Battle of Melilla (1860)

The battle of Melilla took place in February 1860, during the Spanish-Moroccan War, when the Spanish garrison of Melilla suffered a fiasco caused by Riffian fighters outside the city.

On February 6, the Spanish Melilla garrison was disturbed by the Riffian attacks. The governor of Melilla, Manuel Buceta del Villar, decided to confront the Riffians. The Spanish general, Leopoldo O'Donnell, warned Manuel of any reckless attack, but Manuel disobeyed him. He led a force of 1,200 men to pursue the Moroccans after their defeat at Tétouan.

Manuel believed that the Moroccan forces were low in morale and that the Moroccan commanders wouldn't dare to face him. This proved to be wrong. On the night of February 8–9, he established a camp outside the vicinity of Melilla. The Moroccans, with a large army of 15,000 men, focused on their efforts to attack the Spanish camp. The Spanish were taken by surprise and routed. The Riffians chased the Spanish to the walls of Melilla.

The Spanish suffered 370 casualties in this fiasco, while the Riffian casualties were negligible. O'Donnell was furious when he learned of the disastrous sortie and ordered the Spanish navy to bombard several coastal cities to save his face but these did not bring any results. Meanwhile, the news of this victory spread throughout Morocco, and exaggerating the victory did nothing to force Sultan Moulay Muhammad to ask for peace.