Battle of Carabobo

Coordinates: 10°00′16″N 68°09′57″W / 10.0045°N 68.1657°W / 10.0045; -68.1657
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Battle of Carabobo
Part of the Venezuelan War of Independence

La Batalla de Carabobo, Martín Tovar y Tovar
Date24 June 1821
Location
Result Venezuelan Victory.
Belligerents
Spain
Commanders and leaders
José Antonio Páez Miguel de la Torre
Strength
6,500-8,000 4,000-5,000
Casualties and losses
300 killed and wounded 2,908 killed, wounded and captured
Battle of Carabobo is located in Venezuela
Battle of Carabobo
Location within Venezuela
Battle of Carabobo is located in South America
Battle of Carabobo
Battle of Carabobo (South America)
Battle of Carabobo is located in America
Battle of Carabobo
Battle of Carabobo (America)

The Battle of Carabobo, on 24 June 1821, was fought between independence fighters, led by Venezuelan General Simón Bolívar, and the Royalist forces, led by Spanish Field Marshal Miguel de la Torre. Bolívar's decisive victory at Carabobo led to the independence of Venezuela and establishment of the Republic of Gran Colombia.

Before the battle

There were several events that led to the Battle of Carabobo. Francisco de Miranda, famed patriot that tried to free many Latin American countries alongside Simón Bolívar, had taken control of Caracas from 1810 to 1812. The Spanish took back control and Miranda was handed to the royalists because Bolívar, in one of the most questionable decisions of his life, believed him to be a traitor. Bolívar then fled from Venezuela, after which he organized the Admirable Campaign in 1813 and re-established the Second Republic of Venezuela.[1] Bolívar would lose Venezuela again in 1814 and he would re-establish the Venezuelan Republic one more time before uniting with the New Granada to form the Gran Colombia union.

By 1818 the Third Republic of Venezuela had been established with the task of liberating the entirety of Venezuela. Bolivar aimed to liberate Colombia, with the goal of establishing a new country Gran Colombia (a region consisting of what we know today as Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela). The Republic of Colombia was formed in 1819, with Bolívar as president. Once Colombia established independence, Bolivar moved on to liberate Venezuela.[2]

In 1820, an armistice was made between the Spanish, under General Pablo Morillo, and the Patriots, under Bolívar. During the years after he fled from Venezuela, Bolívar spent a lot of time regrouping his forces. He stationed his men on Lake Maracaibo, an area that was occupied by the loyalists. Bolívar had numerical superiority over the loyalists but it would still be a challenge.[3]

The battle

Painting by Martín Tovar y Tovar.

The Royalists occupied the road leading from Valencia to Puerto Cabello. As Bolívar's force of 6,500 or 8,000 (which included 340[4] or 350[5] men of the British Rangers battalion, the great majority of them of Anglophone origin[6] of the so-called "British Legions") approached the Royalist position, Bolívar divided his force and sent half on a flanking maneuver through rough terrain and dense foliage. Bolívar led the attack through the center while Gen. José Antonio Páez went around to the right flank. But before they could do it, the two Spanish field guns fired on the lines.[7]

Gen. Miguel de la Torre, commander of the Spanish, also split his force and sent half to deal with this flank attack. Hitting the Patriots, led by the Apure Braves Battalion, with musket fire, the Royalists initially held back the assault. Though the Venezuelan infantry failed in their attack and retreated, the men of the British battalion, commanded by Colonel Thomas Ilderton Ferrier and including many former members of the famed King's German Legion, fought hard and eventually succeeded in taking the hills. Though greatly outnumbered and low on supplies, the legion soldiers managed to maintain control of the tactically critical hills. By the battle's end, the legionary force had suffered 119 deaths, of which 11 were officers. Col. Ferrier was among the dead. Bolívar later praised the Legion troops and called them the "Saviors of my Fatherland", noting that they had distinguished themselves among other armies.[8]

Simón Bolívar.

