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Ultonia Regiment (Spain)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spanish army regiment (18th–19th centuries)

TheUltonia Regiment (Regimiento "Ultonia")[note 1] was one of the three Irish regiments in the service of theSpanish crown during the 18th and 19th centuries, its sister regiments being theIrlanda Regiment and theHibernia Regiment.[1]

Among its many actions, during thePeninsular War the Ultonia Regiment was garrisoned atGirona duringthe first (June 1808),[1]second (24 July to 16 August 1808)[1] andthird sieges (1809) of that city.[1]

Background

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The three "Irish" regiments, like other units before them, such as theIrish Tercio (Tercio de irlandeses), also known as the Irish Brigade,[note 2] which was raised in 1605 byHenry O'Neill to be incorporated into Spain's Army of Flanders,[2] were raised from among the thousands of young Irishmen who, due to thePenal Laws, left their homes to take service with France and Spain.[1]

The first of these regiments to be formed,Irlandia, was raised bylevies in Ireland in 1638.[3] TheHibernia Regiment was raised in 1703 (or 1709[4]) by order ofPhilip V, from troops and officers from Spain's forces in France and Ultonia was raised later that same year.[3][note 3]

Although the service records give no reasons for the transfers, there was a certain amount of mobility among the three sister regiments, which may have been due to the need to raise the number of men under arms before a specific military action or some other circumstance.[5]

History

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The origins of the Ultonia Regiment were at Zaragoza where, on 1 November 1709, theMarquis of Castelar,[note 4] acting on behalf ofPhillip V, would authorise Colonel Demetrio MacAulif to raise the MacAulif Regiment, to be formed by one battalion.[6] Originally numbering 408 men, the unit's first duties were to pursue the groups of "seditious" forces in Aragon.[6]

By 1718, it had come to be known as the Ultonia Regiment. By 1811, it had been reduced to just one battalion,[6] known as the Distinguished Ultonia Regiment (Regimiento de Distinguidos de Ultonia) and by 1815 it had returned to being called the Ultonia Regiment.[6]

Actions

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War of the Spanish Succession

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Main article:War of the Spanish Succession

Having been incorporated into the Bourbon-Spanish army ofPhillip V in his withdrawal from Catalonia, the regiment's first battle, atAlmenara (27 July 1709), to the north ofLleida, resulted in defeat against an Allied force of British, Portuguese, Dutch and Austrian troops supportingArchduke Charles.[6] The following month, the regiment fought atPeñalba (Huesca) (11 August) and were again defeated at theBattle of Saragossa (20 August).

On 11 June 1715, 24 infantry battalions and 1,200 horse of the Ultonia Regiment, together with the corresponding artillery, set sail forMallorca and Ibiza, accompanied by 18 warships and six galleys. Commanded by Lieutenant-generalAsfeld, after capturing the fortress at Alcudia, the regiment laid siege to Palma, which capitulated on 2 June. Ibiza surrendered forthwith.[6]

War of the Quadruple Alliance

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Main article:War of the Quadruple Alliance

At the beginning of 1718, the regiment's name was officially established as Ultonia. The following July, 700 men of the regiment joinedMarquis de Lede's expeditionary force sent to reconquer Sicily, where the regiment took the citadel at Messina.[6]

On 20 June 1719, the commander-in-chief of the Ultonia Regiment, Colonel Tadeo Mac-Aulif, was killed at theBattle of Francavilla. The following year, the regiment landed at Alicante and, with Guillermo Lacy now in command, the Ultonia Regiment marched to garrison Valencia.[6]

In 1722, the regiment was given the command of the region of Aragon and the garrison at Zaragoza.[6]

Anglo-Spanish War (1727–1729)

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Main article:Anglo-Spanish War (1727)

In 1727, the regiment marched to take part in theSiege of Gibraltar where they remained for the duration of the siege. From there, the regiment was sent to Barcelona where its two battalions were brought up to number and stationed at villages around the city, with orders to embark at a moment's notice.[6]

Spanish conquest of Oran (1732)

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Main article:Spanish conquest of Oran (1732)

In 1732 the whole regiment marched to Valencia, where nine of its companies, together with thegeneral staff, were sent to Alicante to join the expedition to Africa, forming part of the division led by General René. That November they sailed forOran, where they were to reinforce the units that had gained control of that fortress-city.[6]

In 1795, following thePeace of Basel, the regiment was stationed in Galicia at several garrisons along the border with Portugal and along the coast.[6]

War of the Second Coalition

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Main article:War of the Second Coalition

