Battle of Rio de Janeiro (1710)

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Battle of Rio de Janeiro
Part of the War of the Spanish Succession
Date19 September 1710
Location
Result Portuguese victory
Belligerents

Portugal Portuguese Empire

 France
Commanders and leaders
Jean-François Duclerc (POW)
Strength
15,000 troops and militia 6 ships
1,500 men
Casualties and losses
270 killed and wounded 600 killed
600 taken prisoner

The 1710 Battle of Rio de Janeiro was a failed raid by a French privateering fleet on the Portuguese colonial city of Rio de Janeiro in August 1710, during the War of the Spanish Succession. The raid was a complete failure; its commander, Jean-François Duclerc, and more than 600 men were captured. French anger over the Portuguese failure to properly hold, release, or exchange the prisoners contributed to a second, successful raid, the following year.

Duclerc was assassinated while in captivity in March 1711; his killers (and their reason for killing him) are unknown.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Boxer, p. 91

Coordinates: 22°54′35″S 43°10′35″W / 22.9098°S 43.1763°W / -22.9098; -43.1763

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