- Lodi, Battle of
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▪ Italian history [1796](May 10, 1796), small but dramatic engagement in Napoleon Bonaparte's (Napoleon I) first Italian campaign, in which he earned the confidence and loyalty of his men, who nicknamed him “The Little Corporal” in recognition of his personal courage. It was fought at the Lodi Bridge, over the Adda River, 19 miles (31 km) southeast of Milan, between 5,000 troops of Napoleon's Army of Italy and K.P. Sebottendorf's 10,000 troops, the rear guard of Jean-Pierre Beaulieu's Austrian army. After knocking the kingdom of Sardinia (Piedmont) out of the war in April, Napoleon turned northeastward against Beaulieu. Beaulieu refused to stand and fight, afraid to lose his army in a major battle. The retreating Austrians' rear guard continued to hold the Lodi Bridge, however. Napoleon set up artillery to blast the Austrian guns and defenses across the Adda River and sent columns to ford the Adda above and below Lodi; then he and generals Louis-Alexandre Berthier and André Masséna led a massed infantry column to charge across the bridge. Despite 400 casualties in the savage melee on the bridge, the column swept forward to bayonet the Austrians away from their guns. Then other French columns attacked the Austrians from both flanks, forcing them to retire. Austrian losses were 153 men killed and 1,700 captured. Napoleon's reports portrayed the battle as a minor epic, though Beaulieu had made good his escape.
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Universalium. 2010.