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Tomás de Morla y Pacheco, 3rd conde de Cartoajal
Born (1761-04-21)April 21, 1761
Died March 22, 1833(1833-03-22) (aged 71)
Place of birth Málaga
Place of death Antequera
Allegiance Bandera de España 1701-1760 Kingdom of Spain
Service/branch Escudo del Ejército de Tierra Army of Spain
Years of service 1771 – 1833
Rank Lieutenant General
Unit Royal Guard
Commands held Army of the Center
Battles/wars

American Revolutionary War

War of the First Coalition

Spanish War of Independence

Tomás de Morla y Pacheco, 3rd conde de Cartoajal (April 21, 1761 – March 22, 1833) was a Spanish soldier, general, and intendant during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.

Military career[]

Cartoajal enlisted as a cadet in the Royal Guard in 1771 while studying at the Royal School of Mathematics in Barcelona. Upon the declaration of war with Britain in 1779, his grenadier company was posted to the siege lines around Gibraltar. Promoted alférez (1783), segundo ayudante (1788), and primer ayudante (1791), Cartoajal campaigned against the French Republicans in 1793, was wounded in action, and received a colonelcy (1793) and captaincy (1795).[1]

Between 1796 and 1801, Cartoajal, now Brigadier General, served on the Board of Ordnance, later on the staff of the Army of Galicia, and with the field army assembled at Badajoz for the invasion of Portugal. As a protégé of Prime Minister Godoy, Cartoajal enjoyed a string of political and military appointments, with administrative posts as Captain General of Salamanca (1802) and intendant of Madrid (1803).[1]

At the French invasion of 1808 Cartoajal rallied to the insurgents and placed himself at the orders of General Cuesta in Valladolid, who dispatched him to Seville to give an account to the Juntas of the Spanish defeat at Medina de Rioseco.[1] Promoted Lieutenant General upon Napoleon's destruction of the Spanish armies, Cartoajal took to the field with a reconstituted Army of the Centre but was crushed by General Sebastiani at the Battle of Ciudad-Real and sacked for incompetence.

In February 1810 Cartoajal defected to the French occupiers and was granted an audience with King Joseph Bonaparte, who appointed him conseiller d'État and commissary for the Province of La Mancha and the Province of Toledo.[1] But, apparently regretting his decision, the count delivered himself to the guerrilleros April 5 and was conducted to Cádiz to be tried for treason.[1] Absolved in 1813, Cartoajal was nonetheless held in suspicion for his liberalism and appointed only to the Army of Grenada, far from the front in the north.

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Abbad (1992), pp. 179-180

References[]

  • Abbad, Fabrice and Didier Ozanam (1992). Les intendants espagnols du XVIIIe siècle. Casa de Velázquez. ISBN 978-84-86839-37-6. 
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