Abstract
From April 1823 through September of the same year, the city of Pamplona suffered a long siege which ended with its capitulation after being besieged by an army composed of Spanish royalist forces and the Fifth Corps Army of the Pyrenees. The army was commanded by the Count of Molitor, a fraction of the most known one-hundred thousand children of St. Luis. Presented here in the study, the appearance of new source documents allowed for the reinterpretation of important events and expanded on what has been said in other works. Your objective is to better understand a little more of the inside story and answer some questions of this troubled time, a large part of which would make a marka in the historical Spanish society in the nineteenth century, more specifically in Pamplona.
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