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| Siege of Antibes | |||||||
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| Part ofWar of the Austrian Succession | |||||||
Antibes in 1756 | |||||||
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Thesiege of Antibes took place in the winter of 1746–47, during theWar of the Austrian Succession. A combinedAustro-Savoyard army, commanded byMaximilian Ulysses Browne, invadedFrance and laid siege toAntibes on theFrench Mediterranean coast. Despite havingBritish naval support, the Allies failed to capture the town, and after two months Browne's army was forced to lift the siege and retreat back over the border intoSavoy.
Earlier in the war the French had invadedItaly, attackingSavoy and the AustrianDuchy of Milan, but they were forced to retreat after the indecisiveBattle of Rottofreddo (10 August 1746). The Allies then went on the offensive, their first target being France's ally theRepublic of Genoa. The Republic was successfully defeated and occupied after theSiege of Genoa (1746), and the Allies subsequently drew up plans to invade France itself. Command of the operation was entrusted to the Austrian generalMaximilian Ulysses Browne.
On 30 November, Browne led hisAustro-Savoyard army over theRiver Var into France and encamped atCagnes-sur-Mer. From here he had the option of pressing on westward, but before doing so he wished to take control of the fortified town ofAntibes, which was situated on a promontory 10 kilometres to the south and had the potential to disrupt his communications with Italy if left in enemy hands. He therefore sent an envoy to offer surrender terms to the town on 4 December, but these were refused by the commandant,Joseph-David, Count of Sade, and so Browne broke camp and marched south to besiege Antibes.
The siege began on 5 December, and at 4 AM on the following day the Allies attempted to capture the town by storm, but the night attack was repulsed. Browne therefore brought up his artillery, which entrenched themselves atGolfe-Juan and from there began bombarding Antibes. During the week of 19–25 December the town was also subject to a naval bombardment by aBritish squadron commanded byJohn Byng.
Browne again offered terms on 26 December, but de Sade once more rejected them, supposedly responding with the celebrated words:
Two days later, on 28 December, Browne made another attempt to seize the town directly, this time concentrating the attack onFort Carré and deploying hisCroatianshock troops to lead the assault, but again the besiegers were repulsed. The Austrians were therefore forced to revert to their previous strategy of bombarding Antibes into submission.
The siege dragged on into the new year, but by this point the Allies had received the disturbing news that the garrison they had left behind in Genoa had been expelled by a rebellion on 6 December. The Genoese resurgence imperiled the army's lines of communication from Italy and threw the invasion of France into jeopardy. Browne prevaricated for a few weeks, but his mind was made up for him on 1 February 1747, when the Antibes garrison was reinforced by sea with troops commanded by theChevalier de Belle-Isle. The arrival of these reinforcements dashed the last hopes of capturing Antibes, and so on the same day the Allies lifted the siege and began the retreat to Italy. ASecond Siege of Genoa followed later in the year.
By the time the Austrians withdrew, their artillery had fired 2600 bombs and 200firepots into Antibes, levelling 350 houses and also guttingAntibes Cathedral, though the latter was subsequently rebuilt.[2][3]
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