The Coalition’s Rearguard
Austrian Reserves and Garrisons
Brescia and Bergamo Citadals
III Battalion K.K. IR 40 Hungarian Rifle
Line Inf. Regiment. FZM Graf Joseph Mittrowsky
|
723 |
Verona Citadal
K.K. IR 26 Rifle Line Inf. Regiment.
Freiherr Wilhelm Schröder von Lilienhoff
|
1162
|
Cdr: Oberst Rudolph Avemann
- (had three battalions I, II and III)
|
Legnago Citadal
III Battalion K.K. IR 45 Rifle
Line Inf. Regiment. Freiherr Franz von Lattermann
|
517 |
Venice
IV Battalion K.K. IR 18
Rifle Line Inf. Regiment. Graf Patrick Stuart
|
928
|
K.K. IR 10 Rifle Line Inf. Regiment. (former
IR Rgt Kheul)
|
2514
|
(Three battalion in Venice.
They will be sent later to Mantua) Cdr: Oberst Freiherr Ferdinand
Beulwitz
|
Friuli, Trieste and Istria
K.K. IR 44 Rifle Line Inf. Regiment. (no
Inhaber)
|
822
|
The former Italian regiment
Belgiojoso. Cdr: Freiherr Philipp von Brentano-Cimaroli.
I and II Battalions.
|
I Battalion 1st Grenzregiment
Carlstädt-Liccaner (Lika)
|
1011
|
I Battalion 2nd Grenzregiment
Carlstädt-Otoschatz (Otočac) former 2nd Carlstadt
Battalion
|
1151
|
II Battalion 2nd Grenzregiment Carlstädt-Otoschatz (Otočac) former
3rd Carlstadt Battalion
|
1151
|
III Battalion 3rd Grenzregiment Carlstädt-Oguliner (Ogulin) former
7th Carlstadt Battalion
|
961
|
IV Battalion Banal Grenzregiment or
II Battalion 10th GrenzRegiment. of Glina
|
765
|
K.K. Grenadier battalion Freiherr Franz von Neny
|
265
|
|
|
|
|
The Fortresses
Mantua
As a fortress Mantua was one of the most formidable in Europe, a
force of thirty to forty thousand men finding accommodation within
its walls; but it had two serious defects: the marshy climate told
heavily on the health of the garrison, and effective sorties were
almost impossible. After Magnano General Kray was placed in charged
of the besieging operations. Initially he detached, with a small
force, General Elsnitz in order to organize the necessary siege camp
around the city, later, and before the beginning of the Adda combats,
he reached that camp leading the siege until its end, in Summer 1799.
From that moment, the Austrian Mantua’s besieging army became
the real Rearguard of the Italienische Armée, a kind of very
large reserve unit for the campaign.
From a strategic standpoint of view, we can say that Mantua, in
1799, had not the same impact as in the 1796 campaign. In Suvorov’s
campaign, the Coalition armies had always a numerical supremacy over
the French, similar to Austria during the last 1796 months.
However the Mantua blockade was not so crucial in 1799 as it had
been three years before (when the blockades of the two fortress of
Mantua and Kehl, in Germany, decided all the operational development).
Probably the French had more motivated soldiers, for almost certainly
they did not encounter the Italian people’s resentment,
and above all, they Bonaparte as commander, and Massena and
Augereau as “executives”.
Peschiera
 |
The Fortress at Peschiera |
Medieval Lord Mastino della Scala beganthe town fortification works:
the castle (Rocca) was constructed over a Roman building and in
athe 15th Century, the fortress was finally composed by a group of
civil houses, surrounded by walls with towers disposed on five sides. In
1439 Peschiera was part of the Serenissima Republic of Venice. The
town in 1549 had a new fortress which assumed a pentagonal shape.
The town-walls were substituted with bastions, made with stones and
earth, placed on the pentagonal base. This system of town-wall fortifications
knitted the two ancient islands with singular and powerful fortified
bridges, connecting together the two fortresses crossed by the main
branch of the Mincio river.
This fortress configuration remained unchanged until the French
arrival in 1796, after the fall of the Venice Republic. Initially
the fortress was kept as originally, a border watch building. From
1800 and during the French domination (1801-1814) it was partially
dismantled in order to build a set of fortications: a system
of separate forts, which surrounded the town, on dominant positions,
within the countryside. Peschiera surrendered on May 7, 1799.
