Fifth Battle of Maturín explained

Conflict:Fifth Battle of Maturín
Colour Scheme:background:#eeddbb
Partof:the Venezuelan War of Independence
Date:11 December 1814
Place:Maturín, Venezuela
Result:Royalist victory
Combatant1:Venezuelan Patriots
Combatant2: Royalists
Commander1:José Félix Ribas
José Francisco Bermúdez
Manuel Cedeño
José Tadeo Monagas
Strength1:450-500
Strength2:6,000-7,000
Casualties1:unknown
Casualties2:1,000 dead or wounded

The Fifth Battle of Maturín was a military confrontation on 11 December 1814, that resulted in the epilogue of the Second Republic of Venezuela. The Royalist forces, which for two years had tried to conquer the city, destroyed the last great Patriot garrison that remained in the country.

Prelude

After the defeat in the Battle of Urica 4 days earlier, the Republican Army had all but disappeared.[1] General José Félix Ribas and Colonel José Francisco Bermúdez had managed to escape and gather the dispersed survivors in their headquarters of Maturín.[2] After the death of Caudillo José Tomás Boves, his second Francisco Tomás Morales first secured the command over his Royalist llanero army, and then advanced towards Maturín.[3]

The Battle

Maturín was a place defended by three embankments and two batteries. Solid positions, supported to the north by the Guarapiche river and the swamps to the east, made it easily defensible, but the Republicans had few ammunition and low moral.[4] The garrison was composed of 300 dispersed soldiers and almost 200 recruits. Some officers wanted to retire but their superiors ordered to resist. [5]

Morales arrived with his army at dusk on 10 December. He camped near the city and ordered 1,500 men to occupy the Paso del Hervidero but Manuel Cedeño's cavalry repulsed them with fire support from defensive positions.[6] The next day at 8:00 the Royalists stormed the city. For three hours the Patriots managed to resist the frontal attack, but then a column that had secretly flanked their positions, attacked them from the rear and they panicked.[7]

The llaneros entered the city and murdered everyone they found, to avenge the high casualties caused by the cavalry of Colonel José Gregorio Monagas. Bermúdez fled with 200 men to Mountain Tigre, other Republicans fled to coast, and Ribas with 3 or 4 officers to the plains of Caracas to join Rafael Urdaneta, whom they believed to be in Barquisimeto.[8] Ribas was betrayed, captured and shot on 31 January 1815 in Tucupido.[9] Morales persecuted his defeated enemies with 3,000 soldiers, taking Soro on 14 February, forcing Manuel Piar to flee and the next day he took Güiria, from where Bermúdez had to flee. Morales reduced both places to ashes.[10]

Consequences

This campaign finally ended with the Republican military presence in Continental Venezuela.

Bermúdez escaped with 300 men to Isla Margarita where he helped Juan Bautista Arismendi to organize the garrison,[11] but before the arrival of the expeditionary force of Pablo Morillo, he was exiled to Cartagena de Indias, where he participated in the independence struggle of Colombia.[12]
Former Republican soldiers or sympathizers, who had failed to escape from the Continent were persecuted by the llaneros and massacred, as were their families. It is estimated that some 3,000 people were killed. In Irapa, Colonel Rivero and his garrison of 400 men decided to flee but were intercepted and massacred on 17 February.[13] Irapa was occupied eleven days later by the Royalists, thus eliminating the last Republican urban stronghold in Continental Venezuela.[14]

After this campaign, only some scattered Patriot guerrilla bands were left in sparsely populated area's of Venezuela :

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Montenegro Colón, 1837: 181-182
  2. Encina, 1961: 458
  3. Encina, 1961: 454
  4. Baralt, 1841: 238
  5. Montenegro, 1837: 183
  6. Baralt, 1841: 238; Montenegro, 1837: 183-184
  7. Encina, 1961: 458; Montenegro, 1837: 184
  8. Baralt, 1841: 239; Montenegro, 1837: 184
  9. Baralt, 1841: 239
  10. Montenegro Colón, 1837: 190-191
  11. Bolívar, Simón (1826). Colección de documentos relativos á la vida pública del Libertador. Tomo V. Caracas: Imprenta de los Hermanos Dermise, pp. 204.
  12. https://web.archive.org/web/20110820122456/http://www.alba-tcp.org/public/documents/pdf/hitos_del_bicentenario.pdf Hitos del Bicentenario de las Independencias de nuestra América
  13. Montenegro, 1837: 191
  14. Jurado Toro, Bernardo (1974). La batalla naval del Lago de Maracaibo: librada el 24 de julio de 1823. Caracas: Lotería De Beneficencia Pública Del Distrito Federal, pp. 46.
  15. López Contreras, Eleazar (1950). El pensamiento de Bolívar, Libertador: fragmentos de cartas y documentos. La Habana: Editorial Lex, pp. 267.