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Battle of Montenotte

Battle of Montenotte
Part of the French Revolutionary War
Attack On Monte Legino Redoubt.jpg
Attack on the redoubt of Monte-Legino by Giuseppe Pietro Bagetti (1764-1831)
Date 11 and 12 April 1796
Location near Cairo Montenotte,Italy
Result French victory
Belligerents
France French Republic Habsburg Monarchy Habsburg Austria
 Kingdom of Sardinia
Commanders and leaders
France Napoleon Bonaparte
France André Masséna
France Amédée Laharpe
FranceAntoine Rampon
Habsburg Monarchy Eugène Argenteau
Habsburg Monarchy Mathias Rukavina
Strength
9,000, 18 guns 6,000, 12 guns
Casualties and losses
880 2,500, 12 guns

The Battle of Montenotte was fought on 12 April 1796, during the French Revolutionary Wars, between the French army under General Napoleon Bonaparte and an Austrian corps under Count Eugène-Guillaume Argenteau. The French won the battle, which was fought near the village of Cairo Montenotte in the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont. The modern town is located in the northwestern part of Italy. On 11 April, Argenteau led 3,700 men in several assaults against a French mountaintop redoubt but failed to take it. By the morning of the 12th, Bonaparte concentrated large forces against Argenteau's now-outnumbered troops. The strongest French push came from the direction of the mountaintop redoubt, but a second force fell on the weak Austrian right flank and overwhelmed it. In its hasty retreat from the field, Argenteau's force lost heavily and was badly disorganized. This attack against the boundary between the Austrian and Sardinian armies threatened to sever the link between the two allies. This action was part of the Montenotte Campaign.

See Montenotte 1796 Campaign Order of Battle for the organization of the French, Austrian, and Sardinian armies.

On 27 March 1796, a young General Bonaparte arrived in Nice to take over the Army of Italy, his first army command. His army included 63,000 troops, but of these, only 37,600 men and 60 artillery pieces were capable of being put into the field. The soldiers were badly fed, months behind in pay, and poorly equipped. Consequently, morale in many units was low and in a few cases this had led to mutiny. Bonaparte's Austrian opponent, Feldzeugmeister Johann Peter Beaulieu was also new to the Italian theater of operations. Beaulieu directly controlled 19,500 Austrians of whom half were still in winter quarters. Beaulieu's subordinate Argenteau commanded an additional 11,500 Austrians who were deployed farther to the west around Acqui Terme. A Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont army of about 20,000 men was west of Argenteau's corps.


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