On 31 December 1798, the 1st Battalion, having marched to Cádiz, embarked for the Canary Islands, under the orders of the Count of Donadio, to reinforce the archipelago against British attack. The 2nd and 3rd battalions are stationed on the peninsula guarding the frontiers.[6]

War of the Oranges

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Main article:War of the Oranges

In 1801, the 2nd Battalion garrisons Vigo while the 3rd Battalion is prepared to enter into action against Portugal.[6]

Interregnum

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In 1802, the 1st Battalion sailed from the Canary Islands to Barcelona and marched to rejoin the regiment in Galicia.[6]

In 1804, the 1st battalion was sent to joinFrancisco Taranco's troops to put down the popular uprising in Vizcaya (known as theZamacolada).[6]

In 1806, the whole regiment was sent to Catalonia to garrison Girona and other detachments at the border.[6]

Peninsular War

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Main article:Peninsular War

1808

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By 1808, that is, at the start of the War, these "Irish" regiments had only 1,900 men under arms between the three of them, instead of the customary 5,000. On the other hand, most of the troops were no longer Irishmen, but of several nationalities.[1]

In 1808, the garrison at Girona, now reduced to 351 troops and 73 officers, but supported by armed citizens, repel GeneralDuhesme's attack/siege.[6][7][note 5] In time for the third siege, the regiment at Girona had seen its numbers raised from 200 to 800 bayonets, mainly made up of Catalan recruits.[8] However, while on 6 May 1809 its three battalions numbered 800 men, the number that remained on 11 December, the day of surrender, had been reduced to 250.[8]

The 1st and 2nd Battalions, numbering only 300 men each, were incorporated intoCount of Caldagues' division of the Army of Catalonia and sent as the vanguard, under BrigadierMariano Álvarez de Castro, to the Ampurdan region. Of this unit, 126 men[6] (or a "skeleton battalion" of 150 men[9]) was sent to reinforce the small core of regular troops of the garrison, under the command of the governor, Colonel Peter O'Daly, who had distinguished himself at Girona,[9] at theSiege of Roses (November to 5 December 1808).

1809

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At the beginning of 1809, due to the fear that the French army wouldagain besiege Girona, the 2nd and 3rd battalions, except for a detachment that remained at Tarragona, were garrisoned at Girona, under the newly appointed governor, Álvarez de Castro.[6] Besieged once again, from the beginning of May, in June the Ultonia garrison carried out asortie to reinforceHostalrich with 200 men. The following month, another detachment crossed the siege lines to join the troops underEnrique O'Donnell at Hostalrich, where they distinguished themselves in combat atBanyolas on 30 August.[6] Several other successful sorties were carried out throughout the siege and several French assaults were also repelled.

However, with a strong French blockade of the city, the only wayBlake, based atSant Hilari Sacalm, could get a convoy into Girona was by diverting the besiegers' attention: he therefore sent Lieutenant Manuel Llanden of the Ultonia Regiment to attack the heights of Los Ángeles, from where they would be able to protect the convoy. Blake himself advanced with the Reserve and sent Enrique O'Donnell on, with 1,200 infantry and some cavalry to attack the strong French position atBrunyola. Pedro Sarsfield, leading the main attack, then successfully drove the French troops out of their entrenchments.[10] The convoy, of some 4,000 infantry and 500 horse, underGarcía Conde, made it into Girona, with 3,000 troops staying on as reinforcements.[8]

A detachment of the regiment again distinguished itself atBàscara on 14 September. Later that month, Colonel Rudolfo Marshal was killed in action defending the breach of Girona.<[6]

At the end of the siege, Álvarez de Castro was taken first toNarbonne and then toSant Ferran Castle, while the officers andgeneral staff of the Ultonia garrison were taken prisoner toDijon.[11]

1810

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In 1810, the remaining units of the Ultonia Regiment that had not been taken prisoner at Girona were reorganised and incorporated into the 2nd Division of the Army of the Right, under Enrique O'Donnell, taking part in theBattle of Vic. The unit was later transferred to the 3rd Division, under theMarquis of Campoverde, and saw action in the province of Lleida at the bridge ofBalaguer (15 July) and atPuiggròs (17 August).[6]

Having been reduced to just one battalion, now known as the Distinguidos de Ultonia,[6] it was incorporated into the Reserve Division of the Army of the Left camped at Arbeca, near Tarragona. This battalion saw action at Riva (25 August), at Cervera (5 September), atSan Andrés de Palomar (19 September) and atSanta Margarida i els Monjos (28 September).[6]

