Military Wiki
Battle of Vitoria
Part of the Peninsular War
Vitoria - Plaza de la Virgen Blanca 10
Monument to the Battle, Vitoria
Date21 June 1813
LocationVitoria, Spain
Result Decisive Allied victory
Belligerents
France French Empire United Kingdom United Kingdom
PortugueseFlag1750 Portugal
Spain Spain
Commanders and leaders
France Joseph Bonaparte
France Jean-Baptiste Jourdan
United Kingdom Marquess of Wellington
United Kingdom Thomas Graham
United Kingdom Rowland Hill
United Kingdom Lord Dalhousie
Strength

60,000

  • 49,000 infantry
  • 11,000 cavalry
  • 151 guns

82,000

  • 57,000 British
  • 16,000 Portuguese
  • 8,000 Spanish
  • 96 guns
Casualties and losses
~8,000 dead, wounded or captured[1]
All 151 guns captured or destroyed.
King Joseph's baggage train captured.

5,158 dead or wounded[2]

  • 3,675 British
  • 921 Portuguese
  • 562 Spanish

At the Battle of Vitoria (21 June 1813) a British, Portuguese and Spanish army under General the Marquess of Wellington broke the French army under Joseph Bonaparte and Marshal Jean-Baptiste Jourdan near Vitoria in Spain, eventually leading to victory in the Peninsular War.

Background[]

In July 1812, after the Battle of Salamanca, the French had evacuated Madrid, which Wellington's army entered on 12 August 1812. Deploying three divisions to guard its southern approaches, Wellington marched north with the rest of his army to lay siege to the fortress of Burgos, 140 miles (230 km) away, but he had underestimated the enemy's strength and on 21 October he had to abandon the Siege of Burgos and retreat. By 31 October he had abandoned Madrid too, and retreated first to Salamanca then to Ciudad Rodrigo, near the Portuguese frontier, to avoid encirclement by French armies from the north-east and south-east.

Wellington spent the winter reorganising and strengthening his forces. By contrast, Napoleon withdrew many soldiers to rebuild his main army after his disastrous invasion of Russia. By 20 May 1813 Wellington marched 121,000 troops (53,749 British, 39,608 Spanish and 27,569 Portuguese[3]) from northern Portugal across the mountains of northern Spain and the Esla River to outflank Marshal Jourdan's army of 68,000, strung out between the Douro and the Tagus. The French retreated to Burgos, with Wellington's forces marching hard to cut them off from the road to France. Wellington himself commanded the small central force in a strategic feint, while Sir Thomas Graham conducted the bulk of the army around the French right flank over landscape considered impassable.

Wellington launched his attack at Vitoria on 21 June, in four columns.[4] After hard fighting, Thomas Picton's 3rd Division broke the enemy's centre and soon the French defence crumbled. About 5,000 French soldiers were killed or wounded and 3,000 were taken prisoner, while Wellington suffered about 5,000 killed or wounded. 152 cannons were captured, but Bonaparte narrowly escaped. The battle led to the collapse of Napoleonic rule in Spain.

Terrain[]

The battlefield centres on the Zadorra River, which runs from east to west. As the Zadorra runs west, it loops into a hairpin bend, finally swinging generally to the southwest. On the south of the battlefield are the Heights of La Puebla. To the northwest is the mass of Monte Arrato. Vitoria stands to the east, two miles (3 km) south of the Zadorra. Five roads radiate from Vitoria, north to Bilbao, northeast to Salinas and Bayonne, east to Salvatierra, south to Logroño and west to Burgos on the south side of the Zadorra.

Plans[]

Vitoria - Museo de Armeria 06

Recreation with model figures of the battle, displayed at the Armory Museum (Museo de Armería) in Vitoria-Gasteiz.

Jourdan was ill with a fever all day on 20 June. Because of this, few orders were issued and the French forces stood idle. An enormous wagon train of booty clogged the streets of Vitoria. A convoy left during the night, but it had to leave siege artillery behind because there were not enough draft animals to pull the cannons.

