Battles in
NB. See also Steven Thomas’s excellent site on Luso-Spanish warfare;
“Mediaeval Iberia”, “the battles of Portugal” , “battles of Castille and Leon”, “The Napoleon Guide”, La GUERRA DE LA
INDEPENDENCIA ESPAÑOLA
1808-1814, and other cited sites, which contain far more detail on
these subjects than I am able to record here.
Geographical note: LA ALCARRIA denotes a number of valleys to the
ESE of
Assistance gladly received with the battlesites I have been unable
so far to locate – presently listed as “.Unlocated”.
PROVINCE |
TOWN |
DATE YYYY |
EVENT |
DETAILS |
All |
|
.264 – 19BC |
The Romans fought two wars against the Carthaginians from |
|
All |
|
.90-88 BC |
Roman Civil War |
….between Mario and Sila, affected the Hispanic provinces |
All |
|
0711 |
The First Phase Of Islam Saw A
Very Rapid Arab Expansion Across |
|
All |
|
0718 – 1492 |
The Christians gradually re-asserted
themselves from their mountain bases in the North, culminating in the
reconquest of |
|
All |
|
0755
until 1030 |
The
Ummayyad Caliphs in |
A sub-branch of the Umayyad family ruled |
All |
|
1525
- 1704 |
The
Spanish “Tercios” |
The
Spanish “Tercios were innovative and elite military units which played a
large role in warfare across the whole of |
All |
|
1702-14 |
The powerful Bourbon dynasty of
|
|
All |
|
1808
– 12 |
War
of independence |
Paso del Guadalquivir, Batalla de Bailén, defensa de Somosierra,
batalla de Medellín, Almonacid y Ocaña, combates de Castellá y bloqueo de |
All |
|
1808-14 |
A very detailed site, in the Spanish language, on the French
invasion of 1808 and the subsequent years of quasi-guerilla warfare which
accompanied British operations from |
|
All |
|
1834-9 |
The first liberal influences sweeping |
|
All |
|
1868 |
Spanish Revolution |
Queen Isabella overthrown |
All |
|
1936-1939 |
Conservative Nationalists under Franco, landing initially from the
North African colonies, rebelled against an extremist but divided Republican
government supported by the Soviets. Franco received much help from |
|
All |
|
1990s |
ETA bombings |
Bombings by this terror group favouring Basque independence
continued, with new warnings concerning tourist targets just issued in 2004. |
All waters |
|
1701 - 1805 |
Many battles were fought off the coast of |
|
|
|
.206 B.C |
In spite of his numerical
inferiority, Scipio marched his army west to meet the Carthaginians and came
upon them near Ilipa (modern Alcalá del Río). Victory was won by brilliant
tactics made possible by Scipio's recent reforms and training. |
|
|
|
.211 BC |
Masinissa arrived at the scene
in the early morning to begin harrying the Roman flanks. A short while
thereafter the armies of Mago and Gisgo showed up to seal the fate of the
Romans. Publius' men strove valiantly for a time, and Publius even led a
desperate charge, seeking to break through the cordon of Carthaginian troops.
But when he was slain the Romans lost heart and took to flight. Few of the
fugitives escaped the notice of the roving Numidians. Only the eventual fall
of night allowed a handful of survivors to escape. |
|
|
|
.211 BC |
ilorca or Illora |
Caught by surprise on a hill
WNW of present day |
|
|
0711 |
In the spring of 711, Tariq marched northward from |
|
|
Cordova |
0711 |
Cordova |
“When Tarik landed, soldiers
from Cordova came to meet him; and seeing the small number of his companions
they despised him on that account. They then fought. The battle with Tarik
was severe. They were routed, and he did not cease from the slaughter of them
till they reached the town of |
|
Cordova |
0711 |
Shedunia |
“When Roderic heard of the fate
of Cordova, he came to their rescue from |
|
|
1010 |
River
Guadiaro |
The
Catalan army defeats Sulayman's Berbers again, in June, near Ronda in the
hills |
|
|
1079 |
West of Granada, Rodrigo Díaz defeats King Abd Allah of Granada,
who was helped by the Castilian Count García Ordíñez. |
|
|
|
1091 |
Yusuf returns to Spain and defeats the Castilian army, commanded
by Alvar Yáñez, which tried to help the Muslim kings of southern |
|
|
|
1115 |
Baeza |
The lord of Ávila defeats the Moors of Ibn-Idhâri, east of |
|
|
1212 |
The Christian armies of León,
Castile, Navarre and Aragon defeat the Almohads in the decisive Battle of
Navas de Tolosa, a mountain pass that guaranteed Christian forces passage
into Southern Spain. The great defeat marked the beginning of the downfall of
the Almohades, the last Muslim dinasty that ruled southern Spain and North
Africa |
|
|
|
1231 |
|
Don Alvar Pérez de Castro defeats a Moorish army of King Ibn ’ut. |
|
|
1275 |
Martos |
- The
same Abu Yusuf defeats and kills the Archbishop of |
|
|
1319 |
|
Prince Pedro conducts his second
attack against
|
|
|
1337 |
Villanueva
de Barcarrota |
-.
