The government turned to Sir Arthur Wellesley for advice. Recognising that he had not been to blame for the humiliation of the Convention of Cintra and had, in fact, conducted the short campaign of August 1808 with remarkable success.
On 7 March 1809 he submitted a memorandum to Viscount Castleragh, the secretary of state for war, in which he argued that Portugal could be defended regardless of events in Spain, as long as an adequate army under strong command was despatched to Lisbon to reinforce the 10,000 men left there by Moore five months earlier.
Castlereagh was clearly convinced by this argument, and on 22 April Wellesley landed at Lisbon to command a force of 20,000 British troops. 3,000 member’s of the King’s German legion and an estimated 16,000 Portuguese. He faced a daunting task. Ranged against him were three French armies – at Oporto to the North, Ciudad Rodrigo to the North-East and Badajoz to the East – each of which was capable of matching the numbers under his command. Altogether the French had nearly 200,000 troop in the Iberian Peninsula.
Wellesley could only aim to defeat each enemy army in turn, Retreating into Portugal whenever he felt threatened by overwhelming numbers. It was this factor that made the Peninsular campaign, conducted between 1809 and 1814, such a see-saw affair of advance and withdrawal, but it was a measure of the brilliance of Wellesley that he was prepared to fight in such a way. In the process, his army gained the experience and expertise to achieve some memorable victories.
Wellesley’s first objective was Oporto, defended by 20,000 French soldiers under Marshal Soult. The main British force of 18,000 men advanced from Coimbra on 7 May, with the Portuguese providing flank protection. Four days later Wellesley crossed the River Douro to catch Soult by surprise. The French withdrew with cavalry at their heels, retiring North to Galicia across mountainous terrain. By early June Portugal had been cleared of enemy troops, enabling Wellesley to turn his attention to Spain. His aim was to make contact with a Spanish army of 30,000 men under Genral Cuesta before marching against Marshal Victor at Talavera.
Despite problems caused by the indiscipline of Cuesta’s men, who raced towards Madrid only to encounter an enemy army of 46,000 well-trained soldiers, the British force of 20,000 took up strong positions at Talavera, where they were attacked by the French on 27 and 28 July. The battle which earned Wellesley his more familiar title of Viscount (later Duke of) Wellington, was won primarily by the discipline of the British infantry, who lay behind the crest of a ridge to escape French fire, then stood up, poured volleys into the enemy and charged with the bayonet. The French faltered and under pressure from Allied cavalry, withdrew having suffered 7,000 casualties. By comparison, the British lost 5,000 men and gained the field.
On 2 August Wellington received reports that a new French army of 20,000 men had advanced across his rear to take Plasencia, threatening his links with Portugal. He therefore moved his army back to Almaraz on the River Tagus before withdrawing towards Badajoz in the South-West. The French followed, although when it was apparent to them that Wellington had no attention of giving battle, they marched North again to deal with yet another Spanish uprising. Wellington took to opportunity to travel to Lisbon to supervise the construction of defences around the city (the ‘Lines of the Torres Vedras’), while his army occupied winter quarters around Abrantes and along the River Mondego. A French attack was unlikely once the weather worsened.
Both sides prepared for a fresh campaign in 1810. Wellington, having vowed never to attempt another operation in conjunction with the ill-disciplined Spanish, concentrated on the defence of Portugal. The Portuguese militia, about 45,000 strong, was called out and arrangements made for the evacuation of the entire area through which the French, dependent for supplies on what they captured, might advance.
In addition, the lines of the Torres Vedras, comprising fixed defences to the North of Lisbon, were completed, giving the Anglo-Portuguese forces a secure base to which they might withdraw. Meanwhile, Wellington’s main army of 60,000 men, half of whom were British, guarded the likely French approach routes in the Mondego and Tagus valleys. They did not have long to wait. By June 1810 Marshal Massena, one of Napoleon’s more experienced generals, had gathered 86,000 men of Portugal, and was ready to advance.
Massena began his campaign by laying siege to and capturing, Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida, although in the process he gave clear warning that his main line of advance would be along the River Mondego. Wellington reacted by concentrating his army on top of a 10-mile ridge at Busaco, on the road from Almeida to Coimbra. When the French attacked the ridge on 27 September 1810, they suffered a costly defeat, but this was no more than a delaying action. As soon as it was over, Wellington pulled back towards his prepared defences outside Lisbon.
The French were left to march across land deliberately laid bare of supplies, before encountering the elaborate earthworks and trenches which made up the lines of the Torres Vedras. Although Masena held on throughout the winter, his army rapidly lost cohesion and in March 1811 he had no choice but to order a retreat into Spain. As his soldiers struggled over the mountains of central Portugal, they were harried by mercilessly by guerrillas and kept on the move by the advance guard of Wellington’s army. The French fell back to Almeida and Ciudad Rodrigo. They left 25,000 of their comrades behind.