Cisalpine Garrison
Peschiera Fortress: Adjudant général Couthieux
(French)
Infantry
|
1000
|
Guns
|
75
|
Gunboats
|
19
|
Chief-of-Engineers Staff (Army of Italy): Marquis François
de Chasseloup-Laubat [1]
II Battalion 21st Line Demi-brigade
|
600
|
On May 6, 1799, Peschiera
surrendered. The Austrians captured a flag of the 21e Demi-Brigade,
which was there with one battalion
|
Coalition Siege Group
First Deployment
Kolonne Marquis Hannibal Sommariva
K.K. IR
34 Hungarian Rifle Regiment.
|
1528 |
(the
former Esterházy Regiment) I and II Battalions
Commander: Oberst Johann Hillinger
|
K.K. IR
19 Hungarian Rifle Regiment. Freiherr Jozsef Alvinczy
de Berberek
|
1476
|
I and
II Battalions . – Commander: Barone Lelio Spannocchi
|
|
K.K. 10th
Dragoons Regiment. GdC Joseph Fürst Lobkowitz
|
368
|
2
Squadrons – Cdr. Marquis Hannibal Sommariva
|
|
Second Deployment
Siege Group Obst Johann Schröckinger
von Neudenberg [2]
|
|
K.K. IR 8 Rifle Regiment. (former
Huff Rgt)
|
1805 |
Commander: Obst Johann Schröckinger
von Neudenberg (I-II Battalions ) – III Battalion at
Mantua siege.
|
Brigade Major General Graf Johann
Franz de Saint Julien
|
3176
|
l Jäger-Kompanie d’Aspre
|
130
|
K.K. IR 48 Hungarian Rifle
Regiment. (no Inhaber)
|
1402
|
It will became the Regiment.
Freiherr Philipp von Vukassovic . Cdr: Oblt Franz De Baut I – II – III
Battalions
|
K.K. IR 14 Rifle Regiment. Freiherr
Wilhelm von Klebek
|
1644
|
I – II – III
Battalions . Cdr: Oberst Freiherr Franz Kottulinsky
|
Flanking Units from Tyroler Armée
Rocca d’Anfo
Cisalpine Infantry
|
300
|
Guns
|
??
|
 |
The Fortress at Anfo |
The
Anfo Fortress, a military structure re-built by Napoleon on a former
structure, is a reminder of ancient times. It is a unique example
of its kind in Europe, with its eight camouflaged and interconnected
forts dug out in the mountain at various heights dominating the road
between Trento and
Brescia over the
Lake
Idro (
Brescia province). On April 11, Vukassovich took the Rocca d’Anfo
on
Lake
Idro, then advanced to Fusine and Lavignano near
Brescia. His Avant-Garde led by Colonel Prodanovich occupied Goito,
Roverbella and Marmirolo. On April 12, Vukassovich took Castel
Belforte, Bigarella and the right bank of the Molinella. General
Elsnitz cautiously advanced on the
Mantua plains with 11 battalions and 8 squadrons. General Sommariva
was ordered to siege Peschiera and put 3 battalions at Monzambano,
with outposts on
Lake Garda until Goito, deploying 1 battalion And 2 squadrons.
as garrison in Castelnuovo and Cavalcaselle. Colonel Schröckinger
was sent from Mozambano to Ponti to block Peschiera on the Mincio’s
right bank.
Brigade Major General Freiherr
Josef Philipp von Vukassovich
|
6938
|
The Verona OoB’s numbers
were from Clausewitz. These are from Miljutin.
|
Right Kolonne Avant Garde (Oberst)
Major General Sebastian Prodanovich
|
|
Jäger Freikorps Mjr Johann Le
Loup (dutch Battalion -3 Company s)
|
394
|
K.K. Light Battalion N. 14 Oberst
Prince Ludwig (Louis) Rohan (Italian Battalion .)
|
649
|
K.K. Light Battalion N. 15 Oberst
Bonaventura Mihanovic (croat-slavonian)
|
800
|
K.K. Light Battalion N. 2 Oberst
Carl Prince of Rohan (Italian Battalion )
|
580
|
II Battalion Grenzregiment of
Banat (or I Battalion 13th GrenzRgt)
|
1005
|
On April 8, 1799 Oberst Carl
Rohan personally led the attack against the French outpost
of San Antonio (Lake Idro) supporting the successive attack
up to the steep rocky climb of Rocca d’Anfo. Carl Rohan,
then, was charged to secure the right flank of the Vukassovich
main column which was marching towards Brescia.
|
Left (Haupt)Kolonne von Vukassovich
|
|
V Battalion Grenzregiment of
Banat
|
600
|
KK IR 52 Rifle Hungarian Regiment.
