Spanish expeditionary army (Spanish American independence) order of battle
In attempts to retain or re-assert control over its colonies in America, the Spanish Empire deployed several expeditionary forces during and after the Spanish American wars of independence. The largest of these forces, known as "the expeditionary army of Costa Firme",[1] and consisting of over 10,000 troops under General Morillo, undertook the Spanish reconquest of New Granada (1815–16).[2] Forces were also sent to New Spain between 1812 and 1817.[3] Later, after Mexican independence in 1821, a Spanish garrison was sent from Cuba to occupy Spain's last Mexican outpost, the fortress of San Juan de Ulúa; this force remained there until surrendering in 1825.[4] Finally, a force under Isidro Barradas Valdés attempted to regain control of Mexico in 1829.[5]
Viceroyalty of New Spain
Counter insurgency (1812-1821)
Period | year | Number of men | Units and Commanders (units changed names in 1820) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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1812 - 1817 ![]() flag |
year 1812 |
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year 1813 |
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Year 1815 |
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Year 1817 |
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Defense of San Juan de Ulúa (1821-1825)
San Juan de Ulúa 1821 - 1825
Date | Expeditions | Units | |||||||||||
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![]() Fortres San Juan de Ulúa (Veracruz) |
August 7, 1821 |
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August 1821 |
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October 1822 |
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December 24, 1822 |
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March 1823 |
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August 1823 |
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July 1824 |
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January 1825 |
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Expedition of Isidro Barradas (1829)
Division of Vanguard (1829)
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Commander
Units
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Expeditionary Army of Costa Firme
(Venezuela and New Granada)
Viceroyalty of Perú
(Perú, Chile and Upper Peru)
References
- The Americas. Academy of American Franciscan History. 1961. p. 173.
- Lynch, Spanish American Revolutions, 209. Rodríguez, Independence of Spanish America, 122. Kinsbruner, Independence in Spanish America, 57.
- Small contingents from Spain had been arriving in the Americas since 1810. On August 25, 1810, a group of Spanish Marines arrived in Veracruz from Cádiz on the frigate, Nuestra señora de Atocha under the command of Rosendo Porlier and accompanying Viceroy Francisco Javier Venegas. These were the first Spaniards to have come from Europe in support of royalists. Frieyro de Lara. Guerra ejército y sociedad en el nacimiento de la España contemporánea. (2009, Universidad de Granada) p. 660.
- Jaime E. Rodríguez O. (2005). The Divine Charter: Constitutionalism and Liberalism in Nineteenth-century Mexico. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 205–6. ISBN 978-0-7425-3710-1.
- Ruiz Gordejuela Urquijo, Jesús (2006). La expulsión de los españoles de México y su destino incierto, 1821-1836. Universidad de Sevilla. ISBN 978-84-00-08467-7.