Bussaco - Buçaco
Like many languages in Europe, the formal recognition of spelling and other orthographic factors in Portuguese happened as countless historical developments which had drawn Portuguese languages apart, especially the language as spoken in Portugal's largest colony, Brazil and the mother country, efforts were made to bring all Portuguese speakers into one form of the language - some people in Portugal claimed that this processes was Brazilification of the language! The most recent agreement in 2009 became compulsory since May 13, 2015, though still leads to debate.
This is what has happened to Bussaco - Buçaco. The former spelling has been replaced with the latter through the use of a tail on the central ç making the same sound as two ss did in the past. For our purposes, in Wellington's time it would have been Bussaco and now it is Buçaco and you sometimes see both on one signpost reflecting the historical sites in the modern village.
Enough about the language issues for now, let's start the day where we began in Curia.
Early Morning
I woke on Sunday at 3.30am and got up and began to reflect on the previous day's activities. As the blog post developed I realised quite how much we had seen and heard in the day.
By 6am I'd finished the blog post and began my ablutions, Drew woke at 6.30m and, having reviewed the blog content and spotting some typos I'd missed, let it go live. He then did his ablutions.
At 7.30am it was time for breakfast,
Breakfast
Drew began with pancakes and bacon.
Whereas, I went for nuts and seeds, even though there was no natural yogurt today, fruit yogurt being to sweet for me.
I followed up with a selection of cheeses
And then with some sausages and bread.
feeling replate we return to the room at just after 8am.
Looking up to the Ridge at Bussaco
Leaving the hotel at 8.30am by 8.50am we are in Mealhada from where the whole of the 15km Bussaco ridge can be seen.
Or at least at 8.50am it can't be seen for mist
which is just as it was on the day of the Battle of Bussaco when for the first hours of the battle the mist made visibility very restricted.
By the time we left at 9.30am, the ridge is starting to become visible
Background to the Battle of Bussaco
The Battle of Bussaco is the largest battle ever fought in the history of Portugal. 100,000 troops were deployed on the day. It became the first time the new/re-formed Portuguese army fought and did some amazing things. The Viscount Wellington called them: "My Portuguese fighting cocks". The battle began at 6am.
The Third French Invasion of Portugal
The invasion was led by Field Marshal Massena. Massena was military commander during the French Revolutionary Wars who become one of the original 18 Marshals of the Empire created by Napoleon I on his elevation as Emperor. Napoleon nicknamed him "L'Enfant chéri de la Victoire" (the Beloved Son of Victory). He was among Napoleon's most experienced field marshall who had worked his way up to his position by experience, not training or familial connection.
Colonel Marcellin Marbot, aide de camp to Massena wrote a detailed memoir later in life. It has been translated into English and can be read here. It is clear that Napoleon was getting fed up of the small country of Portugal and even more fed up of Wellington whom he called the "Sepoy Leopard" in recognition of his Indian battles. Napoleon also wanted rid of the Guerrillas in both Spain and Portugal.
As regards Wellington, who was still Wellesley at the time we saw him at the Douro yesterday. He had won the Battle of Talavera in July 1809 and had been recognised for it by being made a Peer of the realm as Viscount Wellington of Talavera and of Wellington, Somerset, with the subsidiary title of Baron Douro of Wellesley.
After Talavera Wellington came back into Portugal, so as not to overstretch his supply lines from the Royal Navy. He works closely with Beresford on the re-forming of the Portuguese army that had been shuttered under Junot. So Wellington, has 22,500 Portuguese troops under a British colonel with British training, British muskets, a group distinguished by lots of live ammunition training and target practice.
Wellington arrived at Bussaco two days before the French and set the Royal engineers to prepare the ridge building a road behind it in preparation. In addition, Wellington had gained large number of heavy cavalry who had come to Portugal by Sea from Britain
Massena also built up his forces. Secure in Salamanca, across the border in Spain The French a hammer blow against Portugal, he built up the grand army of Portugal with 65,000 troops, a bigger than Wellington's army which included lots of untried local troops.
Massena had agreed to do this task for Napoleon on one basis, that he could take his mistress, known as Madame H and called Henriette Leberton with him. Napoleon agreed and Marbot says that they delayed marches and made special arrangements to meet Mrs Leberton's requirements.
The night before the Battle of Bussaco, the scene is set, the armies are in place and Massena rides 20 miles west for a night of pleasure with Madame H, before riding back the next morning.
The Battle Begins
Wellington had made his base of operations the Discalced Carmelite Monastery just outside the village of Bussaco.
Massana had three senior generals under him Ney, Reynier and Junot (yes he is back).
The first time they saw the ridge, there is no sign of anyone on top, but Wellington was, as he had in India and did at the Passage of the Douro kept his armies hidden on the new road his engineers had built, telling them not to light camp fires or give any sign of their presence. The French thought that the British weren't ready for the battle, but Wellington, yet again, was the master of preparation and logistics.
The French plan to attack by a flank action to take Wellington in his HQ. With 7,500 men Reynier led the main attack with Generals Foy, Merle and Hudellet leading the battalions.
There were 7km between Reyniers attack and that of Ney, Junot being held in reserve.
