First Battle of Rivas
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| First Battle of Rivas | |||||||
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| Part of the Filibuster War | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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| Strength | |||||||
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≈45 filibusters ≈100 Nicaraguans (avoided action) | ≈500–580 men | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
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11 dead (6 men killed during combat, 5 wounded killed in the aftermath)[1] 7 wounded |
≈70 dead +70 wounded | ||||||
The First Battle of Rivas occurred on June 29, 1855, as part of the struggle to resist William Walker, an American filibuster, adventurer and mercenary who arrived in Nicaragua with a small army of mercenaries in June 1855 in support of the Democratic Party government of General Francisco Castellón in the Nicaraguan civil war. His army were defeated by the Legitimist Party.
A civil war was then raging in the Central American republic of Nicaragua. The Liberal party (Democratic) and the Legitimist party (Aristocratic), were constantly warring with one another as they tried to gain political control through violent means. "During a period of six years Nicaragua had had no fewer than fifteen presidents."[2] When Walker first arrived with The Falange (Filibuster mercenary/adventurer army), he proposed this venture as a show of strength.