Military Wiki
Campaign of the Hills
DateJuly 1869 - March 1, 1870
LocationCentral and Northern Paraguay
Result

Decisive Allied victory

  • End of the Paraguayan War
Belligerents
Page Template:Plainlist/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "wikitext").
  •  Paraguay

 Empire of Brazil


 Argentina

Commanders and leaders
ParaguayBernardino Caballero
ParaguayFrancisco Solano Lopez
ParaguayDomingo Francisco Sanchez
ParaguayJuan Francisco Lopez
Empire of BrazilPrince Gaston, Count of Eu
Empire of BrazilDeodoro da FonsecaArgentinaLuis María Campos
Strength
Paraguay6,000 Empire of Brazil20,000
Argentina2,000
Casualties and losses
5,000 killed
1,100 wounded
1,200 captured
201 killed
259 wounded


The Campaign of the Hills (Spanish language: Campaña de las Cordilleras ) was the last campaign of the Paraguayan War, lasting from July 1869 to the end of the war on March 1, 1870. The Paraguayans were completely defeated by the Allies. Brazilian writer Alfredo d'Escragnolle Taunay, Viscount of Taunay took part in the campaign and later wrote about it. At least 5,000 Paraguayans were killed during this campaign.

Background[]

After the occupation of the Paraguayan capital, Asuncion, by the allies, Marshal Luis Alves de Lima e Silva, Duke of Caxias considered the Paraguayan War to be ended with Allied victory. Since Paraguayan President Lopez refused to surrender, the Allies installed Cirilo Antonio Rivarola, a political opponent of Lopez, as temporary President in occupied Asuncion, and decided to continue the war. Lopez decided to resist in Allies in the mountainous region of Northeastern Paraguay.

Battle of Piribebuy[]

The Allied attack on the town of Piribebuy, then serving as a temporary capital for the Paraguayan government, lasted 5 hours, ending with the capture of the town and destruction of its official records

Battle of Acosta Ñu[]

The last major battle, in which Bernardino Caballero (who later became President of Paraguay) fought a Brazilian-Argentine combined force of 20,000 under Emperor Pedro II's son-in-law Prince Gaston and future Brazilian president Manoel Deodoro da Fonseca.

Battle of Cerro Corá[]

The last battle of the campaign was at Cerro Corá, in which a Brazilian force of 4,000 wiped out President Lopez's personal guard of 100-250 soldiers, killing Lopez, Vice President Sanchez and Lopez's son Juan Francisco.

Bibliography[]

  • Díaz Gavier, Mario, En tres meses en Asunción, Ed. del Boulevard, Rosario, Argentina, 2005. ISBN 987-556-118-5
  • Doratioto, Francisco, Maldita Guerra. Nueva Historia de la Guerra del Paraguay, Ed. Emecé, Sao Paulo/Buenos Aires, 2008, pág. 30-35. ISBN 978-950-04-2574-2
  • León Pomer, La guerra del Paraguay, Ed. Leviatán, Bs. As., 2008. ISBN 978-897-514-141-4
  • Rosa, José María, La guerra del Paraguay y las montoneras argentinas. Buenos Aires: Hyspamérica, 1986. ISBN 950-614-362-5
  • Ruiz Moreno, Isidoro J., Campañas militares argentinas, Tomo IV, Ed. Emecé, Bs. As., 2008. ISBN 978-950-620-257-6
  • Zenequelli, Lilia, Crónica de una guerra, La Triple Alianza, Ed. Dunken, Bs. As., 1997. ISBN 987-9123-36-0

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Campaign of the Hills and the edit history here.