Battle of Albuera | |||||||
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Part of Peninsular War | |||||||
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Combatants | |||||||
Spain Portugal Britain |
France Duchy of Warsaw |
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Commanders | |||||||
William Beresford Joaquin Blake |
Nicolas Jean de Dieu Soult | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
10,000 British 10,000 Portuguese 13,000 Spanish 38 guns |
33,000 men and cavalry 40 guns |
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Casualties | |||||||
5,916 dead or wounded | 7,000 dead or wounded |
Peninsular War |
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Bailén – Roliça – Vimeiro – Corunna – Talavera – Buçaco – Fuengirola – Torres Vedras – Barrosa – Fuentes de Onoro – Albuera – Badajoz – Salamanca – Vitoria - Sorauren |
The Battle of Albuera was a battle of the Peninsular War which took place on May 16, 1811, at Albuera, about 12 miles south of Badajoz between the French Army, under the command of Field Marshal Soult, and an Allied force of British, Spanish, and Portuguese troops. The combined forces were under the command of Lord Beresford, Marshal of the Portuguese Army. Portuguese and British forces were directly under his command; the Spanish forces were commanded by General Joaquin Blake. Soult was attempting to break up Beresford's attempts to besiege Badajoz, and failed to do so; the battle therefore was a victory for Beresford's forces. However, this was due to hard fighting; the British took very heavy casualties, and the Spaniards repelled one of the most massive infantry attacks of the war.
The siege of Badajoz was latter abandoned when Marmont joined forces with Soult. Albuera therefore had little effect on the course of the war , but the performance of Polish Lancers at it did cause the British Army to convert some cavalry regiments to lancers post-Waterloo. It also confirmed the fighting quality of the remodelled Portuguese Army.
Wellington, had spent the winter of 1810-1811 holding a strong line of fortification at Torres Vedras protecting Lisbon. French forces under Massena had spent the winter opposite the lines, unable to assault them and unable to adequately feed themselves, and consequently wasting away . In March 1811 Massena recognised the logic of the situation and fell back to the area of the Spanish border fortress of Ciudad Rodrigo, covering the road from Portugal towards Salamanca. He left a small force in the corresponding Portuguese fortress of Almeida. The combination of the winter in front of the Lines of Torres Vedras and a hurried retreat had largely destroyed his army's offensive capability.
South of the Tagus, the Portuguese fortress of Elvas and the Spanish fortress of Badajoz stood on the main road out of Portugal to Madrid. French operations south of the Tagus were the responsibility of Soult, who was also occupied in other directions (eg pursuing a siege of Cadiz. In January1811, Soult had stripped the Cadiz siege lines in order to put together a field force, with which he moved on Badajoz. In response to this British and Spanish forces attempted to break the siege of Cadiz, leading to the Battle of Barrosa March 8, 1811. Barrosa was a tactical defeat for the French, but was not exploited to disrupt the siege of Cadiz. Badajoz was surrendered to Soult on March 10, 1811 (supposedly as a result of bribery rather than military operations) , and Soult promptly returned to the Seville area to support the siege of Cadiz and prevent any more effective repetition of the move that had led to Barrosa.
Wellington took the view that all four of the above-mentioned fortresses should be taken to protect Portugal from further invasion, and to allow a move by his Anglo-Portuguese forces into Spain. (Fortress towns were particularly important because of the poor state of communications in the Peninsula: they were difficult to bypass and the logistics of moving and supporting an effective siege train were problematic). He decided to split his forces, and attempt to take both Almeida and Badajoz. An Anglo-Portuguese force (20,000 men of whom 10,000 British) under Beresford was therefore detached to besiege Badajoz, whilst Wellington with about twice this dealt with Almeida.
At this point, Wellington had no effective siege train. He therefore blockaded Almeida , with a covering force just to the east. Massena's attack on this position was defeated at the Battle of Fuentes d'Onoro on May 5, 1811. As a result, Almeida was evacuated by the French on May 11, 1811(In one of the more humiliating episodes of the British army, the entire garrison of Almeida slipped through the siege lines without losing a man or raising the alarm).
