Luis de Lacy

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Brigadier-General

Luis Roberto de Lacy y Gautier
Battle of Ocana Battle of Barrosa

Brigadier-General Luis Roberto de Lacy, 11 January 1775 – 5 July 1817, was a Spanish professional soldier of Irish descent, who served in the Spanish and French Imperial armies.

He played a prominent role in the 1808 to 1814

Ferdinand VII. In 1820, the Cortes or Spanish Parliament, declared him a hero of Spanish democracy and installed a plaque to his memory in the Palacio de las Cortes, Madrid
, where it remains.

Background

Luis Roberto de Lacy was born 11 January 1775, in

San Roque, Cádiz, to Lieutenant-Colonel Patrick de Lacy, an officer in the Ultonia or Ulster Regiment, a foreign unit or Infantería de línea extranjera of the Spanish army. Patrick died sometime before 1785, and his wife Antonia remarried Jean Gautier, another Ultonia officer.[1]

His grandfather, General Patrick de Lacy y Gould (1678-?), came from

Count Franz Moritz von Lacy (1725–1801), became an Austrian Fieldmarshall.[2] Patrick himself settled in Barcelona and commanded the Ultonia during the 1701 to 1714 War of the Spanish Succession.[3]

De Lacy's uncle, Francis Anthony de Lacy (1731–1792), commanded Spanish forces in the 1779 to 1783 Great Siege of Gibraltar and later served as envoy to Sweden and Russia. He was created a Knight of the order of Carlos Tecera and appointed Capitán-General of Catalonia in 1789.[1] An aunt married George Browne, another Irish exile who was Governor-General of Livonia, Russia.[4]

While serving with the Imperial French army, de Lacy was based in Quimper, Brittany, where he met Emilia du Guermeur.[5] Her Royalist family disapproved of her relationship with an officer in Napoleon's army but she accompanied de Lacy when his unit was posted to Holland. They apparently had a child but his wife disappears from the record after 1807.[6]

Service with the Royal Spanish Army; 1785 to 1803

De Lacy was commissioned into the Ultonia regiment when he was 10, although his age was recorded as 13 to satisfy minimum requirements. Issuing commissions to children was not unusual, as they were considered private investments and often used to provide pensions for orphans. Although by now the Ultonia was no longer 'Irish', many of the officers were Spanish-born descendants of the original Irish emigrants, including his uncle Francis and various cousins.[7]

In 1789, de Lacy joined an expedition to

Moluccas, before his stepfather brought him home.[1]

Promoted captain, he took part in the War of the Pyrenees against France, which ended with the April 1795 Peace of Basel. He was posted to the Canary Islands in 1799, where he fought a duel with the local Capitán-General. Despite being transferred to El Hierro, he continued their feud; he was court-martialed as a result and sentenced to one year in the Royal Prison at the Concepción Arsenal at Cádiz.[8]

Service with the Imperial Army; 1803 to 1808

Ferdinand in 1808 led to the revolt known as the Dos de Mayo Uprising

His jailers allegedly considered him mentally unbalanced; as a result, De Lacy was stripped of his commission, and barred from re-enlisting in the Spanish army. He moved to France in order to continue his career and was appointed captain in the Irish Legion, a French army unit formed in Brittany and intended to support an Irish rising. Although many of its officers were Irish exiles or of Irish descent, like De Lacy, the rank and file were mostly Polish.[9]

When the proposed rebellion failed to materialise, the Legion was posted to the

Ferdinand, who was replaced in May by Joseph Bonaparte and held in France.[10]

De Lacy arrived in Madrid shortly before the May 1808 revolt known as the Dos de Mayo; he deserted, and was reinstated in the Spanish army as colonel of the Burgos regiment.[11]

Service with the Spanish Army; 1808–1814

In July 1809, de Lacy was given command of the

Battle of Ocana on 19 November 1809; the collapse of the Spanish cavalry under Manuel Freire de Andrade exposed him to a flank attack that practically annihilated his division. A second defeat at Alba de Tormes on 29 November left the Spanish unable to confront the French in open battle and they resorted to guerrilla tactics.[12]

