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Philipp Pittoni von Dannenfeld

Philipp Pittoni Freiherr von Dannenfeld (died 6 October 1824), fought in the army of Habsburg Austria during the French Revolutionary Wars. Promoted to general officer in 1795, he was a brigade commander in northwestern Italy at the time when Napoleon Bonaparte was appointed to lead the opposing French Army of Italy. He led one of the two main columns at Voltri in April 1796. At Borghetto in May, he unsuccessfully defended the bridge. He led a brigade at Castiglione in August and at Second Bassano and Arcole in November 1796. He retired from service the following year and died at Gorizia in 1824.

Philipp Pittoni von Dannenfeld
Died6 October 1824
Allegiance Habsburg monarchy
RankGeneral-major
Battles/warsBattle of Voltri (1796)
Battle of Borghetto (1796)
Battle of Castiglione (1796)
Second Battle of Bassano (1796)
Battle of Arcole (1796)

Montenotte Campaign edit

Neither Pittoni's place and date of birth are known nor are his early military dates of advancement. On 1 May 1795 he was promoted to the rank of General-major.[1] In early 1796, Johann Peter Beaulieu was the newly appointed commander of the combined armies of Habsburg Austria and the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont. Beaulieu's left wing consisted of 19,500 troops. Half of these were on garrison duty, while the rest were led by Pittoni and Josef Philipp Vukassovich. The 11,500-man Austrian right wing was posted to cover Acqui Terme and was commanded by Eugène-Guillaume Argenteau. The 20,000 Piedmontese troops were led by Michelangelo Alessandro Colli-Marchi and included an Austrian contingent under Giovanni Marchese di Provera. Colli's men were strung out in a chain from Cosseria Castle in the east to Cuneo in the west. Further west, the 20,000 Piedmontese under the Prince of Corrigan were faced by François Christophe de Kellermann's Army of the Alps.[2]

According to one authority, on 1 April 1796, Pittoni's 7-battalion brigade was stationed near Alessandria and belonged to Karl Philipp Sebottendorf's wing of Beaulieu's Austrian army.[3] Another authority asserted that he led a division-sized command that included three battalions of the Reisky Infantry Regiment Nr. 13, two battalions of the Nádasdy Infantry Regiment Nr. 39, one battalion of the Terzi Infantry Regiment Nr. 16, one battalion of the Lattermann Infantry Regiment Nr. 45, and one battalion of the Szluiner Grenz Infantry Regiment Nr. 63.[4][5]

 
Map shows the Battle of Voltri on 10 April 1796. Pittoni's division began its march at Campomorone and engaged the French near Pegli.

Because the neutral Republic of Genoa had refused to loan the French money, the representative-on-mission Antoine Christophe Saliceti asked the French army commander Barthélemy Louis Joseph Scherer for 6,000 men to advance in order to intimidate the civic authorities.[6] On 27 March, Pittoni reported to Beaulieu about the movement of these troops to Voltri. Bonaparte, who had just taken command, ordered the movement halted the next day. At first he wanted to withdraw the exposed unit, but later decided to hold the position at Voltri.[7] To counter this threat, on 31 March, Beaulieu ordered Pittoni in invade the Republic of Genoa and cross the Bocchetta Pass. Pittoni occupied Novi Ligure with 2,800 men and started his men on the road up the pass. The Lattermann Regiment was left to guard Novi. Beaulieu apparently was on hand because he noted that the weather was uncomfortably cold and that Pittoni was not well, though he did his soldierly duty. The army commander sent one 12-pound cannon, one 6-pound cannon, and two 7-pound howitzers to join Pittoni's force.[8] By 8 April, Pittoni was in position at the Bocchetta Pass but informed Beaulieu that he was so isolated that it would take him six hours of marching over bad roads to link with Vukassovich near Masone.[9]

On 10 April 1796, Pittoni's column advanced with four squadrons of the Mészáros Uhlans, two battalions of the Reisky Regiment, and one battalion each of the Terzi, Nádasdy, and Szluiner Regiments. Pittoni's force numbered 3,350 infantry and 624 cavalry.[10][11] The troops got a remarkably late start. At 8:00 AM, 250 volunteers set out to cover the right flank by marching via the mountaintop Madonna della Guardia. The main column left Campomorone at 11:00 AM and marched down to the coast before turning right through Sestri di Ponente. Pittoni's Szluiner battalion and the volunteers attacked the French 75th Line Infantry Demi-Brigade near Pegli at 3:00 PM in the Battle of Voltri. After a three-hour fight, the 75th Line withdrew. That evening Pittoni occupied Voltri with three battalions and the cavalry. He was joined at midnight by Beaulieu, who came via Masone and the Turchino Pass with Sebottendorf and Vukassovich. The Austrians lost about 50 casualties while the French reported losing 16 dead, 45 wounded, and 148 captured.[12]

The remaining actions of the Montenotte Campaign went badly for the Austrians. They lost the Battle of Montenotte on 11 and 12 April and the Second Battle of Dego on 14 and 15 April. Soon after, the Piedmontese were defeated at the Battle of Mondovì on 22 April, their government sued for peace.[13]

Borghetto to Arcole edit

 
This view shows the western approaches to the Borghetto bridge which is at the far left of the photo. The Mincio can be seen amid the trees in the foreground.