1811

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Having been transferred back to Campoverde's 2nd Division, and once again with two battalions, the Ultonia Regiment saw action atRiudecols and at the nearby Les Voltes (1 January),[6] and two weeks later, at theBattle of El Pla, for which the regiment’s commanding officer, Vicente Mac-Grath, was awarded a gold medal.[6] The following February, the regiment covered the army's retreat fromGuissona toTorá and on 31 March took part in another Spanish victory atManresa.[6]

Troops from the Ultonia formed one of the five battalions of regular troops, plus the 3,000miqueletes, garrisoned atSant Ferran Castle under Brigadier General Juan Antonio Martínez, that had been holding out at theSiege of Figueras (10 April to 19 August 1811).[12]

With GeneralLuis de Lacy appointedcaptain-general of Catalonia in June,[13] he sent the 2nd Battalion, as part of a 3,000-strong force underEroles into France and sacked several villages in the region ofCerdanya[14] in reprisal for the French attacks in Catalonia, and defeating a French force atSaillagouse (8 August).[6] By the following month, Lacy had reorganized the remnants of the old Army of Catalonia into three divisions under Eroles,Milans del Bosch, andSarsfield, albeit with each containing only four or five battalions.[12] On 4 October the Ultonia Regiment, under Lacy,[6] tookIgualada and that month his troops broke the line of garrisons the French needed to keep the road from Barcelona to Lerida open.[12]

1812

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The regiment saw action under Lacy atSan Feliú de Codina (27 January) and the following month again invaded France, sacking several villages in theAuch region.[6] Back in Catalonia, they fought atMolins de Rey (26 May), atLa Llacuna and again atMontblanc, Spain (7–8 September), while their companies of grenadiers andchasseurs attacked the fortress atMataró.[6]

Brought together again as one unit, the regiment attacked the French forces atSan Vicente de la Llavanera and at other locations.

1813

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In mid-May, under GeneralCopons, appointed captain-general of Catalonia at the end of 1812,[15] the regiment took part in the victory atBattle of La Bisbal (La Bisbal) and in July at another victory "on the fields of La Salud",[6][note 6] as part of the division commanded by GeneralFelipe Fleyres.[6]

1814

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Still only made up of one battalion, with 854 men, the Ultonia took part in the siege of Lleida until it was taken by Eroles (February) and then went on to do the same at Barcelona, until the armistice, upon which it became part of the garrison there.[6]

Post-war

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In 1815, the Ultonia Regiment was again brought together as three battalions, with the Regiment of Alpujarras (2,400 men in two battalions), that had been raised in Granada in 1808, becoming the 2nd Battalion of the Ultonia Regiment, and the Regiment of the Leales Manresanos (1,947 men), that had been raised in Catalonia in 1811, becoming the 3rd Battalion.[6]

Disbandment

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The major reform of Spain's army carried out in 1818 led to the foreign regiments, as well as those with foreign names, including the three "Irish" regiments, being disbanded.[16] The Ultonia Regiment was merged into other regiments as follows: the 1st Battalion was incorporated into the Burgos Regiment, the 2nd Battalion into the Castilla Volunteer Regiment, and the 3rd Battalion into the Granada Regiment.[6]

Colonels of the regiment

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Following Demetrio MacAulif, other colonels of the regiment included the following:

Officers and other ranks mentioned in the historiography

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Ultonia, i.e.Ulster (Oman, 1902).
  2. ^Not to be confused withIrish Brigade of theFrench Royal Army, formed in May 1690, and also composed of Irish exiles, led byLord Mountcashel.
  3. ^Other sources, such as Clark (2010) and Clonard (1857), give the date as 1709.
  4. ^Castelar would, in 1721, become KingPhillip V'sSecretary of State for War.
  5. ^Oman (1908) points out that the regiment "still contained many officers of the old Jacobite strain, as may be seen by consulting the list of killed and wounded, where such names as O'Donnell, Macarthy, Nash, Fitzgerald, Pierson, Coleby, Candy, occur: but it had just been raised from 200 to 800 bayonets by filling the depleted cadre with Catalan recruits, and all the junior lieutenants, newly appointed, were Catalans also. So there was little Irish about it save the names of some of its senior officers."
  6. ^It is unclear whther Clonard (1857) is referring to what is now the district ofLa Salut (Barcelona), but at the time agricultural land outside the city, or to La Salud (Badalona) or La Salut (Sabadell).

