Battle of Curupaity

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Battle of Curupayty
Part of the War of the Triple Alliance

Date September 22, 1866
Location Curupayty, Paraguay
Result Paraguayan victory
Belligerents
Paraguay Uruguay,
Argentina,
Empire of Brazil
Commanders
José E. Díaz Bartolomé Mitre
Strength
5,000 20,000
Casualties and losses
92 ca. 4,000

The Battle of Curupayty was a key battle in the War of the Triple Alliance.

On the morning of september 22, 1866, the joint force of the Imperial (Brazilian), Argentinian and Uruguayan armies attacked Paraguayan fortified trenches on Curupaity. The Paraguayans were led by General José E. Díaz. This position was held by 5,000 men and 49 cannons, some of them in hidden places out of the attackers view. The [Brazilian Navy] gave support to the 20,000 assailants, but the ships had to keep some distance from the guns at the fortress of Humaitá, which led to the lack of accuracy and impact of the ship's fire. The Paraguayans were also successful in misleading their foes: a trench drew most of the Brazlian fire, but the Paraguayan troops were located elsewhere. Around 20 percent of the almost 20,000 allied (Brazilian and Argentine) troops involved in the attack were lost; Paraguay lost less than a hundred men. The utter failure resulted in the change of the allied command. Paraguay's biggest success in the ultimately disastrous War of the Triple Alliance was limited because its military leader Francisco Solano López didn't counterattack the defeated allies. Not even a general as celebrated as Díaz would attack without López's orders. Ultimately, the battle of Curupayty was merely a sidenote and temporary success in what would eventually become a near-extermination of the Paraguayan people.

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