Pittoni's brigade held a position near Gropello Cairoli in early May.[14] He missed the Battle of Lodi on 10 May 1796 since he was marching with Beaulieu via the village of Acquanegra Cremonese toward Cremona.[15] When the Austrians formed a defense line behind the Mincio River, Sebottendorf placed Pittoni's brigade and Prince di Cuto's Neapolitan cavalry near Valeggio sul Mincio.[16] At 7:00 AM on the morning of 30 May 1796, the division of Charles Edward Jennings de Kilmaine attacked the Austrian cavalry outposts on the west side of the Mincio to open the Battle of Borghetto. By 9:00 AM the French reached the Borghetto bridge on the west side of Valeggio and put great pressure on the one battalion each from the Strassoldo Infantry Regiment Nr. 27 and Jordis Infantry Regiment Nr. 59. Pittoni arrived to direct the fighting, but no reserves arrived. By noon, the Austrians ran low on ammunition and withdrew to Valeggio. The French followed and pushed them out of the town as well.[17] To face Kilmaine's 1,500 cavalry and six battalions of grenadiers, Pittoni only had half of the 920 men from the two battalion Strassoldo Regiment and 761 soldiers from the Jordis Regiment.[18]

When the new Austrian army commander Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser advanced to the relief of the Siege of Mantua in late July, he formed his forces into four columns. See the Castiglione 1796 Campaign Order of Battle. The Right-Center Column was led by Michael von Melas and comprised the brigades of Peter Gummer, Adam Bajalics von Bajahaza, Franz Nicoletti, and Pittoni. The latter two reported to Sebottendorf.[19] While Melas led Gummer and Bajalics over Monte Baldo by footpaths, Sebottendorf's two brigades fought their way down the road through Ferrara di Monte Baldo and Brentino Belluno. They accomplished their mission by driving back the French so that the Left-Center Column under Paul Davidovich could join them via the Adige River valley. The 900-man 11th Light Infantry Demi-Brigade and four guns were isolated and captured during the successful operation.[20] Pittoni and Sebottendorf are not specifically mentioned in a detailed account of the Battle of Castiglione on 5 August 1796. In a preliminary action on 3 August, 1,000 Austrians became casualties and Pittoni's fellow brigadier Nicoletti was wounded.[21] On the 5th, the Austrians were beaten with losses of 2,000 killed and wounded plus 1,000 men and 20 guns captured. The French counted 1,100 casualties.[22]

 
Fanciful Horace Vernet painting shows Bonaparte leading his troops across the Arcole bridge.

In 1796, József Alvinczi led the Austrian army in the third relief of Mantua. Peter Vitus von Quosdanovich's 28,699-man Friaul Corps was divided into six brigades under Pittoni, Anton Lipthay de Kisfalud, Anton Schübirz von Chobinin, Gerhard Rosselmini, Adolf Brabeck, and Prince Friedrich Franz Xaver of Hohenzollern-Hechingen.[23] Another authority stated that Pittoni commanded the 4,376-man army Reserve with four battalions, one squadron. See the Arcola 1796 Campaign Order of Battle. The Friaul Corps was accompanied by Alvinczi in person.[24] Provera took Lipthay and Brabeck on a southerly road toward Fontaniva while Hohenzollern and a newly arrived brigade under Anton Ferdinand Mittrowsky took a northerly road toward Bassano del Grappa.[25]

The Second Battle of Bassano was fought on 6 November 1796. Lipthay, supported by Brabeck and Schübirz, repelled French attacks near Fontaniva, while Hohenzollern and the "main part of the division" held their ground near the village of Nove on the west side of Bassano.[26] The Austrian victory cost Provera's wing 208 killed, 873 wounded, and 109 captured. Quosdanovich's wing suffered 326 killed, 858 wounded, 449 men and two guns captured. This bloody contest cost the French 3,000 killed and wounded plus 508 men and one gun captured.[27]

Pittoni was not specifically noted during a thorough account of the Battle of Arcole on 15 to 17 November. Beginning on the second day, Alvinczi entrusted Mittrowsky with 14 battalions for the defense of Arcole, while Provera was given six battalions to hold Belfiore.[28] At 4:00 PM on the third day, a powerful column of Hungarian grenadiers was committed to the combat at Arcole, which suggests that Pittoni's Reserve was being fed into the battle. Soon afterward, the grenadiers fell into an ambush and retreated. By 5:00 PM the French were masters of Arcole and Mittrowsky finally withdrew.[29] The Austrians lost 600 killed (including Brabeck), 1,600 wounded, and 4,000 men and 11 guns captured in the 3-day fight. French losses numbered 1,200 killed and 2,300 wounded.[30]

Pittoni retired from the army on 28 February 1797. He died in Gorizia on 6 October 1824.[1]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Smith & Kudrna, