The
Peninsular War was a contest between France and the allied powers of Spain
, the
United Kingdom
, and Portugal
for control of the Iberian Peninsula
during the Napoleonic
Wars. The war began when French armies invaded Portugal
in 1807 and Spain in 1808 and lasted until the
Sixth Coalition defeated Napoleon
in 1814.
Spain's liberation struggle marked one of the first
national wars and the emergence of large-scale
guerrillas, from which the
English language borrowed the word.
While the French occupation destroyed the
Spanish administration, which fragmented
into quarrelling
provincial
juntas (in 1810, a reconstituted
national government fortified itself in
Cádiz) and proved unable to
recruit, train, or equip effective armies,
Napoleon's failure to pacify the people
of Spain allowed
Spanish,
British and
Portuguese forces to secure Portugal and
engage French forces on the frontiers while Spanish
guerrilleros bled the occupiers. Acting in
concert, regular and
irregular
allied forces prevented Napoleon's
marshals from subduing the
rebellious Spanish provinces.
Years of fighting in Spain gradually wore down Napoleon's famous
Grande Armée. While the French
armies were often victorious in battle, their communications and
supplies were severely tested and their units frequently cut off,
harassed, or overwhelmed by partisans. The Spanish army, though
beaten and driven to the peripheries, could not be stamped out and
continued to hound the French remorselessly.
In 1812, with France
gravely weakened following Napoleon's invasion of Russia,
a combined allied army under Arthur Wellesley
pushed into Spain and liberated Madrid
.
Marshal Soult led the exhausted
and demoralized French forces in a fighting withdrawal across the
Pyrenees and into France over the winter of 1813.
War and revolution against Napoleon's occupation led to the
Spanish Constitution of
1812, later a cornerstone of European
liberalism. The burden of war destroyed the
social and economic fabric of Portugal and Spain and ushered in an
era of social turbulence, political instability, and economic
stagnation. Devastating civil wars between
liberal and
absolutist factions, led by officers
trained in the Peninsular War, persisted in Iberia until 1850. The
cumulative crises and disruptions of invasion, revolution, and
restoration led to the independence of many of Spain's
American colonies and the
independence of Brazil from
Portugal.
Background
In 1806,
while in Berlin
, Napoleon declared the Continental Blockade, forbidding British
imports into continental Europe. Of the two remaining
neutral countries, Sweden
and Portugal
, the latter
tried in vain to avoid Napoleon's ultimatum (since 1373 it had had
a treaty of alliance
with the English which became an
alliance with the United Kingdom
). After the Treaty
of Tilsit in 1807, now free from obligations in the east,
Napoleon decided to capture the Iberian
ports.
On October
27, 1807, Spain
's Prime
Minister Manuel de Godoy and France
signed the Treaty of
Fontainebleau, splitting Portugal into three kingdoms: the new
Kingdom of Northern
Lusitania, the Algarve (expanded to
include Alentejo), and a rump Kingdom of
Portugal. In November 1807, after the refusal of Prince
Regent
John of Portugal to join
the
Continental System, Napoleon
sent an army into Spain under General
Jean-Andoche Junot with the task of
invading Portugal.
At the same time, General Dupont was sent in the direction of
Cádiz
and Marshal Soult towards Corunna
.

Flight of the Portuguese royal family
to Brazil
Godoy initially requested Portugal's alliance against the incoming
French armies, but later secretly agreed with France that, in
return for Spain's cooperation, it would receive Portugal's
territories. Spain's main ambition was the seizure of the
Portuguese
fleet, and it sent two
divisions to help French troops occupy Portugal.
The
Portuguese army was positioned to defend the ports and the coast
from a French attack, and on December 1 Lisbon
was captured
with no military opposition. The escape on
November 29 of Maria I of
Portugal and Prince Regent John, together with the
administration and the Court (around 10,000 people and 9,000
sailors aboard 23 Portuguese war ships and 31 merchant ships) was a
major setback for Napoleon and enabled John VI to continue to rule over his
overseas possessions, including Brazil
.
Invasion by stealth (February–July 1808)
Under the pretext of reinforcing the Franco-Spanish army occupying
Portugal, French Imperial troops began filing into Spain, where the
populace greeted them with enthusiasm in spite of growing
diplomatic unease. In February 1808, Napoleon ordered the French
commanders to seize key Spanish fortresses, and in doing so he had
officially turned on his ally.
A French column, disguised as a convoy of
wounded, took Barcelona
on February 29 by persuading the authorities to
open the city's gates. Many commanders were not particularly
concerned about the fate of the ruling regime, nor were they in any
position to fight. (When
Brigadier Alvarez garrisoned the
Barcelona citadel against the French, his own superiors ordered him
to stand down.)
The
Spanish Royal Army of 100,000 men found
itself paralysed: under-equipped, frequently leaderless, confused
by the turmoil in Madrid, and scattered from Portugal to the
Balearic
Islands
. Fifteen thousand of its finest troops,
(General La
Romana's Division of the
North) had been lent to Napoleon in 1807 and remained stationed
in Denmark
under French command. Only the peripheries
contained armies of any strength: Galicia
, with Joaquin
Blake's troops, and Andalusia
, under Castaños.
The French were consequently able to seize much of north-eastern
Spain by
coups de main, and any hope of
turning back the invasion was stillborn.
