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Battle of Pastrengo

Skirmish of Pastrengo
Part of the First Italian War of Independence
Patria Esercito Re p051.jpg
Charge of the Carabinieri
Date 30 April 1848
Location Pastrengo, Lombardy-Venetia
Result Sardinian victory
Belligerents
Flag of Sardinia Kingdom (1848 - 1851).gif Kingdom of Sardinia Flag of the Habsburg Monarchy.svg Austrian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Flag of Sardinia Kingdom (1848 - 1851).gif Charles Albert
Flag of Sardinia Kingdom (1848 - 1851).gif General Broglia
Flag of the Habsburg Monarchy.svg Marshal Wocher
Flag of the Habsburg Monarchy.svg Hauptmann Nagel 
Strength
13,700 engaged 5,900 Troops
well-entrenched posts
Casualties and losses
15 killed
90 wounded
25 killed
147 wounded
341 captured
42 MIA

The Skirmish of Pastrengo was fought between the Piedmontese and Austrian army on 30 April 1848, in the course of the First Italian War of Independence.

The Austrian forces were deployed in a way that threatened any Piedmontese attack against the fortress of Peschiera del Garda, and against Verona. Therefore, the Piedmontese High Command decided to act energetically against it to neutralize this threat, with the II Corps (commanded by General Ettore Gerbaix De Sonnaz, supported by the reserve division.

Although some sources claimed that the troops of the Kingdom of Sardinia were for the most part volunteers from regions of northern Italy, in fact those consted of four brigades of the Piedmontese regular army. Among the troops at Pastrengo, there were recorded, 1,000 volunteers from Parma, 150 volunteers from Piacenza and 400 students from Pavia and Turin.

The Piedmontese attack, while done with superior forces, was executed rather poorly, in frontal actions and without taking adequate advantage of the numerical superiority, nor with proper reconnaissance done before the battle. On the right the brigade "Savoia" proceeded slowly, hampered by the unknown terrain; on the center and right the brigades "Cuneo" and "Piemonte" met with better success, and after three hours at 14:00 the Piedmontese line began to advance. Despite attempts by the Austrian commander to delay it, the offensive proceeded up to the pontoon-bridge on the river Adige. After this success, however, the Piedmontese stopped and did not advance further.

As documented by the New monthly magazine: Vol. 83, 1848:

"On the 30th of April, what is called in the bulletin issued from the headquarters of the Sardinian army, "the first battle between the two armies of Italy," was fought. The end proposed was to occupy Bussolengo, Pastrengo, and Piovezzana, and to attempt to force the Adige. The affair commenced at half-past eleven, A.m. The Italian troops succeeded in driving the Austrians from all the positions which they occupied at Pastrengo, and in gaining the heights which command the Adige."


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