Peninsular War

Peninsular War
Part of the Napoleonic Wars

Clockwise from top left:
Date2 May 1808 (sometimes 27 October 1807) – 17 April 1814
(5 years, 11 months, 2 weeks and 1 day)
Location
Result

Coalition victory

Belligerents
Spain
 United Kingdom
Portugal
Commanders and leaders
Units involved
Strength
November 1808:
  • 205,000 regulars (125,000 first line, 80,000 second line)
  • 31,000
  • 35,000
  • 1811:
  • 55,000 guerrillas
  • April 1813:
  • Wellington: 172,000 Allied troops (British and Portuguese, and Spanish under British command and subsidy)
  • 160,000 regulars
  • Coalition: 81,318 (53,749 British and 27,569 Portuguese)

64,000 (annual average, 1808–1814)

  • May 1808:
  • 165,103
  • November 1808:
  • 244,125
  • February 1809:
  • 288,551
  • January 1810:
  • 324,996
  • July 1811:
  • 291,414
  • June 1812:
  • 230,000
  • October 1812:
  • 261,933
  • April 1813:
  • 200,000
Casualties and losses
  • c. 300,000 dead
  • 25,000 guerrillas killed in combat
  • 68,059 killed or wounded (December, 1810 – May, 1814)
  • 35,630 killed
  • 32,429 wounded
  • 50,000 dead
  • 417,000–477,000 killed or wounded
  • 180,000–240,000+ dead
  • (76,000–180,000 killed in combat against guerillas)
  • 237,000 wounded
1,000,000+ military and civilian dead

The Peninsular War (1808–1814) was fought in the Iberian Peninsula by the Iberian nations Spain and Portugal, along with the United Kingdom, against the invading and occupying forces of the First French Empire during the Napoleonic Wars. In Spain, it is considered to overlap with the Spanish War of Independence. It overlapped with the War of the Fifth Coalition (1809) and the War of the Sixth Coalition (1812–1814).

The war can be said to have started when the French and Spanish armies invaded and occupied Portugal in 1807 by transiting through Spain, but it escalated in 1808 after Napoleonic France occupied Spain, which had been its ally. Napoleon Bonaparte forced the abdications of Ferdinand VII and his father Charles IV and then installed his brother Joseph Bonaparte on the Spanish throne and promulgated the Bayonne Constitution. Most Spaniards rejected French rule and fought a bloody war to oust them. The war on the peninsula lasted until the Sixth Coalition defeated Napoleon in 1814, and is regarded as one of the first wars of national liberation. It is also significant for the emergence of large-scale guerrilla warfare.

In 1808, the Spanish army in Andalusia defeated the French at the Battle of Bailén, considered the first open-field defeat of the Napoleonic army on a European battlefield. Besieged by 70,000 French troops, a reconstituted national government, the Cortes—in effect a government-in-exile—fortified itself in the secure port of Cádiz in 1810. The British army, under Arthur Wellesley, the future Duke of Wellington, guarded Portugal and campaigned against the French alongside the reformed Portuguese Army and provided whatever supplies they could get to the Spanish, while the Spanish armies and guerrillas tied down vast numbers of Napoleon's troops. In 1812, when Napoleon set out with a massive army on what proved to be a disastrous French invasion of Russia, a combined allied army defeated the French at Salamanca and took the capital Madrid. In the following year the Coalition defeated King Joseph Bonaparte's army at the Battle of Vitoria, paving the way for victory in the war in the Iberian Peninsula.

Pursued by the armies of Britain, Spain and Portugal, Marshal Jean-de-Dieu Soult, no longer getting sufficient support from a depleted France, led the exhausted and demoralized French forces in a fighting withdrawal across the Pyrenees during the winter of 1813–1814. The years of fighting in Spain were a heavy burden on France's Imperial Army. While the French won several battles they were eventually defeated, as their communications and supplies were severely tested and their units were frequently isolated, harassed or overwhelmed by Spanish partisans fighting an intense guerrilla war of raids and ambushes. The Spanish armies were repeatedly beaten and driven to the peripheries, but they would regroup and relentlessly hound and demoralize the French troops. This drain on French resources led Napoleon, who had unwittingly provoked a total war, to call the conflict the "Spanish ulcer".

For France, the Peninsular War bogged down Napoleon's troops, which allowed the rest of Europe to challenge Napoleon once more, including in the War of the Fifth Coalition, the French invasion of Russia, and culminating in Napoleon's defeat in the War of the Sixth Coalition. The war against Napoleon's occupation led to the Spanish Constitution of 1812, promulgated by the Cortes of Cádiz, later a cornerstone of European liberalism. Though victorious in war—France would never again threaten a full-scale invasion of Spain—the burden of war destroyed the social and economic fabric of both Portugal and Spain, and the following civil wars between liberal and absolutist factions ushered in revolts in Spanish America and the beginning of an era of social turbulence, increased political instability, and economic stagnation.