Battle of Milazzo (1860)

Battle of Milazzo
Part of The Expedition of the Thousand

Contemporary reconstruction of the battle.
DateJuly 17, 1860
LocationMilazzo, Sicily
Result Garibaldine victory
Belligerents
 Sardinia
 Hungarian legion of Italia[1]
 Two Sicilies
Commanders and leaders
Piedmont-Sardinia Giuseppe Garibaldi Kingdom of the Two Sicilies Col. Bosco
Strength
c. 4,500 c. 4,500
Casualties and losses
more than 800 c. 300

The Battle of Milazzo was fought on 1724 July 1860 between Giuseppe Garibaldi's volunteers with Hungarian veterans and the troops of the Kingdom of Two Sicilies at Milazzo, Sicily, then part of the Kingdom of Two Sicilies.

The main clash began on the morning of 20 July on an open field leading to the cape on which Milazzo is located. In the afternoon, after seven hours of fight, it moved towards the town itself. Here on a bridge, surrounded by the Neapolitan cavalry, Garibaldi was saved by an assault from Sicilian volunteers. The Garibaldines, after the initial difficulties, got steam from this success. Giacomo Medici, Giuseppe Sirtori and Enrico Cosenz attacked the Neapolitan troops, but were pushed back by general Beneventano's men.

Then came from Palermo the armed ship Tukory, which bombarded the Neapolitans, who retreated to Milazzo's fortress. Here they capitulated on 24 July. Garibaldi had more than 800 killed, the Neapolitans c. 300.

This victory allowed Garibaldi free way to Messina.

References

  1. Magyarország hadtörténete 1. (Military history of Hungary), Zrínyi Katonai Kiadó 1984. ISBN 963-326-320-4

See also