To secure his gains, Napoleon pursued a series of intrigues against
the Spanish royal family. A
coup
d'état instigated by the Spanish aristocrats forced
Charles IV from his throne and replaced
him with his son
Ferdinand.
Napoleon
removed the royals to Bayonne
and forced them both to abdicate on May 5, handing
the throne to his brother Joseph
Bonaparte. A puppet Spanish council approved the new
king, but the usurpation provoked a popular uprising that
eventually spread throughout the country.
Citizens of Madrid
rose up in rebellion against the French
occupation on May 2, slew 150 French soldiers, and were not put
down until Murat's elite Guard and mameluk
cavalry crashed into the city and trampled the crowds.
The next day, immortalized by
Goya in
his painting,
The Third of May
1808, the French army shot hundreds of Madrid citizens in
retaliation. Similar reprisals were repeated in other cities and
continued for days, with no military effect but to strengthen the
resistance; soon afterwards, bloody, spontaneous fighting known as
guerrilla ("little war") erupted
in much of Spain; the term "guerrilla" has been used ever since to
describe such combat.
The tiny province of Asturias
rose up in arms, cast out its French governor on
May 25 and "declared war on Napoleon at the height of his
greatness." Within weeks, all the Spanish provinces had
followed its example. Mobs butchered 338 French citizens in
Valencia. Every French
ship of the
line anchored at Cádiz was bombarded and captured. Napoleon had
unwittingly provoked a
total war against
the Spaniards, a mistake from which the French Empire would never
truly recover.

Josep Bernat Flaugier's 1808 painting
depicts Imperial troops battling Catalan militia
The deteriorating strategic situation forced France to increase its
military commitments – in February, Napoleon had boasted that
12,000 men could conquer Spain; by June, 165,120 troops were
rushing into the country in an effort to control the crisis.
The main
French army of 80,000 men held only a narrow strip of central Spain
stretching from Pamplona
and San Sebastián
in the north through to Madrid and Toledo
to the south. The French in Madrid took
shelter behind an additional 30,000 troops under
Moncey.
Junot, meanwhile, stood stranded in
Portugal, cut off by of hostile territory.
From Murat's optimistic reports, Napoleon believed the uprisings
would die down and the country settle into order if his brother
held on to the throne in Madrid while French
flying columns seized and pacified Spain's
major cities.
To this end, General Dupont
led 24,430 men south toward Seville
and Cádiz
; Marshal Bessières moved into
Aragón
and Old Castile with 25,000 men, aiming to capture
Santander
with one hand and Saragossa
with the other; General Moncey marched toward
Valencia
with 29,350 men; and General Duhesme marshalled
12,710 troops in Catalonia
and put Gerona under siege. Historians
have concluded that Napoleon, having no respect for the "insolent"
Spanish militias which everywhere opposed him, tried to do too much
with too little.
The signs of trouble came quickly:
Catalan
militia (
somatén) virtually
overran Barcelona, and French units attempting to break the ring
were turned back at
the Bruc with
heavy casualties.
Gerona twice
resisted all efforts to conquer it. At
Saragossa, French overtures for an
honorable capitulation met with the laconic reply, "War to the
knife."
General
Palafox and the Spaniards defied the French for three months,
fighting inch by inch,
corp Ã
corp in the streets, and finally forcing
Lefebvre to lift the
siege in August and limp away in defeat. Moncey's push toward the
coast ended in defeat outside the walls of
Valencia, where 1,000 French
recruits fell trying to storm a city whipped into a frenzy by the
clergy. Making short work of Spanish
counterattacks, Moncey began a long retreat, harried at every step.
After
storming and sacking Cordoba
, Dupont, cowed by the mass hostility of the
Andalusians, broke off his offensive and retired to Andujar
.
Only in the north did the French find a measure of success.
In June,
General Lasalle's
cavalry trampled General
Cuesta's small, improvised army at Cabezón and unbarred the road to
Valladolid
. When Bessières' march on Santander was
checked by a string of partisan attacks in July, the French turned
back and found Blake and Cuesta with their combined army atop
Medina del Rio Seco.
The Spanish generals, at Cuesta's insistence, were making a dash
towards the vulnerable French supply lines at Valladolid. The two
armies deployed on July 14, Cuesta unwisely leaving a gap between
his troops and Blake's. The French poured into the hole and, after
a sharp fight against Cuesta, swept the motley Spanish army from
the field, putting Old Castile firmly back in Napoleon's hands.
At a stroke, Bessières' victory salvaged the strategic position of
the French army in northern Spain. The road to Madrid lay open to
Joseph, and the failures at Girona, Valencia, and Saragossa were
forgotten; all that remained was to reinforce Dupont and allow him
to force his way south through Andalusia. A delighted Napoleon
asserted that "if Marshal Bessières has been able to beat the Army
of Galicia with few casualties and small effort, General Dupont
will be able to overthrow everybody he meets."
Just a few days later
however, Dupont was sorely defeated at Bailén
and surrendered his entire Army
Corps to General
Castaños.
The catastrophe was total. With the loss of 24,000 troops,
Napoleon's military machine in Spain abruptly collapsed. Joseph and
the French command panicked and ordered a general retreat to the
Ebro, abandoning Madrid and undoing all of
Bessières' hard-fought gains.
Europe trembled at this first check to the
hitherto unbeatable Imperial armies – a Bonaparte had been chased
from his throne; tales of Spanish heroism inspired Austria
and showed the force of national resistance.