Valencia
in 1815; his rejection of the 1812 Constitution led to a series of revolts, including that led by de Lacy in 1817

Although Cádiz was besieged by the French from February 1810 to August 1812, support from the Royal Navy allowed the Council to send small amphibious expeditions intended to bolster resistance elsewhere. De Lacy led landings in Algeciras, Ronda, Marbella and Huelva and although unable to hold them, this absorbed French resources. In March 1811, de Lacy's troops supported an Anglo-Spanish attempt to break the siege of Cádiz; the resulting Battle of Barrosa was a significant victory, although command failures meant the siege continued.[13]

After the loss of

Valencia weakened them elsewhere and provided the Spanish opportunities for partisan warfare. De Lacy led a series of incursions into the French departments of Haute-Garonne and Ariège; these restored local morale and forced the French to send reinforcements.[15]

Most major towns, including Barcelona, Tarragona and Lleida, remained in French hands and in early 1812, Napoleon made Catalonia part of France. The focus on guerrilla tactics led to an increasingly bitter war of reprisals and executions by both sides, which severely impacted the civilian population. Many of the partisan bands were beyond central control and their operations often indistinguishable from simple brigandage.[citation needed] This led to conflict between de Lacy and local Catalan leaders and in January 1813, he moved to Santiago de Compostela as Captain General of the Kingdom of Galicia. He assumed command of the Reserva de Galicia, which he focused on disciplining and reorganising. Following Allied victory at Vitoria in June 1813, the French withdrew from Spain and Ferdinand returned to Madrid in April 1814.

Execution and rehabilitation

Execution of Luis Roberto de Lacy y Gautier, 5 July 1817

Ferdinand rejected a previous commitment to accept the Spanish Constitution of 1812 and established an absolutist regime; Spain also faced colonial wars in the Americas, which began in 1810 and continued until 1833. This destabilised the regime and led to a series of attempted coups, by military officers like de Lacy backed by progressive civilian elements, often linked by Freemasonry.[16]

Following failed attempts in 1815 and 1816, de Lacy returned to Barcelona and assisted by a former subordinate,

Palma, Majorca, held at Bellver Castle and executed there by firing squad on 5 July 1817.[17]

In 1820, a revolt led by Colonel Rafael del Riego forced Ferdinand to restore the 1812 Constitution; this began the Trienio Liberal, a period of liberalisation that ended in 1823, when a French army allowed Ferdinand to re-assert control. However, in 1820 the reconstituted Cortes Generales declared de Lacy a martyr; along with others including Riego, he is commemorated on a plaque in the Palacio de las Cortes, Madrid, which can still be seen today. De Lacy was buried at the Cementiri de Sant Andreu, in Barcelona. The Calle General Lacy in Atocha, Madrid, is named after him.

References

  1. ^ a b c MacBride 1936, p. 644.
  2. ^ De Lacy-Bellingari 1928, p. 58.
  3. ^ MacBride 1936, p. 643.
  4. ^ Maunsell 1903, p. 146.
  5. ^ Jordi, Roca Vernet. La revolución liberal en España en clave transnacional a través de la amazona Emilia du Guermeur, viuda de Luis Lacy (PDF) (in Spanish). Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 April 2021. Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  6. ^ MacBride 1936, p. 647.
  7. ^ Lacey 1994, pp. 140–143.
  8. ^ MacBride 1936, p. 645.
  9. ^ Clark & Thompson 1976, pp. 165–169.
  10. ^ Carr 1982, pp. 79–85.
  11. ^ "The Old Limerick Journal; Biographical Dictionary of Limerickmen in France" (PDF). limerickcity.ie. Page 182. Archived (PDF) from the original on 31 January 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  12. ^ Gates 2002, pp. 205–206.
  13. ^ Grehan & Mace 2013, pp. 63, 103.
  14. ^ "Luis Roberto de Lacy y Gautier". Gran Enciclopedia Catalana. Archived from the original on 23 August 2020. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
  15. ^ Alexander 1977, pp. 80–81.
  16. ^ Lawrence 2014, pp. 26–27.
  17. ^ MacBride 1936, p. 653.

Sources

External links