As the Legion gained the top, the Apure Braves and 2 companies of the Tirailleurs Battalion (2nd Division) reinforced them, and pushed the enemy off, just as Pedro Camejo, lance in hand, was trying to rally the formations, only to be killed due to two shots to the chest from enemy gunfire, in front of General Páez. Páez, watching him in retreat, told him that he was a coward, to which, with his dying breath, Camejo responded: No, I am not! My general, I have to tell you goodbye, because now I am dead! The cavalry militia of royalist "Llanero" fled[9] from battlefield as the Patriot infantry fought hard, and the patriot cavalry led by Colonel Munoz eventually broke through the Royalist lines on the center, and marched towards the rear of de La Torre's force. The Spanish infantry formed squares and fought to the end under the attack of the Patriot cavalry, but one battalion retreated in the face of the enemy. The rout was so bad that only some 400 of one infantry regiment managed to reach safety at Puerto Cabello. With the main Royalist force in Venezuela crushed, independence was ensured. Subsequent battles included a key naval victory for the independence forces on 24 July 1823 at the Battle of Lake Maracaibo[10] and in November 1823 José Antonio Páez occupied Puerto Cabello, the last Royalist stronghold in Venezuela.

The victory was a hard-won one for the independence forces. Both Ambrosio Plaza and Manuel Cedeño, commanders of the 2nd and 3rd Divisions, were killed in the battle by the enemy.

Commemoration

Brazilian General Abreu e Lima, who fought for the Republicans.[11]

24 June is celebrated as Battle of Carabobo Day. This day is also called "Army Day" in Venezuela.

Every year during the month of June; the 24th specifically, honors the most important battle of the Venezuelan War of Independence and the largest battle of that war that finally secured national independence after years of war against Spain. It is a national celebration that is televised and streamed on the Internet. It lasts all day with a military parade of the Venezuelan Army, showing to public all armaments, tanks, battalions, weapons, etc. of the ground forces, as the main highlight, during the midday hours.[12]

Painting by Martín Tovar y Tovar.

This military parade doesn't have any sponsorship except by the government and the Army. It's the largest military parade in the country after the celebration of the birth of General Simón Bolívar on 24 July 1783 (Navy Day) and the annual Independence Day parades of 5 July yearly.

Also held is a joint historical reenactment organized by the Carabobo State Government, the Ministry of Defense, the National Armed Forces, and the Ministry of Education on the very site of the battle in the morning, joined in by elementary and middle school students. The 2015 event was held for the first time on the Sunday nearest the anniversary, 21 June.

See also

References

  1. ^ Kris E. Lane; Matthew Restall (2011). Wadsworth (ed.). The riddle of Latin America (Student ed.). Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 173–174. ISBN 978-0618153060.
  2. ^ Guild, History (19 June 2021). "Venezuela's Fight For Independence: The Battle of Carabobo". History Guild. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  3. ^ "Battle of Carabobo". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  4. ^ Gonzalo Pulido Ramirez (2011). Estudio Histórico de la batalla de Carabobo (1821). Universidad Andrés Bello, Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas. pp. 163–164.
  5. ^ Real Academia de la Historia. "Boletin de la Real Academia de la Historia". CCIV: 42–43. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Flórez Alvarez (1921). Campaña libertadora de 1821. Bogotá, Colombia: Imprenta del E. M. G. pp. 200.
  7. ^ "Battle of Carabobo". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  8. ^ Piero Gleijeses (1992). "The Limits of Sympathy: The United States and the Independence of Spanish America". Journal of Latin American Studies. Cambridge University Press. 24 (3): 481–505. doi:10.1017/S0022216X00024251. JSTOR 156773. S2CID 145292464.
  9. ^ from 1,551 of theoric cavalry , only two squadrons of hussars fight as infantry. The rest of royalist cavalry, 1,372 Venezuelan Llaneros, flee from the battle
  10. ^ Albert H. Gerberich. "A Forgotten Episode of History: The Battle of Lake Maracaibo". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 52 (1): 82–83.
  11. ^ Canes, Michèlle; Coimbra, Danielle; Pimentel, Spensy (6 April 2005). "Abreu e Lima: há 211 anos, nascia em Recife o brasileiro que virou herói no exército de Bolívar". memoria.ebc.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Agência Brasil. Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  12. ^ "Venezuela Battle of Carabobo Day". Answers.com. Archived from the original on 13 March 2014.

External links

10°00′16″N 68°09′57″W / 10.0045°N 68.1657°W / 10.0045; -68.1657