词条 | Siege of Turin |
释义 |
| conflict = Siege of Turin | partof = the War of the Spanish Succession | image = File:BattleofTurin.JPG | image_size = 300px | caption = The battle during the siege | date = 2 June – 7 September 1706 | place = Turin, Italy | result = Grand Alliance victory | combatant1 = {{flag|Duchy of Savoy}} after reinforcements {{flag|Habsburg Monarchy|name=Habsburg Austria}} {{flag|Prussia|1701}} | combatant2 = {{flagcountry|Kingdom of France}} {{flagicon|Spain|1701}} Bourbon Spain | commander1 = {{flagicon|Duchy of Savoy}} Victor Amadeus after reinforcements {{flagicon|Habsburg Monarchy}} Prince Eugene {{flagicon|Habsburg Monarchy}} Philipp von Daun | commander2 = {{flagicon|Kingdom of France}} Duke of Orleans {{flagicon|Kingdom of France}} Louis de la Feuillade {{flagicon|Kingdom of France}} Marshal Marsin{{KIA}} | strength1 = Garrison; 10,500 plus 4,000 militia During the battle; 30,000 | strength2 = 48,000 | casualties1 = 8,246 | casualties2 = 29,500 }}{{Campaignbox War of the Spanish Succession}} The Siege of Turin lasted from June to September 1706 when a French-led force besieged Victor Amadeus' capital of Turin during the War of the Spanish Succession. The siege was broken when a combined Savoyard/Imperial army relieved the city in September; this was a major turning point for the war in Italy. {{Location map many|Italy Piedmont|caption = Northern Italy; key locations |border = black|width =320|float = left|relief = yes|Italy Piedmont#Italy|label = Susa |pos = left |lat_deg =45|lat_min =08|lon_deg = 7 |lon_min = 03 |label2 = Turin |pos2= right |lat2_deg =45|lat2_min=05|lon2_deg = 7|lon2_min = 41 |label3 = Chivasso |pos3 = right |lat3_deg =45|lat3_min=11|lon3_deg = 7|lon3_min = 43 |label4 = Collegno |pos4 = left |lat4_deg =45|lat4_min=05|lon4_deg = 7|lon4_min = 35 |label5 = Milan |pos5 = left |lat5_deg =45|lat5_min=28|lon5_deg = 9 |lon5_min = 11 |label6 = Carmagnola |pos6 = right |lat6_deg =44|lat6_min=51|lon6_deg = 7|lon6_min = 43 |label7 = Pinerolo |pos7 = left |lat7_deg =44|lat7_min=53|lon7_deg = 7|lon7_min = 20 |label8 = Genoa |pos8 = bottom |lat8_deg =44|lat8_min=24|lon8_deg = 08|lon8_min = 56 |label9 = Ceva |pos9 = bottom |lat9_deg =44|lat9_min=23|lon9_deg = 08|lon9_min = 02 }} BackgroundBy the end of 1705, France and its allies controlled most of Northern Italy, as well as the Savoyard territories of Villefranche and the County of Savoy, now in modern-day France. Vendôme decided it was too late in the year for a full-scale assault on Turin and its capture became the main objective for 1706.[1] To prevent interference from Imperial forces in Lombardy, Vendôme took the offensive and his victory at Calcinato on 19 April drove them into the Trentino valley. The Austrian commander Prince Eugene now returned from Vienna and quickly restored order, taking his remaining forces around Lake Garda and into the Province of Verona.{{efn|While this was part of the Republic of Venice and technically neutral, in practice this was ignored.}} This left 30,000 Imperial troops around Verona facing 40,000 French spread between the Mincio and Adige rivers.[2] Marshall Louis de La Feuillade and 48,000 men arrived before Turin on 12 May, although the blockade was not completed until 19 June.[3] The strong French position changed after their disastrous defeat at Ramillies on 23 May; this led to the diversion of resources, including Vendôme's return to France; on 8 July, Philippe II, Duke of Orléans assumed command in Italy, with Marshal Ferdinand de Marsin as his advisor. The siegeAs was now customary, Turin's defences were divided between the outer City, containing the residential and commercial areas, with the Citadel at its core. La Feuillade and Vendôme proposed digging trenches around the City at a distance of 300-400 metres, then blasting the Citadel into submission; this approach was known as the 'Coehoorn method', after the Dutch military engineer, Menno van Coehoorn. The Citadel's defences had been significantly improved since 1696, largely based on advice provided by Vauban; much of it was now underground and he recommended first taking the City, enabling the artillery to target the base of the Citadel's walls, rather than the higher parts.[4] This advice was ignored and Vauban allegedly offered to have his throat cut if Turin were captured using this approach.[5] With Philipp von Daun commanding the garrison, Victor Amadeus left the city on 17 June with 6,000 cavalry, seeking to disrupt French supply lines and buy time for Prince Eugene's relief force. La Feuillade spent most of the next month chasing him around Southern Piedmont and by the end of July, it was clear the siege was moving too slowly. As Vauban predicted, the bombardment inflicted considerable damage but the Citadel walls remained intact and on 15 August, Prince Eugene began his advance on Turin. Orléans' covering force failed to stop him and joined La Feuillade; their combined forces assaulted the Citadel three times between 27 August and 3 September but were all repulsed with heavy loss.