Bailén set in motion the rise of the
Fifth Coalition against
Napoleon.
Retreat from Portugal (August 1808)
Before the Peninsular War, British military operations on mainland
Europe had been marked by bungling half-measures and a series of
failures (the 1809
Walcheren
expedition being the last of these). The
British Army was not large enough to operate on
its own against the French, and without strong allies, Britain had
been forced to withdraw from Europe. On June 18, the Portuguese
uprising broke out. The popular uprisings in Portugal and Spain
encouraged the British to commit substantial forces once again and
British propaganda was quick to capture the novelty of the
situation; for the first time, peoples, not princes, were in
rebellion against the "Great Disturber".
In August 1808, British forces (including the
King's German Legion) landed in
Portugal under the command of
Lieutenant-General Sir
Arthur Wellesley,
the future Duke of Wellington. Wellesley checked
Delaborde's forces at
Roliça on August 17, while the
Portuguese Observation Army of
Bernardino Freire contained
Loison. On
August 20, the Anglo–Portuguese held their line at the
Vimeiro and repulsed
Junot. Wellesley, however, was considered too junior
an officer to command the newly-reinforced expedition to Portugal
and was replaced by
Harry Burrard, who
proceeded to grant Junot very favourable armistice terms, allowing
for his unmolested evacuation from Portugal – courtesy of the
Royal Navy – under the controversial
Convention of Sintra in August.
The British commanders were ordered back to England for an inquiry
into Sintra, leaving Sir
John Moore to head the
30,000-strong British force, supplied,
convoyed, and protected by the Royal Navy.
Vice-Admiral Lord Collingwood's Mediterranean Fleet
bottled up the remaining French fleet, stationed at Toulon
since its
defeat at Trafalgar
. In June, General La Romana orchestrated a
remarkable escape from Denmark, via Gothenburg
, by slipping the better part of his Division of the
North aboard a British squadron, which set sail for Santander
. The presence of the Royal Navy along the
coast of France and Spain slowed the French entry into eastern and
southern Spain and drained their military resources in the area.
Frigates commanded the strategic Gulf of Roses
north of Barcelona
, close to the French border, and were conspicuously
involved in the defence of Rosas; Lord Cochrane held a cliff-top
fortress against the French for nearly a month, destroying it when
the main citadel capitulated to a superior French
force.
Napoleon's campaign (October 1808–January 1809)
Bailén and the loss of Portugal convinced Napoleon of the peril he
faced in Spain.
Deeply disturbed by news of Sintra, the
Emperor remarked, The French, all but masters of Spain in June,
stood with their backs to the Pyrenees
, clutching at Navarre
and Catalonia
. It was not known if even these two
footholds could be maintained in the face of a Spanish
attack.
However, no attack was forthcoming. The Spanish social fabric,
shaken by the shock of rebellion, gave way to its crippling social
and political tensions; the patriots stood divided on every
question and their nascent war effort suffered accordingly. With
the fall of the monarchy, constitutional power devolved to local
juntas. These institutions
interfered with the army and the business of war, undermined the
tentative central government taking shape in Madrid, and in some
cases proved almost as dangerous to each other as to the French.
The British army in Portugal, meanwhile, was itself immobilized by
logistical problems and bogged down in
administrative disputes, and did not budge.
Consequently, months of inaction passed at the front, the
revolution having "temporarily crippled Patriot Spain at the very
moment when decisive action could have changed the whole course of
the war." While the allies inched forward, a vast consolidation of
bodies and bayonets from the far reaches of the French Empire
brought 100,000 veterans of the
Grande
Armée into Spain, led in person by Napoleon and his
Marshals. With his
Armée
d'Espagne of 278,670 men drawn up on the Ebro, facing a scant
80,000 raw, disorganized Spanish troops, the Emperor announced to
the Spanish deputies: Napoleon led the French on a brilliant
offensive involving a massive
double
envelopment of the Spanish lines. The attack began in November
and has been described as "an avalanche of fire and steel."
In the west, however, one Spanish wing slipped the noose when
Marshal Lefebvre
failed to encircle the Army of Galicia after a premature and
indecisive attack at
Pancorbo;
General Blake drew his artillery back to safety and the bloodied
Spanish infantry followed in good order. Lefebvre and
Victor offered a
careless chase that ended in humiliation at
Valmaseda where their scattered troops
were roughly handled by
La
Romana's newly repatriated Spanish veterans and narrowly
escaped to safety.
The campaign raced to a swift conclusion in the south, where
Napoleon's main army overran the unprotected Spanish centre in a
devastating attack near
Burgos. The
Spanish militias, untrained and unable to form
infantry squares, scattered in the face of
massed French cavalry, while the Spanish and
Walloon Guards stood their ground in vain and
were chewed up by
Lasalle and his
sabreurs. Marshal Lannes with a powerful force then
smashed through the tottering Spanish right wing at Tudela
on November 23, routing Castaños
and adding a new inscription to the Arc de Triomphe
in Paris.
Finally, Blake's isolated army about-faced on November 17 and dug
in at
Espinosa. His lines shook
off French attacks over a day and night of vicious fighting before
cracking the next day.
Blake again outmarched Soult and escaped
with a rump army to Santander
, but the Spanish front had been torn apart and the
Imperial armies raced forward over undefended provinces.
