On to the next major battle of the Italian wars, the battle of Novara fought on 6 June 1513 between France and the Swiss for the control over the Duchy of Milan. This battle was the high point of the Swiss mercenaries during the Italian Wars, routing the larger French army!
This battle was the next major battle after the bloody 1512 clash at Ravenna where the French beat the Spanish-Papal force of the Holy League alliance. Despite their victory, the French army collapsed soon after due their brilliant young commander Gaston of Foix dying in battle.
While the French managed to practically annihilate their opposing army, their casualties were also very high and without the charismatic leadership of Foix, the army disbanded. The French occupation of Duchy of Milan and other parts of northern Italy was now unsustainable.
In normal circumstances, a peace between two sides would follow, but as we saw in previous chapters of the Italian Wars, there was always some other major player lurking in the background to exploit defeats of others, thus the wars just kept going and new conflicts emerged.
With the French control crumbling, the forces of the anti-French Holy League began to divide the spoils. Holy Roman Empire wanted the Duchy of Milan but it would end up being taken over by the neighboring Swiss who installed Maximiliano Sforza as the Duke of Milan.
The next crucial development was when the bellicose Pope Julius II who initiated the Holy League died in February 1513, replaced by the more peaceful Pope Leo X from the Florentine Medici family, which also meant that the Papal States were now effectively in union with Florence.
The French had other things to worry about during 1512 as the English invaded France from the north. However with this new development in Italy in 1513, they saw an opportunity to regain what was lost. They made an alliance with Venice which also wanted to get back territories.
This just shows how chaotic the Italian Wars have been as this particular War of the League of Cambrai started in 1508 with an anti-Venetian alliance of Cambrai and France invading Venice in 1509 and crushing its army, and by 1513 France and Venice were allies in the same war!
Now the alliances were shifted completely and it was France and Venice against everyone else! Emboldened by the new situation, the first objective of the French was to oust the Swiss mercenaries out of the Duchy of Milan and reclaim it, and then campaign from there.
The decisive engagement would be fought on 6 June 1513 at Novara. As the French besieged this city, a large Swiss relief force surprised them and an open battle followed. Swiss had an army of around 10000 men, almost entirely made of pikemen and no support cavalry or artillery!
On the other side were the French with around 20000 men, mostly infantry which included a large contingent of Landksnecht mercenaries, but also heavy cavalry and artillery. They were led by French general Louis de la Trémoille, a veteran warrior of the Italian Wars.
This battle was one of the finest Swiss victories as the skilled Swiss mercenaries completely surprised the French. Using their mobility and extreme discipline, they were able to march quickly over the marshy terrain towards the French artillery, during which they lost 700 men.
Once they reached the artillery lines, the Swiss fought with their bitter rivals the Landsknecht mercenaries and managed to overwhelm them by flanking them with extra detachments of men. The fighting was fierce and the Landsknechts finally routed, with Swiss taking no prisoners!
Meanwhile another Swiss regiment engaged with the French heavy cavalry which was taken by surprise and was unable to form in formation. Eventually, they retreated as well, leaving the Swiss victorious. The French lost around 7000 men and also all the cannons!
The casualties would have been higher if the Swiss had a cavalry to chase down the fleeing French. The Swiss lost only around 1500 men and decided to go on a raiding campaing in France where they had to be paid off by King Louis XII to stop pillaging and return.
The battle of Novara was a disaster for the French. The Swiss won it thanks to their unique offensive infantry tactical discipline, taking the French and their mercenaries completely off guard. However the endless Italian wars would continue and the French would be back soon!
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Today is the anniversary of the glorious battle of Las Navas de Tolosa fought on 16 July 1212, the most famous and crucial battle of the Spanish Reconquista! The joined crusader force of Christian knights defeated the mighty Mohammedan army of the Almohad Caliphate! Deus vult!
The reason why this battle was so crucial was that it followed a string of successes of the Almohads, the mighty Caliphate that replaced the former Moroccan Almoravid dynasty by 1147 and imposed a much more strict form of Islam, treating other religions worse than past rulers.
The Almohads secured an important victory over the Christian forces of Castille in 1195 in the battle of Alarcos after which they captured a lot of Castillian cities and castles. The Mohammedans were on the offensive and Spain and entire Christendom was alarmed by their advance.
The epic 1515 battle of Marignano was fought between the French (led by young king Francis I) and the Swiss over two days and became known as the battle of the giants! The decisive encounter of the War of the League of Cambrai and one of the bloodiest clashes of the Italian Wars!
Before the War of the League of Cambrai started in 1508, the French held the Duchy of Milan and the war started with them invading Venice and crushing them in 1509. But in the next years, the alliances shifted and the tide turned against the French who ended up ousted from Italy!
The Duchy of Milan was occupied by Swiss mercenaries who beat the French at Novara in 1513 and installed Maximilian Sforza as the Duke of Milan. The French new ally Venice was beaten in the same year by Spanish-Imperial forces near Vicenza. Things looked bad for France in Italy!
Did you know? Hernan Cortes was the last European commander to have used a trebuchet catapult as a siege weapon in 1521 when he besieged the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan. By then trebuchets were no longer in use in Europe. What made him do it? Very funny story, I explain...
According to conquistador Bernal Diaz there was a man in Cortes' unit who was a bit of a braggart and kept boasting about serving in the Italian Wars and fighting at Garigliano for the legendary Spanish El Gran Capitan Gonzalo de Cordoba against the French.
Not only did this man boast about his supposed military prowess and heroism in the Italian Wars but he also claimed that during his stay in Italy, he obtained profound knowledge of war-engines and siege weapons, and knew how to construct them!
The battle of La Motta was another significant battle of the Italian Wars, fought on 7 October 1513 between Republic of Venice and combined forces of Spain and Holy Roman Empire. Venice lost yet another battle, but its enemies were once again unable to take advantage of victory!
Another battle that happened during the War of the League of Cambrai (1508-1516), a particularly bloody episode during the Italian Wars where territory of Venice was often contested. Venetian forces were already crushed in 1509 at the battle of Agnadello, but had recovered.
Despite defeat, Venice was able to restore its possessions in the Italian Mainlands, the Terrafirma. Meanwhile the forces of the anti-Venetian League of Cambrai were busy fighting each other. In 1513, Venitians would ally with the French who had previously crushed them in 1509.
One of the things that made historic European kingdoms and empires so powerful was their ability to learn from their defeats very quickly and come back stronger immediately. It was not rare in European history that the greatest days would come after the most bitter defeats!
This is why I'm also optimistic about the future. Europeans never get defeated, they learn lessons instead! What Europe is experiencing right now is a painful lesson, but people will learn a lot from it and come back stronger and wiser. Learn history and you will see what happens
For example Gonzalo de Cordoba and his Spanish forces humiliated at Seminara in First Italian War. Learns from it, comes back with a totally new pike and shot tactic that ensures Spanish dominance for 150 years.
I continue with the Italian Wars with the 1509 battle of Agnadello, a disaster for the Republic of Venice defeated by the mighty French army! Machiavelli famously said of this battle that in one day Venetians "lost what it had taken them eight hundred years' exertion to conquer."
The previous Italian War had ended in 1504 with peace between France and Spain but during those days peace would last very short in Italy! In the previous wars, France had already conquered the Duchy of Milan and Kingdom of Naples, which eventually ended in Spanish hands.
The Papal States also managed to expand with the army led by Cesare Borgia, the illegitimate son of Pope Alexander VI, but when his father died, he lost the favor of the papacy. The territories of the Papal States began collapsing and Venice took the opportunity to expand.