sieg oder die Schlacht bei Vittoria", completed in the first week of October 1813, commemorates the victory. Originally composed for the panharmonicon, it was first performed with Beethoven himself conducting, together with the premiere of his Symphony No. 7.[52]
26 June – 31 October 1813 Siege of Pamplona Pamplona, Navarre Allied victory
7–25 July 1813 First siege of San Sebastián Province of Gipuzkoa, Basque Country French victory Although referred to as one siege, there were in fact two separate sieges. See Second siege of San Sebastián (8 August – 8 September 1813), below.
25 July 1813 – 1 August 1813 Battle of the Pyrenees Allied victory The Battle of the Pyrenees was large-scale offensive, involving several battles, launched by Marshal Soult to relieve the French garrisons under siege at Pamplona and San Sebastián. Following his defeat at Battle of Sorauren at the end of the month, Soult ordered the retreat towards France, having decided it would be impossible to relieve Pamplona.[49]
25 July 1813 Battle of Roncesvalles Roncevaux Pass, Spain French victory Mountain pass at 1,057 m (3,468 ft) on the Spanish side of the Pyrenees near the border with France. A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees.
25 July 1813 Battle of Maya Navarre French victory Mountain pass on the Spanish side of the Pyrenees near the border with France. A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees.
27 July – 1 August 1813 Battle of Sorauren Navarre Allied victory A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees. Soult ordered the retreat towards France, having decided it would be impossible to relieve Pamplona.[49] A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees.
30 July 1813 Combat of Beunza Navarre During the fighting at Sorauren, Hill's 2nd Division and Costa's Brigade were engaged 25 km to the northwest, fighting a French corps at Beunza, near Atez.[49]
8 August – 8 September 1813 Second siege of San Sebastián Province of Gipuzkoa, Basque Country Anglo-Portuguese victory Although referred to as one siege, there were in fact two separate sieges. See First siege of San Sebastián (7–25 July 1813), above.
31 August 1813 Battle of San Marcial Near Irun, Basque Country Spanish victory[53]
12–13 September 1813 Battle of Ordal Defile of Ordal and Vilafranca del Penedès, Barcelona French victory
7 October 1813 Battle of the Bidassoa Allied victory (tactical) Also known as the Battle of Larrun.
9 November 1813 Battle of Nivelle Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France Allied victory Most of Spain had been liberated, except for the French garrison at Pamplona and the east coast. Soult had fortified the Nivelle river for 35 km, inland from its estuary, and was defending it with 60,000 troops. Wellington had 82,000 troops divided into fifteen divisions. Major General Carlos Lecor, commanding the 7th Division, was the first Portuguese officer to command a division of British troops.[49]
8 December 1813[54] Treaty of Valençay Château de Valençay, Indre, France Treaty Napoleon, wishing to reestablish an alliance with Spain, intended the Treaty as the preliminary to a full peace treaty between France and Spain, the agreement providing for the withdrawal of French troops from Spain, and restoration of Ferdinand VII of Spain. The Cortes of Cádiz duly repudiated the treaty once Ferdinand had reached the safety of Madrid.
9–13 December 1813 Battle of the Nive Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France Allied victory
11 December 1813 Abdication of Joseph Bonaparte, King of Spain Abdication

1814 edit

Date Event Province/region (modern) Outcome Notes
15 February 1814 Battle of Garris Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France Allied victory Also known as the Battle of Saint-Palais.
27 February 1814 Battle of Orthez Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France Anglo-Portuguese victory
6 April 1814 Abdication of Napoleon Bonaparte[55] Abdication
10 April 1814 Battle of Toulouse Haute-Garonne, France Allied victory One of the last battles of the Peninsular War. That afternoon, the official word of Napoleon's abdication and the end of the war reached Wellington. Soult agreed to an armistice on 17 April.
14 April 1814 Battle of Bayonne Bayonne, France Allied victory Although there were still isolated incidents, especially in Catalonia, Bayonne was the last major battle of the Peninsular War.
28 May 1814 Surrender of Barcelona Barcelona, Catalonia Surrender The French garrison at Barcelona surrenders.[55]
4 June 1814 Surrender of Sant Ferran Castle Figueres, Catalonia Surrender The last French garrison in Spain surrenders.[55]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also included are naval actions which had a direct effect on the development of the events on the Iberian Peninsula. However, unless they can be directly ascribed to the Peninsular War, those actions which took place in the vicinity, such as the blockade of French ports in the Bay of Biscay, for instance, the actions of November 1808 or April 1809, however much they affected Napoleon's plans on the Peninsula, are excluded as they were possibly more related to the general war efforts of the time.
  2. ^ That is, resulting from the 1976 Constitution of Portugal and the processes of devolution of Spain's transition to democracy (1979), which created seventeen autonomous communities (regions) and two autonomous cities. This affects, in particular, the historical regions and provinces of León and Old Castile (Spanish: Castilla la Vieja), constituted in 1983 as Castile and León.
  3. ^ The only Spanish troops able to escape the round-up were the 2nd Cavalry regiment, the Queen's Own, whose colonel rode off to Oporto with his two squadrons, and some units of the infantry regiments of Murcia and Valencia who escaped to Badajoz. (Oman, 1902: pp. 208–209.)
  4. ^ The mutiny was led by Vives's second-in-command, the Marquis del Palacio, governor of Minorca who, a fortnight later, finally set sail with the greater part of the Balearic garrisons. Part of Vives's reluctance to leave Port Mahon without troops had been due to his "deeply rooted idea" that the English would once again control Minorca, as they had for the greater part of the 18th century. (Oman, 1902: p. 323.)
  5. ^ Originally a hamlet outside the city, Gamonal has been part of the city of Burgos since 1955.
  6. ^ Napoleon was at Vitoria for four days, where, among other reports, he had been waiting to hear that Bessières, his vanguard, had occupied Burgos (Oman, 1902).
  7. ^ Bessières was superseded by Soult.
  8. ^ "Canning strenuously maintained... in the great British tradition of characterizing defeat as victory..." (Fremont-Barnes, 2004, p. 80.)
  9. ^ The Duke del Parque, had moved his forces south, taking with him Ballasteros's division, which had formed the core of the Army of Asturias. (Oman, 1908: p. 217.)
  10. ^ These ships would, later that year, also participate in the Anglo-Spanish Cantabrian Expedition (see 14 October 1810, below), following which two of the Spanish ships, the frigate Santa Maria Magdalena and the brigantine Palomo, would be destroyed in a storm off the coast of Galicia with great loss of life, Magdalena having collided with Narcissus shortly before going down.
  11. ^ Not to be confused with the combat of Aldeia da Ponte, which took place later that year, on 28 September 1811.
  12. ^ Not to be confused with the combat of Vila da Ponte, which took place earlier that year, on 11 January 1811.
  13. ^ In the letter he sent to Suchet along with the capitulation, he stated, "To-day I see that to render Spain less unhappy it is necessary for us all to unite under the King [Joseph], and I make my offer to serve him with the same enthusiasm. Your excellency may be quite sure of me—I surrender a fortress fully provisioned and capable of a long defence—which is the best guarantee of the sincerity of my promise." (Oman, 1914: p. 89.)
  14. ^ "... the most important event that had happened on the north coast of Spain since 1809", for it gave the squadron of Popham possession of the sole really good harbor—open to the largest ships, and safe at all times of the year—which lies between Ferrol and the French frontier". (Oman 1914, p. 555.)
  15. ^ The British government had told Wellington that the force would be entirely at his disposal. However, Maitland, who was under Bentinck's orders, had been told by his commander that he was not part of the army of Spain and must be ready to return to Sicily at the first sign of trouble there. (Yonge.)

References edit

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timeline, peninsular, following, tables, show, sequence, events, peninsular, 1807, 1814, including, major, battles, smaller, actions, uprisings, sieges, other, related, events, that, took, place, during, that, period, note, ease, reference, using, modern, maps. The following tables show the sequence of events of the Peninsular War 1807 1814 including major battles smaller actions uprisings sieges and other related events that took place during that period note 1 For ease of reference using modern maps the provinces regions given for Spain and Portugal are those that correspond to the 20th century note 2 Events in Portugal and France are specified Contents 1 Overview 2 List of events 2 1 1807 2 2 1808 2 3 1809 2 4 1810 2 5 1811 2 6 1812 2 7 1813 2 8 1814 3 See also 4 Notes 5 ReferencesOverview editMain article Peninsular War The Peninsular War was a military conflict for control of the Iberian Peninsula during the Napoleonic Wars waged between France and the allied powers of Spain the United Kingdom and Portugal It started when French and Spanish armies then allied occupied Portugal in 1807 and escalated in 1808 when France turned on Spain its former ally The war on the peninsula lasted until the Sixth Coalition defeated Napoleon in 1814 and is regarded as one of the first wars of national liberation and significant for the emergence of large scale guerrilla warfare British and Portuguese forces eventually secured Portugal using it as a safe position from which to launch campaigns against the French army while both Spanish and Portuguese guerrillas weakened the occupying forces The Peninsular War overlaps with what the Spanish speaking world calls the Guerra de la Independencia Espanola Spanish War of Independence which began with the Dos de Mayo Uprising on 2 May 1808 and ended on 17 April 1814 Although Spain had been in upheaval since at least the Mutiny of Aranjuez March 1808 May 1808 marks the start of the Spanish War of Independence The French occupation destroyed the Spanish administration which fragmented into quarrelling provincial juntas In 1810 a reconstituted national government the Cortes of Cadiz effectively a government in exile fortified itself in Cadiz but could not raise effective armies because it was besieged by up to 70 000 French troops Cadiz would go on to hold the distinction of being the only city in continental Europe to survive a siege by Napoleon thirty one months from 5 February 1810 to 25 August 1812 1 The combined efforts of regular and irregular forces throughout the peninsula prevented Napoleon s marshals from subduing the rebellious Spanish provinces and the war continued through years of stalemate 2 While the initial stages of the Peninsular War were fought on Portuguese soil most of the war was fought on Spanish soil and as the French army was pushed further back across the Pyrenees the final stages of the war were fought on French soil List of events edit1807 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 12 18 October 1807 French troops enter Spain en route to Portugal Irun Basque Country Manoeuvres French Junot crosses into Spain with the 25 000 3 28 000 1 troops of the Corps of Observation of the Gironde The Treaty of Fontainebleau to be signed later that month stipulates that three columns of Spanish troops numbering 25 500 men will support the Invasion of Portugal 3 27 October 1807 Treaty of Fontaine bleau signed by Charles IV of Spain and Napoleon I of France Fontaine bleau Treaty The accord proposed the division of the Kingdom of Portugal and all Portuguese dominions between the signatories 3 12 November 1807 Junot s Army of the Gironde reaches Salamanca 3 Salamanca Castile and Leon Manoeuvres French 19 30 November 1807 Invasion of Portugal Portugal Junot enters Portugal 19 November 22 November 1807 Bayonne to Spain Manoeuvres French The 25 000 men of the French reserves the Second Corps of Observation of the Gironde under General Dupont crossed into Spain 3 The following month when Marshal Moncey s troops also crossed the Pyrenees see 8 January 1808 below Dupont marched on towards Madrid cantoning in Burgos Valladolid and other major cities of Old Castile 29 November 1807 