An army of Castilian noblemen & militias of |
|
|
1340 |
|
-.
In the final battle against Merinids, Alfonso XI of |
|
|
1357 |
Trigueros |
-.
The rebel Juan de la Cerda is defeated by the town milita of |
|
|
1406 |
Quesada/Los
Collejares |
Indecisive battle
between Castilians (Pedro Manrique) and Granadians (Mohammed VII). |
|
|
1410 |
Antequera |
-.
The regent of |
|
|
1419 |
La
Higueruela |
-.
The constable of |
|
|
1482 |
Alhama de Granada |
Against the Moslems, in the hills to the west of the city |
|
|
1483 |
Ajarquía/Axarquía. |
- The
(future) king of Granada, Mohammed "el Zagal" defeats the
Castilians. |
Andalusia |
Granada |
1485 |
Moclín |
-.
Mohammed "el Zagal" defeats again the Castilians. |
Andalusia |
Granada |
1486 |
Loja |
One of the final battles of the Reconquista, WSW of Granada |
Andalusia |
Málaga |
1487 |
Málaga |
|
Andalusia |
Granada |
1489 |
Baza |
NE of Granada, and against the Moslems of that city. |
Andalusia |
Granada |
1491 – 2 |
Campaign against Granada |
Leading to the final reconquest of Spain from the Moslems |
Andalusia |
Malaga |
1580 |
Alcántara |
|
Andalusia |
Cadiz |
1587 |
Cadiz |
The English privateer Sir Francis Drake “singed the King of
Spain’s beard” with his audacious naval raid on the treasure port. |
Andalusia |
Cordoba |
1808 |
19 de Julio de 1808, north of Jaen |
|
Andalusia |
Cordoba |
1808? |
Jaen |
A French division surrendered to Spanish regulars and guerillas
who had encircled them in the hills to the east of Cordoba halfway to Granada |
Andalusia |
Malaga |
1937 |
Malaga |
The Nationalist entry into the town culminated in a massacre of
their opponents. |
|
Ronda? |
1010 |
Aqabat
al-Baqar |
"The
year of the Catalans" Having fled to |
Andalusia? |
Cordoba |
1236 |
Cordovo |
|
Andalusian waters |
Gibraltar |
1704 |
Naval battle off Marbella |
|
Andalusian waters |
1704 |
Naval battle off Málaga |
13 August 1704 |
|
Aragon |
|
.153 BC |
Segeda |
Celtiberians ambushed 30,000 Romans and killed 6000 |
Aragon |
Saragossa |
1063 |
During
the spring Ramiro I of Aragon besieges Muslim Graus in Zaragozan
territory. The Emir Al-Muktadir of Zaragoza leads his army north
accompanied by a Castilian contingent under Prince Sancho (the future Sancho
II). Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar (later known as "El Cid") is
probably in the Castilian contingent. The opposing armies meet and after
a protracted struggle Ramiro I is killed and the Aragonese flee (8 May). |
|
Aragon |
Huesca |
1091 |
The new king of Aragon, Pedro I, defeats the king of Zaragoza, Al-Mustain,
and conquers the city of Huesca. Castilian Counts García Ordóñez and Gonzalo
Núñez fought with the king of Zaragoza. It is probable that El Cid
fought in the Aragonese side. |
|
Aragon |
Huesca |
1096 |
Huesca |
|
Aragon |
Saragossa |
1118 |
Saragossa |
|
Aragon |
Saragossa |
1710 |
Saragossa |
Following up the previous victory of Almenara, James Earl of Stanhope
defeats a Franco-Spanish force of 20,000 under De Bay, taking 5,000 prisoners
and 36 guns |
Aragon |
Saragossa |
1809 |
23rd May |
|
Aragon |
Saragossa |
1809 |
18th June |
|
Aragon |
Saragossa |
1937 |
Saragossa |
|
Aragon |
Teruel |
1937-1938 |
Teruel |
The Nationalists headed for the sea through Teruel, creating a massive
salient into Republican lines. |
Aragón |
Saragossa |
1362 |
Catalayud |
King Peter I starts his great offensive inside the territory of
Aragón, down the Jalon tributary to the Ebro |
Aragon? |
|
.019bc |
Cantabrian revolt |
many of the Cantabrians, having been sold into slavery after their
earlier defeat, murdered their masters and returned home. Subdued by Agrippa,
who killed almost all those of military age and disarmed the others, the
tribe was forced from its strongholds and compelled to live in the plains. |
Aragon? |
|
.022bc |
Cantabrian revolt |
“Not many of the Cantabri were
taken prisoner, for when they saw they had lost all hope of freedom, they lost
all desire to preserve their lives either. Some set fire to their forts and
cut their own throats, others willingly remained with their companions and
died in the flames, while others took poison in the sight of all” |
Aragon? |
|
.026-25 BC, |
Cantabrian War |
fought in the mountains of northern Spain, the first year of the
campaign led by Augustus, himself. |
Aragon? |
|
1082 |
Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, defeats a combined army of the kings of
Valencia (Abu Bakr), Lleida (Al-Hayib), Aragón (Sancho Ramírez) and the Count
of Barcelona (Berenguer Ramón II). |
|
Aragón? |
Murviedro |
1364 |
Alcublas |
-.