Wellington’s next task was to capture the frontier forts at Almeida and further South at Badajoz, preparatory to an invasion of Spain. It proved to be a difficult task. On 11 May 1811, as British troops laid siege to Almeida, a reorganised French army under Massena suddenly attacked them at Fuentes d’onoro. The fighting was desperate, Wellington was later to admit that it was the closest he came to defeat in the Peninsula, but the stubborn resolve of the redcoats forced the enemy back.
Five days later the Anglo-Portuguese army besieging Badajoz was attacked by Soult at Albuera. In the aftermath of a brutal and bloody engagement, characterised by orders to the 57th Foot (1st Battalion, Middlesex Regiment) to ‘die hard’ in the battle, neither side claimed victory, although it soon became apparent that the French had withdrawn. Even so, Wellington’s plans for an offensive into Spain had to be postponed until his shattered battalions could be reinforced. Almeida was taken, but as the winter closed in, the siege of Badajoz had to be abandoned. The French, now under the command of Marshal Marmont, were content to suspend operations until spring, This proved to be a mistake.
On 1 January 1812 Wellington resumed the offensive despite the intense cold, aiming to lay siege to Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz before marching into central Spain. By early April both forts had been taken, two months later Wellington’s Anglo-Portuguese army crossed the River Agueda and advanced towards Salamanca, capturing the town on 17 June. Marmont deliberately drew Wellington deeper into Spain along stretched supply lines, refusing to give battle, and on 16 July threatened to outflank his opponent on the River Douro. Wellington pulled back towards Salamanca, tempting Marmont to over-extend his advance.
On 22 July, on a plain beneath the Arapiles Heights to the South-East of Salamanca, the French spearhead was suddenly attacked in the flank by the British 3rd and 5th Divisions, hidden from Marmont’s view by folds in the ground. As the French infantry reeled from the shock. They were hit by a stunning cavalry charge carried out by the British Heavy Brigade, commanded by General Le Marchant (who was killed in the process). By nightfall, Marmont’s army of Portugal had collapsed, losing an estimated 14,000 men and 20 guns, Marmont himself, wounded in the early stages of the engagement, was on his way back to France. It was Wellington’s most impressive victory to date.
An immediate consequence was the liberation of Madrid, effected by Wellington’s troops on 12 August, but the French were by no means finished. As the British and Portuguese marched North to lay siege to Burgos, General Clausel (Marmont’s successor) rallied his forces and moved against Wellington, while further South and army of 60,000 Frenchman advanced towards the Spanish Capital. Faced with possible encirclement, Wellington pulled back to Salamanca and then to Ciudad Rodrigo, abandoning all his territorial gains of the year, including Madrid. By October, his troops were dispersed in winter quarters in central Portugal.
Despite the apparently indecisive nature of operations in 1812, the French hold on Spain had been weakened. The defeat at Salamanca undermined French morale and gave renewed hope to the people of Spain, a significant proportion of whom engaged in, or actively supported, guerrilla attacks that diverted substantial numbers of French soldiers from the front line. Thus when Wellington began his next campaign in May 1813, his chances of success were higher than ever before. He now had over 80,000 Allied troops under his command, half of whom he sent to Salamanca and half along the River Esla with the intention of encircling the enemy army in Castile.
The French withdrew through Valladolid, Palencia and Burgos, but on 21 June were forced to make a stand at Vitoria to protect their retreating columns. The ensuing battle, although a victory for Wellington, was marred by a failure to pursue the broken enemy (British soldiers seemed far more interested in looting the French baggage train) but the results were impressive. By the end of the month northern and central Spain had been cleared except for small garrisons in San Sebastian and Pamplona (which Wellington proceeded to besiege) and the French had withdrawn into the Pyreness. Operations in eastern Spain, carried out by a British force of 80,000 men that had landed at Alicante in 1812, were less successful, but to all intents and purposes the Iberian Peninsula was now in Allied hands.
After 20 years of war the British army was at last achieving decisive results. This trend continued during the final months of the Peninsular War. Despite French counter-attacks in July 1813, delivered around Roncesvalles and the Maya pass, Wellington succeeded in taking both Pamplona and San Sebastian by October. He then moved against enemy positions along the River Bidassoa with the intention of invading France, winning the battle of the Nivelle in November and approaching the city of Bayonne on either side of the River Nive a moth later. At the same time, British forces in eastern Spain advanced as far as Gerona, putting additional pressure on the French, who were also having to contend with Austrian, Russian and Prussian attacks from the East. Thus when Wellington resumed his offensive in January 1814, he did so against weakened opposition.
On 27 February he won the battle of Orthez, to the East of Bayonne, within weeks he had captured Bordeaux and pushed forward as far as Toulouse, where the final battle of the war took place on 10 April. By then, Paris had fallen to the eastern allies, Napoleon had abdicated and French resistance had crumbled.
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Link will appear as Hanson, Marilee. "The Peninsular War 1808-1814" https://englishhistory.net/georgian/peninsular-war/, January 13, 2022