Massena was overseeing the battle from a Windmill where he is commemorated in Portuguese and French.
Wellington had established his operational base at another Windmill. Which is not preserved, but whose site is known.
The crossroads below was a key battle point, with Wellington in musket range to over see it.
The ground Wellington choose to fight on worked well for him, the French had a big hill to climb, wile at the time there were no trees in this area, the steepness was itself the first line of defence.
Imagine the troops seeing how high the climb might be up the ridge.
The defenders were led by experienced generals too, one of them, General Picton, a native of Carmarthen, was said to have gone into battle with his night cap still on as the French began at 6am.
It is reported: "The fire of the light troops started the day on the 27th of September. Captain Ley useing his 6" cannon, the 74th Highlanders came up"
It was at this time (7.20am) that the fog moved and General Wallace shouts out: "Drive them down the hill with your bayonets, now we have shot our shots". A rolling volley from two battalion with 800 muskets shooting at each time can be a devastating impact. Again Wellington had proved that a steady line of men with muskets could overcome a large group marching in column, the second time the French discovered this in Portugal, but something they never seemed to learn.
The 21st Portuguese division now came into action. The press forward and press forward until the French are driven back. The site of the elite battalions that had dominated the whole of Europe giving way to the fire and bayonet of the British and Portuguese must have been exceptional.
General Foy in his memoirs speaks of it not being like war. He said "They assassinated us, they were able to pick up off in their own time. It was murder. Our men turned and run."
Lord Wellington is said to have been in close observation behind the 88th Connaught Rangers shouting his support to see the French off his ridge.
The other front
Due to the fog over the hill, the two pincers of Massena's army, Reynier and Ney didn't start together as planned. Indeed they couldn't hear or see each other as they were between 5 to 7 km apart. It is reported that Ney thought he heard some guns, but couldn't be sure.
The terrain also provided a formidable difficulty for Ney. In his attack Ney split his forces - with Loisin having 6,500 men and Marchant 7,500 - one taking a direct route up the hill, the others coming from the side.
At the top of the hill facing Ney, above the village of Sula was the commander of the light division was Major-General Robert Craufurd, known to the men as Black Bob, for his bad moods and irrasable nature. Behind his command post - yet another Windmill which, like Massena's, has survived - were Artillery, hidden from the opposing army by a slight decline in the ground.
Ney attacks 90 minutes later than Reynier's attack. Black Bob has 6,500 British and Portuguese troop on the range above Ney. Using rifles rather than muskets, they are able to pick off the French from a greater distance. The action began with the light company's rifleman (The fictional Richard Sharpe and his companions are members of the 75th riflemen.) shooting at the column from their flank.
The gradient steepened considerably as you can see above and those climbing were exhausted and struggling to maintain formation. Many of the French were aiming for a windmill just ahead and thinking that the enemy skirmishers were bested as they had withdrawn. It was at this point that 1,750 troops from the 43rd and 52nd of the Light Division suddenly rose up from concealed positions in a nearby sunken road. General Craufurd was waving his hat as a pre-arranged signal for this maneuver and the men now steadied themselves to fire. Craufurd shoults out: “Now 52nd, avenge the death of Sir John Moore!” Moore, who had died at A Coruna the year before had helped convert the 52nd into light infantry in 1803 and was a fondly remembered leader and mentor.
The 52nd and 43red fired two volleys and then run down the hill towards them. The French were now being attacked by a whole division and the Portuguese rifle men shot them from the front and the sides. The performance of the Portuguese when they returned to the line as per ordered was clapped and cheered by the British Troops.
The French were left to run through the narrow streets of Sula with artillery pouring on them. A French trooper was to write: "It was carnage not conflict."
Marchant and his men faced the same, but not quite as dramatically as those coming direct from Sula.
By the end of the battle there were 4,800 French died and 1,200 British/Portuguese dead.
After the Battle
Wellington moves his whole army at midnight on the end of the day of the battle (28th). They travel quickly down the Coimbra valley. Wellington heads for Torres Vedras of which more on Tuesday. Massena leaves his many wounded in convents and follows Wellington, thinking he may have better luck in a future encounter. But not knowing that Torres Vedras has been prepared as a trap.
Memorial to the Battle of Bussaco
We travel to the memorial of the battle
Mark recalls that the Duke of Kent and the President of Portugal where here for the 250th anniversary in 2008, as was Mark as Chair of the British-Portuguese Historical Socitety.
Lunch
We travel back to Luso, through which we have travelled three times now in our chronological attempts to visit the sites on this ridge. We stop here for lunch.
It was tomato and cheese bruschetta for Drew
and a Nossa Bifana for me, this turns out to be a large sandwich with pork loin on the the bottom topped with cheese, ham and a fried egg. Yummy, but perhaps not the light lunch I intended.
We were obviously enjoying the air-conditioning in the cafe as unusually we have taken photos of each other.
The cafe has been here for five generations and are proud of their family heritage.
Taking the Waters
When I hear the phrase 'taking the waters' I think of that lovely Victorian pagoda in the rock park in Llandrindod Wells, with people daintaly drinking out of small glasses of water while having a cream tea. They do it on a different scale in the town of Luso.