Transfer of the Portuguese Court to Brazil The Royal Court of Portugal headed by the Prince Regent Prince John and his mother Maria I of Portugal set sail for Brazil escorted by the British Royal Navy led by Sir Sidney Smith and Sir Graham Moore younger brother of Sir John Moore 30 November 1807 Junot occupies Lisbon 4 Lisbon Manoeuvres French Junot entered the city with only 1 500 troops the rest of his troops arriving over the following ten days 3 1 December 1807 First anti French riots 4 Lisbon 13 December 1807 Anti French riots Lisbon Junot ordered the Portuguese flag be replaced by the tricolour on the public buildings in the city which led to a fierce riot dispersed with a cavalry charge 3 1808 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 8 January 1808 Bayonne Spain Manoeuvres French Following General Dupont s entry into Spain the previous month see 22 November 1807 above a third army corps Marshal Moncey s 30 000 strong Corps of Observation of the Ocean Coast crossed the border via Bayonne occupying all the major towns of Biscay and Navarre 3 February 1808 Junot dissolves the Regency Council and disbands the Portuguese army 4 Manoeuvres French The Portuguese Legion comprising 6 000 Portuguese soldiers sent to France 4 10 February 1808 French troops enter Catalonia Barcelona Catalonia Manoeuvre French General Duhesme at the head of 14 000 troops half French half Italians enters Catalonia and moves towards Barcelona 3 16 February 1808 Citadel of Pamplona Capture of Pamplona Navarre Manoeuvres French The French troops quartered in the town surprised the Spanish garrison at the Citadel Oman 1902 refers to this coup de main the first of a series of similar actions as the infamous seizure by surprise of the Spanish frontier fortresses which would pass for the most odious act of the Emperor s whole career if the kidnapping at Bayonne were not to follow 3 29 February 1808 Citadel of Barcelona Capture of Barcelona Catalonia Manoeuvres French General Lecchi commanding the French troops passing through Barcelona marched his division through the city to the gate of the citadel and suddenly entered the fortress before the Spanish garrison realised what was happening and without a fight evicted the Spanish troops 3 5 March 1808 Fortress of San Sebastian Capture of San Sebastian Manoeuvres French One of Spain s frontier fortresses this one at the Atlantic end of the Pyrenees was surrendered when orders from Madrid forbade its governor to resist an assault 3 10 March 1808 Joachim Murat crosses into Spain from Bayonne Manoeuvres French Napoleon s brother in law the new Grand Duke of Berg as Lieutenant of the Emperor was to take command of all the French forces in Spain 3 17 19 March 1808 Mutiny of Aranjuez Aranjuez Madrid Ferdinand Prince of the Asturias announced that the King was displeased with Godoy the Prince of the Peace and had determined to dismiss him The following morning a royal decree was issued declaring Godoy relieved of all his posts and duties and banished from the court 3 18 March 1808 Sant Ferran Castle Capture of Figueras Catalonia Manoeuvres French The citadel at Figueras on the Mediterranean coast yet another of Spain s frontier fortresses was seized by a coup de main similar to the one carried out a month earlier at Pamplona 3 See 16 February 1808 above 18 March 1808 Joachim Murat Burgos Manoeuvres French With the arrival at Burgos of the newly appointed Lieutenant of the Emperor and Napoleon s brother in law Murat commissioned to take command of all the French forces in Spain together with the news that more than 30 000 troops under Marshal Bessieres had already started to cross the Pyrenees bringing up the total of French troops on the Peninsula to more than 100 000 men Godoy ordered the departure of the King for Seville 3 19 March 1808 Charles IV of Spain abdicates Aranjuez Madrid Abdication Charles IV of Spain abdicated in favour of his son Ferdinand VII 5 23 March 1808 Murat enters Madrid 5 Madrid Manoeuvres French In his letter to his brother Louis dated 27 March 1808 offering him the throne of Spain Napoleon stated that he had 100 000 troops in Spain and that 40 000 of them had entered Madrid with Murat on 23 March 1808 6 24 March 1808 Ferdinand VII enters Madrid 5 Madrid Manoeuvres French 2 May 1808 Dos de Mayo Uprising Madrid Uprising French victory Following the fighting at the Royal Palace rebellion spread to other parts of the city with street fighting in different areas including heavy fighting around the Puerta del Sol the Puerta de Toledo and at the barracks of Monteleon Martial law was imposed on the city Hundreds of people died in the fighting including around 150 French soldiers The uprising was depicted by the Spanish artist Goya in The Second of May 1808 The Charge of the Mamelukes and The Third of May 1808 6 May 1808 Ferdinand VII abdicates Abdication 9 May 1808 Uprising in Oviedo Oviedo Asturias Uprising On 13 May the president of the Junta of Asturias the Marquis of Santa Cruz declared that when and wherever one single Spaniard took arms against Napoleon he would shoulder a musket and put himself at that man s side 3 23 May 1808 Uprising in Valencia 7 Valencia Uprising Valencia acknowledges Fernando as King of Spain The governor 8 Miguel de Saavedra Baron Albalat 9 is killed by the crowds Bertran de Lis and his brothers arm the population 24 May 1808 Uprising in Zaragoza 8 Zaragoza Uprising 24 May 1808 5 June 1808 Dupont marches from Toledo Toledo Andujar Andalusia Manoeuvres French After having originally received orders from Murat to head for Cadiz which were countermanded by Napoleon thinking that his troops might be needed in Madrid Dupont finally left Toledo with 13 000 second line troops After crossed Sierra Morena and encountering no hostility along the way he occupied Andujar on 5 June 3 26 May 1808 Uprising in Seville lt 3 Seville Uprising 30 May 1808 Uprisings in Corunna and Ferrol 3 Galicia Uprising 5 June 1808 Despena perros Jaen Andalusia Spanish victory guerrillas Two squadrons of French dragoons were attacked by insurgents at the northern entrance to the pass of Despenaperros a steep gorge defile in the Sierra Morena that separates Castile La Mancha including Madrid from Andalusia The French were forced to retreat to the nearby town of Almuradiel 5 June 1808 Uprising of Santa Cruz de Mudela Ciudad Real Castile La Mancha Uprising Spanish victory The 700 French troops stationed in the village of Santa Cruz de Mudela are attacked by the population 109 French soldiers are killed and 113 taken prisoner while the rest flee back in the direction of Madrid to Valdepenas See 6 June 1808 below 5 6 June 1808 Valencia Massacre of Valencia Massacre Canon clergy Baltasar Calvo instigated the massacre of 300 400 French citizens half of whom were inside the city s citadel where the local authorities were protecting them against popular reprisals following the killings in Madrid 9 After having declared himself the only representative of King Ferdinand and was about to issue orders for dismissing the captain general Conde de Cervellon and dissolving the Junta Calvo was arrested tried as a traitor and executed Some two hundred of his followers were also executed and their bodies exposed in public 8 6 June 1808 Uprising of Valdepenas Ciudad Real Castile La Mancha Uprising Spanish victory Following the previous day s uprising in Santa Cruz de Mudela Liger Belair and Roize at the head of some 800 troops together with some 300 soldiers that had escaped from the Santa Cruz uprising the previous day prepare to march through the town of Valdepenas The population attack the leading column and Liger Belair sends in the dragoons who are also forced to retreat The resulting truce stipulates that in return for a day s worth of food supplies the French troops will not pass through the village These actions at Santa Cruz see 5 June 1808 above and Valdepenas together with more isolated actions in the Sierra Morena effectively cut French military communications between Madrid and Andalusia for around a month 6 June 1808 Porto Uprising of Porto Portugal Uprising Portuguese victory On hearing of the rebellion in Spain Spanish general Belesta having participated in the Invasion of Portugal and stationed at Porto with 6 000 Spanish troops captures the French general Quesnel and marches to Coruna to join the fight against the French troops sparking off a series of uprisings throughout the north of Portugal 6 June 1808 Coronation of Joseph I Madrid Napoleon s elder brother Joseph Bonaparte proclaimed King of Spain 10 His reign lasted until 11 December 1813 when he abdicated and returned to France after the French defeat at the Battle of Vitoria in 1813 6 June 1808 First battle of Bruch Barcelona Catalonia Spanish victory See also Second battle of Bruch 14 June 1808 Often grouped together as one battle there were in fact two separate battles separated by more than a week with different armies and commanders involved of the 12 French regiments that participated only one of them fought at both battles 7 June 1808 Battle of Alcolea Bridge Cordoba Andalusia French victory At Alcolea 10 km from Cordoba Dupont s troops engaged in their first battle in Andalusia against 3 000 regular troops under Pedro Agustin de Echavarri who tried to protect the bridge over the Guadalquivir The same day Dupont captured Cordoba 7 June 1808 Cordoba Cordoba Andalusia French victory sack On their way to Seville and ultimately to Cadiz Dupont s 18 000 troops capture Cordoba ransacking the city over four days However damaging guerrilla actions force Dupont to withdraw towards Madrid to meet up with Gobert s division that had set out from Madrid on 2 July to reinforce Dupont Only one brigade of this division ultimately reached Dupont the rest being needed to hold the road north to Madrid against the guerrillas 9 10 June 1808 Sack of L Arboc L Arboc Tarragona Catalonia Manoeuvres French sack On retreating back from Tarragona towards Barcelona 3 General Chabran s vanguard was attacked and chased away by some 1 200 sometents from El Vendrell and 200 Swiss regulars When Chabran s emissary returned to negotiate the villagers met them with gunfire and the French troops retaliated sacking the village 11 9 14 June 1808 Capture of the Rosily Squadron Cadiz Andalusia Spanish victory 11 June 1808 Arrest of Spanish troops in Portugal Lisbon Portugal Manoeuvres French Following General Belesta s escape from Porto See 6 June 1808 above Junot arrested General Carrafa and rounded up most of his 7 000 troops note 3 the only Spanish troops now left in Portugal were disarmed and kept prisoners on pontoons moored under the guns of the Lisbon forts until the English released them after the battle of Vimiero ten weeks later 3 under the terms of the Convention of Cintra 12 June 1808 Battle of Cabezon Valladolid Castile and Leon French victory 14 June 1808 Second battle of Bruch Barcelona Catalonia Spanish victory See also First battle of Bruch 6 June 1808 15 June 1808 14 August 1808 First Siege of Zaragoza Zaragoza Aragon Spanish victory 16 June 1808 Uprising of Olhao Olhao Portugal Uprising Portuguese victory Portuguese civilians revolted and expelled the French forces from Olhao 3 By 23 June all French forces had been expelled from the region of Algarve 17 June 1808 Skirmish of Mongat Montgat Barcelona Catalonia French victory On his way to Girona with four French and three Italian squadrons of cuirassiers and chasseurs almost the whole of his cavalry that is some 5 900 men nearly half his corps and a battery of eight guns Duhesme was met at the Castle of Montgat by some 8 000 or 9 000 somatenes who fled after suffering severe losses 3 17 June 1808 Sack of Mataro Mataro Barcelona Catalonia Manoeuvres French sack Met with barricades and two or three cannon Milosewitz s Italian brigade easily stormed the town which Duhesme s troops entered that same afternoon and were given permission by their general to sack the town 3 After leaving Mataro the following day the French troops then destroyed every other village on the road to Girona 3 18 June 1808 Uprising of Faro Faro Portugal Uprising Portuguese victory On 18 June the civilians in the city of Faro captured 70 French soldiers and General Maurin the Governor of Algarve 3 Colonel Maransin Maurin s second in command having lost his communications with Lisbon evacuated his 1 200 men a battalion each of the 26th of the line and the Legion du Midi from the province He withdrew first to Mertola and then to Beja in the Alemtejo before heading to Lisbon 3 See 26 June 1808 below 19 June 1808 Vedel marches from Toledo Toledo La Carolina Manoeuvres French Vedel with the 6 000 men 700 horse and 12 guns of the 2nd Division set out south from Toledo to force a passage over the Sierra Morena hold the mountains from the guerrillas and