A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. 4, Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811

A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. 4, Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811

A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. 4, Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811 - Massena's Retreat, Fuentes de Oñoro,...
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Author: Oman, Charles,1860-1946
Format: eBook
Language: English
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A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. 4, Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811

A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. 4, Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811

CHF 12.12 CHF 6.06

A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. 4, Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811

CHF 12.12 CHF 6.06
Author: Oman, Charles,1860-1946
Format: eBook
Language: English

A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. 4, Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811 - Massena's Retreat, Fuentes de Oñoro, Albuera, Tarragona

In this volume are contained the annals of all the many campaigns of 1811, with the exception of those of Suchets Valencian expedition in the later months of the year, which for reasons of space have to be relegated to Volume V. It was impossible to exceed the bulk of 660 pages, and the operations on the Mediterranean coast of Spain can be dealt with separately without any grave breach of continuity in the narrative, though this particular Valencian campaign affected the general course of the war far more closely than any other series of operations on the Eastern side of the Peninsula, as I have been careful to point out in the concluding chapters of Section XXIX. The main interest of 1811, however, centres in the operations of Wellington and his opponents, Massna, Soult, and Marmont. In the previous year the tide of French conquest reached its high-water mark, when Soult appeared before the walls of Cadiz, and Massna forced his way to the foot of the long chain of redoubts that formed the Lines of Torres Vedras. Already, before 1810 was over, Massnas baffled army had fallen back a few miles, and this first short retreat to Santarem marked the commencement of a never-ceasing ebb of the wave of conquest on the Western side of the Peninsula. Matters went otherwise on the Eastern coast in 1811, but all Suchets campaigns were, after all, a side issue. The decisive point lay not in Catalonia or Valencia, but in Portugal. [p. iv]When Massna finally evacuated Portugal in March 1811, forced out of his cantonments by Wellingtons skilful use of the sword of famine, a new stage in the war began. The French had lost the advantage of the offensive, and were never to regain it on the Western theatre of war. All through the remainder of 1811 it was the British general who dealt the strokes, and the enemy who had to parry them. The strokes were feeble, because of Wellingtons very limited resources, and for the most part were warded off. Though Almeida fell in May, the siege of Badajoz in June, and the blockade of Ciudad Rodrigo in August and September, were both brought to an end by the concentration of French armies which Wellington was too weak to attack. But the masses of men which Soult and Marmont gathered on the Guadiana in June, and Dorsenne and Marmont gathered on the Agueda in September, had only been collected by a dangerous disgarnishing of the whole of those provinces of Spain which lay beneath the French yoke. They could not remain long assembled, firstly because they could not feed themselves, and secondly because of the peril to which their concentration exposed the abandoned regions in their rear. Hence, in each case, the French commanders, satisfied with having parried Wellingtons stroke for the moment, refused to attack him, and dispersed their armies. That the spirit of the offensive was lost on the French side is sufficiently shown by the fact that when their adversary stood on the defensive upon the Caya in June, and at Alfayates in September, they refused to assail his positions. ......Buy Now (To Read More)

Product details

Ebook Number: 56812
Author: Oman, Charles
Release Date: Mar 22, 2018
Format: eBook
Language: English

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