The water is light and sweet, not like the mineral rich offer of Llandrindod Wells, Bath or Cheltenham Spa.
The above is just for public use, but the Luso Water Company exports it worldwide.
Wellington's Monastery
We next visited the Monastery where Wellington stayed as a guest of the Abbot.
Since that time the monastery has become a royal palace had gained a lot of fussy decoration. But the building and its gardens are quite special.
A hotel on the grounds also has representation of the battle of Bussaco in tiles.
The convent itself, with cork doors and religious art remains quite spectacular.
Bussaco Museum
The museum also has a small chapel attached, which was the blood hospital, where arms and legs etc were removed, in a former church. The church houses a statue of St. Anthony of Lisbon (also of Padua) who was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Portuguese Army and was on a mule at the front of the Portuguese forces as they faced Ney's troops above Sula.
Leaving Bussaco
We leave Busacco at 5.20pm having arrived at the bottom of the ridge of Bussaco at 8.40am. Eight and a half hours in one small area, but we seem to have done and seen so, so much. We passing the place where we had looked up through the mist to the ridge this morning.
Lousã
We drive to the village of Lousã where we arrive at the delightful Palacio de Lousã at 6.20pm
Views from room 114, we have a corner room so look out both to the town and the country beyond.
At 7.30pm I went down for dinner, Drew was exhausted after so many busy days in a row, so decided to snooze instead.
We started with Sopa de peixe com massa e tomate, a typical mediterranean fish and shellfish soup. It was fresh and delicious, I couldn't say know when they offered a second helping.
the main met with less appreciation from the group. It was risoto de peru com curry, yes Turkey risotto with curry - there were many jokes about someone having found a post-Christmas risotto recipe and thought it was typically British!! It turned out to be perfectly palatable, just an odd combination.
I returned to the room at 9.15pm, Drew must have heard me coming - I was chatting to a Californian who is on the tour - the door opened for me without me needing to knock. Drew looked a whole lot better, the white colour of exhaustion in his face was gone.
I edited some photos from the day and got to bed at 10.30pm.
































I’m still amazed you rise soooooo early Haydn - why aren’t you exhausted by mid afternoon?
ReplyDeleteI’m also surprised how quickly you both manage to get ready, be at breakfast so early and finish so quickly!
Clearly a very full day - it’s almost as if you were there during the battle - so many small details!
Hope Drew is fully recovered - fancy missing dinner in favour of a nap!
Hi Malcolm,
DeleteIt caught up with Drew on Sunday and me a bit today.
I really am best in the early morning, my mind is sharper and more creative. It has ever been this, as teenager I'd get up at 2am or 3am and listen to the World Service until everyone else got up.
I got most of my interest in world affairs from that.
Preparing the night before tends to be the key to getting up and out in the morning door both of us.
I agree about missing dinner, I don't think I could ever be that tired.
But Drew felt so much better after his long sleep, it clearly worked for him.
He still has a chesty cough, but no other ill effects, thanks for asking - he sends his best wishes.
sounds like Massena was the Bill Wyman, Leonardo Di Caprio, even David Tennant of his day, there is a theme there I promise! They used to dress her up as a member of the cavalry, maybe that was all part of it!! Your battlefield descriptions very evocative if complex, I also probably need a lie down to absorb.
ReplyDeleteThe amount of detail is hard to grasp, but by making notes as we go and then reflecting on it as I blog actually helps make sense of it.
DeleteThough at some times my brain is ahead of my typing notes.
As we arrived in Foz de Aroche, the historian, Mark, moved from talking about the French army camping here to the current place as a space for parking vehicles like your Victoria, i.e. a Motor Home.
I typed "Ney and the French forces gathered in the Caravan Park". It tickled me when I read it back later. And at least I could work out what if meant
I was chatting to a Spaniard once when I was on my travels. "Where are you from?" I asked. "Oh, you won't have heard of it. It's nowhere..." "Try me" I replied. "It's a place called Talavera". "Ah," I said, "Yes, Talavera de La Reina, site of a famous battle in the Napoleonic wars." I had studied all this for O-Level history in the early 1970s.
ReplyDeleteYou mentioned it was on your syllabus for O level Robin, it is fascinating to me. Given your knowledge and your language skills I'm sure you'd love exploring this area.
DeleteThough I'm now sold on the approach of having a Historian able to draw on the data and then words of the participants, so many who were captured in almost real time through dispatches and memoirs - it truly brings it alive. Combine that with people who know a lot about warfare - either as ex-army, or as War Game players and the context gets richer and richer.
If you are ever this way again Haydn you will find a delightful tea rooms offering some very delicious cake for Drew and other light bites for yourself. I often take a book and have my pot of tea and cake under the glass canopy on tile topped tables. They have blankets for when it is cooler but are very useful for the hard metal chairs! Other beverages are available but for me tea in a china cup from a china teapot cannot be beaten!
ReplyDeleteLikewise I am amazed at your early rising and then not so early to bed routine!
Hi Linda,
DeleteLlandod has always been blessed with tea-rooms. Though I think Drew has only been up there once. Maybe I can tempt him again.