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Battle of Modena (1799)

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Battle of Modena (1799)
Part of War of the Second Coalition
Date12 June 1799
LocationModena, Italy44°39′N 10°56′E / 44.650°N 10.933°E / 44.650; 10.933
Result French victory
Belligerents
France France Habsburg monarchy Habsburg Austria
Commanders and leaders
France Jacques MacDonald (WIA) Habsburg monarchy Prince Hohenzollern
Units involved
Army of Naples Mantua Siege Corps
Strength
29,000 4,300
Casualties and losses
600 2,400, 8 guns
Italian Campaigns
of the French Revolutionary Wars
Italian campaign of 1796–1797
Italian campaign of 1799–1801
War of the Second Coalition

War of the Second Coalition:
Italy About OpenStreetMapsMaps: terms of use 50km
30miles Marengo12Battle of Marengo on 14 June 1800 11Battle of Montebello (1800) on 9 June 1800 10Siege of Genoa (1800) from 6 April to 4 June 1800 9Battle of Genola on 4 November 1799 8Battle of Novi (1799) on 15 August 1799 Second Battle of Novi (1799) on 24 October 1799 7Siege of Mantua (1799) from April–July 1799 6Battle of Trebbia (1799) from 17 to 20 June 1799 5 4Battle of Bassignana (1799) on 12 May 1799 3Battle of Cassano (1799) on 27 April 1799 2Battle of Magnano on 5 April 1799 Verona1Battle of Verona (1799) on 26 March 1799    current battle  Napoleon in command  Napoleon not in command

The Battle of Modena (12 June 1799) saw a Republican French army commanded by Jacques MacDonald attack a Habsburg Austrian covering force led by Prince Friedrich Franz Xaver of Hohenzollern-Hechingen. The outnumbered Austrians were defeated but in an accidental encounter, MacDonald was painfully wounded by two saber cuts. The action occurred during the War of the Second Coalition, part of a larger conflict known as the French Revolutionary Wars. Modena is a city in northern Italy about 40 kilometres (25 mi) northwest of Bologna.

In the battles of Magnano and Cassano, the Austrians and allied Russian Empire forces swept the French from much of northern Italy in April 1799. MacDonald collected the French occupying forces in south and central Italy into an army and marched north to retrieve the situation. Bursting out of the Apennine Mountains, the French divisions of Jean-Baptiste Olivier and François Watrin mauled Hohenzollern's division at Modena. MacDonald swung west to fight the Coalition forces. The next action would be the Battle of the Trebbia (1799) from 17 to 19 June.

See also

References


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