Erzherzog Palatin Anton Viktor
|
2700
|
I – II –III Battalions
cdr: Graf Johann Nepomuk Khuen de Belasi
|
K.K. 9th Hussar Regiment. FML
Johann Nepomuk Graf Erdödy de Monyorókerek (Erdödy Husaren)
|
210
|
Fortress Orzinuovi or San Giorgio
Cisalpine garrison
 |
The Fortress at Orzinuovi |
Orzinuovi traces its origins to 1193, when Brescia’s
people decided to erect a fortress in this strategic location near
the Oglio River. In 1520, Venice entrusted the architect Sammicheli
with the task of making the citadel invulnerable; it took the form
of a five-pointed star with seven ramparts. Of that powerful complex,
today there remains only the Rocca (1477), a work of the military
architect Giovanni Borella; now in restoration.
It was attacked by count Alcaini Gruppe on May 1, 1799 and the
garrison (Cisalpines and some French) surrendered (500 men + 100
wounded, recovered in hospital) on the same day. Graf Alcaini took
the 40 guns of the fortress. Alcaini had 7 battalions . And 2 squadrons.
He spent the rest of the campaign with troops of Vukassovich, Strauch
and Rohan.
Another commander from Tirol’s Army:
Major General Johann (Giovanni) Graf Alcaini [3]
Pizzighettone
Pizzighettone
Fortress Cdr. Capt. Jacquet
|
Infantry
|
630
|
Guns
|
96
|
 |
The Fortress at Pizzighettone |
If the River Po was the principal line of defence, the Pizzighettone-Cremona-Piacenza
triangle, with Alessandria to the left and Mantua to the right, would
provide effective defence of this line and enable the army either
to wait in security for the arrival of distant allies or if need
be to advance offensively in the decisive plain between the Sesia
and the Adige.
The base of the "Gera public square" was constituted in
the period of half XVII century, in 1654, during the 30 Years War,
when Lombardy was an Habsburg of Spain dominion. Planned by the mathematician
Alexander Champion, at the service of the Governor Luis de Benavidez
Marquis of Caracena, the Fortress of Gera supported the Fortress
Pizzighettone, a bridgehead erected in order to control the passage
on river Adda and communication between Cremona and the rest of the
"Milanesado". The fort was rebuilt many times in the 1600s and
the 1700s: in particular, during the Austrian dominion, between 1720
and 1725, under Emperor Carl of Habsburg, when it obtained the current
conformation. On May 11, 1799, the fortress was bombarded by Austrian
artillery for a full day and surrendered in the early evening.
Pizzighettone Siege
Corps – May
1, 1799
|
Brigade Gen.Major Friedrich Xavier
Fürst Hohenzollern-Hechingen
|
|
K.K. IR 36 Rifle Regiment. Fürst
Carl Fürstenberg I – II -III Battalions
|
2576
|
K.K. IR 32 Hungarian Rifle
Regiment. Graf Samuel Gyulai I - II Battalions
|
1482
|
|
Brigade Major General Friedrich
Freiherr von Seckendorf [4]
|
|
K.K. 5th Hussar Regiment 6 Sqn. Cdr.
Freiherr Andreas Szörenyi
|
826
|
Pizzighettone Siege
Corps – May
6-7, 1799
|
Division Major General Konrad
Valentin Kaim
|
K.K. Hungarian
Grenadier Battalion Oberleutnant Ferdinand Pers
garrison at Lodi and Pizzighettone
|
199
|
K.K. IR 24 Rifle Rgt (former
Preiss)
|
1424
|
(Battalions I – II – III)
- Commander: Oberst Carl Philipp von Weidenfeld
|
|
K.K. IR 32 Hungarian Rifle
Regiment. Graf Samuel Gyulai
|
1482
|
Commander: Oberst Franz Posztrehowsky
von Millenburg - (I-II-Battalions ) III Battalion to
Mantua
|
|
K.K. IR 36 Rifle Regiment. Fürst
Carl Fürstenberg
|
2576
|
(I-II-III Battalion ) Commander: Oberst
Conrad von Thelen
|
|
VII Combined Battalion Grenzregiment
Warasdiner of Varazdin
|
627
|
K.K. 5th Hussar Regiment 6 Sqn. Cdr.