The Master of Alcántara, sent to help the Castilian garrison of, is defeated
and killed. |
Asturias |
Covadonga |
0718 or 722 |
Alcama |
Historians symbolically attribute
the defeat of a Moorish army at the Battle of Covadonga to a Christian
Visigothic noble, Pelayo. Whatever really happened at Covadonga, it is
certain that Pelayo gains fame and is elected King of Asturias |
Asturias |
|
192x |
|
Miners revolt savagely put down by the government. |
Balearic islands |
Majorca |
1706 |
Majorca |
25
May 1706 |
Balearic islands |
Minorca |
1708 |
Mahon |
The British Secured The Best
Fortified Harbour In The Islands, As A Base For Their Western Mediterranean
fleet. |
Balearic islands |
Minorca |
1756 |
Minorca |
20 May 1756 Battle of Minorca: this may be the occasion of the
shooting of the infamous British Admiral, Byng |
Balearic islands |
Minorca |
1782 |
Minorca |
During the European operations of the American Independence War |
Balearic waters |
Ibizan waters |
BC 535 |
Alalia |
The Greek fleet from Massilia (Marseilles) defeats the Phoenicians
in a Pyrrhic victory |
Balearics |
Ibiza |
|
|
Ibicenco history [Spanish language] |
Biscay |
All |
|
a range of good articles here, in the Spanish language |
|
Biscay |
San Sebastian |
0778 |
Roncesvalles |
Charlemagne attempts to conquer
Spain. He penetrates as far as Zaragoza when he is called back to France (not
by his mother). On the return trip, his rear guard (including his great
captain, Roland) is attacked and killed by Basque troops. |
Biscay |
|
1355 |
Gordejuela
& Ochandiano |
King Peter I orders the prince Juan de Aragón to fight the rebel
Lord of Biscay, Tello (half-brother of the king). He is defeated by the
Basques (Juan de Avendaño) in a couple of battles. |
Biscay |
Bilbao |
1811 |
19 Feb |
|
Biscay |
San Sebastian |
1813 |
Crossing of the Bidassoa |
Wellington forced the crossing at the foot of the Pyrenees |
Biscay |
San Sebastian |
1813 |
The French, hoping to lift the siege of San
Sebastián, crossed the Bidasoa 31 August, before dawn, by the fords near Hendaya.
The French attacked the Spaniards on the heights of San Marcial, hoping to
penetrate by the gorge of Ercuti and to seize the important position of
Soroya, but were repulsed by the Asturians and others. The French thereupon
threw a pontoon bridge across the river and assaulted a position known as the
Place of the Baskets, under the protection of artillery which they had
planted across the Bidasoa. They were repelled and thrown down the hill by a
brigade of the division of Don Juan Diaz Porlier, helped by the IIº Navy
Battalion. The French then directed their attacks against the Spanish left,
where a brigade of the IIIª division was commanded by Don Jose Maria de
Ezpeleta. They were counterattacked and thrown back to the river by the
regiments of Guadalajara, Asturias and the Crown, three battalions of
Volunteers of Guipúzcoa, sent by D. Juan Ugartemendía, and the Second company
of the IVª battalion of Artillery under Don Juan Lóriga. At the same time,
another French column was forced to descend from the Irachaval mount,
occupied in the first attack, and to recross the Bidasoa by the ford of
Saraburo. Further operations were prevented by incessant rain. The French had
suffered 3,600 losses and the Spaniards a similar number. The English and
Portuguese hardly participated in this battle, although Lord Wellington
appeared at the end. |
|
Biscay |
Vitoria |
1813 |
21 de Junio de 1813 |
|
Biscay |
San Sebastian |
1833 |
Guernica |
The Cristino Baron del Solar de
Espinosa attacked the Carlists at Guernica under Fernando de Zabala and Simon
de La Torre. In their first victory
against army Regulars, the Carlists held the town and inflicted over 300
Cristino casualties, but withdrew when heavy reinforcements approached. |
Biscay |
San Sebastian |
193x |
Bombing of Guernica |
The first example of strategic bombing, carried out by Hitler’s
Condor Legion and made famous by Picasso’s painting. |
Cantabria |
Santander |
1808 |
Espinosa de las Monteros, 10 de Noviembre de 1808,
around the towns of Quintana and Reinosa, on the Trueba river. |
|
Cantabria |
Santander |
1937 |
Santander |
|
Castile |
|
0844 |
Clavijo |
|
Castile |
|
0844 – 1521 |
|
|
Castile |
|
0846? |
Albelda |
|
Castile |
|
0866 |
La Morcuera |
|
Castile |
|
0878 |
Polvoraria |
|
Castile |
|
0918 |
Links to Spanish language site |
|
Castile |
|
0933 |
Osma |
The Castilian-Leonese troops, commanded by the
count Fernán González, defeat again the troops of Abd el-Rahman III. |
Castile |
|
0974 |
Deza |
Count García Fernández of Castile defeat the Moors of general Galib. |
Castile |
|
0981 |
Medinaceli |
Al-Mansur (Almanzor) defeats and kills the rebel
general Galib, and his ally, García Fernández of Castile. |
Castile |
|
1037 |
Tamarón |
1037 -. The first Castilian king, Fernando I, defeats,
and kills his father-in-law, the Leonese Vermudo III, heiring his kingdom. |
Castile |
|
1097 |
Consuegra |
The Almoravids (Muhammad ben AlHach) defeat the Castilian-Leonese
armies (Alfonso VI). The son of Rodrigo Díaz (Diego Rodríguez) dies in the
battle. |
Castile |
|
1111 |
Campo
de la Espina, or Candespina. |
The king of Aragon, Alfonso I "the battler", and the
count Enrique of Portugal, defeat the Castilian Queen Urraca (wife of Alfonso
I). The defeat turns into a victory when Enrique turns against his ally after
the battle. |
Castile |
|
114x |
Montiel |
After a raid into Muslim Spain,
Munio Alfonso is intercepted by a Moorish army, but manages to defeat them. |
Castile |
|
1359 |
Araviana |
-.
