The Battle of Salamanca (July 22, 1812)…
July 1812 CE
The Battle of Salamanca (July 22, 1812) – Wellington’s Stunning Victory
On July 22, 1812, Wellington’s Anglo-Portuguese army achieved a decisive victory over Marshal Auguste Marmont’s French forces at the Battle of Salamanca, also known as the Battle of the Arapiles. This victory was one of Wellington’s greatest battlefield successes and had profound strategic consequences for the Peninsular War.
The Battle – “40,000 Frenchmen in 40 Minutes”
- Wellington’s forces, numbering about 50,000 Anglo-Portuguese troops, engaged Marmont’s 50,000-strong French army near the hills of Arapiles, south of Salamanca.
- Marmont mistakenly believed he had outflanked Wellington, stretching his lines thin as he rushed to seize key high ground.
- Wellington, seeing an opportunity, immediately launched a massive counterattack, striking the French left flank with devastating force.
- In just 40 minutes, the French left and center were shattered, leading to one of the most lopsided defeats suffered by Napoleon’s armies in Spain.
Casualties – A Crushing Blow for the French
- British losses: 3,129 killed or wounded.
- Portuguese losses: 2,038 killed or wounded.
- Spanish casualties: Only six men, as their division was positioned to block French escape routes.
- French casualties: Approximately 13,000 dead, wounded, or captured.
The scale of French losses made this one of the most destructive defeats suffered by Napoleon’s forces in Spain.
Consequences – The Liberation of Madrid and French Retreat from Andalusia
- Following the victory at Salamanca, Wellington marched on Madrid, which was liberated on August 12, 1812.
- King Joseph Bonaparte and his pro-French government were forced to flee, dealing a huge blow to French legitimacy in Spain.
- The French permanently abandoned Andalusia, reducing their control over the Iberian Peninsula.
- Although Wellington’s army had to retreat to Portugal two months later, the loss of Madrid permanently weakened the French position in Spain.
Conclusion – A Decisive Step Toward the End of French Rule in Spain
The Battle of Salamanca was one of the most significant Allied victories of the Peninsular War, proving that Wellington’s Anglo-Portuguese forces could defeat a major French army in open battle.
This victory set the stage for the final expulsion of French forces from Spain, culminating in Wellington’s invasion of France in 1814.