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VII.

1819.

connived at by the American government, into the pro- CHAP. vince of TEXAS. At length, however, these difficulties were adjusted, and the cession took place. Thus while Spain, in the last stage of decrepitude, was losing some of its colonies by domestic revolt, and others by sales to foreign states, the great and rising republic of America was acquiring the fragments of its once boundless dominions, and spreading its mighty arms into farther provinces, the scene of war and appropriation in future times. One F of the most interesting things in history is the unbroken 1819; Messuccession of events which obtains in human affairs, and Congress, the manner in which the occurrences, apparently trivial, 1819; Ann. of one age, are linked in indissoluble connection with 597, 604. changes the most important in another.1

1 Treaty,

sage to

Dec. 7,

Hist. ii.

the King.

Anxious, if possible, to continue the direct line of suc- 63. cession, the king, after the death of his former queen, did Marriage of not long remain a widower. On 12th August a proclama- Aug. 12. tion announced to the astonished inhabitants of Madrid that the king had solicited in marriage the hand of the Princess Maria Josephine Amelia, niece of the Elector of Saxony, and been accepted. The marriage was solemnised by proxy at Dresden on the same day, and the young queen set out immediately for Spain. She arrived at the Bidassoa on 2d October, and at Madrid on the 19th of the same month, when she made her public entry into Madrid on the day following, amidst the discharges of artillery, rolling of drums, clang of trumpets, and every demonstration of public joy. But it was of bad augury for the married couple that the very day before an edict Oct. 19. had been published, denouncing the penalty of death against any one coming in from the infected districts in the south. An amnesty was published on occasion of the marriage; but as, like the former, it excluded all persons 395, 396; charged with political offences, it had no effect in allaying 1819, 181. the anxiety of the public mind.2

But the time had now arrived when an entire revolution was to take place in the affairs of the Peninsula, and

2 Ann. Hist.

ii.

Ann. Reg.

1820.

64.

attempted

Jan. 1, 1820.

CHAP. those changes were to commence which have changed the VII. dynasty on the throne, altered the constitution of the country, and finally severed her American colonies from Revolution Spain. The malcontents in the army, so far from being by Riego. deterred by the manner in which the former conspiracy had been baffled by the double and treacherous dealing of the Conde d'Abisbal, continued their designs, and, distrusting now the chiefs of the army, chose their leaders among the subordinate officers. Everything was speedily arranged, and with the concurrence of nearly the whole officers of the army. The day of rising was repeatedly adjourned, and at length definitively fixed for the 1st January 1820. At its head was RIEGO, whose great achievements and melancholy fate have rendered his name imperishable in history. On that day he assembled a battalion in the village of Las Cabezas where it was quartered, harangued it, proclaimed amidst loud shouts the Constitution of 1812, and marching on Arcos, where the headquarters were established, disarmed and made prisoners General Calderon and his whole staff; and then, moving upon San Fernando, effected a junction with QUIROGA, 1 Martignac, who was at the head of another battalion also in revolt. The two chiefs, emboldened by their success, and having Ann. Reg. hitherto experienced no resistance, advanced to the gates of Cadiz, within the walls of which they had numerous partisans,1 upon whom they reckoned for co-operation

i. 183; Ann. Hist. iii.

386, 390;

1820, 222, 223.

*

* 66 "Raphael y Nunez del Riego was born in 1785, at Tuna, a village of Asturias. His father, a Hidalgo without fortune, placed him in the Gardes-du-Corps, which, ever since the scandalous elevation of the Prince of Peace, by the favour of the Queen, from its ranks, had been considered as the surest road to fortune in Spain. He was in that corps on occasion of the French invasion of that country in 1808; and when it was disbanded by the seizure of the royal family, he entered a guerilla band, and was afterwards promoted to the rank of an officer in the regiment of Asturias. He was ere long made prisoner, and employed the years of his captivity in France in completing his education, which he did chiefly by reading the works of a liberal tendency in that country. the peace of 1814 he was liberated, returned to Madrid, and received the appointment of Lieut.-Colonel in the 2d battalion of the Regiment of Asturias. That regiment formed part of the army under the Conde d'Abisbal, destined to act against South America; and it was thus that Riego was brought to destruction and ruin."-Biographie Universelle, lxxix. 114, 115 (RIEGO).

On

VII.

1820.

and admission within it. But here they experienced a CHAP. check. The gates remained closed against them-the governor of the fortress denounced them as rebels-the expected co-operation from within did not make its appearance, and the two chiefs were obliged to remain encamped outside, surrounded with all the precautions of a hostile enemy.

65.

measures

insurgents.

