Juan Henestrosa | |
Birth Date: | 28 June 1765 |
Birth Place: | Écija, Seville |
Death Place: | Madrid |
Battles: | Peninsular War |
Juan de la Cruz Fernández de Henestrosa y Horcasitas (1765–1831) was a Spanish military commander.
Appointed lieutenant colonel of the María Luisa Regiment of Hussars at the beginning of 1801, Henestrosa saw action during the War of the Oranges.
See main article: Peninsular War.
Having been given command of the Regiment of Light Infantry Volunteers of Spain in August 1807, he refused to obey orders to join French General Dupont's forces,[1] and instead marched his regiment to Extremadura, for which he was promoted to brigadier in June 1808 by the local Junta. By October that year, Henestrosa was leading the 2nd Division of Galluzo's 12,800-strong Army of Extremadura, an army which the following month, then under the command of the Conde de Belvedere, would be routed at Gamonal.[2]
He was promoted to lieutenant general of Cavalry following the Battle of Medellín (28 March 1809).[3]
Henestrosa was appointed captain general of Spain's Royal Armies in 1825.[4]