| Sortie on Mestre | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of theFirst Italian War of Independence | |||||||
The Venetian sortie on Mestre, 1848 | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| [6][7][8] | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 2,000–2,500[2][5][9] mostly volunteers | 2,000–3,000[2][10][11] austrian garrison | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 87 killed[12][13] 163 wounded[12][13] | 97 killed[6] 200 killed & wounded[3] 303 captured[6] 3 cannons lost[6][7] | ||||||
Thesortie on Mestre occurred during therevolutionary year of 1848 on October 27.
Italian volunteers charged theAustrian fortification, took the town and withdrew, with theloot of three baggage-waggons, eight horses, large quantity of ammunition and the military chest,[14] back to the fort atMarghera.[4]
Anarrative on the event of thesortie on mestre, was written byLieutenant-General Pepe, and published by Henry Colburn in 1850,London:[15]
"On the morning of the 27th, before dawn, the General-in-Chief, surrounded by his staff, from the lunette No. 12 in the fort ofMalghera, observed the movement of three columns, which contained in all about 2000 bayonets. That on the left consisted of 450 men of the fifth Venetian legion, commanded by its colonel, D'Amigo, and embarked on a number of boats; it was preceded by five pirogues and two scouts, under the orders of Captain Basilesso of the navy. These boats, with their artillery, were intended to facilitate the landing of our men in Fuseria."
"The Colonel had instructions to occupy that post, and afterwards the part of Boaria which adjoins the city ofMestre, so as to form a reserve for the centre column. This column consisted of 900 men, commanded by Colonel Morandi, and composed ofLombard andBolognese volunteers; its orders were to dislodge the enemy entrenched on the railroad, and then to occupyMestre by force. The right column of 650 men, formed of the free Italian battalion, and the chasseurs of theUpper Reno, commanded by Colonel Zambeccari, had orders to take a barricade erected on the narrow banks of the canal ofMestre, and defended by two guns, and by considerable numbers of infantry posted in the neighbouring houses, which were fortified with loopholes."
Anarrative on the event of thesortie on mestre, was written byLieutenant-General Pepe, and published by Henry Colburn in 1850,London:[15]
"The strength of the enemy was about 3000 men on the whole line, besides 2000 entrenched inMestre, which was also defended by many field-pieces, and by chasseurs ready to fire from the houses."
"The centre column was stopped by the fire of the muskets, and by the artillery of the enemy. The General-in-Chief despatched Colonel Ulloa with one hundred gendarmes of the reserve, and with this reinforcement he rallied and urged on the column at the pas de charge; and they penetrated into the city. They were stopped a second time; but in spite of the obstinate resistance they encountered, and the great loss they sustained, they advanced onwards."
"The enemy, after losing part of their artillery, defended themselves from the houses. Captain Sirtori, Major Rosaroll, and Captain Cattabene, bold even to temerity, undertook with a handful of braveLombards to drive out theAustrian's house by house, and thus opened the way to our troops who occupied the city militarily."
"But what was still better, was to have proved that theItalian volunteers, who only a few months before had taken arms for the first time, commanded by officers for the most part new to the profession, had beaten theAustrians, who were superior in number, well entrenched, obstinately defended, and prepared overnight to receive us, and who made use of the loop-holed houses as a second line of defence."
Part of theloot taken fromMestre, included the officialAustrian war correspondence.[14] Amongst which theVenetians discovered that theAustrians had been informed of the projected attack, and had made all the necessary arrangements to meet it,[16] which proved that theVenetians had aspy amongst their ranks.[5][14]
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