Battle of Toulouse (1814)

The Battle of Toulouse (10 April 1814) was one of the final battles of the Napoleonic Wars, four days after Napoleon's surrender of the French Empire to the nations of the Sixth Coalition. Having pushed the demoralised and disintegrating French Imperial armies out of Spain in a difficult campaign the previous autumn, the Allied British-Portuguese and Spanish army under the Duke of Wellington pursued the war into southern France in the spring of 1814.

Battle of Toulouse
Part of the Peninsular War

Panoramic view of the battle with allied troops in the foreground and a fortified Toulouse in the middle distance
Date10 April 1814
Location
Toulouse, France
43.6044°N 1.4439°E / 43.6044; 1.4439
Result Inconclusive
Belligerents
 France  United Kingdom
Spain
Portugal
Commanders and leaders
Nicolas Soult Marquess of Wellington
Strength
42,043 49,446
Casualties and losses
3,236 4,558
Peninsular war: Spain
200km
125miles
Toulouse
12
Vitoria
11
Tordesillas
10
Burgos
9
Salamanca
8
Ciudad
7
Talavera
6
Corunna
5
Tudela
4
Bailén
3
Valencia
2
Madrid
1
  current battle
  Wellington in command
  Wellington not in command

Toulouse, the regional capital, proved stoutly defended by Marshal Soult. One British and two Spanish divisions were badly mauled in bloody fighting on 10 April, with Allied losses exceeding French casualties by 3,000. Soult held the city for an additional day before orchestrating an escape from the town with his army, leaving behind some 1,600 of his wounded, including three generals.

Wellington's entry on the morning of 12 April was acclaimed by a great number of French Royalists, validating Soult's earlier fears of potential fifth column elements within the city. That afternoon, the official word of Napoleon's abdication and the end of the war reached Wellington. Soult agreed to an armistice on 17 April.

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