Henry of Trastámara, half brother of the Castilian king Peter I "the
cruel" invades Castile and defeats the royal troops. |
Castile |
|
1360 |
Nájera
(1st battle). |
- After
an uncertain battle, Henry leaves Castile, looking for refugee in France. |
Castile |
|
1367 |
Nájera (2nd battle). |
- Henry
of Trastámara (now, king Henry II of Castile) is defeated by the English
Black Prince. Peter returns to the power, while Henry refugees once more in
France. |
Castile |
|
1369 |
Montiel |
-.
Final victory of Henry II over his brother, who is killed in the following
days. |
Castile |
|
1521 |
The army of the "comuneros" rebels in Castile is defeated
by the royalist army. |
|
Castile |
Madrid |
1706 |
Madrid |
Madrid fell briefly to the
Anglo-Portuguese Allies, but they were then cut off by a popular
anti-Portuguese uprising, and had to evacuate. |
Castile |
Madrid |
1833 |
Madrid |
Merino, the 64 year old renegade
Castilian priest, led 11,000 Carlists south from Logroño towards
Madrid. He got near enough to alarm the inhabitants of the
capital but was forced to withdraw to Navarre in the face of superior
numbers.
|
Castile |
|
1936-9 |
Siege of Madrid |
The Nationalists, who had approached originally from Extremadura,
closed their stranglehold gradually around the city. |
Castile,
New |
Toledo |
1072 |
Golpejera |
(early
Jan) Sancho II of Castile defeats his brother, Alfonso VI of León over the Carrión
River (9 miles south of the city of Santa Maria de Carrion - the capital of
the Beni-Gomez - Christian counts of Saldaña, Liebana, Carrion, and Zamora).
The battle starts at dawn and after a hard fight the Castilians are driven
from the field. Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar manages to encourage both King
and army, and leads them in a new attack the following
morning. Alfonso is captured and seeks refuge in Toledo. But
Sancho is then assassinated when attacking Alfonso's men in Zamora. Alfonso
inherits the joint Kingdom of Leon-Castile. |
Castile, New |
Toledo |
1085 |
Toledo |
|
Castile, New |
Madrid |
1809 |
19 Nov |
|
Castile, New |
Toledo |
1809 |
28 de Julio de 1809 |
|
Castile, New |
Toledo |
1809 |
After the action of Aranjuez on 5 August, General
Venegas directed his Army of La Mancha towards Toledo, uniting all his forces
on the 10th in Almonacid, consisting of 22.000 infantry, more than
3,000 horse and 29 pieces of artillery. The French had passed the previous
day through Toledo and the fords of Añover, arriving on the 20th
in the town of Nambroca, one league from Almonacid. The Spanish Caudillo,
despite knowing of the retirement of the Allied army from Talavera towards
Extremadura, had determined to attack the French on the 12th. But
on the 11th the French made the first move, with 26,000 infantry,
4,000 horse and 40 guns. The Army of La Mancha was moved hastily in front of
Almonacid: the Vigodet division, a
little delayed, occupied the extreme right, with the greater part of the
cavalry. Other forces occupied the hills of Utrera, Santo, and Lacy, next to
the Guazalate stream. The 3ª (Girón) regiment was distributed between the key
height of the Cerrojones, and the Castle of De la Cruz on its hill, where the
reserve was located. The Spanish left was first attacked, by General Lewal
with the Polish and German divisions after a very violent fire of artillery,
answered well by the Spanish guns. The battalions of Bailén and Jaén twice
repulsed the Poles; however reserves arrived late and could not prevent the
French occupying the important positions of the Cerrojones, although with
heavy losses. The Spaniards were forced to take refuge on Castle Hill and
then retire, covered by shrapnel fire and by the charges of the Vigodet
division and the Spanish Grenadiers against enemy cavalry, which prevented
the encirclement of the Spanish left by Polish and German troops. The French,
who had 2,500 losses, did not pursue beyond Moor, and many of the Spanish
therefore arrived in good order at Manzanares, although some were dispersed
as far as the Brown Mountain range.