Napoleon
flung 45,000 men south into the Sierra de Guadarrama
which shielded Madrid.
The mountains hardly slowed Napoleon at all: at
Somosierra pass on November 30, his
Polish and Guard cavalry squadrons
charged up a narrow gorge through raking fire to overrun
General San Juan's artillery. San Juan's
militias then gave way before the relentless French infantry, while
the Spanish royal artillerymen stuck to their guns and fought to
the last. French patrols reached Madrid on December 1 and entered
the city in triumph on December 4. Joseph Bonaparte was restored to
his throne. San Juan retreated west to Talavera, where his mutinous
conscripts shot him before dispersing.
General Sir
John
Moore's small British army moved from Portugal into
northwestern Spain, surprising a body of French cavalry at
Sahagun. Moore remained in Leon for some
time after he recognised that the position of his army was
perilous; this was a calculated attempt to draw the attention of
the French and give the Spanish forces time to rally after their
recent reverses. In this Moore was successful, alerted to his
whereabouts the Imperial army forced Moore into a harrowing retreat
marked by a breakdown in the discipline of many regiments. The
retreat was punctuated by stubborn rearguard actions at
Benavente and
Cacabelos, each time the British army
turned to fight the discipline of the troops showed a marked, but
temporary, improvement.
La Romana dutifully marched his tattered
army to cover his ally's retreat, but while the British troops
managed to escape to the sea at A Coruña
after fending off
a strong French attack, the Spaniard had no escape
and was defeated by Soult at Mansilla. Some 26,000 sickly
troops eventually reached Britain, 7,000 men having been lost over
the course of the expedition. Moore, killed while directing the
defence of Coruña, remains buried in Spain under a monument
constructed by Soult.
In
Catalonia
, Napoleon fed his faltering army strong
reinforcements as early as October 1808, ordering Marshal St. Cyr with 17,000 men to
the relief of Duhesme in Barcelona
. Rosas fell to the French at the end of
November, opening the path south for St. Cyr, who bypassed Girona
and, after a remarkable forced march, fell upon and destroyed part
of the Spanish army at
Cardedeu,
near Barcelona (December 18). St. Cyr and Duhesme chased the
retreating Spaniards under
General
Reding, capturing 1,200 men at
Molins
de Rey. In February 1809, Reding led a reconstituted army
against the French right wing and, after vigorous marching and
countermarching, took a stand at
Valls only to be ridden down and killed by
French cavalry.

Episode of the Defence of
Zaragoza Against the French by Federico Jiménez Nicanor.
Only at Saragossa, still scarred from Lefebvre's bombardments that
summer, was the Imperial charge temporarily halted once again. The
French invested the city on December 20. Lannes and Moncey
committed two army corps (45,000 men) and considerable materiel to
a
second siege of the
city, but their numbers and guns made no impression on the Spanish
citizen-soldiers who, behind the walls of Saragossa, proved
unmovable.
Palafox's second epic defence brought the city enduring national
and international fame. The Spaniards fought with a determination
which never faltered; street by street, building by building,
through
pestilence and
starvation; at times entrenching themselves in
convents, at others putting their own homes
to the torch. Nearly all who stood with
Palafox met their deaths, but for two months, the Grande Armée did
not set foot beyond the
Ebro's shore. On
February 20, 1809, the French left behind burnt-out ruins filled
with 64,000 corpses. After only a little more than two months in
Spain, Napoleon returned command to his marshals and went back to
France.
Portuguese frontier (1809)
In March,
Marshal Soult
initiated the second invasion of Portugal through the northern
corridor.
Initially repulsed in the Minho river by Portuguese militias, he then captured
Chaves, Braga
and, on March 29, 1809, Porto
.
However,
the resistance of Silveira in Amarante and
other northern cities isolated Soult in Porto
.
Miguel Pereira Forjaz, the
Secretary of War, rebuilt and reformed the
Portuguese army with British aid and arms.
In a first phase some 20,000 were called to the regular army and
30,000 to militias. Wellesley returned to Portugal in April 1809 to
command the Anglo–Portuguese forces. He strengthened the British
army with the recently formed Portuguese regiments organized by
Forjaz and the Governors of the Realm and adapted by
General Beresford
to the British way of campaigning. These new forces turned Soult
out of Portugal at the
Battle of
Grijó (May 10–11) and the
Second Battle of Porto (May 12). All
other northern cities were recaptured by General Silveira.
With Portugal secured, Wellesley advanced into Spain to unite with
the
General Cuesta's forces.
The combined allied force prepared for an assault on Victor's
I Corps at
Talavera, July 23. Cuesta, however, was reluctant to agree, and was
only persuaded to advance on the following day. The delay allowed
the French to withdraw, but Cuesta sent his army headlong after
Victor, and found himself faced by almost the entire French army in
New Castile – Victor had been reinforced by the Toledo and Madrid
garrisons. The Spanish retreated precipitously, necessitating two
British divisions advancing to cover their retreat. The next day,
July 27, the French advanced in three columns and were repulsed
several times throughout the day by British infantry in line.
The
Battle of
Talavera
was a costly victory that left the allies
precariously exposed, so they retreated westwards, abandoning
several thousand of their own wounded to the Spanish who
transferred them to the French. Although the Spanish had
promised food to the British if they advanced into Spain, not only
was no food forthcoming, but Spanish troops threatened to pillage
any town that sold food to their allies, forcing the British to
continue retreating back to Portugal.
