Battle of Castellón

Battle of Castellón
Part of the Peninsular War
Date1 January 1809
Location42°15′N 3°05′E / 42.250°N 3.083°E / 42.250; 3.083
Result Spanish victory
Belligerents
French Empire Spain
Commanders and leaders
Honoré Charles Reille Marqués de Lazán
Strength
500 regulars
Casualties and losses
300 dead or wounded,
90 captured
Peninsular War: Napoleon's invasion
210km
130miles
14
Corunna
13
Castellón
12
11
10
9
8
Zaragoza
7
6
Somosierra
5
Tudela
4
3
2
1
  current battle

The Battle of Castellón was an ambush against a French Imperial detachment under General Reille near Girona during the Peninsular War (1807–1814).

Background

The Corunna campaign started with the Battle of Cardedeu.[1] [2]

Battle

Having crept his force up along the right bank of the Fluvià River and set up headquarters at La Armentera, a village near the river mouth on the Mediterranean Sea, General Lazán prepared a coup de main against the French battalion installed atop Castelló d'Empúries. Since bad roads precluded a night attack, Lazán moved in the early morning, and brusquely forced the French off the ridge. While Reille's troops effected a disciplined fighting withdrawal toward Rosas,[3] Juan Clarós's Chasseurs, acting as the vanguard for General Álvarez de Castro's division, circled across their path of retreat and set up a position in a grove next to the main road, preparing to block the French passage. Caught in a pincer movement, the French were cut down. Only 80 escaped unwounded and 90 surrendered.

Sequel

When Reille, established at Figueras, learned of the rout of his men, he set out against the Spaniards the next day with 3,000 infantry and cavalry, aiming to cut their communications with Gerona. In spite of the rapid French movements, Reille was unable to achieve a surprise, and Lazán awaited him with his men solidly entrenched at Castellón. Seeing his attacks repulsed everywhere along the line, Reille decided not to try conclusions with the Spaniards, and Lazán fell back on Gerona unmolested.

Aftermath

The Corunna campaign proceeded with the Battle of Mansilla.

Commemorations

Ferdinand VII, the king of Spain, awarded a commemorative medal to recognize the participants in the battle.[4]

See also

References

[5]

  1. ^ Minali, Guillelmo (1840). Historia militar de Gerona, que comprende particularmente los dos sitios de 1808 y 1809 (in Spanish). A. Figaró. pp. 59–60.
  2. ^ "1-1-1809 Sorpresa de Castellón". www.1808-1814.org (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2005-02-11. Retrieved 2011-08-16.
  3. ^ Minali, Guillelmo (1840). Historia militar de Gerona, que comprende particularmente los dos sitios de 1808 y 1809 (in Spanish). A. Figaró.
  4. ^ Crusafont I. Sabater, Miguel (2006). Medalles commemoratives dels Països Catalans i de la Corona catalano-aragonesa: (S. XV-XX). Institut d'Estudis Catalans. p. 152. ISBN 978-84-7283-864-2.
  5. ^ Ferrer, Raymundo (1816). Barcelona cautiva, ó sea Diario exacto de lo ocurrido en la misma ciudad mientras la oprimieron los Franceses, esto es, desde el 13 de Febrero de 1808 hasta el 28 de Mayo de 1814 Acompañta a los principios de cada mes una Idea del estado religiosa-politico-militar de Barcelona y Cataluña (in Spanish). Brusi.
Preceded by
Battle of Benavente
Napoleonic Wars
Battle of Castellón
Succeeded by
Battle of Uclés (1809)