link up with Dupont pacifying Castile La Mancha along the way Vedel was joined during the march by small detachments under Roize and Liger Belair 20 21 June 1808 Battle of Girona Girona Catalonia Spanish victory 21 June 1808 Manoeuvres French Portuguese victory Loison based at Almeida left for Porto with two battalions some 2 000 men and a few guns to garrison the city Crossing the Douro at the ferry of Pezo de Ragoa his troops were attacked on all sides by the local population which fired on his troops from above and rolled rocks down the slopes at them Loison retreated back to Almeida 26 28 June 1808 Battle of Valencia Valencia Valencia Spanish victory 26 June 1808 Sack of Villa Viciosa Villa Viciosa District of Evora Portugal Manoeuvres French sack Avril based at Estremoz near Elvas relieved the French garrison at Villa Viciosa where the townsfolk had besieged the company of the 86th Regiment The French force sacked the town 3 26 June 1808 Sack of Beja Beja Portugal Manoeuvres French sack Isolated in the centre of the insurrection in Portugal Maransin had left Mertola to withdraw towards Lisbon with his 1 200 men At Beja a mass of citizens fired upon the French troops from the town s walls The French force sacked the town 3 See 18 June 1808 above 26 June 1808 Puerta del Rey mountain pass Jaen Andalusia French victory Vedel s column faced Lieutenant Colonel Valdecanos s detachment of Spanish regulars and guerrillas with six guns blocking the mountain pass The following day Vedel met up with Dupont at La Carolina reestablishing military communications with Madrid after a month of disruption With the reinforcements from Vedel and Gobert Dupont now had 20 000 men albeit short of supplies 12 27 June 1808 Gijon Arrival of British officers Asturias Delegation In response to the Junta General of Asturias request to London the Portland administration sent three British Army officers led by a lieutenant colonel to Gijon to assess the state of affairs Following the Spanish victory at Bailen the following month the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies Viscount Castlereagh sent a second delegation led by General Sir James Leith who arrived in Gijon on 30 August 1808 charged with seeing how the north of Spain could be reinforced to prevent Napoleon sending in more troops through Irun and isolating him in Madrid or Burgos Leith would join Baird s forces in November 1808 13 30 June 1808 Balearic Islands to mainland Spain Manoeuvres Spanish The corps of 10 000 men stationed in the Balearic Islands was the nearest force able to succour Catalonia Faced with the open mutiny of the Aragonese and Catalan battalions of his army the Captain General at Palma General Vives in charge of the garrisons of Majorca and Minorca finally agreed to send troops from Port Mahon to the mainland note 4 The Aragonese regiment landed near Tortosa and marched for Saragossa while the bulk of the expeditionary force nearly 5 000 strong was put ashore in Catalonia between 19 and 23 July 2 3 July 1808 Sack of Jaen Jaen Jaen Andalusia Manoeuvres French Dupont ordered Vedel based at Baylen to send a brigade which sacked the city 3 4 July 1808 Sack of Guarda Guarda District of Guarda Portugal Manoeuvres French Loison left a garrison of 1 200 men at Almeida having formed a provisional battalion of soldiers not deemed fit for forced marching and spent a week moving through the mountains of Beira skirmishing with insurgents along the way and sacking the town of Guarda By the time he reached Abrantes he had lost 200 men mostly stragglers killed by peasantry His cruelty led to his nickname Maneta One Hand being accursed for many years in Portugal 13 July 1808 1 August 1808 Expeditionary force British Cork Ireland Mondego Bay Coimbra District Portugal Manoeuvres British Wellington s expeditionary force comprising thirteen battalions of infantry plus cavalry and artillery 14 9 000 men in all 2 sailed from Cork landing in Portugal on 1 August 14 14 July 1808 Battle of Medina de Rioseco Valladolid Castile and Leon French victory Also known as the Battle of Moclin from the name of a nearby hill held by Spanish infantry 16 19 July 1808 Battle of Bailen Jaen Andalusia Spanish victory decisive Having lost some 2 000 men on the battlefield together with some 800 Swiss troops that had gone over to Reding s Swiss regiment Dupont called for a truce formally surrendered his remaining 17 600 men on 23 July Under the terms of surrender Dupont Vedel and their troops were to be repatriated to France However with the exception of the most senior officers most of the French rank and file were confined on hulks in Cadiz before being transported to the uninhabited island of Cabrera where half of the 7 000 men starved to death 5 24 July 1808 16 August 1808 Second Siege of Girona Girona Catalonia Spanish victory 29 July 1808 Battle of Evora Alentejo Portugal French victory The following day the French General Loison massacred the men women and children of Evora marking the future of the relationships between the different nations 1 August 1808 17 December 1808 Blockade of Barcelona Barcelona Catalonia French victory 7 August 1808 11 October 1808 Evacuation of the La Romana Division Denmark Spain by sea Manoeuvres Spanish Some 9 000 men stationed in Denmark belonging to the 15 000 strong Division of the North comprising Spanish troops commanded by Pedro Caro 3rd Marquis of la Romana defected from the armies of the First French Empire under the leadership of Marshal Bernadotte Transported aboard British navy ships on reaching Santander they reinforced Blake s Army of Galicia Entering into battle at Valmaseda on 5 November 1808 they defeated Victor s army only to be defeated by the same forces a few days later at the Battle of Espinosa 17 August 1808 Battle of Rolica Leiria Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory tactical French retreat The first battle fought by the British army during the Peninsular War 15 21 August 1808 Battle of Vimeiro Lisbon Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory Wellesley not yet Wellington was superseded in command by Generals Sir Harry Burrard and Sir Hew Dalrymple 15 This defeat for the French led to the signing of the Convention of Sintra on 30 August 1808 putting an end to Napoleon s invasion of Portugal 27 August 1808 Alfaro Bridge of amp Tudela Alfaro La Rioja Tudela Navarre amp Miranda de Ebro Manoeuvres Spanish wbr skirmishes On 27 August following Palafox s instructions to push as far up the Ebro as he could Eugenio Eulalio Palafox Portocarrero Count of Montijo at the head of a column of the Army of Aragon reached the bridge at Alfaro almost opposite the left flank of the French forces at Milagro When attacked there by Lefebvre Desnouettes s cavalry the Spanish column retreated to Tudela where Marshal Moncey met them with an infantry division Again Montijo retreated Thinking that these skirmishes must be mere diversions and under the impression that the attack would be coming from that side King Joseph moved his reserves up the river to Miranda Montijo however had given way simply because his troops were raw levies and because his nearest support was Saragossa 3 It would not be until some three weeks later that Spanish forces made another offensive move 30 August 1808 Convention of Sintra Lisbon Portugal French troops abandon Portugal Following his victory at the Battle of Vimeiro 21 August Sir Arthur Wellesley against his wishes was ordered by his immediate superiors Sir Harry Burrard and Sir Hew Dalrymple to sign the preliminary Armistice The subsequent convention the Convention of Cintra agreed between Dalrymple and Kellerman and despite the protests of the Portuguese commander Freire 16 allowed the evacuation of Junot s 20 900 troops from Portugal to France with all their equipment and personal property mostly loot aboard Royal Navy ships The public outcry in Britain led to an inquiry held 14 November to 27 December 1808 which cleared all three British officers Shortly after George Woodward would caricature Wellesley in The Convention of Cintra a Portuguese Gambol for the amusement of Iohn Bull London 1809 16 Lieutenant General Sir John Moore took over command of the army in Portugal 15 10 20 September 1808 Bilbao Relief of Bilbao Basque Country Spanish victory Contrary to the plan of operations decided on at Madrid on 5 September by which he was to meet up with the armies of Castanos and of Eguia neither of which were ready on 10 September Blake set in motion his own plan to threaten Burgos with a small portion of his army of some 32 000 Galicians and Asturians while with the main body he would march on Bilbao 3 Having sent his vanguard and reserve brigades towards Burgos Blake moved on Bilbao with four complete divisions with the Marquis of Portazgo s division routing General Monthion s garrison there on 20 September 17 18 26 September 1808 Bilbao Retreat from Bilbao Basque Country Manoeuvres Spanish Having routed General Monthion s garrison the previous week Marquis of Portazgo s division was forced to abandon the city as Ney approached Although Portazgo occupied it again 12 October he was forced to abandon the place once again 18 17 12 October 1808 Combat of San Cugat Sant Cugat del Valles Barcelona Catalonia Spanish victory 3 16 October 1808 Almeida Portugal Manoeuvres British Having left 9 000 troops at Almeida as well as sending 4 000 troops under Lt Gen Sir John Hope towards Madrid via Elvas LtGen Sir John Moore the commander of British forces in Portugal entered Spain with 17 000 troops to meet up with Sir David Baird s 12 300 troops then marching towards Leon from Coruna 19 31 October 1808 Battle of Zornoza Biscay Basque Country Indecisive Although a tactical victory for the French it was considered a strategic blunder 5 November 1808 Battle of Valmaseda Biscay Basque Country Spanish victory 7 November 1808 5 December 1808 Siege of Roses Girona Catalonia French victory 10 November 1808 Battle of Gamonal Burgos Castile and Leon note 5 French victory The Conde de Belvedere at the head of the 1st Division 4 000 foot 400 horse and twelve guns of the army of Estremadura plus the greater part of the 2nd Division about 3 000 infantry and two regiments of hussars of the same army had arrived to reinforce the 1 600 men plus four guns of the Burgos garrison The Spanish forces therefore totalled some 8 600 bayonets 1 100 sabres and sixteen guns which would face Napoleon s French forces note 6 under Soult note 7 of some 70 000 men although of these only around 18 000 bayonets and 6 500 sabres would be deployed for the battle 3 10 11 November 1808 Battle of Espinosa Burgos Castile and Leon French victory 23 November 1808 Battle of Tudela Tudela Navarre French Polish victory 30 November 1808 Battle of Somosierra Mountain pass 60 miles north of Madrid separating the provinces of Madrid and Segovia French victory Famous for the Polish light cavalry s uphill charge in columns of four against Spanish artillery positions The heavily outnumbered Spanish detachment of conscripts and artillery were unable to stop the Grande Armee s advance on Madrid and Napoleon entered the capital of Spain on 4 December a month after having entered the country 10 4 December 1808 Napoleon entered Madrid with 80 000 troops 10 Madrid French victory Napoleon turned his troops against Moore s British forces who were forced to retreat back towards Galicia three weeks later and after a last stand at the Battle of Corunna in January 1809 withdrew from Spain 9 11 December 1808 General St Cyr sets off to relieve Duhesme at Barcelona Roses Barcelona Manoeuvres French Having captured Rosas See 7 November 1808 above General St Cyr was now able to return to his initial task of relieving Duhesme at Barcelona Leaving Reille s division of 5 000 5 500 soldiers to hold Figueras and Rosas watch Girona and protect the high road to Perpignan St Cyr headed south with the divisions of Souham Pino and Chabot a force of some 15 000 infantry and 1 500 horse Realising that Girona would be able to hold out longer than the timeline available Duhesme had reported that their provisions would only last until the end of that month and after failing to draw its commanders Lazan and Alvarez to meet him in the open and as the place commanded the high road St Cyr chose the inland by paths meaning that he was forced to send his guns and heavy baggage back to Figueras 20 15 December 1808 Skirmish at fortress of Hostalrich Hostalric Girona Catalonia French victory The Spanish garrison came out and skirmished with the rearguard of St Cyr s column See 9 December 1808 above but without doing much harm 20 15 December 1808 Combat at San Celoni Sant Celoni Catalonia French victory St Cyr s column See 9 December 1808 above proceeding in single file with the dragoons dismounted and leading their horses