Spanish losses were not more than 4,000 men total. |
|
Castile, Old |
Burgos |
1054 |
Atapuerca |
The
army of Ferdinand I of Castile defeats that of his brother García IV of
Navarra at Atapuerca 12 miles to the east of Burgos (1 Sep). Several
disaffected Navarrese knights join the Castilians before the battle and one
of these men is believed to have killed Garcia. Garcia's son Sancho is
proclaimed King on the field of battle and the war continues. |
Castile, Old |
|
1068 |
Llantada |
On
the plain of Llantada, Sancho of Castile, with El Cid
at the head of the army, routed the army of Leon. Sancho and his brother
Alfonso of Leon had agreed that the battle would decide everything and the
winner would take the other's kingdom, but Alfonso changed his mind and fled
into Leon. |
Castile, Old |
Segovia |
1132 |
Lucena |
Militas of Segovia & Ávila defeat an Almoravid army, under the
command of prince Tâshfin. |
Castile, Old |
Ávila |
1173 |
After a raid into Muslim Spain, militias of Ávila, commanded by
Sancho Jimeno "the Hunchback" (known in Muslim chronicles as
"Abú Bardaca", "the Packsaddler") are intercepted and defeated
by an Almohad army. Sancho Jimeno is killed in the battle. |
|
Castile, Old? |
Burgos? |
1808 |
10 de Noviembre, in the valleys of Piso and
Arlanzon |
|
Castile? |
|
1111 |
Viadangos |
A Galeg (Galician) army, commanded by Count Pedro Froilaz and
Bishop Gelmírez is ambushed and defeated by Alfonso of Aragón. The greatest
prize (the young king Alfonso) escaped the victor: seeing the battle turning
into a rout, Bishop Gelmírez fled, and delivered him safely to his mother
Urraca in Galicia. |
Castile? |
|
1255 |
Lebrija |
A rebel army, commanded by the prince Enrique (brother of the king
Alphonse X) is defeated by Royal troops, under the command of Nuño González
de Lara & Rodrigo Alfonso. |
Castile? |
|
1275 |
Ecija |
- Merinid
invaders, under the command of Abu Yusuf, defeat the Castilian army of Nuño
de Lara (the winner of Lebrija), who dies in the battle. |
Castille |
|
1936 |
Toledo |
|
Castille |
|
1937 |
Brunete |
|
Castille, New |
|
1937 |
Jarama |
|
Catalonia |
|
.042bc? |
|
Caesar beats Pompeiian contingents in Hispania, in the opening
stages of the Roman Civil War. |
Catalonia |
Lerida |
.049 B.C |
Ilerda or Illerda |
Fought in the Terra Alta district west of the Ebro River. |
Catalonia |
Cervera |
1000 |
Cervera |
Moslems defeat the first army
assembled by the united Christian kingdoms of Spain. |
Catalonia |
Tortosa |
1060 |
Tortosa |
Emir
Al-Muktadir ibn Hud of Zaragoza drives Slavs from Tortosa when the Tortosans
rise against their Slav ruler |
Catalonia |
|
1639-43 |
French
War |
Actions at Rives-Altes and Rosas; defence of Canet in Roussilon |
Catalonia |
|
1640s |
…with French aid |
|
Catalonia |
|
1650-55 |
War
of Catalonia |
Ocupación de Miraver, toma de Solsona. |
Catalonia |
1705 |
The Catalan capital captured by the Allies with strong popular
support. The Prince of Darmstadt killed in the fighting. |
||
Catalonia |
Lerida |
1710 |
Almenara |
The Bourbon Philip V of Spain
had 22,000 on the Rio Segre inland from the Catalonian coast, while Stanhope
and Starhemberg had 18,000 men. Stanhope crossed the Segre at Balaguer (north
of Lerida) marching to the bridge of Alfarras, crossing it on 27 July. Both
armies then met at Almenara, a few kilometers from the bridge, where the
Allies inflicted a defeat, the French retreating to Saragossa. |
All |
1718-1721 |
Taking advantage of an invasion, Catalonian
patriots loot and set fire to the properties of Castilians |
||
Catalonia |
|
1793-4 |
War
of Rousillon |
Fall of Bellegarde; battles of Thuir, Canoes, Musset, Vernet y
Trouillas. Fall of Collioure. |
|
|
1808 |
16 de Diciembre de 1808, near Sarria, |
|
|
|
1808 |
21st December. French general Saint-Cyr, with about 40,000 infantry and 3000
cavalry, overturned a Spanish position in front of |
|
|
|
1809 |
25th February. Saint-Cyr seized the
bridge at Goy over the Francolí river, the Spaniards retreating in panic back
towards |
|
|
|
1811 |
|
|
|
|
1834 |
Mayals |
|
|
|
1835 |
Cervera |
|
|
|
1938 |
In July, the Republicans from the Catalonian enclave attempted to
force the river line and gain the hilly Terra Alta region in a most bloody
contest, with the ultimate intent of linking with the government’s remaining
territory in Valencia. |
|
|
|
1938-1939 |
Siege of |
.. where there had been intermittent street fighting during the
