All About History

BATTLE OF MARENGO

When Austrian troops advanced to attack two French divisions near Marengo, Italy, on 14 June 1800, Napoleon Bonaparte was shocked. Fully expecting the Austrians to avoid a fight, he had detached several of his divisions to block potential escape routes, and he didn’t arrive at the battlefield himself until the French situation was almost lost.

The French and Austrian armies were evenly matched, each numbering around 31,000, although the Austrians held a significant advantage in artillery (100 guns to just 40), but Napoleon’s decision to disperse his forces meant he was facing the full strength of his enemy with just 22,000 men and 20 guns.

Disaster loomed as he tried to slow the Austrian advance, buying time for the return of his scattered divisions. Whether or not any of them could get back to the battlefield before the Austrians won a decisive victory would determine Napoleon’s fate. He stood on the brink of a humiliating failure from which he might never recover.

PRELUDE TO BATTLE

Napoleon had built his reputation in Italy. Taking command of a bedraggled and listless Army of Italy in 1796, he reinstilled fighting vigour and led it to a series of sweeping victories that announced the arrival of a bold and innovative commander. By the end of the year, most of Italy was under French control.

Napoleon then embarked on a daring campaign in Egypt, before returning home to take a position in a new three-man consulate to rule France. Quickly establishing himself as First Consul, he recognised the need for a period of peace after years of fighting. The Second Coalition against France had all but collapsed, but Austria remained hostile and needed to be persuaded to accept peace

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from All About History

All About History2 min readMusic
Inside History WOODSTOCK FESTIVAL
Between 15 and 18 August 1969, a farm in the small town of Bethel, New York became host to one of the most iconic music events of all time. Thousands of young “hippies” descended on the grounds of a dairy farm, at which stages had been erected and pe
All About History10 min read
FRITZ LANG The Director Who Snubbed The Nazis
By 1933, Fritz Lang had become the most celebrated director working in Germany. Movies such as Metropolis (1927) and M (1931), while not as commercially successful as some of his other works, cemented his reputation as a cinematic genius. That same y
All About History3 min read
Key Events
The peace symbol is introduced by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament at their inaugural meeting in London. It is designed by Gerald Holtom and is based on the semaphore signals for N and D. One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest author Ken Kesey makes his

Related Books & Audiobooks