Gazan's divisions guarded the narrow western end of the Zadorra valley, deployed south of the river. Maransin's brigade was posted in advance, at the village of Subijana. The divisions were disposed with Leval on the right, Daricau in the centre, Conroux on the left and Villate in reserve. Only a picket guarded the western extremity of the Heights of La Puebla.

Further back, D'Erlon's force stood in a second line, also south of the river. D'Armagnac's division deployed on the right and Cassagne's on the left. D'Erlon failed to destroy three bridges near the river's hairpin bend and posted Avy's weak cavalry division to guard them. Reille's men originally formed a third line, but Sarrut's division was sent north of the river to guard the Bilbao road while Lamartinière's division and the Spanish Royal Guard units held the river bank.

Wellington directed Hill's 20,000-man Right Column to drive the French from the Zadorra defile on the south side of the river. While the French were preoccupied with Hill, Wellington's Right Centre column moved along the north bank of the river and crossed it near the hairpin bend behind the French right flank.

Graham's 20,000-man Left Column was sent around the north side of Monte Arrato. It drove down the Bilbao road, cutting off the bulk of the French army. Dalhousie's Left Centre column cut across Monte Arrato and struck the river east of the hairpin, providing a link between Graham and Wellington.

Battle[]

File:Battle of Vitoria map.jpg

Map of the battle

Coming up the Burgos road, Hill sent Morillo's Division to the right on a climb up the Heights of La Puebla. Stewart's 2nd Division began deploying to the left in the narrow plain just south of the river. Seeing these moves, Gazan sent Maransin forward to drive Morillo off the heights. Hill moved Col. Henry Cadogan's brigade of the 2nd Division to assist Morillo. Gazan responded by committing Villatte's reserve division to the battle on the heights.

About this time, Gazan first spotted Wellington's column moving north of the Zadorra to turn his right flank. He asked Jourdan, now recovered from his fever, for reinforcements. Having become obsessed with the safety of his left flank, the marshal refused to help Gazan, instead ordering some of D'Erlon's troops to guard the Logroño road.

Wellington thrust James Kempt's brigade of the Light Division across the Zadorra at the hairpin. At the same time, Stewart took Subijana and was counterattacked by two of Gazan's divisions. On the heights, Cadogan was killed, but the Anglo-Spanish force managed to hang on to its foothold. Wellington suspended his attacks to allow Graham's column time to make an impression and a lull descended on the battlefield.

At noon, Graham's column appeared on the Bilbao road. Jourdan immediately realised he was in danger of envelopment and ordered Gazan to pull back toward Vitoria. Graham drove Sarrut's division back across the river, but could not force his way across the Zadorra despite bitter fighting. Further east, Longa's Spanish troops defeated the Spanish Royal Guards and cut the road to Bayonne.

Vitoria - Monumento Batalla Vitoria3

The French withdrawal, Monument to the Battle, in Vitoria-Gasteiz.

With some help from Kempt's brigade, Picton's 3rd Division from Dalhousie's column crossed to the south side of the river. According to Picton, the enemy responded by pummelling the 3rd with 40 to 50 cannon and a counter-attack on their right flank, still open because they had captured the bridge so quickly, causing the 3rd to lose 1,800 men (over one third of all Allied losses at the battle) as they held their ground.[5] Cole's 4th Division crossed further west. With Gazan on the left and D'Erlon on the right, the French attempted a stand at the village of Arinez. Formed in a menacing line, the 4th, Light, 3rd and 7th Divisions soon captured this position. The French fell back to the Zuazo ridge, covered by their well-handled and numerous field artillery. This position fell to Wellington's attack when Gazan refused to cooperate with his colleague D'Erlon.

French morale collapsed and the soldiers of Gazan and D'Erlon ran for it. Artillerists left their guns behind as they fled on the trace horses. Soon the road was jammed with a mass of wagons and carriages. The efforts of Reille's two divisions, holding off Graham, allowed tens of thousands of French troops to escape by the Salvatierra road.