descended into the Barcelona chaussee near San Celoni where it was attacked by four battalions of miqueletes sent by Vives 20 16 December 1808 Battle of Cardadeu Barcelona Catalonia French victory 20 December 1808 20 February 1809 Second Siege of Zaragoza Zaragoza Aragon French victory 21 December 1808 Battle of Molins de Rey Barcelona Catalonia French victory 21 December 1808 Battle of Sahagun Leon Castile and Leon British victory 24 December 1808 Combat of Tarancon Tarancon Cuenca Castilla La Mancha Spanish victory Manoeuvres The Duke of the Infantado sent General Venegas with the vanguard of the Army of the Centre together with greater part of his cavalry to surprise the French brigade of dragoons at Tarancon The two French regiments escaped the town with the loss of fifty or sixty men and the Spanish cavalry arrived too late to give chase The vanguard of the Spanish forces planning to evict King Joseph from Madrid remained at Tarancon until 11 January when they withdrew to Ucles 20 See 13 January 1809 below 25 December 1808 Retreat to Corunna British retreat John Moore started a 250 mile 400 km retreat reaching La Coruna on 14 January 29 December 1808 Massacre of Chinchon Chinchon New Castile now Community of Madrid Massacre sack In retaliation for the murder of four French soldiers in the town two day previously the French troops based at Aranjuez executed 86 people both in the town itself and on the road to Aranjuez and set fire to numerous buildings Goya whose brother was a priest in Chinchon during that period 21 makes a reference to this and other tragedies of war in his etching This is worse Esto es peor part of the series The Disasters of War 21 29 December 1808 Battle of Benavente Zamora Castile and Leon British victory 30 December 1808 Battle of Mansilla Leon Castile and Leon French victory 1809 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 1 January 1809 Battle of Castellon Girona Catalonia Spanish victory This Castellon refers to Castello d Empuries in Catalonia not the town or province in Valencia 3 January 1809 Battle of Cacabelos Leon Castile and Leon British victory 13 January 1809 Battle of Ucles Cuenca Castile La Mancha French victory 14 January 1809 Treaty between Great Britain and Spain London Treaty Treaty of peace friendship and alliance by which Britain recognises Fernando as King of Spain 22 16 January 1809 Battle of Corunna A Coruna Galicia Different analyses British tactical victory 23 2 French strategic victory note 8 24 The British troops were able complete their embarkation but left the port cities of Corunna and Ferrol as well as the whole of northern Spain to be captured and occupied by the French During the battle Sir John Moore the British commander was mortally wounded 15 The battle is also referred to as the Battle of Elvina 18 January 1809 Corunna Surrender of A Coruna Galicia French victory Alcedo whose garrison of two Spanish regiments had protected Sir John Moore s troops during the embarkation surrendered to Marshal Soult who was able to refit with the ample military stores available A week later Soult s forces also captured Ferrol a major Spanish naval base with an even greater arsenal than that of Corunna and taking eight ships of the line 18 January 1809 Combat of Tortola Tortola Guadalajara Castile La Mancha French victory Following the defeat at Ucles See 13 January 1809 above battle at which he was not present Infantado withdrawing towards Chinchilla in the kingdom of Murcia via his base at Cuenca went ahead of his artillery Fifteen guns escorted by a single cavalry regiment were captured by Digeon s dragoons at Tortola a few miles to the south of Cuenca 20 31 January 1809 French troops garrison Vigo 25 Vigo Galicia Manoeuvres French On his way to Portugal Marshal Soult left a garrison of 700 men at Vigo to prevent the British using its harbour to supply the Galician insurgents As soon as Soult had moved on to Orense the Galicians headed by Pablo Morillo a lieutenant of the regular army and Manuel Garcia del Barrio a colonel dispatched by the Central Junta from Seville blockaded the city 20 See 27 March 1809 below 25 February 1809 Battle of Valls Tarragona Catalonia French victory 6 7 March 1809 Battle of Monterey Monterrey Orense Galicia French victory 7 March 1809 British General William Beresford appointed Commander in Chief of the Portuguese Army 10 March 1809 Aguilar de Campoo Capture of Aguilar de Campoo Palencia Castile and Leon Spanish victory Juan Diaz Porlier s irregular troops captured the French battalion garrisoned at Aguilar taking prisoner nine officers 400 soldiers and seizing two 4 pounder guns which were taken to Oviedo and handed over to the Junta For this action Porlier was promoted to brigadier and his second in command Amor to captain 26 10 12 March 1809 First Siege of Chaves Norte Portugal French victory Francisco da Silveira would later recapture the town at the Second Siege of Chaves 21 25 March 1809 17 March 1809 Battle of Villafranca Leon Castile and Leon Spanish victory 17 March 1809 Combat of Mesas de Ibor Mesas de Ibor Caceres Extremadura French victory Despite his strong position with six guns and 5 000 troops on the heights of the other side of the ravine at the river Ibor Duke del Parque was forced to retreat pushing his guns over the precipice by Leval s eight battalions 20 20 March 1809 Battle of Braga Braga Portugal French victory Also known as the Battle of Povoa de Lanhoso or Battle of Carvalho d Este 20 March 1809 Combat of Berrocal Caceres Extremadura Spanish victory Henestrosa as the rearguard of Cuesta s Army of Estremadura and faced with Lasalle pressing him made a sudden halt and drove in the leading squadron of the French by a charge of his Royal Carbineers The skirmish at Miajadas the following day would be an even greater Spanish victory 20 See 21 March 1809 below 21 March 1809 Battle of Miajadas Miajadas Caceres Extremadura Spanish victory 21 25 March 1809 Second Siege of Chaves Norte Portugal Portuguese victory 24 March 1809 Battle of Los Yebenes Toledo Castile La Mancha Spanish victory 27 March 1809 Battle of Ciudad Real Ciudad Real Castile La Mancha French Polish victory 27 March 1809 Capitulation of Vigo 20 Vigo Galicia Anglo Spanish victory Articles of Capitulation signed between Chalot the Governor and Commandant of the French troops garrisoned in the town and forts of Vigo on the one part and Crawford captain of the British frigate Venus deputed by George McKinley captain of HMS Lively and Commanding Officer before Vigo and Morillo Colonel Commandant of the Spanish troops before the town on the other 20 See 31 January 1809 above 28 March 1809 Battle of Medellin Medellin Extremadura French victory 28 March 1809 First Battle of Porto Porto Portugal French victory 18 April 1809 2 May 1809 Battle of the Bridge of Amarante Amarante Porto Portugal French victory Oman 1902 p 250 refers to it as the defence of Amarante 3 Following Francisco da Silveira s victory at Chaves see 21 March 1809 above Soult in Porto sent General Delaborde Lorge and Heudelet to assist Loison in opening up the route back to Spain At Amarante the Portuguese troops were able hold Loison with 9 000 French troops nearly half the army of Portugal concentrated on the west bank of the Tamega Riverfor almost two weeks 3 22 April 1809 Creation of Anglo Portuguese Army Having arrived at Lisbon on the 29th 14 Wellesley Commander in Chief of the British Army was appointed Commander in Chief of the Portuguese Army and integrated the two armies into mixed British Portuguese divisions normally on a basis of two British and one Portuguese brigades citation needed 6 May 1809 12 December 1809 Third Siege of Girona Girona Catalonia French victory Depicted in The Great Day of Girona by Ramon Marti Alsina 10 May 1809 11 May 1809 Battle of Grijo Porto Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory 12 May 1809 Second Battle of Porto Porto Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory decisive Also known as the Battle of the Douro Wellesley s British troops reinforced by Portuguese units under Beresford s command beat Soult at Oporto forcing the French out of the country 15 14 May 1809 Battle of Alcantara Caceres Extremadura French victory 22 May 1809 Combat at Campo de Estrella Santiago de Compostela Galicia Spanish victory General La Carrera having rested his 2000 strong detachment of regulars at Puebla de Sanabria then marched them plus six guns up to form the core of the Division of the Minho the newly raised insurrectionary army that Morillo and Garcia del Barrio had been training The combined force of 10 000 men of whom 7 000 had firearms then approached Santiago where Maucune s four battalions and a regiment of chasseurs met them outside the city and were repulsed with Carrera forcing the French troops back into the town and chasing them for a league beyond it Maucune himself wounded and having lost 600 men a fifth of his whole force and two guns retreated in disorder to La Coruna 20 23 May 1809 Battle of Alcaniz Teruel Aragon Spanish victory 7 June 1809 9 June 1809 Battle of Puente Sanpayo Pontevedra Galicia Spanish victory 15 June 1809 Battle of Maria Zaragoza Aragon French victory 18 June 1809 Battle of Belchite Zaragoza Aragon French victory 27 28 July 1809 Battle of Talavera Toledo Castile La Mancha Anglo Spanish victoryStrategic French victory Wellesley who together with Spanish troops under General Cuesta had defeated the French army at this battle then had to return to Portugal when Marshal Soult s army threatened his lines of communication 15 8 August 1809 Battle of Arzobispo Toledo Castile La Mancha French victory 11 August 1809 Battle of Almonacid Toledo Castile La Mancha French victory 12 August 1809 Battle of Puerto de Banos Caceres Extremadura French victory Mountain pass 9 October 1809 Combat of Astorga Leon Castile and Leon Spanish victory Apparently unaware that the town had recently been heavily garrisoned Kellerman sent Carrie with 1 200 infantry and two regiments of dragoons to attack the town 27 18 October 1809 Battle of Tamames Salamanca Castile and Leon Spanish victory 25 October 1809 Battle of Maguelone Gulf of Roses Girona Catalonia British victory A running naval battle 26 October 1809 28 Wellington orders construction of the Lines of Torres Vedras Lisbon Portugal Fortification Anglo Portuguese Wellington orders construction of the Lines Under the direction of Sir Richard Fletcher the first line was completed one year later around the time of the Battle of Sobral 11 November 1809 Combat of Ocana Toledo Castile La Mancha French victory Ocana is a small town 65 km from Madrid defended by five regiments of Milhaud s dragoons and Sebastiani s division six battalions of Polish infantry Areizaga sent his cavalry force 5 700 strong which outnumbered the French cavalry by three to one and forced them to retreat behind the Polish infantry After attempting to attack the squares Areizaga realised that they would have to wait for Zayas s infantry to arrive and attack the following day The French however retreated overnight to Aranjuez Areizaga entered the town the following day 29 18 November 1809 Combat of Ontigola Ontigola near Ocana French victory The cavalry of Milhaud and Paris who was killed in the battle 30 made up of eight regiments numbering almost 3 000 men and riding at the head of the French army crossed the Tagus river at Aranjuez and met Freire s four divisions of horsemen over 4 000 sabres moving at the head of Areizaga s column According to Oman 1908 the collision of Milhaud and Freire brought about the largest cavalry fight which took place during the whole Peninsular War 30 19 November 1809 Battle of Ocana Toledo Castile La Mancha French victory At Ocana 65 km from Madrid French forces under Soult and King Joseph Bonaparte caused the greatest single defeat of Spanish army leaving twenty six thousand out of the fifty four thousand Spanish troops under Areizaga dead wounded or imprisoned 1 23 November 1809 Battle of Carpio Valladolid Castile and Leon Spanish victory El Carpio some 20 km southwest of the town of Medina del Campo is about 4 km from Fresno el Viejo Both villages border the province of Salamanca at the southwestern tip of the province of Valladolid The village including its strategic 10th century fortress was completely destroyed by the French troops on 25 November 26 November 1809 Battle of Alba de Tormes Salamanca Castile and Leon French victory 1810 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 21 January 1810 Battle of Mollet Barcelona Catalonia Spanish victory 31 January 1810 Capture of Oviedo Oviedo Asturias French victory The captain general of Asturias Antonio Arce with some 4 000 men to cover the whole of Asturias note 9 plus some new levies little more than 2 000 strong raised at Oviedo evacuated