Battle of Polesella

Battle of Polesella
Part of the War of the League of Cambrai
Date 22 December 1509
Location Polesella, present-day Italy
Result Ferrarese victory
Belligerents
Duchy of Ferrara  Republic of Venice
Commanders and leaders
Ippolito Cardinal d'Este
Alfonso I d'Este
Angelo Trevisan
Strength
unknown unknown
Casualties and losses
light ~2,000 killed

The Battle of Polesella, fought on 22 December 1509, by forces of the Duchy of Ferrara and the Republic of Venice, was a naval battle on the River Po in the War of the League of Cambrai in the Italian Wars. It was an overwhelming victory for Ferrara.

The battle

In 1509 the Venetian fleet was moored on the river Po, waiting for the right moment to attack Ferrara. Meanwhile, the Slavonian and Albanian mercenaries (called stradiotti) made daily incursions into the Dukedom, sowing death and terror.

On the night of 21-22 December, given the high level reached by the waters of the Po, that had brought the enemy galleys up to the level of the embankment, the Ferrarese forces set up their famous artillery along the river and at dawn opened fire. In the indescribable chaos that followed this surprise action, many ships were sunk and others captured. The soldiers and sailors who tried to escape into the water were taken prisoner and shot or killed without mercy as soon as reach firm ground. It was rather a massacre than a battle.

The troops of Ferrara conquered 15 galleys and a number of other ships. The Venetians lost 2000 killed or drowned and 60 flags.

Angelo Trevisan succeeded in fleeing, but his damaged galley sunk 5 km further. Back in Venice, he was tried for "misconduct and carelessness". When Duke Alfonso I d'Este entered Ferrara five days later, his wife Lucrezia Borgia was waiting for him with her maids of honour, the court and the jubilant population.

The battle was described by Ludovico Ariosto in his epic poem Orlando Furioso (canto 40, 2, vv. 1-4).

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