Siege of Salvador (1822–1823)

Last updated
Siege of Salvador
Part of the Brazilian War of Independence
Entrada do Exercito pacificador na Leal e Valorosa cidade capital da provincia de Bahia.jpg
Entrada do Exército pacificador na Leal e Valorosa cidade capital da província de Bahia. Lithograph by Bento Capinam, c.1830, depicts the triumphal entry of the Brazilian army into the capital of the province of Bahia
Date2 March 1822 – 2 July 1823
Location 12°58′29″S38°28′36″W / 12.97472°S 38.47667°W / -12.97472; -38.47667
Result Brazilian victory
Belligerents
Flag of Empire of Brazil (1822-1870).svg  Empire of Brazil Flag of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves.svg  Kingdom of Portugal
Commanders and leaders
Flag of Empire of Brazil (1822-1870).svg Pierre Labatut
Flag of Empire of Brazil (1822-1870).svg Lima e Silva
Flag of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves.svg Madeira de Melo
Strength
At the beginning:
1,500 [1]
At the end:
14,000 [2]
Ships: [3]
1 ship of the line
3 frigates
2 corvettes
3 brigs
1 charrua
1 brig-schooner
At the beginning:
3,000 [1]
At the end:
10,500 [2]
Ships: [2]
1 ship of the line
2 frigates
8 corvettes
2 brigs
1 charrua
1 smack
Casualties and losses
750 killed
280 wounded[ citation needed ]
2,500 killed
700 wounded
300 captured[ citation needed ]

The siege of Salvador occurred during the Brazilian War of Independence, during which the newly formed Brazilian army, under the command of French general Pierre Labatut, attempted to capture the city of Salvador in Bahia from its Portuguese defenders. The siege lasted from 2 March 1822 until 2 July 1823, finally ending when the Portuguese commander, Madeira de Melo, surrendered his forces to the Brazilians. [4]

Madeira de Melo's proclamation to the inhabitants of Bahia one week before the siege, 21 February 1822 Proclamacao. Habitantes da Bahia (.).pdf
Madeira de Melo's proclamation to the inhabitants of Bahia one week before the siege, 21 February 1822

Notes

  1. 1 2 Rodrigues 1975, p. 206.
  2. 1 2 3 Rodrigues 1975, p. 218.
  3. Maia 1975, pp. 72–74.
  4. Diégues 2004, pp. 162–167.

Related Research Articles

The Brazilian Navy is the naval service branch of the Brazilian Armed Forces, responsible for conducting naval operations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tim Maia</span> Brazilian singer-songwriter

Tim Maia was a Brazilian musician, songwriter, and businessman known for his iconoclastic, ironic, outspoken, and humorous musical style. Maia contributed to Brazilian music within a wide variety of musical genres, including soul, funk, disco, jazz, rock and roll, rhythm and blues, romantic ballads, samba, bossa nova, baião and música popular brasileira (MPB). He introduced the soul style on the Brazilian musical scene. Along with Jorge Ben, Maia pioneered sambalanço, combining samba, soul, funk and rock and roll. He is recognized as one of the biggest icons in Brazilian music.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carlos Diegues</span> Brazilian film director (born 1940)

Carlos Diegues, also known as Cacá Diegues, is a Brazilian film director. He was born in Maceió, Alagoas, and is best known as a member of the Cinema Novo movement. He is popularly known for his unconventional, yet intriguing film techniques among other film producers of the Cinema Novo movement. Diegues is also widely known for his dynamic use visuals, ideas, plots, themes, and other cinematic techniques. He incorporated many musical acts in his film as he favored musical pieces to be complementary of his ideas. Diegues remains very popular and is regarded as one of the most cinematic producers of his generation. Of the Cinema Novo directors, he would go on to produce films, plays, musicals and other forms of entertainment in Brazil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Independence of Brazil</span> 1821–24 movement for Brazilian independence from the Portuguese Empire

The independence of Brazil comprised a series of political and military events that led to the independence of the Kingdom of Brazil from the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves as the Brazilian Empire. It is celebrated on 7 September, the date when prince regent Pedro of Braganza declared the country's independence from the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves on the banks of the Ipiranga brook in 1822 on what became known as the Cry of Ipiranga. Formal recognition by Portugal came with the Treaty of Rio de Janeiro, signed in 1825.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Pascoe Grenfell</span> Navy officer and diplomat of the Empire of Brazil

John Pascoe Grenfell was a British officer of the Empire of Brazil. He spent most of his service in South America campaigns, initially under the leadership of Lord Cochrane and then Commodore Norton. He was the nephew of British politician Pascoe Grenfell and grandfather to General Sir John Grenfell Maxwell. In Brazil, he rose to the rank of admiral and for his achievements was made a knight grand cross of the Imperial Order of the Rose and a knight of the Imperial Order of the Southern Cross.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Armed Forces of the Empire of Brazil</span> Combined military forces of the erstwhile Empire of Brazil (1822–1889)

The Armed Forces of the Empire of Brazil were the overall unified military forces of the Empire of Brazil. The Brazilian military was first formed by Emperor Dom Pedro I to defend the new nation against the Portuguese in the Brazilian War of Independence. The Army and Armada were commissioned in 1822 with the objective of defeating and expelling the Portuguese troops from Brazilian soil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Itaparica</span>

The Battle of Itaparica was fought in the then province of Bahia from January 7 to 9, 1823, between the Brazilian Army and Armada and the Portuguese Army and Navy during the Brazilian War of Independence.

The siege of Caxias was a siege during the Brazilian War of Independence in which the Brazilian Army under the command of José Pereira Filgueiras attempted to capture the city of Caxias in Maranhão, which was defended by the Portuguese Army of João José da Cunha Fidié. The siege lasted from 23 May 1823 until 31 July 1823, when the Portuguese surrendered to the Brazilian forces after the combats that occurred between 17 July and 19 July that severely reduced its numbers. The event marked the beginning of the Portuguese forces' collapse in Maranhão.

