Siege of Chaves | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Peninsular War | |||||||
|
|||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Portugal | French Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
First siege: Francisco Pizarro Second siege: Francisco Silveira |
First siege: Marshal Soult Second siege: Major Messeger |
||||||
Strength | |||||||
First siege: 6,000 men |
First siege: 1,800 men 12 cannons |
||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
First siege: 3,500 men captured 50 cannons captured Second siege: 4 to 5 men killed |
First siege: No casualties Second siege: 300 dead 1,500 captured 12 cannons captured More than 1,000 rifles captured |
First siege:
3,500 men
50 cannons
First siege:
23,000 men
50 cannons
The Siege of Chaves refers to the French siege and capture of Chaves, Portugal from 10 to 12 March 1809, and the subsequent siege and recapture of the town by Portuguese forces from 21 to 25 March 1809, during the second invasion of Portugal in the Peninsular War.
Portugal suffered three invasions by French forces during the turbulent period of the Peninsular War. The northern region of Trás-os-Montes, as all the country, had succumbed to the Napoleonic regency of Junot. As soon as news came of the disembarkation of the British in Portuguese Estremadura, the rebellion broke out. Bragança, and soon after Chaves, proclaimed liberation. The militias were formed to fight the invader.
Napoleon, worried about what was happening in Spain and upset with the failure of the expedition of his forces, decided to come personally to the Peninsula in whose submission he had invested 300,000 men. The British, who had disembarked in 1807 in Galicia under the command of general John Moore, did not surpass 30,000 in number. With his customary mobility Napoleon multiplied himself, divided and destroyed the British and the Spanish in quick and precise blows. He ordered Soult to pursue the British in Galicia. Moore's army was defeated and hounded across the mountains of Lugo; the British general himself was killed during the final combats carried out around the bay of Coruña, where the remnants of his forces re-embarked.