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The 1799 Campaign in Italy: General Suvorov’s Arrival in
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1799 March, 12th |
Suvorov talkes command of the Russian
Army at
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1799 March, 25th |
Suvorov reaches
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1799 April, 4th |
Hermann Corps sent to
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1799 April, 14th |
Suvorov reaches
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General Aleksandr Suvorov |
The Lion Returns [1]
The travel from
The field marshal, wanting to save time, determined to
use that road for the moves of the army equipment and gave orders to
the soldiers to ford the streams. On the left road, elevated on a hill,
was an inn, a grey house whose ground floor was equipped with windows
secured by iron bars. There Suvorov made his quarters. He then
rode along the left bank of the Guà, encouraging those who were
crossing the torrent. Then he went to the inn in order to pass the night.
The next day, around 8 a.m., with already deployed troops, Suvorov was
visited by General Johann Gabriel de Chasteler, the Austrian Chief of
Staff in
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General Johann Chasteler |
While talking together, the
waiter carried two Italian “polenta” portions with roasted
lamb and, as soon as the meal finished, Chasteler put a map on the table,
on which were marked the Austrian positions and those of the French troops.
The Austrian explained the military situation to the Russian field marshal
and communicated that in the army of His Imperial Majesty Franz II were
42,683 combatants, a number inferior to that of all the French forces
scattered in Italy; he stated also that another Austrian Corps, that
of General Klenau with 4,500 men, was in reserve. After the
battles of
On April 14, towards noon, the Russian troops approached
the
A citizen, caressing the horses of the marshal, screamed: "Viva il nostro Liberatore ! (Alive our liberator!)”. People followed Suvorov’s coach until Villa Emilio, where the marshal, not loving the luxury, had chosen for himself the more unpretentious locations available. During the afternoon, at 3 p.m., he received the higher Austrian Staff, who had come with new orders. In the waiting room the officials were received by Prochor, Suvorov’s attendant. The marshal complimented the Austrian generals for their recent victories and, after their departure, he received the judges and deputies of the city. Later, in the evening, three Cossacks regiments appeared in the city, provoking great curiosity near the people. Their mode of dress and the eccentric armament were the main arguments of conversation. The Cossacks wore wide long pants “à la brachesse" and brown, red and blue long coats, coloured with incredible verve. They carried all kind of weapons and everyone had two horses to utilize; to their comparison the Russian infantry had more humble uniforms. During the night between April 14 and 15, Suvorov worked without sleeping and sent his orders for the forces’ forward movement. He sent an Austrian Corps towards Mantova, in whose citadel was the French garrison of General De Foissac, and sent to Goito another Russian column, the vanguard led by Prince Bagration, with whom the field marshal marched. Having reached Goito he decided to give to General Chasteler the task to distribute his new instructions in order to proceed in the advance and, on April 16, he took care personally of the troops reorganization, explaining to the Austrians the principles of his strategy.
| Infantry-General Andrej Grigorjevich Rozenberg Corps | 20,247 |
Rozenberg (Andrej Grigorjevich,
1730 - 1813) - General of Infantry, participated in
the Seven Years War and in the First Turkish War, was also
the
| Infantry Total | 16,013 men |
Cavalry Total |
2.930 cossacks |
Corps Artillery |
|
Artillery Battalion Lieutenant General Ejler |
632 men |
(with 1st Artillery Company Ivanov and 2nd Artillery Company Kuzmin) |
|
Divisional (regimental) Light Artillery |
672 men |
Division Lieutenant General Jacob Ivanovich Povalo-Shvejkovsky
1st
Brigade Major General Mihail Semionovich Baranovsky 2nd
Major General Baranowsky was the Chief of the Nizovski Musketeers Regiment from January 16, 1799 until probably January 28, 1801. From December 14, 1803 until May 29, 1805 he was the Chief of the Tobolsk Garrison Regiment. He was excluded from duty on May 29, 1805, the date of his death.