Aftermath[]

The Allied army lost about 5,000 men, with 3,675 British, 921 Portuguese and 562 Spanish casualties.[2] French losses totalled at least 5,200 killed and wounded, plus 2,800 men and 151 cannon captured. By army, the losses were South 4,300, Centre 2,100 and Portugal 1,600. There were no casualty returns from the Royal Guard or the artillery.[6]

French losses were not higher for several reasons. First, the Allied army had already marched 20 miles (32 km) that morning and was in no condition to pursue. Second, Reille's men valiantly held off Graham's column. Third, the valley by which the French retreated was narrow and well-covered by the 3rd Hussar and the 15th Dragoon Regiments acting as rearguard. Last, the French left their booty behind.[2]

Many British soldiers turned aside to plunder the abandoned French wagons, containing "the loot of a kingdom". It is estimated that over one million pounds of booty (perhaps £100 million in modern equivalent) was seized, but the gross abandonment of discipline caused an enraged Wellington to write in a dispatch to Earl Bathurst, "We have in the service the scum of the earth as common soldiers".[7] The British general also vented his fury on a new cavalry regiment, writing, "The 18th Hussars are a disgrace to the name of soldier, in action as well as elsewhere; and I propose to draft their horses from them and send the men to England if I cannot get the better of them in any other manner."[2] (On 8 April 1814, the 18th redeemed their reputation in a gallant charge at Croix d'Orade, shortly before the Battle of Toulouse.)

Order was soon restored, and by December, after detachments had seized San Sebastián and Pamplona, Wellington's army was encamped in France.

The battle was the inspiration for Beethoven's Opus 91, often called the "Battle Symphony" or "Wellington's Victory", which portrays the battle as musical drama. The climax of the movie The Firefly, starring Jeanette MacDonald, occurs with Wellington's attack on the French centre. (The film used music from an opera of the same name by Rudolf Friml, but with a totally different plot.)

Reenactment of the Battle of Vitoria, staged on Armentia fields, Vitoria-Gasteiz,
22 June 2013, Bicentenary of the Battle

Forces []

British, Portuguese and Spanish French Army

General Arthur Wellesley, 1st Marquess of Wellington


From Glover (2001), The Peninsular War, pp. 382-385 unless otherwise cited.

King Joseph Bonaparte
Marshal Jean Baptiste Jourdan (69,767)