that city without offering much resistance to General Bonet s 7 000 troops out of Santander 30 However by seizing Infiesto and Gijon Juan Diaz Porlier effectively cut off Bonet s communication with Santander forcing the French general to abandon Oviedo and head back towards Santander in order to clear his rear whereby the Spanish general Barcena was able to reoccupy the Asturian capital See 14 February 1810 below 1 February 1810 Seville surrender of Seville Andalusia French victory King Joseph accompanied by Marshals Soult and Victor entered Seville the Central Junta having abandoned the city to its fate 30 5 February 1810 24 August 1812 Siege of Cadiz Cadiz Andalusia Spanish victory The reconstituted national government of Spain known as the Cortes of Cadiz effectively a government in exile fortified itself in Cadiz besieged by 70 000 French troops 14 February 1810 Combat of Colloto amp capture of Oviedo Colloto Asturias French victory Bonet having secured his line back to Santander returned to take Oviedo the capital of Asturias again See 31 January 1810 above after defeating Barcena who had reoccupied the city at Colloto 30 just outside Oviedo The Roman bridge of Colloto crosses the Nora River on the Roman road that connected Cantabria with Gallaecia It was declared a Cultural heritage monument in 2003 31 20 February 1810 Battle of Vich Barcelona Catalonia French victory 19 March 1810 Skirmish at Grado Grado Asturias Spanish victory Jose Cienfuegos appointed by the Asturian junta to take command of Arce s Asturian troops resumed the offensive operations against Bonet Following the skirmish and once again concerned with Juan Diaz Porlier s rear attacks Bonet abandoned Oviedo for the third time 30 withdrawing to Cangas de Onis See 14 February 1810 above 21 March 1810 Battle of Vilafranca Vilafranca del Penedes Catalonia Spanish victory 21 March 1810 22 April 1810 Siege of Astorga Leon Castile and Leon French victory 29 March 1810 Capture of Oviedo Oviedo Asturias French victory For the fourth time in three months 30 Bonet took the capital of Asturias See 19 March 1810 above The Spanish troops once again retired without offering serious opposition and were finally forced to retreat to Tineo in the mountains Bonnet s 7 000 men were now immobilized for the rest of the year having to garrison Oviedo the ports of Gijon and Aviles as well as all the central and eastern Asturias and moreover to defend the communication with Santander from Juan Diaz Porlier s continued attacks 30 5 April 1810 Battle of Manresa Manresa Catalonia Spanish victory 15 April 1810 Lleida arrival of Suchet s troops Lleida Catalonia Manoeuvres French Suchet s army of 13 000 French troops arrived in front of Lleida The siege proper started on 29 April 23 April 1810 Battle of Margalef Tarragona Catalonia French victory On 22 April a Spanish force of 8 000 infantry and 600 cavalry 32 incorporated into two divisions led by Ibarrola and Pirez under O Donnell 33 descended the Monblanc defile of the Prades Mountains to relieve Lleida They were surprised by Musnier s seven infantry battalions and 500 cuirassieres which together with Harispe s three infantry battalions and two squadrons of hussars that had been stationed at Alcoletge a bridgehead three miles from Lleida forced them to retreat to the ruined village of Margalef some 10 miles from Lleida 32 26 April 1810 9 July 1810 First siege of Ciudad Rodrigo Salamanca Castile and Leon French victory 29 April 1810 13 May 1810 Siege of Lleida Lleida Catalonia French victory 15 May 1810 8 June 1810 Siege of Mequinenza Zaragoza Aragon French victory 11 July 1810 Combat of Barquilla Salamanca Castile and Leon French victory 11 July 1810 Landing at Santona Santona Cantabria Manoeuvres Anglo Spanish Captain Mends on board HMS Arethusa off Bermeo informed the commander in chief of the Western Squadron Lord Gambier that his squadron also composed of HMS Medusa under Captain Bowles HMS Narcissus 1801 under Captain Aylmer who would also lead the landing party HMS Dryad 1795 HMS Amazon 1799 note 10 and HMS Cossack 1806 had successfully participated in the landing of Brigadier general Porlier s 500 men and that a brigade of British seamen and Marines had also been part of the landing party and had seen action onshore Mends as well as commending the officers and men serving under him ends his dispatch by praising Porlier and the gallantry of his small band of officers and soldiers 34 24 July 1810 Battle of the Coa Guarda Portugal French victory After having blown up the Real Fuerte de la Concepcion on 20 July Craufurd positioned his Light Brigade comprising five battalions of infantry two light cavalry regiments and one horse artillery battery about 4200 infantry 800 cavalry and 6 guns 35 east of the Coa River disobeying Wellington s orders near Castelo de Almeida and near the only bridge of an otherwise unfordable river On the morning of the battle they were surprised by Marshal Ney s 20 000 troops on their way to besiege Almeida Craufurd was able to defend the bridge against several attacks but finally retreated at midnight The Real Fuerte de la Concepcion in the province of Salamanca was one of a series of star forts on the Spanish side of the border between Spain and Portugal The Praca forte de Almeida 10 km away in the Guarda District was one of a series of Portuguese star forts 25 July 27 August 1810 First siege of Almeida Guarda Portugal French victory 29 July 1810 Sanabria Zamora French victory At the head of 5 000 troops 30 General Seras attacked the castle at Puebla de Sanabria near the border with Portugal garrisoned by 3 000 Spanish troops 36 When the Spanish general Taboada abandoned the place the French took twenty pieces of artillery and enough provisions for 3 000 troops for six months 36 Silveira concerned immediately prepared to defend the frontier However Seras unexpectedly turned back to Zamora leaving a battalion of the 2nd Swiss Regiment and a squadron of horse to garrison the place 30 Silveira and Taboada immediately united their forces and routed the French from the castle forcing it into the town on 4 August where it was forced to surrender a week later with some 20 officers and 350 men of an original 600 taken prisoner 30 Seras returned too late to succour his garrison and retired to Benavente whereupon Taboada reoccupied the place Seras then had to head up to the north where Bonet was being bothered by Porlier s actions with Bonet asking him to attack Porlier s force in the rear 30 11 August 1810 Combat of Villagarcia Villagarcia de la Torre Extremadura French victory 10 September 1810 Combat at Bagur Bagur Girona Catalonia English victory An English landing party stormed the coastal battery capturing the garrison of 50 men 30 14 September 1810 Battle of La Bisbal Girona Catalonia Anglo Spanish victory 14 September 1810 Actions at Palamos San Feliu amp Calonje Palamos San Feliu amp Calonje Girona Catalonia Anglo Spanish victory On the same day that O Donnell was taking La Bisbal see above General Doyle the British commissioner in Catalonia and Captain Fane having sailed from Tarragona on the British frigate Cambrian Fane s ship accompanying the Spanish frigate Diana and a few transports led a landing force numbering some 500 troops to storm Palamos 30 while the Spanish troops under Colonel Fleires took San Feliu 30 and Colonel Aldea cut off the French troops at Calonje 30 That day Anglo Spanish forces captured General Schwartz two colonels fifty six officers and 1 183 rank and file with seventeen guns leaving Schwartz s brigade completely out of action 30 15 September 1810 Battle of Fuente de Cantos Fuente de Cantos Extermadura French victory 24 September 1810 Cortes of Cadiz opening session Cadiz Andalusia The opening session of the Cortes was held eight months into the two and a half year Siege of Cadiz 27 September 1810 Battle of Bussaco Serra do Bussaco mountain range Aveiro District Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory Marshal Massena having captured the border fortresses of Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida advanced into Portugal At Bussaco Wellington s Anglo Portuguese army drove them off with the loss of about 1 250 killed or wounded compared to French losses of 4 500 men 15 1 2 October 1810 Sack of Coimbra Coimbra Coimbra District Portugal Massena s troops sacked the city over two days the first division of the 8th Corps consisting mainly of newly formed battalions of conscripts arriving on 1 October No attempt was made to restore order until the 6th Corps entered the next day although the plunder continued 30 6 October 1810 Trant s Raid Coimbra Portugal Portuguese victory Coimbra is recaptured by Portuguese militia led by Nicholas Trant 13 14 October 1810 Battle of Sobral Lisbon Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory 6 October 1810 Trant s Raid Coimbra Portugal Portuguese victory Coimbra is recaptured by Portuguese militia led by Nicholas Trant 14 October 2 November 1810 Cantabrian Expedition La Coruna Galicia Gijon Asturias Santona Cantabria Viveiro Galicia Manoeuvres Anglo Spanish Having previously collaborated on a joint mission see 11 July 1810 above another Anglo Spanish landing operation set off to establish a base at Santona from which to free the western part of the coast of the Cantabrian Sea of French troops and then move on to free up the central and eastern coast of the region effectively cutting off Irun as the main gateway for French supplies into Spain 37 The squadron under the command of Captain Joaquin Zarauz sailed from La Coruna on 14 October 1810 37 The British squadron led by Captain Mends on board the frigate HMS Arethusa 1781 was also composed of the frigates HMS Medusa under Captain Bowles HMS Narcissus 1801 under Captain Aylmer HMS Amazon 1799 and the brig sloop HMS Port Mahon 1798 37 The landing party consisted of 1 200 Spanish troops under Field Marshal Renovales and 800 British Marines 37 30 After an initial landing at Gijon from which they drove the French garrison and captured large amounts of supplies the expedition then headed for Santona where a gale forced the expedition to turn back On their way into port at Viveiro two of the Spanish ships the frigate Santa Maria Magdalena and the brig Palomo were both destroyed with great loss of life Magdalena having collided with HMS Narcissus 1801 shortly before foundering 37 Of the 508 people on board the Magdalena 500 perished in the storm 37 including her captain Blas Salcedo 37 and the commander in chief of the Expedition Zarauz 38 Of the eight people who managed to reach shore five later died of their injuries 37 Of the 75 men on board the Palomo 50 perished in the storm while the remaining 25 including their captain managed to reach the shore 37 15 October 1810 Battle of Fuengirola Malaga Andalusia Polish French victory 18 October 1810 Plunder of Solsona Solsona Lleida Catalonia Manouevre plunder French The French Marshal Macdonald at the head of two French and two Italian brigades set off to do battle against the Marquis de Campoverde s Spanish troops Stopping at Solsona until then the seat of Junta of Upper Catalonia and finding the place deserted by its inhabitants the French troops proceeded to plunder the town and burnt its cathedral 30 21 October 1810 Combat of Cardona Cardona Barcelona Catalonia Spanish victory The Marquis de Campoverde s division together with several thousand somatenes had manned the town its castle and the neighbouring heights Without waiting for Marshal Macdonald and the reserve brigade the Italian general Eugenio marched straight at the position with Salme s French brigade in support and was forced to retreat 30 31 October 1810 Combat at Alventosa Albentosa Teruel Aragon French victory General Chlopicki in the first of two successive engagements defeated the partisan forces of Carbajal and Villacampa 30 See 11 November 1810 below 4 November 1810 Battle of Baza Granada Andalusia French victory 11 November 1810 Combat at Fuensanta Sanctuary of Our Lady of Fuensanta Villel Teruel Aragon French victory General Chlopicki in the second of two successive engagements defeated the partisan forces of Carbajal and Villacampa 30 See 31 October 1810 above 16 December 1810 2 January 1811 Siege of Tortosa Tortosa Catalonia French victory 25 December 1810 Combat at Palamos Palamos Girona Catalonia French victory Two French gunboats and eight transports on their way from Cette with provisions for the garrison at Barcelona were destroyed by a landing party from the British frigates based along the Catalan coast Although the initial British raid was a success they were surprised by a French flying column and driven back to their boats with a loss of over 200 men including the commanding officer Captain Fane of HMS Cambrian 39 who was taken prisoner 31 December 