Battle of Alcolea Bridge

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Battle of Alcolea Bridge
Part of the
Córdoba, Spain
37°55′55″N 4°40′23″W / 37.932°N 4.673°W / 37.932; -4.673
Result French victory
Belligerents First French Empire First French Empire Spain SpainCommanders and leaders Pierre Dupont Pedro EchávarriStrength 18,000 3,000Casualties and losses Unknown Unknown
Peninsular war: Spanish uprising 1808
Map
200km
125miles
Santander
12
Evacuation of La Romana August 1808
Bailén
11
Battle of Bailén July 1808
Rioseco
10
Battle of Medina de Rioseco July 1808
Valencia
9
Battle of Valencia June 1808
Girona
8
Battle of Girona June 1808 8.1 Second siege of Girona July 1808
Zaragoza
7
First siege of Zaragoza June 1808
Cabezón
6
Battle of Cabezón June 1808
Cadiz
5
Capture of the Rosily Squadron June 1808
Alcolea
4
Valdepeñas
3
Battle of Valdepeñas June 1808
Bruch
2
Battles of El Bruch June 1808
Dos de Mayo
Madrid
1
Madrid Uprising May 1808
  current battle

The Battle of Alcolea Bridge was a minor battle that took place on 7 June 1808, during the

Córdoba, the city that would be invaded by French troops later that same afternoon.[1]

Background

The Dos de Mayo Uprising had put Iberia in revolt against French rule.

Battle

It is significant in that it was the first staged battle against regular Spanish troops that General Pierre Dupont de l'Étang fought in Andalusia after having left Toledo on 24 May, heading for Cádiz, with 18,000 troops. Although successive movements of French troops would be harried by Spanish guerrilleros fighting along the way, on both sides of the Sierra Morena and in the steep gorge (defile) of Despeñaperros that separates Castile-La Mancha (including Madrid) and Andalusia, Dupont met with no resistance there.

At Alcolea, some 3,000 regular troops, accompanied by some armed civilians, tried, unsuccessfully, to stop Dupont's vastly superior forces at the bridge over the Guadalquivir and were forced to retreat to Córdoba. Dupont went on to capture Córdoba that same day, his troops ransacking the city over four days.

The seventy troops Dupont had left to protect the bridge were later massacred by guerrillas led by Juan de la Torre, the mayor of the town of Montoro.[2]

One of the Spanish soldiers who fought at Alcolea was Pedro Agustín Girón, who would later become a minister of war, and who would also accuse General Echávarri of not having personally participated.[3]

Aftermath

Iberia in revolt proceeded with the Capture of the Rosily Squadron.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Foy 1827, pp. 218–220.
  2. ^ Esdaile 2003, pp. 253–254.
  3. ^ Esdaile 2003, p. 66.

References

  • Foy, Maximilien Sébastien (1827). History of the war in the Peninsula under Napoleon, to which is prefixed a view of the political and military state of the four belligerent powers. countess Foy. pp. 218–220. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  • Esdaile, Charles (2003). The Peninsular War: A New History. Palgrave Macmillan. . Retrieved 4 May 2021.

External links