Beresford managed to assemble a siege train of sorts from antique Portuguese guns held at Elvas, and began siege operations against Badajoz May 8, 1811. Soult marched with about 24,000 men to the relief of Badajoz. Beresford moved to a strong covering position on a N-S ridge behind a stream astride the Badajoz- Seville road at Albuera 12 miles from Badajoz, and 12,000 Spanish troops under Blake operating further south marched to join him.
On May 15, Beresford's cavalry screen (2,500 men) was driven back from the right bank of the Albuera River with some ease by the French cavalry (the British brigadier-general responsible was later relieved of command). In the small hours of May 16, Blake's forces joined Beresford (unbeknownst to Soult) and were deployed at the South end of the position.
Soult decided to attack. His plan was to feint an attack on the town of Albuera on the road with one brigade, but to take the bulk of his force on a wide flanking move to the South (the Allied right wing).
A brigade of infantry commanded by General Godin pushed back soldiers from a brigade of the King's German Legion (KGL) under the command of General Altena. They crossed the river at a bridge but took heavy losses from Portuguese artillery fire, which displaced some of the Germans from the village.
Beresford detected Soult's move and attempted to redeploy his forces in response. Orders were given for the Spanish forces (upon whom the flank attack would fall) to redeploy to face south. The British 2nd Division (under General Stewart) behind Albuera was replaced by a Portuguese division and moved south to extend the right flank to the west echelonned behind the Spaniards. The 4th Division under General Cole remained in reserve. However Blake, commanding the Spaniards, refused to move his troops because he was sure the main attack would be upon Albuera village.
When the French V Corps under the command of General Girard begun its attack on three Spanish divisions under the command of Generals Zayas, Lardizabal, and Ballasteros, only Zayas's men were aligned to meet the attack (on his own initiative). V Corps' flanks were covered by horse artillery. On the left flank of V Corps, a French dragoon division under the command of General Latour Mauborg took its position. On its right flank, General Werle's infantry division was deployed.
Zayas' Spaniards fought well and General Stewart's 2nd Infantry Division, along with a battery from the KGL, moved to assist them. Colborne's brigade advanced in line to fire into the left flank of the attacking French infantry column. The French were shattered and Stewart ordered a charge. However at this point a rainstorm reduced visibility (and made it highly difficult to fire a musket). The British infantry were in line, with little or no firepower and unaware that French cavalry, which had made a wider flanking move was to their right flank and behind them.
At this moment, General Latour Maubourg sent the Uhlan Regiment and the 10th Hussars Regiment against them. The three British regiments involved (3rd Regiment of Foot, 2/48th Regiment of Foot and the 66th Regiment of Foot)were almost totally destroyed. The 31st Regiment of Foot was able to form square just in time to save itself from destruction by the French/Polish Lancers.
The French attack then fell upon Houghton's brigade (29th Regiment of Foot, 1/48th Regiment of Foot and the 57th Regiment of Foot) of the 2nd Division, which held its ground despite heavy casualties. Colonel Inglis, of the 57th Regiment of Foot fell mortally wounded; but in his last moments kept calling to his men to “die hard“. So far, the battle had gone well for the French. However, Soult had become aware by now that Blake's army had joined Beresford and was therefore reluctant to gamble his last reserves to secure victory.
At this point Beresford's 4th Division under Lowry Cole attacked up the ridge from the West. The Fusiliers Brigade (7th Regiment of Foot & 23rd Regiment of Foot), Portuguese 11/23 Brigade and 7th Caçadores distinguished themselves particularly. They repelled cavalry charges by dragoons and Uhlans, and advanced to within close range of the French columns. They exchanged musket fire for about 20 minutes. They suffered over 1000 casualties. Then the French infantry - who must have suffered at least as badly - broke as the British survivors mounted a fierce bayonet charge.
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