1810 Ponte do Abbade Combat of Ponte do Abbade Guarda District Portugal French victory Francisco da Silveira with six militia regiments and the former garrison of Almeida had orders to stay between General Claparede s force of 6 000 troops and Porto The Portuguese had been following the French troops and Claparede based at Trancoso which Silveira had initially retreated from on Claparede s approach routed the Portuguese at Ponte do Abbade on 31 December Having lost 200 men Silveira retreated to Vila da Ponte some seven miles away 39 1811 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 11 January 1811 Vila da Ponte Combat of note 11 Aldeia da Ponte Guarda District Portugal French victory On 11 January General Claparede made a second sortie from Trancoso beating Francisco da Silveira s men even more decisively than at Ponte do Abbade the previous month and pursued them to Lamego on the Douro Silveira crossed the river on the 13th and the news of his defeat brought terror to Oporto Bacelar ordered the four battalions from Vizeu Trant s seven battalions from Coimbra and Wilson s four battalions from Penacova to join him They concentrated at Castro Daire ten miles south of Lamego with a force of 14 000 bayonets whereupon Claparede with less than half that number and worried about being cut off returned to Trancoso 39 15 January 1811 Battle of Pla Tarragona Catalonia Spanish victory 19 22 January 1811 Siege of Olivenza Badajoz Extremadura French victory 26 January 1811 11 March 1811 First Siege of Badajoz Badajoz Extremadura French victory The Spanish fortress fell to the French forces under Marshal Soult 19 February 1811 Battle of the Gebora Badajoz Extremadura French victory 21 February 1811 Cadiz Tarifa Algeciras Cadiz Andalusia Manoeuvres Allied A mixed force of 9 500 Spanish 4 900 British and a few hundred Portuguese set sail from Cadiz towards Tarifa fifty miles to the south in order to move inland and attack the French besiegers from the rear However due to bad weather the force had to land at Algeciras further than planned 14 See 5 March 1811 below 5 March 1811 Battle of Barrosa Cadiz Andalusia Anglo Spanish victory Throughout February March an Anglo Iberian relief force had tried to break the French blockade of Cadiz On 5 March Marshal Victor attacked this force near Barrosa and although the Allies succeeded in routing Victor s army they were not able to lift the siege of Cadiz 15 See 21 February 1811 above 11 March 1811 Battle of Pombal Leiria Portugal French victory 12 March 1811 Battle of Redinha Coimbra Portugal Indecisive wbr Manoeuvres French retreat 14 March 1811 Battle of Casal Novo Coimbra Portugal French victory 15 March 1811 Battle of Foz de Arouce Anglo Portuguese victory Lousa Coimbra District Portugal 15 March 1811 21 March 1811 Siege of Campo Maior Castle Alentejo Portugal French victory 800 Portuguese militia and 50 old cannon held out against 4 500 troops belonging to the V Corps under Marshal Mortier 25 March 1811 Battle of Campo Maior Alentejo Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory 3 April 1811 Battle of Sabugal Guarda Portugal Anglo Portuguese victory 9 10 April 1811 Capture of Sant Ferran Castle Figueres Girona Spanish victory Manoeuvres In the early hours of 10 April 700 miqueletes sent by Francesc Rovira i Sala entered through the vaults of the citadel and caught the French garrison asleep Within the hour the place had been won By dawn over 2 000 Catalans had manned the fortress 39 See also 17 April 1811 below 10 April 19 August 1811 Siege of Figueras Sant Ferran Castle Figueres Girona French victory Following the miqueletes s capture of the citadel see 10 April 1811 above General Peyri with 1 500 Italian troops had reoccupied the town of Figueras below the citadel waiting for reinforcements It would not be until a week later that General Baraguey d Hilliers with 6 500 infantry and 500 cavalry started the blockade proper of the citadel 39 See also 19 August 1811 below 14 April 10 May 1811 Second siege of Almeida Guarda Portugal Allied victory Also known as the Blockade of Almeida since the Anglo Portuguese Army had no heavy guns to breach the walls they were forced to starve the garrison out Because of this it was technically a blockade rather than a siege French troops abandoned the fort under cover of darkness and escaped See Battle of Fuentes de Onoro 22 April 12 May 18 May 10 June 1811 Second Siege of Badajoz Badajoz Extremadura French victory The siege was briefly lifted while the Battle of Albuera was fought on 16 May 3 6 May 1811 Battle of Fuentes de Onoro Salamanca Castile and Leon Tactically indecisive 40 41 42 Anglo Portuguese victory strategic 43 Spanish village on the border with Portugal French troops under Massena failed to relieve the fortress at Almeida after being narrowly defeated by Wellington at Fuentes de Onoro 15 See Blockade of Almeida 5 May 1811 29 June 1811 First siege of Tarragona Tarragona Catalonia French victory 16 May 1811 Battle of Albuera Badajoz Extremadura Allied victory Allied forces engaged the French Armee du Midi Army of the South some 20 kilometres 12 mi south of Badajoz Marshal Soult had set out to relieve Badajoz besieged by Beresford Soult outmanoeuvred his opponent at nearby Albuera but was forced to withdraw 15 Three days later Wellington arrived at Badajoz having marched from Almeida 15 25 May 1811 First battle of Arlaban Mountain pass between Gipuzkoa and Alava Spanish victory Guerrilla ambush led by Francisco Espoz y Mina Also referred to as the First Surprise of Arlaban to distinguish it from the Second Surprise of Arlaban April 1812 25 May 1811 Battle of Usagre Badajoz Extremadura Allied victory 6 and 9 June 1811 Forts of Badajoz two separate assaults Badajoz Extremadura French victory Wellington made two assaults against the forts but was beaten back 15 French reinforcements forced him to abandon the siege 15 23 June 1811 Battle of Cogorderos Leon Castile Leon Spanish victory 30 June 2 July 1811 Siege of Niebla Niebla Huelva Andalusia French victory Instead of marching on Seville Joaquin Blake laid siege to the Castle of Niebla whose garrison consisted of a battalion of 600 Spanish and British deserters 39 However an escalade having failed and having been unable to bring up artillery due to the bad mountain roads the Spanish troops were unable to take the place Blake finally withdrew when Soult sent Conroux and Godinot to relieve the garrison Although the siege itself was not successful it did serve to draw 11 000 French troops into a remote corner of the region for some weeks 39 29 July 1811 Battle of Montserrat Barcelona Catalonia French victory 9 August 1811 Battle of Zujar Granada Andalusia French victory 19 August 1811 Sant Ferran Castle Figueres Girona Surrender With the fall of Figueras which blocks the main road from Perpignan to Barcelona Marshall Macdonald s troops which had been detained for so long blockading the citadel were now able to come to the assistance of Suchet s Army of Aragon to capture Valencia 44 See also 10 April 1811 above 25 September 1811 Battle of El Bodon Salamanca Castile and Leon French victory 28 September 1811 Aldeia da Ponte Combat of note 12 Aldeia da Ponte Guarda District Portugal Wellington having secured his ground at Alfayates with his whole army also considered Aldea da Ponte to be too valuable to relinquish unless overwhelmed by a superior force Even though it lay outside the intended line of battle two miles away and on lower ground it was a meeting place of several roads and well placed for observation Generals Thiebault and Souham Montbrun and Watier under Marshal Marmont had engaged the British troops there in skirmishes but Marmont on arriving took the decision not to advance and ordered the retreat for Ciudad Rodrigo while Wellington gave orders for his army to take up winter quarters 39 4 14 October 1811 Battle of Cervera Lleida Catalonia Spanish victory 16 October 1811 Action at Ayerbe Ayerbe Huesca Aragon Spanish victory A column of 800 Italian infantry belonging to Severoli s division at Zaragoza marching to relieve the garrison of Ayerbe was surprised by Mina s 4 000 troops The column was exterminated 44 with two hundred Italians killed and six hundred including many wounded taken prisoner after a running fight between Ayerbe and Huesca Mina then crossed 200 miles of French occupied territory in Northern Spain to the Cantabrian coast at Motrico where he handed over his prisoners to the British frigate HMS Isis 44 25 October 1811 Battle of Saguntum Valencia Valencia French victory 28 October 1811 Battle of Arroyo dos Molinos Caceres Extremadura Allied victory 3 November 1811 9 January 1812 Siege of Valencia Valencia Valencia French victory 5 November 1811 First battle of Bornos Cadiz Andalusia Spanish victory 19 December 1811 5 January 1812 Siege of Tarifa Cadiz Andalusia Allied victory 29 December 1811 Combat of Navas de Membrillo La Nava de Santiago Badajoz French victory Hoping to surprise General Dembowski at Merida Hill s advanced cavalry chanced upon a troop of hussars at the head of a column of French infantry three companies of the 88th regiment some 400 men who had been sent out to raise requisitions of food in the villages in the area Hill sent two squadrons each of the 13th Light Dragoons and 2nd Hussars of the King s German Legion KLG in pursuit The French captain formed his men in a square and beat off five cavalry charges with heavy loss to Hill s men the KGL Hussars had two men killed and one officer and 17 men wounded while the 13th Light Dragoons had one killed and 19 wounded Dembowski once warned of the approaching allied forces evacuated Merida where Hill arriving the following day found the French had abandoned 160 000 lb of wheat 44 45 In a letter to the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies the Earl of Liverpool Wellington expressed his surprise at Dembowski being still alive having thought that he had been killed at Arroyo dos Molinos the previous October 46 1812 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 8 January 1812 20 January 1812 Second siege of Ciudad Rodrigo Salamanca Castile and Leon Allied victory Wellington laid siege to the town and by 19 January his guns had opened up two gaps in its defences That night while the 3rd Division attacking one breach suffered heavily from a huge mine explosion the Light Division assaulted the other and managed to force its way into the town The French troops surrendered the town 15 18 January 1812 Combat of Villaseca Vila seca Tarragona Catalonia Spanish victory Lafosse the governor of Tortosa on his way to relieve Tarragona with a battalion and a troop of dragoons was surprised by Eroles at the head of over 3 000 somatenes at Villaseca Lafosse managed to reach Tarragona with only twenty two of his dragoons but his battalion after resisting for several hours in the village was forced to surrender Eroles took nearly 600 prisoners and left over 200 French troops dead 44 Commodore Edward Codrington then commanding a squadron in the Mediterranean Sea charged with harrying French shipping was present at the combat having come on shore to confer with Eroles with whom he often collaborated 44 regarding an action against Tarragona The Spanish force managed to liberate two Royal Navy captains taken prisoner by Lafosse s men after having landed at Cape Salou the previous day 44 20 January 1812 Capture of Denia Denia Province of Alicante Manoeuvres French Denia was an important centre of distribution for stores and munitions of war and its fortifications had been newly repaired during Blake s time at Valencia However following Blake s surrender at Valencia earlier that month Mahy withdrew his garrison neglecting to remove its magazines On entering Denia Harispe found sixty guns mounted on its walls plus forty small merchant vessels in the harbour some of them laden with stores As well as garrisoning the place the French fitted out some of the vessels as privateers Mahy s carelessness in abandoning these resources was among the reasons he was removed from command by the Cadiz Regency 44 20 January 1812 2 February 1812 Siege of Peniscola Peniscola Valencia Valencia French victory Garrisoned by 1 000 veteran Spanish troops under Garcia Navarro the impregnable fortress at Peniscola sitting atop a rock connected with the mainland by a narrow sand spit 250 yards long known as the little Gibraltar was one of the strongest places in all Spain and was regularly revictualled by Spanish and British vessels from Alicante Cartagena and the Balearic Isles Suchet ordered Severoli with two Italian and two French battalions to besiege the place and on the 31st work began to erect five batteries 44 On February 2 Garcia Navarro capitulated under unusually favourable terms note 13 Having surrendered the place to the French