The
Dos de Mayo Uprising had put
Iberia in revolt against French rule. The
Spanish conventional warfare had started with the
Battles of El Bruch. The
British intervention had started with the
Battle of Roliça.
Napoleon's invasion of Spain had ended successfully with the French occupation of Madrid. The
Corunna campaign started with the Battle of Cardedeu.
French defeats As part of
Emperor Napoleon's plan to seize the
Kingdom of Spain in a military coup, several key points, including
Barcelona were captured in February 1808. Among other strong places, the French also seized
San Sebastián,
Pamplona and
Figueras by trickery. On 2 May 1808, the Spanish people revolted against the Imperial French occupation in the
Dos de Mayo Uprising. In the early summer of 1808, a 12,710-man French corps commanded by
General of Division Guillaume Philibert Duhesme was stationed at Barcelona. General of Division
Joseph Chabran's 1st Division had 6,050 soldiers in eight battalions, while General of Division
Giuseppe Lechi's 2nd Division consisted of 4,600 men in six battalions. The 1,700 cavalry were organized in nine squadrons under
Generals of Brigade Bertrand Bessières and
François Xavier de Schwarz. The force included 360 artillerists. This modest-sized corps was instructed to put down the insurrection in
Catalonia, to send assistance to Marshal
Bon-Adrien Jeannot de Moncey in his attempt to capture
Valencia, and to hold Barcelona. Considering the intensity of the rebellion, these orders were unrealistic. Chabran and Schwarz were defeated at the
Battles of the Bruch in mid-June and Duhesme was repulsed in the
Battle of Gerona on 20–21 June. After securing the assistance of an improvised division commanded by General of Division
Honoré Charles Reille, Duhesme initiated the
Siege of Gerona. This unsuccessful operation lasted from 24 July to 16 August before Duhesme retreated to Barcelona and Reille withdrew to Figueres. News of the French disaster at the
Battle of Bailen on 22 July 1808 buoyed Spanish morale and depressed the Imperial troops. Duhesme's troops had to fight their way back through the hills and abandon their field artillery in order to make it back to Barcelona, where they arrived on 20 August. Meanwhile,
Marquis del Palacio's division of regular Spanish troops arrived from the
Balearic Islands. Supported by thousands of
miquelets (Catalan militia) the Spaniards
blockaded Barcelona at the beginning of August. On 31 July, they captured the castle of Mougat and its garrison of 150 Neapolitans with the help of Captain
Thomas Cochrane and a British frigate. Though Duhesme's 10,000 surviving troops were in a tight spot, Del Palacio did not press them very hard. The French commander was able to send strong columns through the loose blockade in order to gather food and other supplies. On 12 October, an Italian column was roughly handled at
Sant Cugat del Vallès with 300 casualties and the expeditions stopped. Because Del Palacio remained almost inert during his tenure of command, the Catalan Junta replaced him as
Captain General with
Juan Miguel de Vives y Feliu on 28 October. This veteran of the
War of the Pyrenees had capably led the Spanish right wing at the
Battle of the Black Mountain in 1794 and covered the retreat at the
Battle of Boulou. Vives skirmished with the French outpost line on 8 November, but then went into hibernation until reinforcements arrived under General
Theodor von Reding. On 26 November, Vives pushed the French within the walls of Barcelona, inflicting about 100 casualties. According to a 5 November report, the Army of Catalonia under Vives had 20,033 soldiers available in five divisions and a small reserve.
Brigadier General Mariano Álvarez de Castro led 5,600 soldiers of the Vanguard Division. The Vanguard included 100 cavalry in the volunteer
San Narciso Hussars, the regular foot regiments of
Ultonia (300),
Borbon (500),
2nd Barcelona (1,000), and 1st
Wimpfen Swiss (400), and the volunteer
tercios 1st Gerona (900),
2nd Gerona (400),
Igualada (400),
Cervera (400),
1st Tarragona (800), and
Figueras (400). General
Conde de Caldagues commanded the 4,998-strong 1st Division which consisted of six artillery pieces manned by 70 gunners, 50 sappers, the cavalry regiments
Españoles Hussars (220) and
Catalonia Cazadores (180), the regular infantry regiments the
2nd Walloon Guards (314),
Soria (780),
Borbon (151),
2nd Savoia (1,734), and 2nd Swiss (270), and the volunteer tercios
Tortosa (984) and elements of
Igualada and
Cervera (245). General
Laguna led the 2,360-man 2nd Division with seven guns manned by 84 artillerists, 30 sappers,
Españoles Hussars (200), two battalions each of provincial grenadier
militia of
Old Castile (972) and
New Castile (924), and the
Zaragoza Volunteers (150). General
La Serna's 2,458-man 3rd Division comprised the regular two-battalion
Granada Regiment (961), and the volunteer units
2nd Tarragona Tercio,
Arzu division (325), and
Sueltas companies (250). General
Francisco Milans del Bosch led the 4th Division which was made up of 3,710 volunteer soldiers in the following tercios,
1st Lerida (872),
Vich (976),
Manresa (937), and
Vallès (925). The 907-strong Reserve included four guns manned by 50 artillerymen, 20 sappers, 80
Españoles Hussars, a 60-man detachment from the
Spanish Guards, the detached grenadiers from the
Soria (188) and
Wimpfen (169) Regiments, and the General's bodyguard (340). Two divisions of
Granadan reinforcements under Reding were just arriving or on the way. The 1st Division numbered 8,200 men and included one battalion of the
2nd Reding Swiss Regiment (1,000) and two 1,200-man battalions each of the
1st Granada,
Baza, and
Almeria Regiments. The 6,000-man 2nd Division consisted of 1,200-man battalions. These were the one-battalion
Antequera and the two-battalion
Santa Fé and
Loxa Regiments. The
Granada Hussars with 670 sabers and six artillery pieces worked by 130 gunners accompanied Reding's force. In addition, the 3rd Division of the Army of
Aragon under General
Palafox was instructed to reinforce Vives on 10 November. The division numbered 4,688 soldiers and comprised 64 gunners, one troop of the
Ferdinand VII Cazadores Cavalry (22), and the volunteer infantry battalions
1st Zaragoza (638),
3rd Zaragoza (593),
Ferdinand VII (648),
Daroca (503),
La Reunion (1,286), and
General Reserve (934).
