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Topic: Palestine riots of 1929

British Reinforcements Arrive …

Years: 1762 - 1762
June

British Reinforcements Arrive and the Reorganization of the Portuguese Army (1762)

As the Spanish invasion of Portugal collapsed, British reinforcements arrived, strengthening Portugal’s ability to counterattack and expel the remaining invaders.

British Expeditionary Force Lands in Portugal

Britain, committed to defending its oldest ally, dispatched a significant military force to Lisbon in two waves:

  • May 1762: The advance force, commanded by Major General George Townshend, included:

    • The 83rd and 91st Regiments of Infantry
    • The major portion of the 16th Light Dragoons
  • July 1762: The main force, arriving from Belle-Isle, consisted of:

    • The 3rd, 67th, 75th, and 85th Regiments of Foot
    • Two companies of the Royal Artillery

The total strength of the British force was 7,104 officers and men, a precise figure known from official records.

In addition to troops, Britain also provided:

  • Provisions and munitions
  • A loan of £200,000 to support the Portuguese war effort

Friction Between the Allies

Despite their common enemy, tensions arose between the British and Portuguese forces due to:

  • Language barriers that complicated orders and coordination
  • Religious differences, as Portugal remained strongly Catholic while Britain was Protestant
  • Salary discrepancies, as British officers were paid double their Portuguese counterparts, maintaining their higher pay from British service

Lippe’s Leadership: Rebuilding the Portuguese Army

To ensure military effectiveness, Count Wilhelm von Schaumburg-Lippe, the Allied supreme commander, took decisive action to reform and integrate the Portuguese army with the newly arrived British forces.

  • Out of 40,000 Portuguese soldiers, Lippe selected only 7,000–8,000 as fit for service, dismissing the rest as unfit for war.
  • This restructured army, combined with British troops, formed a professional Allied force of approximately 15,000 regular soldiers (about half Portuguese, half British).

Portuguese Militia and Defense Strategy

  • Militia and Ordenanças (second- and third-line troops), numbering around 25,000 men, were assigned to garrison fortresses rather than field operations.
  • A small force of regular Portuguese troops remained in northern Portugal, keeping watch on Spanish forces in Galicia.

Facing Overwhelming Odds

The 15,000-strong Anglo-Portuguese army faced a formidable enemy, as Spain and France had gathered an invasion force of 42,000 men:

  • 30,000 Spaniards, led by the Count of Aranda
  • 10,000–12,000 French troops, commanded by Prince de Beauvau

Despite being vastly outnumbered, Lippe would successfully integrate the British and Portuguese armies, rebuild discipline and organization, and lead a defensive campaign that would ultimately secure Portugal’s survival and victory.

His strategic leadership and effective use of limited forces ensured that Spain and France would fail in their objectives, marking one of the most remarkable defensive victories of the Seven Years’ War.

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