3. ARMY OF ESTREMADURA.

General Galluzzo [afterwards the Conde de Belvedere].

Men.
1st Division, Conde de Belvedere: [afterwards General De Alos]
*Spanish Guards (4th batt.); *Majorca (two batts.); *2nd Light Infantry of Catalonia (one batt.); †Provincial Grenadiers (one batt.); one company of tirailleurs4,160
Cavalry, *4th Hussars (‘Volunteers of Spain’)360
Sappers, two companies; artillery, two batteries408
2nd Division, General Henestrosa:
*Walloon Guards (4th batt.); ‡Badajoz (two batts.); ‡Valencia de Alcantara; ‡Zafra3,300
Cavalry, 5th Hussars (Maria Luisa)298
Sappers, two companies; artillery, two batteries440
3rd Division, General Trias:
†Badajoz; ‡Truxillo (one batt.); ‡Merida; ‡La Serena3,580
Cavalry, 2nd Hussars (Lusitania)300

Total of the Army, 12,846, of which 958 were cavalry.

[N.B.—From the Madrid Gazette of Oct. 21, 1808, compared with the table in Arteche, iii. 496.]

4. ARMY OF THE CENTRE.

General Castaños.

Men.
1st Division, Conde de Villariezo:
*Walloon Guards (two batts.); *Reina (three batts.); *Corona (two batts.); *Jaen (three batts.); *Irlanda (three batts.); *Barbastro (one batt.); †Jaen(about) 8,500
Out of these fifteen battalions nine were detached to the rear in or about Madrid, and were not present on the Ebro.
2nd Division, General Grimarest:
*Ceuta (two batts.); Ordenes Militares (three batts.); †Truxillo; †Bujalance; †Cuenca; †Ciudad Real; ‡Tiradores de España; ‡Volunteers of Catalonia; ‡Tiradores de Cadiz; ‡Carmona(about) 6,000
3rd Division, General Rengel:
*Cordova (two batts.); *Volunteers of Valencia (one batt.); *Campo Mayor (one batt.); †Toledo; †Burgos; †Alcazar; †Plasencia; †Guadix; †Seville no. 1; †Lorca; †Toro.(about) 6,500
Out of these thirteen battalions four were detached to the rear, and were not present on the Ebro.
4th Division, General La Peña:
*Africa (two batts.); *Burgos (two batts.); *Saragossa (one batt.); *Murcia (two batts.); †Provincial Grenadiers of Andalusia (two batts.); †Siguenza; ‡Navas de Tolosa; ‡Baylen; ‡5th Battalion of Seville(about) 7,500
5th [Murcian-Valencian] Division, General Roca [vice General Llamas]:
*Savoya(two batts.); *Valencia (three batts.); *America (three batts.); †Murcia; †Avila; ‡Liria; ‡Cazadores de Valencia (three batts.); ‡Orihuela (two batts.); Tiradores of Xativa and Cartagena (two companies); ‡Peñas de San Pedro(about) 8,000
[One regiment was left at Aranjuez as guard to the Junta, with General Llamas in command.]
‘Army of Castile,’ General Pignatelli [after Oct. 30, General Cartaojal]:
*Cantabria (two batts.); †Leon Militia; ‡Grenadiers ‘del General’; ‡Cazadores de Cuenca; ‡1st, 2nd, and 3rd Volunteers of Leon; ‡1st, 2nd, and 3rd Tercios of Castile; ‡Tiradores de Castilla; ‡Volunteers of Benavente; ‡Volunteers of Zamora; ‡Volunteers of Ledesma(about) 11,000
The first-named four corps were made into a detached brigade under Cartaojal on Oct. 30: the others (except ‡Benavente in garrison at Burgos) were dispersed among the Andalusian divisions for misbehaviour at Logroño on Oct. 26.
Cavalry: *Farnesio; *Montesa; *Reina; *Olivenza; *Borbon; *España; *Calatrava; *Santiago; *Sagunto; *Principe; *Pavia; *Alcantara. Very few of these regiments had more than three squadrons at the front, some only one. The total was not more than 3,500 sabres, even including one or two newly raised free-corps, of insignificant strength(about) 3,500

Total of the Army of the Centre, about 51,000 men, of whom only about 42,000 were on the Ebro: the remaining 9,000 were in or about Madrid, and were incorporated in San Juan’s ‘Army of Reserve.’

5. ARMY OF CATALONIA.