Everything about The Battle Of Marignano totally explained
The
Battle of Marignano was a battle fought during the phase of the
Italian Wars (1494–1559) called the
War of the League of Cambrai, that took place on
13 and
14 September,
1515, near the town today called
Melegnano, 16 km south east of
Milan. It resulted in a victory for
French forces.
On one side were the
French forces of
Francis I and some German
landsknechts — and, eventually, his
Venetian allies — and on the other the
mercenaries of the
Old Swiss Confederacy, since 1512 in control of Milan, where the nominal
Sforza duke,
Massimiliano — son of
Lodovico il Moro, whom the French had previously defeated for possession of Milan — was under Swiss control. The bloody battle of Marignano was fought to retake control of the
duchy of Milan, the French gate to Italy.
The prologue to the battle was a remarkable Alpine passage, in which François hauled pieces of artillery (including 40 or 70 huge cannons) over new-made roads over the
Col d'Argentière, an unexpected route. At
Villafranca the French surprised and seized Prospero Colonna and most of the Swiss cavalry. The Swiss retreated to Milan, where French gold sent some cantons' contingents of disciplined pikemen home.
After a delay of some time, the Swiss marched out to meet Francis's forces at the little burnt-out village at a bridgehead over a small river. The battle lasted more than 24 hours, a brutal and bloody engagement quite unlike either the courteous feinting of the
condottieri of the previous century, or the orderly and schematic presentation in the memorial painting (
upper right). In the moonlight and confusion, the outcome hung in the balance. Only the early-morning arrival of fresh light cavalry commanded by the
condottiero Bartolomeo d'Alviano, paid by the Venetian allies who had drawn Francis into Italy in the first place turned the tide against the Swiss. The previous day had seen a scandalous public auction of official places in Venice, described by the diarist
Marcantonio Michiel: "By the end of the day 47,000
ducats had been raised, though with the greatest shame and disrepute for the Great Council." Dispatch riders placed the sum in the hands of the
condottiero overnight.
By the peace of Noyon (1516), Milan was returned to France. The Franco-Swiss treaty of peace after Marignano has never been broken. However France had a decisive intervention into Switzerland at the end of the
18th century.
Marignano established the superiority of French cast
bronze artillery and
cavalry over the until-then invincible
phalanx tactics of the Swiss infantry. The victory of Francis at Marignano, however, eventually galvanized opposition in the divided
peninsula, and turned the
European
balance of power against Francis I. In the meantime, however, Francis gained the city, and more importantly, the
Castello Sforzesco within it, the strategic key to control of
Lombardy. There
Massimiliano Sforza and his Swiss mercenaries and the
cardinal-
bishop of Sion retreated, only submitting when French
sappers had placed mines under the foundations. The French regained Milan, and Massimiliano went into luxurious exile with a French purse of 30,000 ducats.
Marignano was also the first battle in history in which the
fife was used by the Swiss infantry to relay commands throughout the army.
Commemorating the event are a
bas-relief of the Battle of Marignano by
Pierre Bontemps, which decorates Francis I's tomb at
Saint-Denis; a painting by
Antoine Caron for
Fontainebleau (now at the
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa); and the most famous musical composition of
Clément Janequin, the
chanson La bataille.
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