References

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  1. ^abcdefgOman, Charles (1902).A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. I, pp. 90, 315, 325–328, 635, footnote 292.Project Gutenberg. Accessed 17 March 2025.
  2. ^(in Spanish). Mesa Gallego, Eduardo de (2020).'Soldiers of 'nations' for the Army of Flanders: the Irish Tercio, 1605–1620".Cuadernos de Historia Moderna, 45(1), 2020: 145–175.
  3. ^abO'Callaghan, John Cornelius (1870).History of the Irish Brigades in the Service of France: From the Revolution in Great Britain and Ireland Under James II, to the Revolution in France Under Louis XVI, p. 293. Glasgow: Cameron and Ferguson.Google Books. Accessed 20 March 2025.
  4. ^Clark, George B. (2010)Irish Soldiers in Europe, 17th-19th Century, p. 72. Mercier Press.Google Books. Accessed 20 March 2025.
  5. ^(in Spanish). López Durán, Mario Luis (2023)."Entre guerras, escalafones y nación: la composición del regimiento Irlanda en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII". IN: Rey Castelao and Cebreiro Ares, Francisco (eds.).Los caminos de la Historia Moderna. Presente y porvenir de la investigación, pp.753-760: pp. 756–357.Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Accessed 22 March 2025.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanao(in Spanish).Clonard, Count (1857).Historia organica de las armas de infanteria y caballeria españolas desde la creacion del ejercito permanente hasta el dia, Vol. 11, pp. 351, 356–359, 362-363, 368–369, 370–372.Google Books. Accessed 17 March 2025.
  7. ^The Edinburgh Annual Register for 1809, p. 769.Google Books. Accessed 17 March 2025.
  8. ^abcdOman, Charles (1908).A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. III, pp. 23, 43–44. (footnote 27), 37, 524.Project Gutenberg. Accessed 17 March 2025.
  9. ^abcOman, Charles (1902).A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. II, pp. 47–48.Project Gutenberg. Accessed 18 March 2025.
  10. ^The Edinburgh Annual Register, Volume 2, Part 1, p. 775. John Ballantyne and Company, 1811.Google Books. Accessed 20 March 2025.
  11. ^abcde(in Spanish). Minali, Guillelmo (1840).Historia militar de Gerona, que comprende particularmente los dos sitios de 1808 y 1809, pp. 34, 107, 233, 370. A. Figueroa.Google Books. Accessed 20 March 2025.
  12. ^abcOman, Charles (1911).A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. IV, pp. 535, 540.Project Gutenberg. Accessed 18 March 2025.
  13. ^ab(in Spanish). Ramiro de la Mata, Javier."Luis de Lacy Gautier".Historia Hispánica.Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 21 March 2025.
  14. ^Oman, Charles (1914).A History of the Peninsular War, Vol. V, p. 93.Project Gutenberg. Accessed 22 March 2025.
  15. ^(in Spanish) Cassinello Perez, Andrés."Francisco Copons y Navia".Diccionario Biográfico electrónico (DB~e).Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  16. ^Tauler Cid, Benito (2022)."The French presence in the armies of Spain at the change from the Old to the New Regime: men, units, commands and procedures". IN: Tauler Cid, Benito.The French Presence in the Spanish Military, p. 199.International Journal of Military History, 100/Cuaderno de Historia Militar, 11.Ministerio de Defensa. Accessed 17 March 2025.
  17. ^ab(in Spanish). Isabel Sánchez, José Luis."Juan José Creagh de Lacy".Historia Hispánica.Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
  18. ^(in Spanish). Rovira Gómez, Salvador J."Juan Antonio de Fábregues-Boixar Talarn".Historia Hispánica.Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 29 March 2025.
  19. ^abcdefgh(in Spanish). Gil Novales, Alberto (2010).Diccionario biográfico de España (1808-1833): G/O, pp. 1409–1410, 1621–1622, 1802, 1804, 2195, 2202, 2267.Fundación Mapfre. Accessed 26 March 2025.
  20. ^(in Spanish). Martín-Lanuza, Alberto."Juan de Kindelán y O'Reagan".Historia Hispánica.Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 22 March 2025.
  21. ^ab(in Spanish) Gil Novales, Alberto (2010).Diccionario biográfico de España (1808-1833): A/F, pp. 516.Fundación Mapfre. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
  22. ^abIglesias Rogers, Graciela (2012).British Liberators in the Age of Napoleon: Volunteering Under the Spanish Flag in the Peninsular War (e-book). Bloomsbury Publishing.Google Books. Accessed 20 March 2025.
  23. ^(in Spanish). Gil Novales, Alberto (2010).Diccionario biográfico de España (1808-1833): P/Z, pp. 2687.Fundación Mapfre. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
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