Conflict: | Capture of Fort-Dauphin (1794) |
Partof: | the Haitian Revolution and the War of the Pyrenees |
Date: | 28–29 January 1794 |
Place: | Fort-Dauphin, Saint-Domingue |
Result: | Spanish victory |
Combatant1: | Spain |
Combatant2: | France |
Commander1: | Gabriel de Aristizábal |
Commander2: | Candy Jean-François Papillon |
Strength1: | 3 ships of the line 1 frigate 400 men |
Strength2: | 1031 men |
Casualties1: | none |
Casualties2: | 1031 captured 41 artillery guns taken |
Colour Scheme: | background:#ffff99 |
Latd: | 19 |
Latm: | 40 |
Lats: | 4 |
Latns: | N |
Longd: | 71 |
Longm: | 50 |
Longs: | 23 |
Longew: | W |
The Capture of Fort-Dauphin was a bloodless encounter of the French Revolutionary Wars on which a Spanish expedition under Gabriel de Aristizábal seized Fort-Liberté, then named Fort-Dauphin, from Revolutionary France. The French colonial garrisons, consisting of over a thousand men, surrendered without firing a single shot.
The French, blockaded by land and sea were forced to capitulate. When the Spanish seized the fort, Candy, the French commander, was arrested and sent to Mexico to do hard labour, whereas the rest of prisoners were sent to France as prisoners of war.
With the British having captured Pondicherry in Eastern India and Martinique, Guadeloupe, St. Lucia and other small islands in the West Indies, the capture of Fort Dauphin by the Spanish troops was an added blow to those who received France in its colonies.