After his disappointing experience, and fearing a new French
attack, Wellesley made the decision to strengthen Portugal's
defences. To protect Lisbon, he took a plan from Major
Neves Costa and ordered the construction of a
strong line of 162 forts along key roads and entrenchements and
earthworks, the
Lines of Torres
Vedras.
Stalemate (1810–1811)
The French reinvaded Portugal in July 1810 with an army of around
60,000 led by
Marshal Masséna.
The first significant clash was at the
Battle of Coa. Later on, Masséna took "the
worst route in Portugal."
At the Battle of Buçaco
on September 27, he suffered a tactical defeat with
a careless attack on a strong position, but he soon forced the
allies to retreat to the Lines. The fortifications were so
impressive that, after an attack by a small force at Sobral on
October 14, a stalemate ensued. As
Charles
Oman wrote, "On that misty October 14
th morning, at
Sobral, the Napoleonic tide attained its highest watermark, then it
ebbed." The Portuguese population had subjected the area in front
of the lines to a
scorched earth
policy and the French were eventually forced to withdraw due to
disease and a lack of food and other supplies. The British suffered
a setback just the next day in the
Battle of Fuengirola.
On October 15, a much
smaller Polish
garrison
held off British troops under Lord Blayney, who was
subsequently taken captive and held by the French until
1814.
The allies were reinforced by the arrival of fresh British troops
in early 1811 and began an offensive.
A French force was
beaten at Barrosa
on March 5 as part of an unsuccessful manoeuvre to
break up the siege of Cádiz
, and Masséna
was forced to withdraw from Portugal after an allied victory at the
Battle of Fuentes de
Onoro (May 3–5). Masséna had lost 25,000 men in the
fighting in Portugal and was replaced by
Auguste Marmont.
Soult came from the
South to threaten Extremadura
, and captured the fortress town of Badajoz
before returning to Andalusia
with most of his army. An Anglo–Portuguese
and Spanish army led by Marshal
William
Beresford marched to try and retake the town; they laid siege
to the French garrison Soult had left behind, but Soult regathered
his army and marched to relieve the siege.
Beresford moved his
besieging army from Badajoz to intercept the marching French, and
after the Battle of
Albuera
on May 16, Soult was forced to retreat to
Seville.
The war now fell into a temporary lull, the numerically superior
French being unable to find an advantage and coming under
increasing pressure from Spanish guerrilla activity. The French had
upwards of 350,000 soldiers in
L'Armée de l'Espagne, but
the vast majority, over 200,000, was deployed to protect the French
lines of supply, rather than as substantial fighting units.
Meanwhile, the Spaniards drafted the liberal
Spanish Constitution of
1812.
Turning of the tide (1812)

Battle of Salamanca.
In
January 1812, Napoleon approved the full
annexation of Catalonia
into the French
Empire. Its territory was divided in départements (Ter, Sègre
,
Montserrat and
Bouches-de-l'Èbre).
Looking for the approval of the local population,
Catalan was declared the official language
in those departments together with
French. However, it did not succeed because
of the historical aversion that the
Catalans had against the
French, and
guerrilla activity
continued in Catalonia.
Wellington renewed the allied advance into
Spain just after New Year in 1812, besieging and capturing the
fortified towns of Ciudad
Rodrigo
on January 19 and Badajoz
, after a costly
assault, on April 6. Both towns were pillaged by the
troops.
The allied army took Salamanca
on June 17, just as Marmont approached – the two
forces finally met on July 22. The Battle of
Salamanca
was a damaging defeat to the French, and Marshal
Marmont was severely wounded. As the French
regrouped, the Anglo–Portuguese entered Madrid
on August 6
and advanced towards Burgos, before retreating all the way back to
Portugal when renewed French concentrations threatened to trap
them. As a consequence of the Salamanca campaign
the French were forced to end their long siege of Cadiz
and to
permanently evacuate the provinces of Andalusia
and Asturias
.
Allied victory (1813–1814)
French hopes of recovery were stricken by Napoleon's disastrous
invasion of Russia
in 1812. He had taken 30,000 soldiers from the hard-pressed
Armée de l'Espagne, and, starved of reinforcements and
replacements, the French position became increasingly unsustainable
as the allies renewed the offensive in May 1813.
In a
strategic move, Wellington planned to move his supply base from
Lisbon to Santander
. The Anglo–Portuguese forces swept
northwards in late May and seized Burgos; they then outflanked the
French army, forcing Joseph Bonaparte into the valley of the River
Zadorra. At the
Battle of Vitoria,
on June 21, the 65,000 men of Joseph were routed by 53,000 British,
27,000 Portuguese and 19,000 Spaniards. Wellesley pursued and
dislodged the French from
San Sebastián, which was sacked
and burnt to the ground by the Anglo-Portuguese.
The
allies chased the retreating French, reaching the Pyrenees
in early July. Soult was given command of
the French forces and began a counter-offensive, dealing the allied
generals two sharp defeats at the
Battle
of Maya and the
Battle
of Roncesvalles. Yet, he was severely repulsed by the
Anglo–Portuguese, lost momentum, and finally fled after the allied
victory at the
Battle of Sorauren
(July 28 and July 30).
