Battle of Blaauwberg

Battle of Blaauwberg
Part of the War of the Third Coalition

Illustration of British troops during the battle
Date8–18 January 1806
Location33°45′22″S 18°27′56″E / 33.75611°S 18.46556°E / -33.75611; 18.46556
Result British victory
Territorial
changes
British occupation of the Dutch Cape Colony
Belligerents
United Kingdom Batavian Commonwealth
France
Commanders and leaders
David Baird
Home Riggs Popham
Jan Willem Janssens
Strength
5,399
4 ships of the line
2 frigates
3 brigs
9 troopships
3,122
1 ship of the line
1 frigate
Casualties and losses
15 killed
189 wounded
36 drowned
337–700 killed, wounded, captured or missing
1 ship of the line scuttled
1 frigate scuttled

The Battle of Blaauwberg (also known as the Battle of Cape Town) was a successful British amphibious operation during the War of the Third Coalition which lasted from 8–18 January 1806 and resulted in the capture of the Dutch Cape Colony. After defeating their Batavian opponents, the British signed a treaty under the Treaty Tree in Woodstock, Cape Town which established Britain's control over the Cape Colony. The colony later became a permanent part of the British Empire following the Congress of Vienna that marked the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1814. Due to establishing permanent British rule over the Cape Colony, the battle would have many ramifications for southern Africa during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. A bi-centennial commemoration of the battle was held in January 2006.