ObstLt. Freiherr Andreas Szörenyi
|
826
|
|
Pizzighettone Garrison after the Fortress Was Taken –
May 20, 1799
|
|
K.K. Hungarian
Grenadier Battalion Oberleutnant Ferdinand Pers
garrison in Lodi and in Pizzighettone
|
199
|
Notes
[1] Marquis
François de Chasseloup-Laubat (August
18, 1754 - October 3, 1833), , was born at St Semi. (
Lower Charente), of a noble family, and entered the French engineers
in 1774. He was still a subaltern at the outbreak of the Revolution,
becoming captain in 1791. His ability as a military engineer was
recognized in the campaigns of 1792 and 1793. In the following
year he won distinction in various actions and was promoted successively chef-de-bataillon and
colonel. He was Engineers chief at the
Mainz siege in 1796, after which he was sent to
Italy
. There he commanded and organized the lines’ positions
of Bonaparte. He was promoted general-de-brigade before the end
of the campaign, and was subsequently employed in fortifying
the new French Rhine border.
His work as Engineers’ Chief in the army
of
Italy
(1799) had good results, and he was made general-de-division after
the battle of
Novi. When Napoleon began his new campaign in 1800 to retrieve the
1799 disasters, Chasseloup was again chosen as the Chief of Engineers.
During the era of peace (1801-1805) he was mainly ordered to reorganize
the defenses of northern
Italy
, and, in particular, those ine
Mantua’s area. His masterpiece was the large
Alessandria fortress by the
Tanaro
River.
In 1805 he remained in
Italy
with André Masséna, but at the end of 1806, Napoleon,
leading the Polish Campaign, called him to his Grande Armée,
with which he served during the campaign of 1806-07, directing sieges
at Colberg, Danzig and
Stralsund. During the Napoleonic domination in
Germany
, Chasseloup reconstructed many fortresses, in particular
Magdeburg. In the 1809 campaign he was again in
Italy
. In 1810 Napoleon made him a State Advisor. His last active campaign
was the Russian of 1812.
Retired from active
service, in 1814 he was occasionally engaged for inspections and
construction of fortifications. Louis XVIII made him a peer of
France
and a knight of
St Louis. He refused to join Napoleon during the Hundred Days, but
after the second Restoration he voted in the chamber of peers against
the condemnation of Marshal Ney. As an Engineer, Chasseloup was a
supporter of the old bastioned system, though with some modern views,.
He followed in many respects the works of the Engineer Bousmard,
published in 1797 and who fell, as a Prussian officer, during the
Danzig defence of 1807 against Chasseloup's own attack. His ideas
were applied at
Alessandria, which had many upgrades of the bastion outline, with,
in particular, the masked tenaille flanks, which served as extra
flanks of the bastions. The bastions themselves were carefully entrenched.
The usual “Rivellino” (ravelin) was replaced with an
heavy casemated caponier (à la Montalembert), and, like Bousmard's,
the true ravelin became a large and powerful fort built outer, beyond
the glacis.
[2] Oberst
Johann Schröckinger von Neudenberg,
(died 26 July 1808), provisional Generamajor on March 6 (26?)1800,
confirmed on 22 April1800, retired in 1805.
[3] A brigade from the Tyroler Armée was attached as Armée
Reserve. (Johann Baptist) Giovanni
Battista Reichsgraf von Alcaini was born in
Venice on August 18, 1748. On January 24, 1794 he was named provisional
major general and confirmed in that rank on February 12, 1794.
In 1799 he was 55 years old; from September 1, had the provisional
rank of Field Marshal Lieutenant and was confirmed on October 2,
1799. He died on October 8, 1800, from the severe wounds suffered
during Tortona siege.
[4] Major General Friedrich
Alexander Wilhelm Freiherr von Seckendorf-Aberdar,
(2 August 1743 – 11 June1814). Had the provisional nomination
to major general from 1 May 1 1794 but on May 30 his promotion
was official. He followed FML Wurmser in Italy often employed
as Staff organizer, cavalry reserve commander and adjudant. He
did not stay in Mantua, but remained in Tirol where he participated
to the deployment of the right wing at Rivoli, January 14, 1797,
in the place of FML Davidovich. He was with Mélas during
the 1799 campaign often performing rearguard or siege tasks.
On September 12, 1799 he was provisionally named Feldmarschalleutnant,
rank confirmed a month later, October 2, 1799.