The intelligence of this revolt excited the greatest alarm at Madrid, and the Government at first deemed their Vigorous cause hopeless. The next day, however, brought more adopted consoling accounts-that Cadiz remained faithful, and against the a majority of the troops might still be relied on to act against the insurgents. Recovering from their panic, the Government took the most vigorous measures to crush the insurrection. General Freyre was despatched from Madrid at the head of thirteen thousand men hastily collected from all quarters, upon whom it was thought reliance could be placed, and he rapidly reached the Isle of Leon, where the insurgent troops, to the number of ten thousand, lay intrenched. A part of them, however, joined the insurgents, the force of whom was thus raised to ten thousand men. By the approach of the royalist army, however, they found themselves in a very critical situation, placed between the fortress of Cadiz on the one side and the troops from Madrid on the other, and in a manner besieged themselves in the lines of the besiegers. They published proclamations and addresses in profusion,* but without obtaining any material accession of strength Ann. Reg. beyond what had at first joined them;1 and the defection 223. and disquietude began to creep over them which invari

"Notre Espagne touchait à sa destruction, et votre ruine aurait entraîné celle de la Patrie: vous étiez destinés à la mort, plutôt pour délivrer le Gouvernement de l'effroi que votre courage lui impose, que pour faire la conquête des colonies, devenue impossible. En attendant vos familles restaient dans l'esclavage le plus honteux, sous un Gouvernement arbitraire et tyrannique, qui dispose à son gré des propriétés, de l'existence, et de la liberté des malheureux Espagnols. Ce Gouvernement devait détruire la nation, et finir par se détruire lui-même ; il n'est pas possible de la souffrir plus longtemps.-Violent et faible à la fois, il ne peut inspirer que l'indignation ou le mépris ; et pour que la

1 Martignac,

18,

Ann. Hist.

iii. 392, 393;

1820, 222,

CHAP. ably pervade an insurgent array when decisive success does not at once crown their efforts.

VII.

1820.

66.

the arsenal, and expedi

tion of

the inte

rior.

Jan. 12.

Unable to endure this protracted state of suspense, and Capture of fearful of its effect on the minds of the soldiers, Riego directed an attack on the arsenal of the Caraccas, an imRiego into portant station on an island in the bay of Cadiz, which was taken by a detachment under the command of Quiroga. By this success, a large quantity of arms and ammunition fell into their hands, as well as a seventy-four gun-ship laden with powder; and they rescued from the dungeons of that place a number of Liberals in confinement. Several attacks were afterwards made on the dykes which led from the opposite sides of the bay to Cadiz, but they all failed before the formidable fortifications by which they were defended; and though several émeutes were attempted in the fortress, they all failed of success. Meanwhile Freyre's troops were drawn round them on the outside, and effectually cut them off from all communication with the mainland of Andalusia; and the troops became discouraged from a perception of their isolated position, and the long inactivity to which they had been exposed. To relieve it, and endeavour to rouse the population in their rear, Quiroga, who had been invested with the supreme command, detached Riego with a movable column of fifteen hundred men into the interior of the province. They set out on 27th January, and without difficulty passed the straits near Chictana, and reached Algesiraz in safety, where they proclaimed the constitution amidst the loud acclamations of a prodigious concourse of inhabitants. After remaining five days, however, in that

Jan. 27.

Jan. 29.

Patrie soit heureuse, le Gouvernement doit inspirer la confiance, l'amour, et le respect. Soldats! nous allons employer pour notre bien, et pour celui de nos frères, les armes qui ont assuré l'indépendance de la nation contre le pouvoir de Buonaparte: l'entreprise est facile, et glorieuse! Existe-t-il un soldat Espagnol qui puisse s'y opposer? Non! Dans les rangs même de ceux que le Gouvernement s'efforce de rassembler, vous trouverez des frères qui s'uniront à vous; et si quelques-uns assez vils osaient tourner leurs armes contre vous, qu'ils périssent comme des satellites de la tyrannie, indignes du nom d'Espagnols.”— ANTONIO QUIROGA, Général-en-chef de l'Armée Nationale, 5 Jan. 1820. Annuaire Historique, iii. 390, 391.

VII.

1820.

1 Relation

town, he found that shouts and huzzas were all that the CHAP. inhabitants were disposed to afford; and leaving their inhospitable streets, he directed his march to Malaga, which he reached, after several combats, and entered on the 18th February, and immediately proclaimed the con- de l'Expestitution. But although his little corps had been received in dition de with acclamations wherever he went, it had met with no 26; Biog. real assistance; the people cheered, but did not join 118, 119; them; and, to use the words of Riego's aide-de-camp, iii. 396,397. "All applauded: none followed them."1

Riego, 19,

Univ.lxxix.

Ann. Hist.

and failure.

Meanwhile his associate Quiroga was the victim of the 67. most cruel anxieties. Weakened by the detachment of Its defeat the force under Riego, and besieged in his intrenched camp before Cadiz, he daily found his situation more critical, and his soldiers evinced unequivocal symptoms of discouragement from the inactivity in which they had been retained since their revolt, and the want of any succour from the troops with which they were surrounded. He sent, in consequence, orders to Riego to return to the lines in the island of Leon, but it had become no longer possible for him to do so. He was closely followed by a light column under the orders of O'Donnell; and finding that the population of the country were not inclined to join him, and that his corps was daily diminishing by desertion, he evacuated Malaga, and bent his steps towards the Cordilleras, with a view to throwing himself March 11. into the Sierra Morena. He crossed the Guadalquiver de l'Expeby the bridge of Cordova, and directing his steps towards dition de the hills, at length reached Bien-Venida on the 11th 60; Biog. March with only three hundred followers, destitute of 119; Ann. everything, and in the last stage of exhaustion and dis- 399, 400. couragement.2

2 Relation

Riego, 45,

Univ.lxxix.

Hist. iii.

position of

The intelligence of the disasters of Riego, which reached 68. the Isle of Leon in spite of all the precautions which the Perilous generals of the revolutionary army there could take to Quiroga in intercept it, completed the discouragement of the troops Leon. of the revolutionary army there assembled. Mutually

the Isle of

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