  • Army of the South (General of Division Honoré Gazan) (34,636)
    • 1st Division (General of Division Jean François Leval) (4,844)
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Georges Alexis Mocquery) (2,579)
        • 9th Light and 24th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Jacques Polycarpe Morgan) (2,099)
        • 88th and 96th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Artillery: One battery (166)
    • 3rd Division (General of Division Eugene-Casimir Villatte) (5,874)
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Antoine Rignoux) (2,578)
        • 27th Light and 63rd Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Étienne Nicolas Lefol) (3,113)
        • 94th and 95th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Artillery: One battery (183)
    • 4th Division (General of Division Nicolas François Conroux) (6,589)
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Jean-Pierre-Antoine Rey) (3,669)
        • 32nd and 43rd Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Henry Cesar Auguste Schwiter) (2,717)
        • 55th and 58th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Artillery: One battery (193)
    • 5th Division
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Jean-Pierre Maransin) (2,927)
        • 12th Light and 45th Line Infantry Regiments
    • 6th Division (General of Division Augustin Darricau) (5,700)
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Louis Paul Baille de Saint-Pol) (2,711)
        • 21st Light and 100th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Victor Urbain Remond) (2,984)
        • 28th Light and 103rd Line Infantry Regiments
      • Artillery: One battery (240)
    • 1st Cavalry Division (General of Division Pierre Benoît Soult) (1,502)
      • 2nd Hussar, 5th, 10th and 21st Chasseurs à Cheval Regiments
      • Horse Artillery: One battery (169)
    • 2nd Cavalry Division (General of Division Jacques Delaistre de Tilly) (1,929)
      • 2nd, 4th, 14th, 17th, 26th and 27th Dragoon Regiments
    • 3rd Cavalry Division (General of Division Alexandre, vicomte Digeon) (1,692)
      • 5th, 12th, 16th and 21st Dragoon Regiments
      • Horse Artillery: One battery (177)
    • Auxiliary Troops (1,883)
      • Artillery Reserve: Two batteries (370)
      • Artillery Park: (713)
      • Engineers: (630)
      • Gendarmerie: (105)
      • Wagon Train: (65)
  • Army of the Centre (General of Division Jean-Baptiste Drouet, Comte d'Erlon) (17,691)
    • 1st Division (General of Division Jean Barthélemy Darmagnac) (4,472)
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade David Hendrik Chassé) (1,794)
        • 28th and 75th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Nueunstein) (2,678)
        • 2nd Nassau, 4th Baden, Frankfort Infantry Regiments
    • 2nd Division (General of Brigade Louis Victorin Cassagne) (5,209) on loan from Army of the South
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Braun?)
        • 16th Light and 8th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Jacques Blondeau)
        • 51st and 54th Line Infantry Regiments
    • 1st Cavalry Division (General of Division Anne-François-Charles Trelliard) (1,038)
      • 13th, 18th, 19th and 22nd Dragoon Regiments
    • 2nd Cavalry Division (General of Division Antoine Sylvain Avy) (474)
      • 27th Chasseurs à Cheval, Nassau Chasseurs
    • Auxiliary Troops: (830)
      • Artillery: Three batteries (501)
      • Engineers: (131)
      • Wagon Train, etc.: (198)
  • Army of Portugal (General of Division Honoré Charles Reille) (17,440)
    • 4th Division (General of Division Jacques Thomas Sarrut) (4,802)[8]
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Joseph François Fririon)
        • 2nd Light and 36th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Jean Baptiste Pierre Menne)
        • 4th Light and 65th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Artillery: One battery
    • 6th Division (General of Division Thomas Mignot de Lamartinière) (6,711)
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Étienne Gauthier) (2,567)
        • 118th and 119th Line Infantry Regiments
      • Brigade: (commander unknown) (3,968)
        • 120th and 122nd Line Infantry Regiments
      • Artillery: One battery (176)
    • 1st Cavalry Division (General of Division Julien Augustin Joseph Mermet) (1,801)
      • Brigade: (General of Brigade Jean Baptiste Théodore Curto) (902)
        • 13th and 22nd Chasseurs à Cheval Regiments
      • Brigade: (unknown commander) (899)
        • 3rd Hussar, 14th and 26th Chasseurs à Cheval Regiments
    • 2nd Cavalry Division (General of Brigade Pierre François Joseph Boyer) (1,471)
      • 6th, 11th, 15th and 25th Dragoon Regiments
    • Auxiliary Troops: (2,455)
      • Reserve Artillery: Four foot and one horse batteries (390)
      • Pontoniers: (773)
      • Engineers: (195)
      • Gendarmerie: (174)
      • Wagon Train: (933)
  • Army of the North[9]
    • Mixed detachment (800)
  • King Joseph's Spanish Army (5,633)
    • (French) Royal Guard (General of Brigade Nicolas Philippe Guye) (2,805)
      • Guard Grenadier, Tirailleur and Voltigeur Regiments (2,380)
      • Guard Lancer and Guard Hussar Regiments (425)
    • (Spanish) Troops of the Line (General Casapalacios) (2,833)
      • Castile, Toledo and Royal Foreign Regiments (2,070)
      • Cavalry: 1st and 2nd Chasseurs à Cheval, Guadalajara Hussar Regiments (670)
      • Artillery: One battery (93)


From Fletcher (2005), Vittoria 1813, pp. 32-33 unless otherwise cited.

Notes[]

Vitoria - Museo de Armeria 09

Imperial militaria captured by the allies after the battle, displayed at the Armory Museum (Museo de Armería) in Vitoria-Gasteiz.

  1. Gates, p.390
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Glover, p 243
  3. Gates, p.521
  4. Gates, p.386
  5. Historical Record of the Seventy-fourth Regiment (Highlanders), Richard Cannon, Published by Parker, Furnivall & Parker, 1847
  6. Smith, p 427
  7. Wellington to Bathurst, dispatches, p. 496.
  8. Fletcher (2005), p. 68. Source noted Sarrut's mortal wounding.
  9. Glover (2001), pp. 392-393. French OOB.

References[]

External links[]

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