The Campaigns Of Napoleon Bonaparte 1796-1797 May 2026
Piedmont exited the war, leaving Napoleon free to focus solely on Austria. The Bridge at Lodi and the Entry into Milan
Napoleon’s first goal was to separate the Austrian army from their Piedmontese allies. In a lightning-fast two-week offensive (the Montenotte Campaign), he won a series of engagements: The Campaigns of Napoleon Bonaparte 1796-1797
The 1796–1797 campaign redefined modern warfare. It proved that a smaller, faster army could defeat a larger, static one through superior maneuver and morale. Napoleon returned to Paris not just as a hero, but as the most powerful man in France, setting the stage for his eventual rise to Emperor. Piedmont exited the war, leaving Napoleon free to
French forces entered Milan in triumph, beginning the looting of Italian art and gold to fund the French Republic. The Siege of Mantua It proved that a smaller, faster army could
A desperate three-day battle in the marshes where Napoleon famously seized a flag and charged the bridge.