Battle of Novi (1799)

The Battle of Novi (15 August 1799) saw a combined army of the Habsburg monarchy and Imperial Russians under Field Marshal Alexander Suvorov attack a Republican French army under General Barthélemy Catherine Joubert. As soon as Joubert fell during the battle, Jean Victor Marie Moreau immediately took overall command of the French forces. After a prolonged and bloody struggle, the Austro-Russians broke through the French defenses and drove their enemies into a disorderly retreat, while French division commanders Catherine-Dominique de Pérignon and Emmanuel Grouchy were captured. Novi Ligure is in the province of Piedmont in Northern Italy a distance of 58 kilometres (36 mi) north of Genoa. The battle occurred during the War of the Second Coalition which was part of the French Revolutionary Wars.

Battle of Novi (1799)
Part of the Italian campaigns in the War of the Second Coalition

Battle of Novi, by Alexander Kotzebue
Date15 August 1799
Location
Novi Ligure, Piedmont, Italy
44°45′42″N 8°47′26″E
Result Austro-Russian victory
Belligerents
Russian Empire
Habsburg monarchy
French Republic
  •   Polish Legion
  •   Lombard Legion
Commanders and leaders
Alexander Suvorov
Wilhelm Derfelden
Pyotr Bagration
Mikhail Miloradovich
Ivan Förster
Paul Kray
Michael von Melas
Peter Ott
Heinrich von Bellegarde
Michael von Fröhlich
Anton Mittrowsky
Alexander von Seckendorff
Johann Nobili
Barthélemy Joubert 
Jean Moreau
Dominique de Pérignon (POW)
Emmanuel de Grouchy (POW)
Louis Lemoine
Laurent de Gouvion Saint-Cyr
Gaspard Gardanne
François Watrin
Pierre de Laboissière
Jan Dąbrowski
Units involved
See Allied army See French army
Strength
  • 51,547 in battle
    • 35,995
    • 15,552

  • 64,700 in total
    • 41,000
    • 23,700
34,930 to 37,252
40+ guns
Casualties and losses
8,000–9,000
...other calculations
Details:
  • 7,000 dead, wounded;
  • 2,000 prisoners, missings.

3 guns
9,663–12,000
...other calculations
Details:
  • 7,000 dead, wounded;
  • 4,000 prisoners, missings.

37 guns
4 standards
Location within Europe
War of the Second Coalition:
Italy
50km
30miles
Marengo
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
Verona
1
  current battle
  Napoleon in command
  Napoleon not in command

Novi was a strong defensive position situated on steep heights. An old fortress wall from the 15th century surrounded the city. This medieval wall served as a good defense for the French chasseurs. It was damaged in many places, there were breaks, but the French had barricaded all these breaches.

In 1799, Russian and Austrian forces swept across the Po River valley, recapturing lands taken by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1796. The French troops in Italy were badly defeated at the major battles of Magnano, Cassano and the Trebbia. Subsequently, French and Cisalpine Italian troops retreated into Genoa and the Ligurian Republic. A new French government placed Joubert in command of the reformed Army of Italy and ordered him to take the offensive. Accordingly, the French army moved north across the mountain crests and assembled on high ground at Novi Ligure on 14 August. To Joubert's dismay, it was clear that large Coalition forces were nearby. The next morning Paul Kray's Austrian corps assaulted the French left flank and the battle was on. After a delay, Suvorov committed a Russian corps to attack the center and Michael von Melas' Austrian corps to attack the French right flank. Kray's troops suffered heavy losses but by evening the French army was badly beaten and the French hold on the Italian Riviera was gravely weakened. Cavalry proved ineffective in such terrain and was hardly used by either the Allied or French sides. The Russo-Austrians deployed it en masse only to pursue. However, the Coalition planners proceeded to throw away their advantage by sending Suvorov's Russians to Switzerland, a change of strategy that ended badly.

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