On 25 November 1812, the insurgent forces took position and began their assault. Colonel
Manuel Montaño marched up the surrounding mountainside to the
Cerro de la Soledad to cut the town's water supply and to impede any retreat in that direction by way of
Santo Domingo Tehuantepec. General
Hermenegildo Galeana took command of the
vanguard;
Miguel Bravo took command of the center column;
Mariano Matamoros y Guridi commanded the
rearguard. For his part, Morelos himself commanded a section of
cavalry. A good portion of the
infantry remained in
reserve to be used if necessary later in the battle. The fort at Cerro de la Soledad, which was at that time in Spanish loyalist control, was able to check the main advance for some time with its artillery cover barrages. Morelos, thinking that his position was unfavorable for attack, sent the colonels
Ramón Sesma and
Manuel de Mier y Terán to take the fort on the mountain. They attempted to move a cannon close to the fort to assist in their attack but soon discovered that they were under heavy fire from two sides and abandoned the gun. Morelos thereafter decided to simply reinforce the main advance by Mier and Terán until their objective was at last completed. Once that position had been taken by the insurgents, the main attack on Oaxaca began supported by an eight-pound cannon. The royalist troops initially returned fire but as the battle progressed, they were unable to sustain the firepower until the town's defender ordered a retreat. The last skirmish, referred to as the
Juego de Pelota (literally: ball game), was the taking of a fortified position that was surrounded by a moat and trenches. Insurgent forces were initially hesitant to advance on the well fortified position until
Guadalupe Victoria hurled his sword across the pit exclaiming -
¡va mi espada en prenda, voy por ella! (
There goes my sword, I will go and get it!). Swimming across the moat, he incited his comrades to follow him, eventually taking the position successfully. The loss of Oaxaca was a significant strategic victory for the insurgents and a severe setback for the
Viceroyalty of New Spain. For the insurgents, it signified the military prestige and prowess of Morelos as an effective battle commander and gave the insurgents a viable geographic position from which to control the surrounding area. == References ==