Battle of Bassignana (1799)

Battle of Bassignana (1799)
Part of the Italian campaigns during the war of the Second Coalition
Date12 May 1799
Location
Bassignana, present-day Italy
45°0′8″N 8°43′55″E / 45.00222°N 8.73194°E / 45.00222; 8.73194
Result French victory
Belligerents
French First Republic France Russian Empire Russian Empire
Holy Roman Empire Habsburg Empire
Commanders and leaders
French First Republic Jean Moreau
French First Republic Paul Grenier
French First Republic Claude-Victor Perrin
Russian Empire Grand Duke Constantine
Russian Empire Andrei Rosenberg
Russian Empire Nikolay Chubarov (WIA)
Holy Roman Empire Andreas Karaczay
Strength
French First RepublicHelvetic Republic 12,000[a] 3,500–7,000[b]
Casualties and losses
617 992–2,000; 2–4 guns
Map
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  current battle
  Napoleon in command
  Napoleon not in command

The Battle of Bassignana (12 May 1799) saw a Russian corps led by Andrei Grigorevich Rosenberg, who was under the influence of Grand Duke Constantine, attempt to establish a bridgehead on the south bank of the Po River in the presence of a French army under Jean Victor Marie Moreau. The French rapidly massed superior strength and attacked. After several hours of hard fighting, the Russians abandoned their foothold with serious losses. This War of the Second Coalition action occurred near the town of Bassignana, located in the angle between the Po and Tanaro Rivers, about 19 kilometres (12 mi) northeast of Alessandria, Italy.

A string of Austrian and Russian victories in the spring of 1799 evicted the French armies from north and northeast Italy. The leader of the combined Austro-Russian armies, Alexander Suvorov prepared to drive the French armies from the rest of Italy. Suvorov ordered his lieutenant Rosenberg to join him on the south bank of the Po below its confluence with the Tanaro. Probably overruled by the Tsar's son Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich of Russia, Rosenberg unwisely crossed above the confluence with the Tanaro. Two of Moreau's divisions under Paul Grenier and Claude Victor-Perrin soon counterattacked and defeated the Russians. The Bassignana action was only a minor setback for the Allies. A few days later, Moreau launched a reconnaissance that resulted in the First Battle of Marengo.
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