Portal:Military history of France/Selected article/9

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The Battle of Ceresole (or Cerissoles) was fought on April 11, 1544, about a mile outside the village of Ceresole d'Alba in the Piedmont, during the Italian War of 1542. In a lengthy engagement that historian Bert Hall characterized as "marvelously confused", a French army under François de Vendôme, Count of Enghien, defeated the Spanish-Imperial army of Alfonso d'Avalos d'Aquino, Marquis del Vasto.[1] Despite inflicting massive casualties on the Imperial troops, the French failed to exploit the victory, as Enghien was unable to take Milan after much of his army was recalled to face an Anglo-Imperial invasion of France.

Enghien and Del Vasto had arranged their armies along two parallel ridges; due to the topography of the battlefield, many of the individual actions of the battle were uncoordinated with each other. The battle opened with several hours of skirmishing between opposing bands of arquebusiers and an ineffectual artillery exchange, after which Del Vasto ordered a general advance. In the center, Imperial landsknechts clashed with French and Swiss infantry, suffering enormous casualties. In the southern part of the battlefield, Italian infantry in Imperial service was harried by French cavalry attacks and withdrew after learning that the Imperial troops of the center had been defeated. In the north, meanwhile, the French infantry line crumbled, and Enghien led a series of ineffectual and costly cavalry charges against Spanish and German infantry before the latter were forced to surrender by the arrival of the victorious Swiss and French infantry from the center. (More...)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hall, Weapons and Warfare, 187. Jeremy Black also notes that "any summary of the battle underplays its confused nature" ("Dynasty Forged by Fire," 43).