war between the various factions of the left, well described in George
Orwell’s classic “Homage to |
|
|
1090 |
Rodrigo Díaz defeats the Count of Barcelona, Berenger Ramon II. |
|
Extremadura |
Plasencia |
1079 |
Coria |
Alfonso VI (now king of Castile & León, after the death of Sancho)
defeats the Muslim king of |
Extremadura |
|
1086 |
Zallaka |
The Almoravids, a Purita nical Berber sect, were called into |
Extremadura |
|
1195 |
|
Castilian King Alfonso VIII
(1158-1214) challenges Almohad emperor Yacub to battle. It ends in the defeat
of the Christian army at |
Extremadura |
|
1479 |
Albuera |
Portuguese claim the throne of |
Extremadura |
All |
1640-68 |
“War of |
|
Extremadura |
|
1644 |
To the east of |
|
Extremadura |
|
1705 |
|
North of |
Extremadura |
|
1709 |
Gaia or La Caya |
On May 7th 1709 the
Anglo-Portuguese army, under command of the Marquis de Frontera, lay on the side
of the Caya west of Badajoz, and the army of the Duke of Anjou, commanded by
the Marquis de Bay, on the other. De Bay made a motion with the whole body of
his horse toward Fort St. Christopher, near |
Extremadura |
|
1809 |
28th March |
|
Extremadura |
|
1811 |
|
|
Extremadura |
|
1811 |
16 de Mayo de 1811 |
|
Extremadura |
|
1812 |
British assault on the border fortress |
|
Extremadura? |
|
1112 |
Astorga |
The Count of |
|
|
1135 |
Cerneja |
D. Alfonso Enriquez defeats Count Fernando Pérez de Trava and
Rodrigo Vela. Four years later he would become King of |
|
|
1809 |
16 de Enero de 1809 |
|
|
|
1809 |
|
|
Galician waters |
|
1702 |
Naval battle of Rande/Vigo Bay |
A
Franco-Spanish bullion fleet met an Anglo-Dutch fleet at the end of the |
Galician waters |
Finisterre |
1747 |
1st |
3 May 1747 |
Galician waters |
Finisterre |
1747 |
2nd |
14 October |
Galician waters |
Ferrol |
1805 |
|
Prior to the great battle at Trafalgar, French
Admiral Villeneuve encountered Calder’s British squadron of 15 battleships on
22nd of July. They fought an abortive action in poor visibility. Calder
captured two French ships, and several of the
British ships were damaged. Calder failed to press home the action, for which
he was severely criticized. |
|
1704 |
|
||
|
|
1753
– 92 |
Sieges
of the Rock |
|
|
|
1782 |
|
Sep. - Oct. 1782 The Great Attack on Gibraltar During the European
operations of the American Independence War |
Gibraltarian waters |
|
1344 |
|
Moorish fleet defeated near Gibraltar |
Gibraltarian waters |
|
1805 |
|
Lord Nelson’s greatest and final battle – he split the
Franco-Spanish line but died from a musket wound which struck him on deck. |
La Alcarria |
|
1097 |
|
A second army under the command of Yusuf's son, Ibn-Aisa, the
governor of Murcia, attacked the eastern end of the Christian line in the
Cuenca district and there defeated Alvar Fáñez. |
La Alcarria |
|
1108 |
The Almoravids defeat the Castilian-Leonese armies. The heir to
the throne (Sancho) dies at the battle, and the local cities of Consuegra, |
|
La Alcarria |
|
1164 |
Huete |
Battle between the families Castro and Lara for the regency of
Castile, during the childhood of Alfonso VIII. |
La Alcarria |
|
1225 |
Aspe |
A Castilian army (militias of |
La Alcarria |
Brihuega |
1665 |
Villa
Viciosa I |
|
La Alcarria |
Brihuega |
1710 |
Villa Viciosa II |
|
La Alcarria |
|
1710 |
The Allies are surrounded, isolated and defeated by the
Franco-Spanish. |
|
La Alcarria |
|
1809 |
13 de Enero de 1809 |
|
La Alcarria |
|
1937 |
|
|
La Alcarria |
|
1937 |
|
|
|
Valdepenas? |
1811 |
5 Mar |
|
La Rioja |
Soria |
.142-133 B.C |
Numantia was a strongly fortified settlement at the confluence of
the Durius (now |
|
La Rioja |
Soria |
.153 bc |
Romans brought elephants up against the city wall – they became
frightened and turned upon their masters. |
|
La
Rioja |
|
1067 |
War
of the three Sanchos: |
|
La Rioja |
|
1834 |
?? August 1834:
A triumph for the Carlist horse against Baron
Luis Angel de Carondolet. Although
they at first refused to charge, Zumalacárregui’s 200 lancers then met and
broke the illustrious Cazadores de la Guardia Real, largely because the
latter were foolish enough to receive the charge of the lancers when
halted. The lancers went on to
overwhelm a battalion of the Castilla Regiment (19th Line) and
take its Colour. |
|
Las Canarias |
Gran Canaria |
1478 |
Guiniguada |
Castilians finally conquer the |
Las Canarias |
|
1495 |
Peñuelas and Acentejo |
-.