On
October 7, after Wellington received news of the reopening of
hostilities in Germany, the allies finally crossed into France,
fording the Bidasoa
river. On December 11, a beleaguered and desperate
Napoleon agreed to a separate peace with Spain under the Treaty of Valençay
, under which he would release and recognize
Ferdinand in exchange for a complete cessation of
hostilities. But the Spanish had no intention of trusting
Napoleon, and the fighting continued.
The
Peninsular War went on through the allied victories of Bera
pass, the Battle of
Nivelle, and the Battle of Nive
near Bayonne
(December 10–14 1813), the Battle of Orthez (February 27, 1814) and
the Battle of Bayonne (April 14),
the latter occurring after Napoleon's abdication.
Guerrilla war
The Spanish War of Independence was one of the most successful
partisan wars in history and is
the origin of the word
guerrilla
in the English language (from
Spanish Guerra de guerrillas or
"War of little wars"). However, this guerrilla warfare was costly
to both sides. Not only did the 'patriotic' Spaniards trouble the
French troops, they also petrified their countrymen with a
combination of forced conscription and looting of towns. Many of
the partisans were, in fact, either fleeing the law or trying to
get rich, although later in the war the authorities tried to make
the guerrillas militarily reliable, and many of them formed regular
army units, like
Espoz y
Mina's "Cazadores de Navarra", among others.
The idea of forming the guerrillas into an armed force had positive
and negative effects. On the one hand, uniform and stronger
military discipline would stop men from running off into the
streets and disappearing from the band. However, the more
disciplined the unit was, the easier it was for the French troops
to catch them when they sprang an ambush. Only a few partisan
leaders formed up with the authorities; most did so just to lay off
criminal charges and to retain the effective status of an officer
in the Spanish army, so their weaponry, clothes and food would be
paid for.
The guerrilla style of fighting was the Spanish military's single
most effective application. Most organized attempts on the part of
regular Spanish forces to take on the French led to their defeat.
However, once the battle was lost and the soldiers reverted to
their guerrilla roles, they effectively tied down greater numbers
of French troops over a wider area with much less expenditure of
men, energy, and supplies. Wellington's final success in the
peninsula is often said to be largely due to the collapse and
demoralization of the French military structure in Spain caused by
the guerrillas;
Mass resistance by the people of Spain prefigured the
total wars of the twentieth century and eventually
inspired parallel struggles by the
Russians
and
Prussians.
Tsar Alexander, when threatened with
war, rebuked the
French
ambassador:
Role of intelligence
Intelligence played a crucial role in the successful prosecution of
the war by the British after 1810. Spanish and Portuguese
guerrillas were asked to capture messages from French couriers.
From 1811 onwards, these dispatches were often either partially or
wholly
enciphered.
George Scovell of Wellington's
General Staff was given the job of deciphering them. At first, the
ciphers used were fairly simple and he received help from other
members of the General Staff. However, beginning in 1812, a much
stronger cipher, originally devised for diplomatic messages, came
into use and Scovell was left to work on this himself. He steadily
broke it, and the knowledge of French troop movements and
deployments was used to great effect in most of the engagements
described above. The French never realised that the code had been
broken and continued to use it until their code tables were
captured at the Battle of Vitoria.
Consequences
Spain
King Joseph was cheered initially by Spanish
afrancesados ("Frenchified"), who believed
that
collaboration with France
would bring modernisation and liberty. An example was the abolition
of the
Spanish Inquisition.
However, priesthood and patriots stirred up agitation among the
populace, which became widespread after the French army's first
examples of repression (Madrid, 1808) were presented as fact to
unite and enrage the people. The remaining afrancesados were exiled
to France following the departure of French troops.
The pro-independence side included both traditionalists and
liberals.
After the war, they would clash in the
Carlist Wars, as new king Ferdinand VII, "the Desired One" (later "the
Traitor king"), revoked all the changes made by the independent
Cortes, which were summoned in
Cádiz
acting on
his behalf to coordinate the provincial Junta and resist the French.
He restored absolute monarchy, prosecuted and put to death everyone
suspected of liberalism, and altered the laws of royal succession
in favour of his daughter
Isabella II,
thus starting a century of civil wars against the supporters of the
former legal heir to the throne.
The liberal Cortes had approved the
first Spanish Constitution on
March 19, 1812, which was later nullified by the king. In
Spanish America, the Spanish and
Criollo officials
formed Juntas that swore allegiance to King Ferdinand. This
experience of self-government led the later
Libertadores (Liberators) to promote the
independence of the Spanish–American colonies.
French troops seized many of the extensive properties of the
Catholic Church. Churches and convents were used as stables and
barracks, and artworks were sent to France, leading to an
impoverished Spanish cultural heritage. Allied armies also
plundered Spanish towns and the countryside. Wellington recovered
some of the artwork and offered to return it, but King Ferdinand
gave them to him.
These pieces can be viewed at the Duke's
London home, Apsley
House
, and at his country estate, Stratfield
Saye House
.
Another notable effect of the war was the severe damage incurred by
Spain's economy; devastated by the war, it continued to suffer in
the political turbulence that followed.
Portugal
The
Peninsular War signified the traumatic entry of Portugal
into the modern age. The Court's movement
to Rio de
Janeiro
initiated the process of Brazil's state-building
that eventually produced its independence. The skillful
evacuation by the
Portuguese Navy of
more than 15,000 people from the Court, Administration, and Army
was a bonus for Brazil and a blessing in disguise for Portugal, as
it liberated the energies of the country. The Governors of Portugal
nominated by the absent king had a scant impact because of the
successive French invasions and British occupation.
