Napoleon Series Archive 2017

British soldiers’ views of Spanish violence

‘Barbarity more suited to Savages’: British soldiers’ views of Spanish and Portuguese violence during the Peninsular War, 1808–1814
Gavin Daly
War & Society Volume 35, 2016 - Issue 4, Pages 242-258

This article explores British soldiers’ reactions to the violence that Iberian soldiers, guerrillas and civilians perpetrated against wounded French soldiers and prisoners of war during the Peninsular War. Whilst they saw this violence as retaliatory, and sympathized with the suffering of the occupied, British soldiers were shocked, disturbed and outraged, often leading them to self-identify with their very enemy — the French. On one level, this violence was seen as a fundamental violation of customary rules of war. Yet further, in British minds it revealed a deeper Iberian culture of violence and way of war, which set the Iberian peoples apart from ‘civilized’ nations.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07292473.2016.1244920?src=recsys&journalCode=ywar20

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British soldiers’ views of Spanish violence
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