{{efn|The Piedmontese hero Pietro Micca was killed during the second assault on 31 August.}} On 29 August Prince Eugene reached Carmagnola, where he was joined by Victor Amadeus. Often overlooked, this was a considerable achievement and shows why Eugene was so well regarded; taking over a battered and defeated army, he first reorganised it, then ...marched 200 miles in 24 days...crossed four major rivers, pierced lines drawn between the mountains to the seas to stop him...and drove superior numbers of the enemy before him.[6] French forces around Turin still outnumbered those of Eugene and Victor Amadeus by 42,000 to 30,000; however, they were dispersed around the city while morale was low after the failed and costly assaults. On 5 September, the Savoyard/Imperial army concentrated at Collegno, between the Dora Riparia and the Stura di Lanzo rivers near a weak spot in the French lines. They launched their attack around 10:00 am on 7 September; after three failed attempts, Prussian infantry under the Prince of Anhalt-Dessau broke the French right wing and their position began to collapse.[7] Both Marsin and Orléans were wounded, Marsin fatally; the French lost 2,000 dead and 6,000 captured,{{efn|These figures assume most of the French wounded were left behind and captured.}} the relief force 1,800 dead and 4,000 wounded.[8] While French positions around the rest of Turin remained intact, the siege was broken; they retreated east towards Pinerolo and Victor Amadeus re-entered his capital the same day.[9] AftermathOn 8 September, a French detachment in Lombardy under the Count of Médavy defeated a Hessian corps at Castiglione but this did not affect the strategic position. Although the French still had substantial numbers of men in both Pinerolo and Susa, Victor Amadeus correctly calculated they would not conduct offensive operations. His Duchy was enlarged by the new territory of Montferrat but Nice and the County of Savoy were not returned until 1713 while Savoyard ambitions to gain Milan remained unfulfilled for another 150 years.[10] To the fury of his Allies, in March 1707, Emperor Joseph signed the Convention of Milan with France ending the war in Italy. The French withdrew their remaining garrisons, ceding control of Milan and Mantua to Austria but given free passage to France, allowing them to be redeployed elsewhere.[11] Prince Eugene agreed to support Allied operations in Spain by attacking the French naval base at Toulon but the Austrians then diverted 10,000 troops to capture the Spanish-held Kingdom of Naples, making it the dominant power in Italy.{{efn|Without significant naval forces of its own, Austria could not take Sicily and both were recaptured by Spain in 1734.}} The Siege of Turin and the death of the Piedmontese hero Pietro Micca became significant parts of the history first of the Savoyard and then the Italian state. This was portrayed in the 1938 Italian film Pietro Micca. On its third centenary in 2006, a number of studies were published to mark the occasion including Le Aquile e i Gigli. Una storia mai scritta.[12] Footnotes{{notelist}}References1. ^{{cite book|last1=Symcox|first1=Geoffrey|title=Victor Amadeus II: Absolutism in the Savoyard State, 1675-1730|date=1983|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=0520049748|page=149}} 2. ^{{cite book|last1=Lynn|first1=John|title=The Wars of Louis XIV 1667-1714|date=1999|publisher=Longman|isbn=0582056292|page=309}} 3. ^Symcox, p.150. 4. ^{{cite book|last1=Duffy|first1=Christopher|title=The Fortress in the Age of Vauban and Frederick the Great 1660-1789|date=1985|publisher=Routledge|isbn=1138924644|pages=50-51|edition=2017}} 5. ^{{cite book|last1=Lynn|first1=John|title=The Wars of Louis XIV 1667-1714|date=1999|publisher=Longman|isbn=0582056292|page=309}} 6. ^{{cite book|last1=Somerville|first1=Thomas|title=The History of Great Britain During the Reign of Queen Anne|date=1795|publisher=Forgotten Books|isbn=1333572379|page=137|edition=2018}} 7. ^Symcox, p.151. 8. ^{{cite book|last1=Frey, Linda|first1=Frey, Marsha|title=The Treaties of the War of the Spanish Succession: An Historical and Critical Dictionary|date=1995|publisher=Greenwood|isbn=0313278849|page=446}} 9. ^Lynn, p.310 10. ^{{cite book|last1=Symcox|first1=Geoffrey|title=Victor Amadeus II: Absolutism in the Savoyard State, 1675-1730|date=1983|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=0520049748|pages=152-1523}} 11. ^{{cite book|last1=Sundstrom|first1=Roy A|title=Sidney Godolphin: Servant of the State|date=1992|publisher=EDS Publications Ltd|isbn=0874134382|page=196}} 12. ^{{cite book|title=Le Aquile e i Gigli. Una storia mai scritta|editor=Giovanni Cerino Badone|location= Turin|year=2007|isbn=978-88-7241-512-2}} Sources
External links
12 : Battles of the War of the Spanish Succession|Sieges involving France|Conflicts in 1706|1706 in France|1706 in Italy|History of Turin|1706 in the Holy Roman Empire|Sieges of the War of the Spanish Succession|Sieges involving Savoy|Sieges involving the Holy Roman Empire|Sieges involving Austria|Sieges involving Prussia |
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