The role of the
War Minister Miguel Pereira Forjaz was unique.
Wellington held him as the ablest man in Portugal. With the
Portuguese Staff, he managed to build a regular army of 55,000 men
and a further 50,000 as national guard
milicias and a
variable number of home guard
ordenanças, perhaps
totalling more than 100,000. In an 1812 letter to
Baron Stein, the Russian Court Minister, Forjaz
recommended a "
scorched earth" policy
and the trading of space for time as the only way to defeat a
French invasion.
Alexander I,
Tsar of Russia, ordered his generals to use Wellington's Portuguese
strategy and avoid battles to starve Napoleon's Grande Armée.
The nation at arms had a similar impact on Portugal as the
French Revolution on France. A new class,
tried, disciplined, and experienced by war against the
French Empire, would assert Portuguese
independence. Marshal Beresford and 160 officers were retained
after 1814 to lead Portugal's Army while the King was still in
Brazil. Portuguese politics hinged on the project of a
Luso–Brazilian
United Kingdom, with the African colonies supplying slaves,
Brazil manufacturing and Portugal the trade.
By 1820, this became
untenable: Portuguese Peninsular War officers expelled the British
and began the liberal
revolution at Porto
on August
24. Liberal institutions were only consolidated after a
civil war in 1832–34.
Cultural
Goya's series of 82 prints
The
Disasters of War remains the most famous and powerful
depiction of the war and its effects on the civilian population.
Prosper Mérimée's
Carmen, on which
Bizet's opera was based, is set during the war. The
C. S.
Forester novel
Death to the French concerns a
private in a British Rifle Regiment who is cut off from his unit
and joins a group of Portuguese guerrillas. The 1957 motion picture
The Pride and the
Passion, also set during the war, was based on Forester's
The Gun. A short but
dramatic episode from the war is given in
Gary Jennings's
Aztec Rage.
F. L. Lucas's novel The English Agent - A Tale of
the Peninsular War (1969), about the Battle of Bailén
and its aftermath, is the account of a British Army
officer who, gathering information before the first British
landings, buys a Frenchwoman at auction to save her from the
Spanish mob. Lucas's poem "Spain 1809" (in
From Many
Times and Lands, 1953), the story of a Spanish village woman's
courage during the French occupation, was turned into the play
A Kind of Justice by Margaret Wood (1966).
Curro Jiménez was a successful
Spanish TV series about a generous bandit fighting against the
French in
Sierra Morena. The
Sharpe
novels by
Bernard Cornwell were a
series likewise following the adventures of a
British Army officer and set, partly, during
the Peninsular War. They were later made into a series of
television movies featuring
actor Sean Bean as Sharpe (see
Sharpe ).A
board wargame called
Wellington — The
Peninsular War 1812–1814 was produced by
GMT Games in 2005.
The Peninsular War saw the first use of
medal
bars. Also known as "devices", they are clasps affixed to the
ribbons from which
medals are suspended. The
Peninsular Medal, more properly known as the
Army Gold Medal was issued to senior
officers in Wellington's army, with a clasp for each major battle
in which the holder participated. When four clasps were issued a
Peninsular Cross was given, with each arm inscribed with a battle's
name. Subsequent clasps were then added to the ribbon.
Wellington's
Peninsular Cross, featuring a unique nine clasps, can be seen on
his uniform in the basement of Apsley House
. In
1847 the surviving
lower ranked officers and enlisted men received the
Military General Service
Medal, with battle clasps, for service in this conflict.
Notes
- Also Spanish War of Independence - Guerre
d'indépendance espagnole and Guerra de la Independencia
Española in French and Spanish respectively. It is also known
as Guerra del Francès ("the War of the Frenchman") in
Catalonia and
Invasões Francesas ("French Invasions") in Portugal.
- Churchill, p. 258. "Nothing like this universal uprising of a
numerous, ancient race and nation, all animated by one thought, had
been seen before...For the first time the forces unchained by the
French
Revolution, which Napoleon had disciplined and directed, met
not kings or Old World hierarchies, but a whole population inspired
by the religion and patriotism which...Spain was to teach to
Europe."
- Laqueur, p. 350. Laqueur notes that the war was "one of the
first occasions when guerrilla warfare had been waged on a large
scale in modern times."
- Gates, pp. 33–34. Gates notes that much of the Grande Armée "was
rendered unavailable for operations against Wellington because
innumerable Spanish contingents kept materialising all over the
country. In 1810, for example, when Massena invaded Portugal, the
Imperial forces in the Peninsula totalled a massive 325,000 men,
but only about one quarter of these could be spared for the
offensive—the rest were required to contain the Spanish insurgents
and regulars. This was the greatest single contribution that the
Spaniards were to make and, without it, Wellington could not have
maintained himself on the continent for long—let alone emerge
triumphant from the conflict."
- Chandler, The Art of Warfare on Land, p. 164
- Glover, p. 52. Glover notes that "the Spanish troops were no
match for the French. They were ill-equipped and sketchily
supplied. Their ranks were filled with untrained recruits. Their
generals bickered among themselves. They lost heavily but their
armies were not destroyed. Time and time again Spanish armies lost
their artillery, their colours, their baggage. They suffered
casualties on a scale that would have crippled a French or a
British army. They never disintegrated. They would retire to some
inaccessible fastness, reorganise themselves and reappear to plague
the French as they had never been plagued before."