Saint-Cyr takes command After the failures of the summer, Napoleon appointed
General of Division Laurent Gouvion Saint-Cyr to replace Duhesme on 17 August 1808. A week earlier, the emperor had ordered two crack divisions to reinforce the
VII Corps from the garrison of Italy. General of Division
Joseph Souham led 10 veteran French battalions while General of Division
Domenico Pino commanded the best Italian units. On the other hand, Reille's division had been formed of 8,000 soldiers of indifferent quality. His rag-tag force included
French National Guards, drafted gendarmes, French reserves and provisional units, one Swiss battalion, and the French 113th Line Infantry Regiment, plus cavalry and artillery. The so-called French 113th was actually made up of Italians from the recently annexed
Grand Duchy of Tuscany. For many years, Saint-Cyr served France with distinction and had "first-rate ability" according to historian
Charles Oman. His soldiers recognized his talents and had confidence in him but he was too aloof to be loved by them. He was also very self-centered and quick to leave his fellow generals to their own devices. Saint-Cyr's dislike of Napoleon had held him back from earlier promotion. Though he later wrote darkly that the emperor wanted him to fail, Napoleon made him a
Marshal of France in 1812. Saint-Cyr's reinforcements did not begin to assemble in southern France until mid-September and lack of wagons caused further delay. On 5 November Saint-Cyr's corps finally crossed the
Pyrenees, near the
Fort de Bellegarde. At this time, Saint-Cyr's VII Corps consisted of six infantry divisions, three cavalry brigades, and attached artillery. A roster from 10 October listed a total of 42,382 soldiers, but 1,302 were on detached duty and another 4,948 were wounded or sick. Of these, Chabran's 1st and Lechi's 2nd Divisions plus the cavalry brigades of Bessières and Schwarz were bottled up in Barcelona with Duhesme. Reille's 3rd Division had one battalion each of the 32nd Light, 16th Line, and 56th Line Infantry Regiments, one battalion each of the 5th Reserve Legion, the
Chasseurs des Montagnes, and the Swiss
Valais, two battalions of the 113th Line, and four battalions of the
Perpignan Provisional Regiment. Souham's 4th Division was made up of three battalions each of the 1st Light and 42nd Line Infantry Regiments, two battalions of the 7th Line, and one battalion each of the 3rd Light and 67th Line. Pino's 5th Division comprised three battalions each of the Italian 1st Light, 2nd Light, and 6th Line Infantry Regiments, two battalions of the 4th Line, and one battalion each of the 5th and 7th Line. General of Division
Louis François Jean Chabot's 6th Division included only two battalions of the 2nd Neapolitan Line Infantry Regiment and one battalion of the
Chasseurs of the Eastern Pyrenees. General of Brigade Jacques Fontane's cavalry brigade consisted of the
Royal and 7th Italian
Chasseurs à Cheval. The corps included the French 24th
Dragoon Regiment which was unbrigaded. Of the divisions in Saint-Cyr's field army, Reille counted 4,612 men, Souham 7,712, Pino 8,368, and Chabot 1,988. The three cavalry regiments numbered 1,700 troopers while the gun crews had about 500 artillerists. Upon taking his new command, Saint-Cyr received his orders in person from Napoleon. The emperor instructed him that the relief of Barcelona was the prime objective but allowed him discretion in how to carry out the assignment. According to the latest information from Duhesme, Barcelona could be expected to hold out until the end of December before running out of food. Saint-Cyr decided that he must first reduce the port of
Roses (Rosas) before marching to Duhesme's relief. The
Siege of Roses consumed another month, lasting from 7 November to 5 December 1808. The successful operation cost the Imperial French forces about 1,000 killed, wounded, or died of disease. With Roses out of the way, Saint-Cyr was free to direct his energies to the relief of Barcelona. After assigning Reille to hold Figueras and Roses and to protect the roads from France, Saint-Cyr had about 1,500 horsemen and 15,000 foot soldiers in three divisions of 26 total battalions.
Girona (Gerona) stood squarely in the path that the French army would have to take. The French general knew that besieging Girona was out of the question; in the time it would take to capture the place, Barcelona would be starved out. Once past Girona, there were two available roads. Knowing that the coast road via
Mataró was obstructed and could easily be placed under the guns of the British
Royal Navy, Saint-Cyr chose to use the inland road. In order for his plan to work, the Imperial general hoped to keep Vives guessing as to his true intentions and to defeat his opponent in detail. ==Battle==