Imperial Russian Grenadier Regiment. Gd I Rozenberg or Moskowsky (Moskow) – 2 Battalions |
1424 |
Commander: (until June 10) Colonel Petr Petrovic Passek. |
|
Imperial Russian Musketeers Regiment. GM Baranowsky II or Nizowski Musketeer Regiment. – 2 Battalions |
1590 |
Commander: Colonel Mihail Aleksejevic Chitrowo |
|
Imperial Russian 7th Jäger Regiment. GM Bagration – 2 Battalions |
737 |
Commander: General Petr Ivanovic Bagration |
|
| Imperial Russian Grenadier Battalion (GB) Lomonosov | 606 |
5th Don Cossacks Regiment. Denissov |
490 |
|
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6th Don Cossacks Regiment. Pasdejev (written Posdeev) |
470 |
Brigade Major General Mihail Andrejevich Miloradovic 1st
Lieutenant General from November 8, 1800, infantry general from September 29,1809. From May 1, 1813 he was Column Brigadier. From July 27, 1798 to September 1, 1814 he was also the Chief of the Apsheronsky Musketeers Regiment
Imperial Russian Musketeers Regiment. Lieutenant General Förster (Ferster) or Tambowski (Tambov) |
1503 |
|
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Imperial Russian Musketeers Regiment. GM Mihail Andrejevich Miloradovic or Apsheronsky (Apsheron) |
1516 |
|
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| Imperial Russian Grenadier Battalion (GB) Dendrjugyn | 623 |
| Don Cossacks Regiment. Molchanov | 494 |
Division Lieutenant General Ivan Ivanovich Förster (in Russian Ferster)
Ivan Ivanovich Ferster (Förster,
Fershter) Born in 1739. In 1771 was the Second Major in the Karlopolsk
Carabiniers Regiment. Later Vyatski. Lieutenant General from January
22,1799. From June 4, 1797 to January 24, 1803 he was the Chief of the
Brigade Major General Jacob Ivanovich Tyrtov
Colonel, promoted to Major General on September 14, 1797
in order to became the Chief of the
Imperial Russian Musketeers Regiment. GM Tuyrtov or Tug’lsky (Tula) – 2 Battalions |
1527 |
|
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Imperial Russian Musketeers Regiment. GM Baron Ivan Ivanovich Dalheim or Archangelogorodsky (Archangelsk). |
1514 |
|
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Imperial Russian 8th JägerRegiment. Major General Chubarov |
750 |
|
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| Imperial Russian Grenadier Battalion (GB) Kalemin | 614 |
8th Don Cossacks Regiment. Grekov. |
494 |
Brigade Major General Mihail Mihajlovich Veletskij
He was the commander of the Suzdal Musketeers Regiment. He was promoted Major General on October 31, 1798 and commander of the Butyrsk Musketeers Regiment. until June 20, 1799 when he became the Chief of the same regiment until September 16, 1800.
Imperial Russian Musketeers Regiment. Young-Baden or molodo-Badensky – 2 Battalions |
1424 |
Chief: Lieutenant
General Karl Ludwig Prince of
|
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Imperial Russian Musketeer Regiment. Lieutenant-General Povalo-Shveikovsky or Smolensky (Smolensk) – 2 Battalions |
1510 |
Commander: Colonel Grigoriy Dimitrjevich Kazakhovsky |
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| Imperial Russian Grenadier Battalion (GB) Sanajev | 608 |
2nd Don Cossacks Regiment. Sujchev |
498 |
Don Cossacks Regiment. Semernikov (Semjornikov) |
484 |
Cavalry Detached from the Austrian Italienisches Armée See also Hohenzollern Brigade
K.K. 1st Light Dragoons Regiment. Kaiser Franz II (6 Squadrons) |
1000 |
K.K. 4th Light Dragoons Rgt Karacsay (6 Squadrons) |
1085 |
K.K. 2nd Hussars Regiment. Erzherzog Josef Anton (4 Squadrons) |
650 |
Notes:
[1] Aleksandr Vassiljevic Suvorov
Graf Rimniksky, Prince Italysky (1729-1800), was born ain
The campaign opened with a series of victories (Cassano,
Trebbia, Novi) which reduced the French government to dire straits and
drove every French soldier from Italy, save for the few under Moreau,
which maintained a base in the Maritime Alps and around Genoa. Suvarov
himself was made prince of
His son Arkadi (1783-1811) was a general officer in the Russian army during the Napoleonic and Turkish wars of the early 19th century, and was drowned in the river Rimnik. His grandson Aleksandr Arkadievich (1804-1882) was also a Russian general.
He was a great captain, viewed from the standpoint of any
age of military history, specially the great commander of the Russian
nation, for his leadership character responded to the character of the
Russian soldier. In an age when war had become an act of diplomacy he
restored its true significance as an act of force. He was reckless of
human life, bent only on the achievement of the object in hand, and he
spared his own soldiers as little as he showed mercy to the population
of a fallen city. He was a man of great simplicity of manners, and while
on a campaign lived as a private soldier, sleeping on straw and contenting
himself with the humblest fare. But he had himself passed through all
the gradations of military service; moreover, his education had been
of the rudest kind. His acid tongue procured him many enemies. He had
all the contempt of a man of ability and action for ignorant favourites
Officers and politicians. In
Placed on the Napoleon Series: June 2007
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