- Esdaile, p. 2
- Gates, pp. 5–7 and Esdaile, pp. 2–5
- Esdaile, pp. 7–8 and Gates, p. 8
- Esdaille, p. 166
- Chandler, p. 605
- Gates, p. 35. For example, the Army's 26 cavalry regiments of
15,000 men possessed only 9,000 horses.
- Chandler, p. 610
- Esdaile, pp. 302–303. Rebel groups sprung up on a local basis
and were unaware of the resistance being prepared elsewhere in
Spain. Esdaile asserts that the partisans were as committed to
driving the ancien regime out of Spain as they were
to fighting foreign armies, noting that the Patriots had no
scruples about liquidating officials skeptical of their
revolutionary program.
- Churchill, p. 259
- Gates, p. 12
- Glover, p. 53
- Chandler, p. 608. Chandler notes that Napoleon "never
appreciated how independent the Spanish people were of their
government; he misjudged the extent of their pride, of the tenacity
of their religious faith, of their loyalty to Ferdinand. He
anticipated that they would accept the change of regime without
demur; instead he soon found himself with a war of truly national
proportions on his hands."
- Chandler, p. 611
- Gates, p. 162
- Chandler, p. 611. Gates, pp. 181–182
- Chandler, p. 614
- Gates, p. 61
- Gates, p. 77
- Chandler, p. 616
- Chandler, p. 617. "This was an historic occasion; news of it
spread like wildfire throughout Spain and then all Europe. It was
the first time since 1801 that a sizable French force had laid down
its arms, and the legend of French invincibility underwent a severe
shaking. Everywhere anti-French elements drew fresh inspiration
from the tidings. The Pope published an open denunciation of
Napoleon; Prussian patriots were heartened; and, most significantly
of all, the Austrian war party began to secure the support of the
Emperor Francis for a renewed challenge to the French Empire.
- James, pp. 131–132
- Chandler, p. 625. Chandler notes that "the particular interests
of the provincial delegates made even the pretense of centralised
government a travesty."
- Chandler, p. 621. John Lawrence Tone has questioned this
assessment of the Spanish juntas on the grounds that it relies too
much on the accounts of British officers and elites; these sources
being patently unfair to the revolutionaries, "whom they despised
for being Jacobins, Catholics, and Spaniards, not necessarily in
that order."
- Esdaille, pp. 304–305. Esdaille notes that the Junta of Seville
declared itself the supreme government of Spain and tried to annex
neighbouring juntas by force.
- Gates, p. 487
- Glover, p. 55
- Chandler, p. 631
- Churchill, p. 262
- Gates, p. 114
- Glover, p. 89
- Gates, p. 128. Gates notes that the siege "was a demonstration
the French army was never to forget and ... it was to
inspire Spaniards to maintain replica struggles that have few
parallels in the history of war.
- Gates, p. 127. The military garrison of 44,000 left 8,000
survivors, 1,500 of them ill.
- Glover, p. 89. 10,000 of these were French.
- David A. Bell, Napoleon's Total War, TheHistoryNet.com
- Later on, this number would grow to 50,000 in the army and
another 50,000 in militias, in addition to 120,000
ordenanças and volunteer units.
- Gates, p. 177
- P. Guedalla, p. 186
- Esdaile, pp. 505–507
- Oman (1908), Vol. III, p. 418
- GMT Games — Wellington
References
Further reading
- Esdaile, Charles J. Fighting Napoleon Yale University
Press, 2004, ISBN 0300101120.
- Esdaile, Charles J. The Spanish Army in the Peninsular
War Manchester University Press, 1988, ISBN 0719025389.
- Fletcher, Ian Peninsular War; Aspects of the Struggle for
the Iberian Peninsula Spellmount Publishers, 2003, ISBN
1873376820.
- Fletcher, Ian (ed.) The Campaigns of Wellington, (3
vols), Vol 1. The Peninsular War 1808–1811; Vol. 2. The Peninsular
War 1812–1814, The Folio Society, 2007.
- Goya, Francisco The Disasters of War Dover
Publications, 1967, ISBN 0486218724.
- Griffith, Paddy A History of the Peninsular War: Modern
Studies of the War in Spain and Portugal, 1808-14 v.
9 Greenhill Books, 1999, ISBN 185367348X.
- Lovett, Gabriel H. Napoleon and the Birth of Modern
Spain New York UP, 1965, ISBN 0814702678.
- Napier, William.
The War in the Peninsula (6 vols), London: John Murray
(Vol 1), and private (Vols 2-6), 1828-40.
- Oman, Charles. The History of
the Peninsular War (7 vols), Oxford, 1903-30.
- Rathbone, Julian Wellington's War, Michael Joseph,
1984, ISBN 0718123964
- Suchet, Marshal Duke D'Albufera Memoirs of the War in
Spain Pete Kautz, 2007, 2 volumes: ISBN 1858184770 & ISBN
1858184762.
- Urban, Mark. Rifles: Six years with Wellington's legendary
sharpshooters Pub Faber & Faber, 2003. ISBN
0571216811
- Urban, Mark. The Man who Broke Napoleon's Codes. Faber
and Faber Ltd, London 2001. ISBN 0571205135
External links