Castilians conquer the |
|
|
0844 – 1521 |
|
|
|
|
0870 or 0888 |
Padura – Arrigorriaga |
Possibly imaginary battle between on the one side
the Basques, commanded by Lope Fortún, first lord of
Biscay and Sancho de Estigiz, lord of Durango, and on the other prince
Ordoño, son of the king Alfonso "el Magno" of Leon. Arrigorriaga
means the "Place of red stones" in the Basque language. |
|
|
0917 |
S.
Esteban de Gormaz |
The Leonese king, Ordoño II, defeats the Moslem
armies of Caliph Abd el-Rahman III. |
|
|
0920 |
Valdejunquera |
The troops of Abd el-Rahman III defeat the Leonese
& Navarrese. |
|
|
0939 |
The new king of Leon, Ramiro II, defeats Abd
el-Rahman III. |
|
|
|
0939 |
|
|
|
|
0981 |
Rueda |
The Moorish leader Al-Mansur (Almanzor) defeats
king Ramiro III of León. |
|
|
0982 |
Portela |
Battle between two pretenders to the throne of
León, Ramiro (III) and Vermudo (II). |
|
|
1002 |
Calatañazor |
A coalition of Christians, led by Vermudo II of
León, defeats the armies of Al-Mansur, who dies a few days later. |
|
|
1016 |
|
Norman
raiders ascend the Rio Miño/Minho and destroy Tuy in León |
|
|
1037 |
Támara
or Tamarón |
The
first Castilian king, Ferdinand I, defeats and kills his father-in-law,
Vermudo III of León, thus inheriting his kingdom. |
|
|
1162 |
Valmuza |
-.
King Fernando II of León defeats the militias of Salamanca, who tried to
destroy the new built fortifications of Ciudad Rodrigo. |
|
Tierra de Campos |
1179 |
Castejón |
The Leonese defeat the Castilians,
recovering control of the town of |
|
|
1808 |
Medina de Rioseco, 14 de Julio de 1808 |
|
|
|
1809 |
18 Oct |
|
|
|
1811 |
Despite defeating Marshal
Masséna's French army at Bussaco, |
|
|
|
1812 |
|
|
|
|
1812 |
|
|
|
|
1812 |
A second site goes into more detail about the
battle fought on |
|
|
|
1936-1937 |
|
|
|
|
1068 |
Llantada |
The
|
|
|
.209 B.C |
New |
|
|
|
.219-218 B.C |
Saguntum |
|
|
Lorca |
1809 |
15th June |
|
Murcian waters |
|
1708 |
Naval battle of Cartagena |
28 May 1708 |
|
|
1335 |
Tudela |
A Navarrian-Aragonese army plans to invade |
|
|
1521 |
Noain |
In May a Franco-Navarrese army under André de Foix, Lord of
Asparrós and Count of Foix, penetrates |
|
Tudela |
1808 |
23 de Noviembre de 1808 |
|
|
|
1813 |
Following the disastrous battle of |
|
|
|
1813 |
|
|
|
Estella |
1833 |
Los Arcos |
First battle of Carlist War.
