- Battle of Asseiceira
Warbox
conflict=Battle of Asseiceira
partof=
campaign=
caption=
date=May 16 ,1834
place=Asseiceira
result=Loyalist victory
combatant1=flagicon|Portugal|1830 Loyalist Portuguese
combatant2= Miguelists
commander1=António Severim de Noronha, Duke of Terceira for Dom Pedro
commander2=Luís Vaz Pereira Pinto Guedes, Viscount Montalegre for Dom Miguel
strength1=
strength2=
casualties1=
casualties2=The Battle of Asseiceira, fought on
May 16 1834 , was the last and decisive engagement of thePortuguese Civil War , or "War of the Two Brothers", between Dom Pedro, ex-Emperor ofBrazil (fighting to restore his daughter DonaMaria da Glória as rightful Queen of Portugal) and the usurperDom Miguel . Dom Miguel's rebel forces were defeated.Miguel's army, under the command of General Guedes, had been retreating eastward before the advance of Dom Pedro's forces, and had camped in a strong position on the Heights of Asseiceira, a system of hills and valleys about four miles from
Tomar . Miguel himself was atSantarém and was not involved in the ensuing battle. Pedro's general, the Duke of Terceira, advanced from Tomar on the morning of the 16th and attacked their position in three columns commanded by ColonelsQueirós ,Nepomuceno and Vasconcelos.The Miguelite forces attempted to repel them with artillery bombardment and cavalry charges but the loyalist forces persisted in their attacks and eventually a charge by their own cavalry carried the heights. Many of the enemy were killed or wounded, their guns captured, and some 1400 men taken prisoner. The remainder fled towards
Golegã , which was occupied by Terceira the following day. Dom Pedro (already ill with the sickness that would kill him shortly after his final victory) arrived there on the 18th fromCartaxo . Miguel rallied his forces atÉvora , but his officers were unwilling to risk a final battle after nearly two years of warfare, and he was presently induced to seek terms of capitulation.ources
*"An Account of the War in Portugal, between Dom Pedro and Dom Miguel" by Admiral Charles Napier (London, 1836); the battle is described on pp. 199-203.
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