The 'Battle of Agnadello' was the one of the more significant battles of the
War of the League of Cambrai, and one of the major battles of the
Italian Wars.
On
April 15,
1509, a French army under the command of
Louis XII left
Milan and invaded
Venetian territory. To oppose its advance, Venice had massed a
mercenary army near Bergamo, jointly commanded by the
Orsini cousins,
Bartolomeo d'Alviano and
Niccolò di Pitigliano. The Orsini had orders to avoid a direct confrontation with the advancing French, and spent the next several weeks engaging in light skirmishing.
By
May 9, however, Louis had crossed the
Adda River at
Cassano d'Adda. Alviano and Pitigliano, encamped around the town of
Treviglio, disagreed on how to deal with Louis, since Alviano wanted to attack the French in defiance of his orders; they finally decided to move south towards the
Po River in search of better positions.
On
May 14, as the Venetian army moved south, Alviano was confronted by a French detachment under the
Seigneur de Chaumont, who had massed his troops around the village of Agnadello. Alviano positioned his forces, numbering around eight thousand, on a ridge overlooking some vineyards. De Chaumont attempted to attack, first with cavalry and then with
Swiss pikemen, but the French, forced to march up a hillside crossed with irrigation ditches, which were soon filled with mud from the pouring rain, were unable to breach the Venetian lines.
Pitigliano had been moving ahead of Alviano, and was several miles away when the French began their attack. In reply to Alviano's request for help, he sent a note suggesting that a pitched battle should be avoided, and continued his march south.
Meanwhile, Louis, with the remainder of the French army, had reached Agnadello. The French now surrounded Alviano on three sides and proceeded to destroy his forces over the next three hours. The Venetian cavalry collapsed and fled, and Alviano himself was wounded and captured. Of his command, more than four thousand were killed.
Although Pitigliano had avoided engaging the French directly, news of the battle reached him by that evening, and the majority of his forces had deserted by morning. Faced with the continued advance of the French army, he hurriedly retreated towards
Treviso and
Venice. Louis then proceeded to occupy the remainder of Lombardy.
References
★ Norwich, John Julius (1989). ''A History of Venice''. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-679-72197-5.
External links
★
The Battle of Agnadello