Battle of Ravenna (1512) explained

Conflict:Battle of Ravenna
Partof:the War of the League of Cambrai
Date:11 April 1512
Place:Near Ravenna, present-day Italy
Result:Franco-Ferrarese victory
Combatant1:Kingdom of France
Duchy of Ferrara
Combatant2:Spain
Papal States
Commander1:Gaston de Foix
Jacques de La Palice
Alfonso I d'Este
Commander2:Fabrizio Colonna
Ramón de Cardona
Pedro Navarro
Strength1:
  • 2,000 men left to hold Ravenna
  • 21,000 men engaged against the relief army
  • 54 artillery pieces
Strength2:
  • Garrison at Ravenna: 5,000 men
  • Relief army: 16,000 men
  • 30 artillery pieces
Casualties1:
  • 3,000–4,500 dead
  • 4,500 wounded
Casualties2:
  • 9,000 dead
  • Unknown wounded
  • 17,000 civilians massacred

The Battle of Ravenna, fought on 11 April 1512, was a major battle of the War of the League of Cambrai. It pitted forces of the Holy League against France and their Ferrarese allies. Although the French and Ferrarese eliminated the Papal–Spanish forces as a serious threat, their triumph was overshadowed by the loss of their young general Gaston of Foix. The victory therefore did not help them secure northern Italy. The French withdrew entirely from Italy in the summer of 1512, as Swiss mercenaries hired by Pope Julius II and Imperial troops under Emperor Maximilian I arrived in Lombardy. The Sforza were restored to power in Milan.

Monster of Ravenna

A month before the battle, multiple sources reported a monstrous birth which became known as the Monster of Ravenna. This child's terrifying features included a horn on its forehead, wings, an eye on its knee, and a clawed foot, according to Florentine chronicler Luca Landucci.[1] Its appearance was a cause for alarm, and news spread across Europe in the diaries of contemporary writers.

Most accounts, including that of Landucci's, associate the "monster's" appearance with the battle it preceded; its appearance was taken for a bad omen of future suffering, and the French medical professional Ambroise Paré opined that the creature's birth was a direct sign of God's wrath, brought to bear in the form of Louis XII's army.[2] Regardless, the Monster of Ravenna acquired theological implications which evolved beyond the one battle and persisted well into the Protestant Reformation.

Prelude

Beginning in February 1512, the French forces in Italy, newly commanded by Gaston de Foix, Duc de Nemours, had been engaged in capturing cities in the Romagna and the Veneto, in an attempt to deny control of those regions to the forces of the Holy League. Although he had been successful in a number of sieges, Nemours was aware that the impending invasion of France by Henry VIII of England would cause much of his army to be withdrawn, and he was determined to force the main army of the Holy League into battle before that occurred. Thus, in late March, Nemours, together with an Italian contingent under Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara, marched east from Bologna. The French army reached Ravenna on April 8 and started a bombardment of the city on the following day. A general assault was launched after a breach was made, but the attack was repulsed by Papal troops who defended the city. Over the next couple of days, the French forces attempted three "fruitless assaults".[3]

Notes and References

  1. Niccoli, Prophecy and People in Renaissance Italy, 36.
  2. Daston and Park, Wonders and the Order of Nature, 177; Paré, On Monsters and Marvels, 6.
  3. Donvito, F. (2012). "Storm of steel: The Battle of Ravenna