The siege of Montevideo occurred during the War of Independence of Brazil, during which the Brazilian Army under Carlos Frederico Lecor attempted to capture the city of Montevideo in Cisplatina from the Portuguese Army of Álvaro da Costa de Sousa de Macedo. The siege lasted from 20 January 1823 until 8 March 1824 when the Portuguese surrendered to the Brazilian forces. The naval defeat in the Battle of Montevideo (1823) also contributed to hasten the surrender of the Portuguese troops. The event marked the end of the resistance against independence of Brazil in its territory.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Uruguayan War</span> 1864–1865 war between Brazil and Uruguay

The Uruguayan War was fought between Uruguay's governing Blanco Party and an alliance consisting of the Empire of Brazil and the Uruguayan Colorado Party, covertly supported by Argentina. Since its independence, Uruguay had been ravaged by intermittent struggles between the Colorado and Blanco factions, each attempting to seize and maintain power in turn. The Colorado leader Venancio Flores launched the Liberating Crusade in 1863, an insurrection aimed at toppling Bernardo Berro, who presided over a Colorado–Blanco coalition (fusionist) government. Flores was aided by Argentina, whose president Bartolomé Mitre provided him with supplies, Argentine volunteers and river transport for troops.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Paysandú</span> 1864 siege in South America

The siege of Paysandú began on 3 December 1864, during the Uruguayan War, when Brazilian forces and Colorado forces attempted to capture the city of Paysandú in Uruguay from its Uruguayan Army defenders. The siege ended on 2 January 1865, when the Brazilian and Colorado forces conquered the town.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manuel Marques de Sousa, Count of Porto Alegre</span> Brazilian statesman and military leader (1804–1875)

Manuel Marques de Sousa, Count of Porto Alegre, nicknamed "the Gloved Centaur", was an army officer, politician and abolitionist of the Empire of Brazil. Born into a wealthy family of military background, Manuel Marques de Sousa joined the Portuguese Army in Brazil in 1817 when he was little more than a child. His military initiation occurred in the conquest of the Banda Oriental, which was annexed and became the southernmost Brazilian province of Cisplatina in 1821. For most of the 1820s, he was embroiled in the Brazilian effort to keep Cisplatina as part of its territory: first during the struggle for Brazilian independence and then in the Cisplatine War. It would ultimately prove a futile attempt, as Cisplatina successfully separated from Brazil to become the independent nation of Uruguay in 1828.

The siege of Salto occurred during the Uruguayan War, from the 22nd to the 28th of November 1864, when Brazilian forces and Colorado forces attempted to capture the city of Salto in Uruguay from its Uruguayan Army defenders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pedro Afonso, Prince Imperial of Brazil</span> Prince Imperial of Brazil

Dom Pedro Afonso was the Prince Imperial and heir apparent to the throne of the Empire of Brazil. Born at the Palace of São Cristóvão in Rio de Janeiro, he was the second son and youngest child of Emperor Dom Pedro II and Dona Teresa Cristina of the Two Sicilies, and thus a member of the Brazilian branch of the House of Braganza. Pedro Afonso was seen as vital to the future viability of the monarchy, which had been put in jeopardy by the death of his older brother Dom Afonso almost three years earlier.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Salvador (1638)</span> Siege during the Dutch-Portuguese War and Eighty Years War

The siege of Salvador was a siege that took place between April and May 1638, during the Dutch–Portuguese War and Eighty Years' War. The governor of the Dutch colony in Brazil, John Maurice, Prince of Nassau-Siegen, commanding the army of the Dutch West India Company, with vastly superior forces and a supporting fleet under Johan van der Mast, put the city of Salvador under siege. The Portuguese and Spanish defenders, commanded by Giovanni di San Felice, Count of Bagnolo, and Luís Barbalho, managed to resist the Dutch attacks until they gave up taking the city and withdrew with several casualties.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Timeline of Brazilian history</span>

This is a timeline of Brazilian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Brazil and its predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of Brazil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Imperial Brazilian Navy</span> Navy of the Brazilian Empire between 1822 and 1889

The Imperial Brazilian Navy was the navy created at the time of the independence of the Empire of Brazil from the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves. It existed between 1822 and 1889 during the vacancy of the constitutional monarchy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manuel Jorge Rodrigues, 1st Baron of Taquari</span>

Manuel Jorge Rodrigues, 1st Baron of Taquari, was a Portuguese-born Brazilian general and politician. A veteran of the Peninsular War, Rodrigues distinguished himself in many battles during that campaign fighting alongside the British. During the Cisplatine War he commanded the defense of the town of Colonia del Sacramento from an Argentine attack over the course of February–March 1826. Later on he also fought internal revolts in Brazil. Rodrigues briefly held the office of president of the Pará province during the Cabanagem revolt in 1835, after which he was sent to southern Brazil in order to fight the rebels in the Ragamuffin War, the longest civil war in Brazilian history, that broke out during the Regency period in the provinces of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antônio Rodrigues Fernandes Braga</span>

Antônio Rodrigues Fernandes Braga was a Brazilian judge, county ombudsman, and politician. He was a general deputy to the General Assembly and the provincial governor of the province of Rio Grande do Sul from 2 May 1834 to 21 September 1835. He was the provincial governor at the outbreak of the Ragamuffin War in Rio Grande do Sul. He also served as a senator from Rio Grande do Sul and as a justice to the Supreme Court of Justice, nominated to the latter by imperial letter on 27 April 1870 and serving from 1870 to his death in 1875.

References