Vicente Genaro de Quesada
Vicente Genaro de Quesada (1782 in Havana, Cuba – 15 August 1836, in Madrid) was a Spanish military figure. He participated in the Battle of Burgos (1808) during the Peninsular War, leading the Royal Guard and Walloon Guards. Forming a rearguard for the shattered Spanish lines, these troops absorbed repeated charges by General Lasalle's French cavalry without yielding any ground.[1]
He later fought in the First Carlist War on the Isabeline (Liberal) side, losing the Battle of Alsasua in April 1834. After the Mutiny of La Granja in August 1836, he tried to suppress demonstrations in Madrid in support of restoring the Constitution of 1812. The next day, with the queen regent having acceded to the demands of the mutineers, he fled to the village of Hortaleza, but was captured and killed there by a crowd including members of the National Militia.[2]
References
- Guerra de Independencia española 1808-1814 Archived 2005-02-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Wenceslao Ayguals de Izco (1854). El Panteón universal: diccionario histórico de vidas interesantes, aventuras amorosas, sucesos trágicos ... de todos los paises, desde el principio del mundo hasta nuestros dias ... Madrid: Ayguals de Izco Hermanos. p. 239.