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| Siege of Turin | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of theWar of the Spanish Succession | |||||||
The Battle of Turin 1706 Karl von Blaas, 1864 | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Duke of Saxe-Gotha Prince of Württemberg | |||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 36,000 total[1] | 60,000 total[1] | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| Siege: 4,600 total (including disease)[1] Relief operation: 3,500–4,800 killed and wounded[2] | Siege: 10,000 total (including disease)[3] Relief operation: 7,000[4]–9,000[2] | ||||||
TheSiege of Turin, June to September 1706, took place during theWar of the Spanish Succession. AFrench army led byLouis de la Feuillade besieged theSavoyard capital ofTurin, whose relief byPrince Eugene of Savoy has been called the most brilliant campaign of the war in Italy.[5] The siege is also famous for the death ofPiedmontese heroPietro Micca.
By 1706, France occupied most of theDuchy of Savoy, with the exception of its capital Turin. On 19 April,Louis Joseph, Duke of Vendôme, consolidated the French position inLombardy by victory atCalcinato. Shortly afterwards, Prince Eugene resumed command of Imperial troops in Northern Italy, while Vendôme was recalled to France in July, and replaced by theDuke of Orleans.
Siege operations began on 2 June but made little progress, while Prince Eugene out manoeuvred the French field army under Orleans, and joined forces with 7,000 cavalry led byVictor Amadeus II of Sardinia. Despite being outnumbered overall, the Allies were able to concentrate their forces; on 7 September, they attacked the French south of Turin, and after fierce fighting, broke through their lines.
The French were forced to withdraw from Northern Italy, allowing Victor Amadeus to recover most of Piedmont, although his possessions north of the Alps were held by France until 1713. In March 1707, France, Savoy andEmperor Joseph signed theConvention of Milan, ending the war in Italy.
TheWar of the Spanish Succession was triggered by the death in November 1700 of the childlessCharles II of Spain. He named his heir asPhilip of Anjou, grandson ofLouis XIV of France, and on 16 November, he became king of theSpanish Empire. In addition to mainlandSpain, this included theSpanish Netherlands, large parts ofItaly, and much ofCentral and South America. In 1701, disputes over territorial and commercial rights led to war between France, Spain, and theGrand Alliance, whose candidate wasCharles, younger son ofLeopold I, Holy Roman Emperor.[6]
Fighting in Northern Italy centred on the Spanish-held Duchies ofMilan andMantua, which were considered essential to the security ofAustria's southern borders. In March 1701, French troops occupied both cities;Victor Amadeus II, Duke of Savoy, allied with France, in return for which his daughterMaria Luisa married Philip V.[7]
In October 1703, Victor Amadeus switched sides to join the Grand Alliance. The following year, French armies underde la Feuillade captured Savoyard territories north of theAlps inVillefranche and theCounty of Savoy. Vendôme conducted a simultaneous offensive inPiedmont, and by the end of 1705Turin was the only significant city still under Savoyard control.[8]
To prevent interference from Imperial forces in Lombardy, Vendôme took the offensive and his victory atCalcinato on 19 April drove them into theTrentino valley. The Austrian commanderPrince Eugene returned fromVienna and quickly restored order; this left 30,000 Imperial troops aroundVerona facing 40,000 French spread between theMincio andAdige rivers.[9] On 12 May, 48,000 men under de la Feuillade arrived outside Turin, although they did not completely encircle it until 19 June.[10]
However, after a serious defeat atRamillies inFlanders on 23 May, Louis XIV ordered Vendôme back to France and on 8 July he relinquished command in Italy to the inexperiencedPhilippe II, Duke of Orléans, although it has been argued he was fortunate to be recalled before Prince Eugene exposed his poor strategic planning for the theatre.[11] Orléans was givenFerdinand de Marsin as his main advisor and while neither was a match for the prince, Vendôme was confident they could prevent him intervening at Turin.[12]

Turin's defences were divided into the outer city, containing the residential and commercial areas, with a fortifiedCitadel at its core; normal practice was to take the city first, allowing the besiegers to bombard the citadel from close range. Hoping to speed up operations, La Feuillade decided to begin firing on the citadel as soon as possible, from gun positions constructed 300 metres outside the city.[13]
