The Swiss may have intended to annex …

Years: 1513 - 1513
June

The Swiss may have intended to annex part (or all) of Milan to the Swiss Confederation.

Novara, about forty kilometers west of Milan, is the second most important city of the Milanese duchy.

The French are surprised at their camp there on June 6 by a Swiss relief army of some thirteen thousand troops, who have come to relieve their forces in the town.

The German Landsknecht mercenaries of the French, pike-armed like the Swiss, are able to form up into heavy squares, and the French are able to deploy some of their artillery.

Despite this, the Swiss onslaught, sweeping in from multiple directions due to forced marches which achieve encirclement of the French camp, take the French guns, push back the Landsknecht infantry regiments, and destroy the Landsknecht squares.

Caught off guard, the French heavy cavalry, their decisive arm, is unable to properly deploy, and plays little role in the fight.

The battle is particularly bloody, with five thousand casualties (other sources state up to ten thousand) on the French side, and moderate losses for the Swiss pikemen, mostly suffered from the French artillery as the Swiss move into the attack.

Seven hundred men are killed in three minutes by heavy artillery fire.

Additionally, after the battle, the Swiss execute the hundreds of German mercenaries they have captured who had fought for the French.

The Swiss also capture twenty-two French guns with their carriages.

The defeat forces Louis XII to withdraw from Milan and Italy in general, and leads to the temporary restoration of Duke Maximilian Sforza, although he is widely regarded to be the puppet of his Swiss mercenaries and "allies", who hold real military power in Milan.

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