Second Battle of La Puerta explained

Conflict:Second Battle of La Puerta
Partof:Venezuelan War of Independence
Date:15 June 1814
Place:Quebrada de La Puerta, Villa de Cura
Coordinates:10.0383°N -67.4892°W
Map Type:Venezuela
Territory:Fall of Caracas to the Royalists
Result:Royalist victory
Combatant1: United Provinces of Venezuela
Combatant2: Spanish Empire
Commander1:Simón Bolívar
Santiago Mariño
José Tadeo
Manuel Cedeño
Commander2:José Tomás Boves
Francisco Tomás Morales
Strength1:3,000 men[1]
9 canons
Strength2:7,500
2 canons
Casualties1:1,000 dead
1,500 prisoners killed
Casualties2:200 dead

The Second Battle of La Puerta (Spanish; Castilian: Segunda Batalla de La Puerta) was fought between Royalists of the Spanish Empire and the Second Republic of Venezuela on 15 June 1814. It was a crushing defeat for the Republicans and a turning point in the war that led to the fall of the Second Republic of Venezuela.

The Battle

The Republicans had won the Battle of Carabobo on 28 May and had become overconfident when they decided to confront the irregular Royalist army, made up mainly of llanero horsemen, commanded by José Tomás Boves. The two armies met at the gorges of La Puerta, near the Sémen River and San Juan de Los Morros, in the current state of Guárico.

During the battle, José Tomás Boves and his forces inflicted heavy casualties on Bolívar's army, resulting in the death of over many of Bolívar's soldiers. Following the battle, over 60 officers were captured and to be executed by firing squad. Among these prisoners was Colonel Diego Talon, who was hanged the day after the battle in Cura.[2]

Bolívar and his men would forced to retreat out of La Puerta, with Bolívar fleeing towards Caracas, while Mariño going to Cumana.[3]

Consequences

On 18 June, Bolívar and Mariño arrived in Caracas with 400 survivors, closely pursued by the Royalist vanguard of Captain Ramón González (1,500 cavalry). On 25 June, José Félix Ribas and 400 cavalry managed to stop González's division and delay its advance to the capital. Meanwhile, Boves had decided to first besiege Valencia with the bulk of his army, but its garrison resisted during 21 days.[4]

The heroic resistance of Valencia, gave the Republicans the time to regroup in Caracas. Ribas only managed to gather less than 2,000 soldiers. It was obvious that it was impossible to defend the capital and on 6 July, Bolívar evacuated Caracas and two thirds of the population, in a long march that is known as the Emigration to East.[5]

Links

Notes and References

  1. Book: González . Edgar Esteves . Batallas de Venezuela, 1810-1824 . 2004 . El Nacional . 978-980-388-074-3 . 25 December 2023 . es. 77–78.
  2. Book: Ducoudray Holstein, H.L.V . Memoirs of Simon Bolivar, President Liberator of the Republic of Colombia, and of His Principal Generals; Secret History of the Revolution and the Events Which Preceded It, from 1807 to the Present Time. . 1807–1829 . Boston: S. G. Goodrich . 1829 . 65.
  3. Book: Ducoudray Holstein, H.L.V . Memoirs of Simon Bolivar, President Liberator of the Republic of Colombia, and of His Principal Generals; Secret History of the Revolution and the Events Which Preceded It, from 1807 to the Present Time. . 1807–1829 . Boston: S. G. Goodrich . 1829 . 65.
  4. Montenegro Colón, Feliciano (1837). Geografía general para el uso de la juventud de Venezuela. Tomo IV. p.172 Caracas: Imprenta de Damiron y Dupouy.
  5. Barletta Villarán, Roberto (2011). Breve historia de Simón Bolívar. Madrid: Nowtilus. ISBN 978-84-9967-241-0. pp 119-120