troops he was then appointed governor of the same place by the French 47 24 January 1812 Battle of Altafulla Tarragona Catalonia French victory 16 March 1812 6 April 1812 Siege of Badajoz Badajoz Extremadura Allied victory Having breached the city walls at great loss Wellington s troops went on a rampage of rape and pillage for three days massacring hundreds of civilians before being brought to order 15 3 April 1812 Combat at Fuente del Maestre Fuente del Maestre Badajoz Extremadura Anglo Portuguese victory Lt Col Abercromby led a column of 2nd Hussars and 14th Portuguese Cavalry that routed a body of around 100 French dragoons 48 9 April 1812 Second battle of Arlaban Mountain pass between Gipuzkoa and Alava Spanish victory Also referred to as the Second Surprise of Arlaban to distinguish it from the First Surprise of Arlaban May 1811 11 April 1812 Battle of Villagarcia also known as the Battle of Llerena Badajoz Extremadura British victory 18 19 May 1812 Battle of Almaraz Caceres Extremadura Allied victory Some 9 000 Allied troops under Rowland Hill destroyed the pontoon bridge the French had built at Almaraz in 1811 Hill then proceeded to repair the bridge at Alcantara thereby allowing Wellington to move towards Salamanca 49 The original bridge at Almaraz dating from 1552 had been partially destroyed in January 1809 by the Spanish General Juan de Henestrosa the vanguard of General Gregorio de la Cuesta s army The following month it had suffered further damage when another part of it collapsed killing 26 soldiers including the engineer officer 50 31 May 1812 Battle of Bornos Cadiz Andalusia French victory 11 June 1812 Battle of Maguilla Badajoz Extremadura French victory 13 17 June 1812 Ciudad Rodrigo Salamanca Castile Leon Manoeuvres British Wellington s troops moved from their cantonments towards Salamanca The French troops abandoned the city and Wellington entered on the 17th 49 See 17 June 1812 below 17 June 1812 La Coruna North of Spain Cantabria Basque Country and Navarre Manoeuvres British Popham sailed from Corunna with his fleet comprising two line of battleships five frigates two sloops and one or two smaller vessels transporting two battalions of marines a company of artillery 14 and several thousand small arms for the guerrilleros Popham also carried credentials from Castanos as captain general of Galicia for Mendizabal the officer liaising with the bands of Cantabria and Biscay including Porlier s brigades in the Eastern Asturias and Longa s in Cantabria both of which were considered part of the regular army as well as the guerrilleros of el Pastor in Guipuzcoa Renovales in Biscay el Cura Merino and others 44 17 27 June 1812 Siege of the Salamanca forts Salamanca Castile Leon Allied victory See 13 June 1812 above 21 22 June 1812 Lequeitio storming of defences a fort and a fortified convent Basque Country Anglo Spanish victory Popham landed a 24 pounder and marines which met up with El Pastor s guerrillas and breached the fort When the gun was brought up against the fortified convent the commander surrendered without fighting 290 prisoners were taken Popham then sailed off to Bermeo and Plencia both of which the French evacuated leaving behind provisions and unspiked guns 44 29 June 19 August 1812 Astorga Second siege of Leon Castile Leon Spanish victory Spanish troops liberate Astorga in French hands since the first Siege of Astorga in 1810 6 8 July 1812 Castro Urdiales Cantabria on the Bay of Biscay Anglo Spanish victory Popham was joined by Longa s brigade and drove off a small French column that had come to raise the siege The governor of Castro surrendered with some 150 men and 20 guns on his walls Popham decided to use its castle as a temporary base and garrisoned it with some of his marines 44 21 July 1812 Battle of Castalla Alicante Valencia French victory 22 July 1812 Battle of Salamanca Salamanca Castile and Leon Decisive Allied victory Also known as the Battle of Arapiles for the name of the nearby village Arapiles which in turn takes its name from the two low flat topped hills Arapil Chico Lesser Arapile and Arapil Grande Greater Arapile over and around which part of the battle took place Having secured the Portuguese Spanish frontier Wellington was able to advance further into Spain At Salamanca his Allied army defeated a larger French force under Marshal Marmont 15 22 July 2 August 1812 Santander Capture of Santander Spain Cantabria Anglo Spanish victory Oman considered the capture of Santander the most important event that had happened on the north coast of Spain since 1809 44 note 14 Popham s initial attack coordinated with Mendizabal and one of Porlier s lieutenants Campillo failed However the French governor Dubreton broke out of the place with his 1 600 men on the night of the 2nd 3rd leaving eighteen spiked guns 23 July 1812 Battle of Garcia Hernandez Salamanca Castile and Leon Anglo German victory 31 July 1812 Sicily Palamos Catalonia Manoeuvres Allied Wellington had suggested that an attack on the Catalonian coast would by creating a diversion prevent Suchet from intervening in the west Maitland sent by Lord William Bentinck to Spain with three British two German battalions plus several other foreign units and having picked up some Spanish troops on the way arrived off Palamos on the Catalan coast with some ten thousand men in total eventually landing further south note 15 Although the force achieved little in military terms it did have the desired effect as it was clear that Suchet had been aware of the rumour of troops coming from Sicily and of the existence of the transports at Alicante and Majorca 14 11 August 1812 Battle of Majadahonda New Castile now Community of Madrid 14 August 1812 44 Surrender of the French garrison at the Citadel of Madrid Parque del Buen Retiro Madrid Madrid Allied victory King Joseph having evacuated Madrid on the 10th General Lafon Blaniac surrenders his 2 000 strong garrison Following his victory at Salamanca the previous month Wellington was able to liberate Madrid before moving north to besiege Burgos 15 the logistical hub for all reinforcements and supplies for the French armies in Spain 49 See 19 September 1812 below 25 August 1812 Cadiz Siege of ends 1 Cadiz Andalusia Manoeuvres French French troops withdrew from Cadiz Cadiz would be the only city in continental Europe to survive a siege by Napoleon thirty one months from 5 February 1810 to 25 August 1812 1 19 September 21 October 1812 Siege of Burgos Burgos Castile and Leon French victory Wellington had to abandon the siege of Burgos and retreat back into Portugal once again 15 due to the risk of being encircled by the French forces which following Wellington s victory at Salamanca had themselves been forced to retreat from Andalusia in the south 15 to avoid being cut off but still had enough troops in north and eastern Spain to launch a major counter offensive 15 23 October 1812 Battle of Venta del Pozo Palencia Castile and Leon IndecisiveFrench tactical victory 51 Also known as the Battle of Villodrigo 25 29 October 1812 Battle of Tordesillas Valladolid Castile and Leon French victory Also known as the Battle of Villamuriel or Battle of Palencia 1813 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 13 April 1813 Battle of Castalla Alicante Valencia Anglo Spanish victory 2 June 1813 Battle of Morales Zamora Castile and Leon 3 11 June 1813 Second siege of Tarragona Tarragona Catalonia French victory 18 June 1813 Battle of San Millan Osma San Millan Burgos Castile and Leon Osma Alava Basque Country Allied victory Mountain pass northwest of Miranda del Ebro just off the Burgos Bilbao road 21 June 1813 Battle of Vitoria Alava Basque Country Allied victory decisive Led to the abdication of Napoleon s brother Joseph Bonaparte King of Spain 11 December 1813 Beethoven s Op 91 Wellingtons Sieg oder die Schlacht bei Vittoria completed in the first week of October 1813 commemorates the victory Originally composed for the panharmonicon it was first performed with Beethoven himself conducting together with the premiere of his Symphony No 7 52 26 June 1813 Battle of Tolosa Gipuzkoa Basque Country Allied victory decisive Led to the abdication of Napoleon s brother Joseph Bonaparte King of Spain 11 December 1813 Beethoven s Op 91 Wellingtons Sieg oder die Schlacht bei Vittoria completed in the first week of October 1813 commemorates the victory Originally composed for the panharmonicon it was first performed with Beethoven himself conducting together with the premiere of his Symphony No 7 52 26 June 31 October 1813 Siege of Pamplona Pamplona Navarre Allied victory 7 25 July 1813 First siege of San Sebastian Province of Gipuzkoa Basque Country French victory Although referred to as one siege there were in fact two separate sieges See Second siege of San Sebastian 8 August 8 September 1813 below 25 July 1813 1 August 1813 Battle of the Pyrenees Allied victory The Battle of the Pyrenees was large scale offensive involving several battles launched by Marshal Soult to relieve the French garrisons under siege at Pamplona and San Sebastian Following his defeat at Battle of Sorauren at the end of the month Soult ordered the retreat towards France having decided it would be impossible to relieve Pamplona 49 25 July 1813 Battle of Roncesvalles Roncevaux Pass Spain French victory Mountain pass at 1 057 m 3 468 ft on the Spanish side of the Pyrenees near the border with France A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees 25 July 1813 Battle of Maya Navarre French victory Mountain pass on the Spanish side of the Pyrenees near the border with France A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees 27 July 1 August 1813 Battle of Sorauren Navarre Allied victory A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees Soult ordered the retreat towards France having decided it would be impossible to relieve Pamplona 49 A battle included in the Battle of the Pyrenees 30 July 1813 Combat of Beunza Navarre During the fighting at Sorauren Hill s 2nd Division and Costa s Brigade were engaged 25 km to the northwest fighting a French corps at Beunza near Atez 49 8 August 8 September 1813 Second siege of San Sebastian Province of Gipuzkoa Basque Country Anglo Portuguese victory Although referred to as one siege there were in fact two separate sieges See First siege of San Sebastian 7 25 July 1813 above 31 August 1813 Battle of San Marcial Near Irun Basque Country Spanish victory 53 12 13 September 1813 Battle of Ordal Defile of Ordal and Vilafranca del Penedes Barcelona French victory 7 October 1813 Battle of the Bidassoa Allied victory tactical Also known as the Battle of Larrun 9 November 1813 Battle of Nivelle Pyrenees Atlantiques France Allied victory Most of Spain had been liberated except for the French garrison at Pamplona and the east coast Soult had fortified the Nivelle river for 35 km inland from its estuary and was defending it with 60 000 troops Wellington had 82 000 troops divided into fifteen divisions Major General Carlos Lecor commanding the 7th Division was the first Portuguese officer to command a division of British troops 49 8 December 1813 54 Treaty of Valencay Chateau de Valencay Indre France Treaty Napoleon wishing to reestablish an alliance with Spain intended the Treaty as the preliminary to a full peace treaty between France and Spain the agreement providing for the withdrawal of French troops from Spain and restoration of Ferdinand VII of Spain The Cortes of Cadiz duly repudiated the treaty once Ferdinand had reached the safety of Madrid 9 13 December 1813 Battle of the Nive Pyrenees Atlantiques France Allied victory 11 December 1813 Abdication of Joseph Bonaparte King of Spain Abdication 1814 edit Date Event Province wbr region modern Outcome Notes 15 February 1814 Battle of Garris Pyrenees Atlantiques France Allied victory Also known as the Battle of Saint Palais 27 February 1814 Battle of Orthez Pyrenees Atlantiques France Anglo Portuguese victory 6 April 1814 Abdication of Napoleon Bonaparte 55 Abdication 10 April 1814 Battle of Toulouse Haute Garonne France Allied victory One of the last battles of the Peninsular War That afternoon the official word of Napoleon s abdication and the end of the war reached Wellington Soult agreed to an armistice on 17 April 14 April 1814 Battle of Bayonne Bayonne France Allied victory Although there were still isolated incidents especially in Catalonia Bayonne was the last major battle of the Peninsular War 28 May 1814 Surrender of Barcelona Barcelona Catalonia Surrender The French garrison at Barcelona surrenders 55 4 June 1814 Surrender of Sant Ferran Castle Figueres Catalonia Surrender The last French garrison in Spain surrenders 55 See also editPeninsular War A History of the Peninsular War by Charles Oman 7 volumes List of French generals of the Peninsular War