Since 1696, the citadel had been significantly improved based on designs provided by the French military engineerVauban, and much of it was now underground, including 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) of tunnels used for countersapping operations.[14] Vauban pointed out firing from that distance meant they could only target the higher part of the walls, not the base, and allegedly offered to have his throat cut if Turin was captured using this approach.[9]
Leaving the Austrian generalPhilipp von Daun in command of the garrison, Victor Amadeus escaped from the city on 17 June with 7,000 cavalry. Attempting to buy time for Prince Eugene, he spent the next two months attacking French supply lines, while La Feuillade continued siege operations 'with more obstinacy than success.' As Vauban predicted, the bombardment inflicted considerable damage, but the citadel remained largely intact, and Frenchmining attempts proved unsuccessful.[3]
On 15 August, Prince Eugene began his advance on Turin, easily evading Orléans' covering force; on 29th, he reachedCarmagnola south of Turin, where he was joined by Victor Amadeus. Often overlooked, this was a considerable achievement, comparable in skill and execution to Marlborough's march to theDanube.[15] Taking over a battered and defeated army, Prince Eugene first reorganised it, then...marched 200 miles in 24 days...crossed four major rivers, pierced lines drawn between the mountains to the seas to stop him...and drove superior numbers of the enemy before him.[16]
Aware of his approach, Orléans joined La Feuillade, and their combined force made three assaults between 27 August and 3 September. All were repulsed with heavy loss;Pietro Micca was killed on 31 August, after exploding a mine to prevent the French breaking into one of the tunnels underneath the citadel.[17] Including deaths from disease, the leading cause during a prolonged siege, the French suffered losses of 10,000, the garrison 4,500.[3]

Despite their losses, French forces around Turin still outnumbered the combined Imperial-Savoyard relief force of 30,000, but they were dispersed along 25 kilometres (16 mi) of defences, and morale was low after the failed and costly assaults. On 5 September, the Savoyard-Imperial army concentrated atCollegno, between theDora Riparia and theStura di Lanzo rivers near a weak spot in the French lines.[18]
On 7 September, Prince Eugene divided his force into eight columns, each split into two lines, leaving gaps between each one for their artillery. Johann of Saxe-Gotha (1677-1707) commanded the right,Charles of Württemberg the left, andLeopold of Anhalt-Dessau the centre.[3] The battle began with an artillery exchange, but the Imperial guns made little impact on the French entrenchments, and around 11:00 am, Prince Eugene ordered a general assault. Although Charles of Württemberg broke through on the left, the rest of the army was held up, before repeated attacks by Leopold, supported by a sortie led by von Daun, finally forced the French to retreat.[18]
Orléans was wounded, as was Marsin, who was captured and died the next day; French casualties ranged from 7,000 to 9,000 (including between 3,200 and 6,000 prisoners), those of the Allies ranged from 3,500 to 4,800. The French withdrew from Turin, abandoning their siege artillery, and retreated towardsPinerolo; Victor Amadeus re-entered his capital the same day.[17]
On 8 September, a French detachment in Lombardy under theCount of Médavy defeated a Hessian corps atCastiglione but this did not affect the strategic position. French garrisons in Pinerolo andSusa were withdrawn, and the forts reoccupied by Savoy. In 1708, Victor Amadeus gained the minorDuchy of Montferrat, but Nice and the County of Savoy were not returned by France until 1713. Savoyard ambitions to gain Milan remained unfulfilled for another 150 years.[19]
To the fury of his Allies, in March 1707 Emperor Joseph signed theConvention of Milan with France, ending the war in Northern Italy. In return for handing over Milan and Mantua to Austria, French and Spanish troops were repatriated with all their equipment; many were sent to Southern France, where they helped defeat an Allied attack on the French naval base atToulon in July. In April, Joseph captured the Spanish-ruledKingdom of Naples, leaving Austria the dominant power in Italy for the first time in two centuries.[20]
AfterItalian unification in the 19th century, Pietro Micca became an example of patriotism and loyalty to the new Italian state. He was the hero of the 1938 filmPietro Micca; on the tercentenary of his death in 2006, a number of studies were published to mark the occasion, includingLe Aquile e i Gigli; Una storia mai scritta, by Cerino Badone.[21]
In 2004, construction of an underground carpark in thePiazza Vittorio Veneto uncovered 22 skeletons dating from the early 18th century; a study published in 2019 indicates these are almost certainly casualties from the 1706 siege.[22]
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