The Carlist Field-Marshal Santo Ladrón de
la Guevara led a body of Royalist Volunteers from Logroño into |
|
|
1833 |
Peñacerrada |
Following Los Arcos the
Cristino Generals Pedro Sarsfield and Manuel Lorenzo crossed the |
|
|
1833-38 |
First
Carlist War |
Actions at Arcos, Nazar, Muesa, Mendigorría, Miravalles, Villaró, Mendigorría,
Huesca, Barbastro, Graá, Linares, Arcos de las Cantera, Alcora, Castil de la
Peña, Morella, Uxó, Maella. |
|
Estella |
1834 |
Peñas de San Fausto |
|
|
Mendaza |
1834 |
Mendaza |
12 December 1834: Pursued through Navarre by the Spanish Liberal
army, Carlist commander Tomás Zumalacárregui with 10,000 men unwisely
accepted open battle against 14,000 under General Luis Fernández de Córdova
and Colonel arcelino Oráa. After a
bloody five-hour action the Carlists were forced to withdraw. |
|
|
1834 |
Arquijas I |
|
|
|
1834 |
Gulina |
|
|
Salvatierra |
1834 |
Alsasua |
2 May 1834: Zumalacárregui
attacked and defeated the Cristinos (General Vicente Jenaro de Quesada) as they passed Alsasua
on a march from
Salvatierra into |
|
|
1834 |
Salvatierra /
Alegría |
Fought on the
plains of Salvatierra near |
|
Mendaza |
1835 |
|
|
|
|
1835 |
|
March 1835:
Taking advantage of Zumalacárregui absence, the Cristinos (General Espoz y
Mina) launched a major attack from |
|
|
1843-9 |
Matiners
War |
Siege of |
|
|
1872-6 |
Second
Carlist War |
Actions at Sierra de Bernal, Villafría, Miranda de Ebro, Yesa,
Gandesa, Lácar, Sierra de Galcerán, Montejurra, and Estella. |
|
|
1937 |
|
|
|
|
1846 |
Matiners War |
|
|
|
1873-6 |
Second Carlist War |
|
|
|
1833 |
Astarta |
|
|
|
1834 |
Artaza |
|
|
|
1835 |
|
|
|
Beasain |
1835 |
Ormáiztegui |
2 January 1835: Following
success at Arquijas, Carlist commander Tomás Zumalacárregui marched north and
at Ormáiztegui, west of Beasain, met Spanish Liberal Generals Baldomero
Espartero and José Carratalá (2 Jan).
After costly fighting the Carlists fell back to strong positions at
Segura |
|
Maeztu |
1835 |
Orbiso |
|
|
|
1868 |
Alcolea |
|
|
|
.147 BC |
Lusitanian War |
A horseback guerilla resistance succeeded eventually in ambushing
10,000 Romans. |
|
|
1071 |
|
|
|
|
1128 |
Sao Memede |
|
|
|
1139 |
Ourique |
the victory of Count Alfonso I
of |
|
|
1147 |
|
|
|
|
1147 |
|
|
|
|
1158 |
Alcacer do Sal |
|
|
|
1189 |
Silves |
|
|
|
1195 |
Alarcos |
|
|
|
1217 |
Campaigns of Sancho |
|
|
|
1384 |
Atoleiros |
|
|
|
1385 |
Valverde |
|
|
|
1385 |
Trancoso |
|
|
|
1385 |
Aljubarrota |
Definitive victory of Portugal over the Castilians |
|
|
1449 |
Alfarrobeira |
|
|
|
1459 |
Alcacer Ceguer |
|
|
|
1476 |
|
|
|
|
1640-68 |
“War of |
|
|
|
1657
– 65 |
War
of |
Toma de Olivenza, defensa de Badajoz, sitio de Yepes, reconquista
de Arronches, batalla de Estremoz y Villaviciosa. |
|
|
1709 |
Val Gudina |
In April, the Franco-Spanish defeat the Anglo-Portuguese |
|
|
1762 |
Portuguese campaign |
|
|
|
1808 |
Junot failed in his attempt to break the Lines of Torres Vedras, and
agreed a deal whereby his troops were ferried back to |
|
|
Obidos |
1808 |
The French occupied hills blocking |
|
|
|
1809 |
|
|
|
|
1810 |
|
|
|
Almeida |
1810 |
Coa
river |
Masséna
issued orders to Marshal Michel Ney on 21st July for the 6th Corps to advance
on Almeida. In the face of the French advance, General Robert Crauford,
commanding the British Light Division, blew up the isolated Spanish fortress
of |
Portuguese waters |
|
1327 |
|
|
Portuguese waters |
|
1381 |
Naval battle of Saltes |
|
Portuguese Waters |
|
1780 |
|
|
|
|
1081 |
Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, now serving Al-Mutamin of Zaragoza, For
almost four months he lies encamped on that little plain until he provoked
Abu Bakr of Valencia into an attack which ended with the latter's defeat. |
|
|
|
1084 |
NW of Valencia, Rodrigo Díaz defeats Al-Hayib and Sancho Ramírez. |
|
|
|
1094 |
|
The
Almoravid Yusuf brought a huge army after Rodrigo El Cid,
onto the plain of Valencia. On the night of |
|
|
1096 |
|
Late
in 1096 Rodrigo took an expedition to secure his outer fortresses and met a Moorish
army of 30,000. He maneuvered to catch them in a narrow place and again won a
great battle. |
|
|
1097 |
The unstoppable Almoravids decide to attack Valencia again, but
Rodrigo Díaz and his ally, Pedro I of Aragón make a pre-emptive strike from
Valencia and find the Moslems unprepared (they tought El Cid was going to
wait for them inside the walls of Valencia). |
|
|
|
1102 |
Cullera |
Alfonso VI goes to help Valencia, besieged by Almoravids. The
battle ends in a draw. |
|
|
1705 - 6 |
Skirmishes around Valencia de
Alcantara |
The Allies, supplied by the
British fleet, sought to defend and expand from their base at |
|
Castellon |
1706 |
|
A fight over this strategic
town between the Allied strongholds of Catalonia and Valencia |
|
|
1707 |
|
A contest for the strategic pass between |