List of Spanish generals of the Peninsular War List of Portuguese generals of the Peninsular WarNotes edit Also included are naval actions which had a direct effect on the development of the events on the Iberian Peninsula However unless they can be directly ascribed to the Peninsular War those actions which took place in the vicinity such as the blockade of French ports in the Bay of Biscay for instance the actions of November 1808 or April 1809 however much they affected Napoleon s plans on the Peninsula are excluded as they were possibly more related to the general war efforts of the time That is resulting from the 1976 Constitution of Portugal and the processes of devolution of Spain s transition to democracy 1979 which created seventeen autonomous communities regions and two autonomous cities This affects in particular the historical regions and provinces of Leon and Old Castile Spanish Castilla la Vieja constituted in 1983 as Castile and Leon The only Spanish troops able to escape the round up were the 2nd Cavalry regiment the Queen s Own whose colonel rode off to Oporto with his two squadrons and some units of the infantry regiments of Murcia and Valencia who escaped to Badajoz Oman 1902 pp 208 209 The mutiny was led by Vives s second in command the Marquis del Palacio governor of Minorca who a fortnight later finally set sail with the greater part of the Balearic garrisons Part of Vives s reluctance to leave Port Mahon without troops had been due to his deeply rooted idea that the English would once again control Minorca as they had for the greater part of the 18th century Oman 1902 p 323 Originally a hamlet outside the city Gamonal has been part of the city of Burgos since 1955 Napoleon was at Vitoria for four days where among other reports he had been waiting to hear that Bessieres his vanguard had occupied Burgos Oman 1902 Bessieres was superseded by Soult Canning strenuously maintained in the great British tradition of characterizing defeat as victory Fremont Barnes 2004 p 80 The Duke del Parque had moved his forces south taking with him Ballasteros s division which had formed the core of the Army of Asturias Oman 1908 p 217 These ships would later that year also participate in the Anglo Spanish Cantabrian Expedition see 14 October 1810 below following which two of the Spanish ships the frigate Santa Maria Magdalena and the brigantine Palomo would be destroyed in a storm off the coast of Galicia with great loss of life Magdalena having collided with Narcissus shortly before going down Not to be confused with the combat of Aldeia da Ponte which took place later that year on 28 September 1811 Not to be confused with the combat of Vila da Ponte which took place earlier that year on 11 January 1811 In the letter he sent to Suchet along with the capitulation he stated To day I see that to render Spain less unhappy it is necessary for us all to unite under the King Joseph and I make my offer to serve him with the same enthusiasm Your excellency may be quite sure of me I surrender a fortress fully provisioned and capable of a long defence which is the best guarantee of the sincerity of my promise Oman 1914 p 89 the most important event that had happened on the north coast of Spain since 1809 for it gave the squadron of Popham possession of the sole really good harbor open to the largest ships and safe at all times of the year which lies between Ferrol and the French frontier Oman 1914 p 555 The British government had told Wellington that the force would be entirely at his disposal However Maitland who was under Bentinck s orders had been told by his commander that he was not part of the army of Spain and must be ready to return to Sicily at the first sign of trouble there Yonge References edit a b c d e Hindley Meredith 2010 The Spanish Ulcer Napoleon Britain and the Siege of Cadiz in Humanities January February 2010 Volume 31 Number 1 National Endowment for the Humanities Retrieved 21 February 2023 a b c Chandler David G 1966 The Campaigns of Napoleon pp 164 619 657 Weidenfeld and Nicolson Internet Archive Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak Oman Charles 1902 A History of the Peninsular War Vol I pp 9 26 29 31 34 41 65 67 177 208 209 212 213 215 216 267 272 273 274 312 315 323 381 384 418 425 Project Gutenberg Retrieved 24 February 2023 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c d Grab Alexander 2003 Napoleon and the Transformation of Europe Palgrave Macmillan pp 147 8 ISBN 9781403937575 a b c d Esdaile Charles 2003 The Peninsular War A New History Palgrave Macmillan pp 34 35 83 155 ISBN 978 1 4039 6231 7 Retrieved 27 March 2013 Alison Archibald 2011 History of Europe During the French Revolution p 563 Cambridge University Press Google Books Retrieved 21 August 2013 in Spanish Martinez Campos Pilar Vicente Bertran de Lis Thomas Diccionario Biografico electronico DB e Real Academia de la Historia Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c Southey Robert 1823 History of the Peninsular War pp 283 295 Google Books Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b Serra Hernando Pilar Maria 2017 El ayuntamiento de Valencia y la invasion napoleonica in Spanish Publicacions de la Universitat de Valencia ISBN 978 84 370 9480 9 a b c Fremont Barnes Gregory and Todd Fisher 2004 The Napoleonic Wars The Rise and Fall of an Empire pp 15 16 205 Osprey Publishing Google Books Retrieved 22 August 2013 in Spanish Baselga Jose Manuel 2021 El dia que ardio L Arboc 8 June 2021 Diari de Tarragona Retrieved 8 April 2023 Scott Walter 1839 The Life of Napoleon E L Carey and A Hart p 386 in Spanish Lastra Rodriguez Alicia 1975 Buscando a mi general el periplo asturiano de Andrew Leith Hay en 1808 in Archivum pp 219 247 Universidad de Oviedo Google Books Retrieved 4 August 2013 a b c d e f Yonge Ian The Royal Navy and the Peninsular War The Army of Sicily The Waterloo Association Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Peninsular War National Army Museum Retrieved 19 February 2023 a b in Portuguese A Convencao de Sintra The Convention of Cintra a Portuguese Gambol for the amusement of Iohn Bull Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal Retrieved 22 August 2013 a b Napier 1844 History of the War in the Peninsula Vol 1 p 91 Google Books Retrieved 25 February 2023 a b in Spanish Martin Lanuza Martinez Alberto Francisco de Paula Gomez de Teran y Negrete Diccionario Biografico electronico Real Academia de la Historia Retrieved 25 February 2023 Chartrand Rene 2013 Bussaco 1810 Wellington defeats Napoleon s Marshals p 9 Bloomsbury Publishing Google Books Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k Oman Charles 1903 A History of the Peninsular War Vol II pp 5 10 13 58 64 153 155 263 4 384 385 Project Gutenberg Retrieved 20 March 2023 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b in Spanish Matilla J M 2008 Esto es peor Goya en tiempos de Guerra Madrid Museo Nacional del Prado p 310 Museo Nacional del Prado Retrieved 22 March 2023 Chitty Joseph 1824 A Treatise on the Laws of Commerce and Manufactures and the Contracts Relating Thereto With an Appendix of Treaties Statutes and Precedents Volume 4 p 84 A Strahan Google Books Retrieved 22 August 2013 Sandler Stanley Ground warfare An International Encyclopedia Vol 1 ABC CLIO 2002 214 Costly British victory in the Peninsular War Corunna was a British victory only in the sense that Moore was able to prevent Soult from annihilating his men According to The Times The fact must not be disguised that we have suffered a shameful disaster Hibbert p 188 Carl Cavanaugh Hodge Encyclopedia of the Age of Imperialism 1800 1914 Greenwood 2007 p lxxiii French Victory at the Battle of Corunna Britain Forced to Evacuate Spain in Spanish Picatoste Mauro Quien es quien en la Reconquista de Vigo 25 March 2022 El Espanol Retrieved 11 August 2023 in Spanish Isabel Sanchez Jose Luis Bartolome Amor de la Pisa Diccionario Biografico electronico DB e Real Academia de la Historia Retrieved 20 March 2023 Rickard J 2008 Combat of Astorga 9 October 1809 Retrieved 25 August 2013 Oman C W C 1913 Wellington s Army 1809 1814 pp 52 53 London Edward Arnold Project Gutenberg Retrieved 8 April 2023 Rickard J 2008 Combat of Ocana 11 November 1809 Retrieved 31 August 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Oman Charles 1908 A History of the Peninsular War Vol III pp 89 90 91 139 144 217 219 403 406 498 500 503 Project Gutenberg Retrieved 20 February 2023 in Spanish Decreto 220 2003 de 30 de octubre por el que se declara Bien de Interes Cultural con la categoria de monumento el Puente de Colloto en el concejo de Siero BOE 295 de 10 12 2003 Sec 3 pp 44048 44050 Boletin Oficial del Estado BOE Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b Napier William 1842 History of the War in the Peninsula and in the South of France From the Year 1807 to the Year 1814 Volume 2 p 138 Carey and Hart Google Books Retrieved 22 August 2013 in Spanish Suchet Louis Gabriel 1829 Memorias del mariscal Suchet duque de Albufera sobre sus campanas en Espana desde el ano 1808 hasta el de 1814 Volume 1 p 259 Bossange pere Google Books Retrieved 22 August 2013 Marshall John 2010 Royal Naval Biography Cambridge University Press pp 203 204 ISBN 978 1 108 02271 2 Burnham Robert The Napoleon Series Action on the River Coa Retrieved 24 August 2013 a b Gifford C H 1817 History of the Wars Occasioned by the French Revolution from the Commencement of Hostilities in 1792 to the End of 1816 p 701 Google Books Retrieved 20 May 2023 a b c d e f g h i in Spanish Gonzalez Fernandez Marcelino Blas Salcedo y Salcedo Real Academia de la Historia Retrieved 3 June 2023 in Spanish Fernandez Duro Cesareo 1867 Naufragios de la Armada Espanola pp 219 225 407 420 Diaz y Lopez Google Books Retrieved 3 June 2023 a b c d e f g h Oman Charles 1911 A History of the Peninsular War Vol IV pp 19 22 241 475 476 488 496 577 584 Project Gutenberg Retrieved 22 February 2023 Brialmont Alexis Henri 1858 History of the life of Arthur duke of Wellington Vol 1 London Longman Brown Green Longmans amp Roberts p 381 Both armies retained their positions Maxwell Herbert 1899 The Life of Wellington The Restoration of the Martial Power of Great Britain Vol 1 S Low Marston p 227 Internet Archive Retrieved 26 March 2023 Currie Laurence 1934 The baton in the knapsack new light on Napoleon and his marshals John Murray p 126 Weller Jac 2012 Wellington in the Peninsula 1808 1814 p 166 Napoleonic Library a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Oman Charles 1914 A History of the Peninsular War Vol V pp 1 2 23 24 87 89 94 94 133 134 517 518 550 555 574 576 footnotes 86 amp 92 Project Gutenberg Retrieved 20 February 2023 Sidney Edwin 1845 The Life of Lord Hill G C B Late Commander of the Forces p 180 J Murray Google Books Retrieved 26 March 2023 Wellesley Arthur Duke of Wellington The Dispatches of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington 1809 1813 Vol V p 464 London John Murray Google Books Retrieved 26 March 2023 in Spanish Salduena Jesus Albert Pedro Garcia Navarro Diccionario Biografico electronico Real Academia de la Historia Retrieved 16 March 2023 Gurwood John 1852 The Dispatches of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington K G During His Various Campaigns in India Denmark Portugal Spain the Low Countries and France Peninsula 1809 1813 p 466 London John Murray Google Books Retrieved 8 April 2023 a b c d e f g Gaudencio Moises Burnham Robert 2021 In the Words of Wellington s Fighting Cocks The After action Reports of the Portuguese Army during the Peninsular War 1812 1814 Pen and Sword Military pp 36 37 62 84 85 ISBN 978 1 5267 6171 2 in Spanish Madoz Pascual 1845 Almaraz Puente de Diccionario geografico estadistico historico de Espana y sus posesiones de ultramar Vol 2 p 73 Est tip de P Madoz y L Sagasti Google Books Retrieved 25 March 2023 Gates David 2001 The Spanish Ulcer A History of the Peninsular War p 473 Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 81083 2 a b Rodman Michael Wellington s Victory for orchestra Op 91 Allmusic Retrieved 6 September 2013 Esdaile Charles J 2014 The Wars of Napoleon p 337 Routledge Google Books Retrieved 13 March 2023 Elliot Jonathan 1834 The American Diplomatic Code Embracing a Collection of Treaties and Conventions Between the United States and Foreign Powers from 1778 to 1834 p 13 Google Books Retrieved 7 March 2023 a b c in Spanish Guerrero Misa Luis Javier Fernando Sigler Silvera 2012 Estudios sobre la Guerra de la Independencia espanola en la Sierra de Cadiz p 133 Consejeria de Gobernacion y Justicia Junta de Andalucia Retrieved 7 April 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of the Peninsular War amp oldid 1221504895, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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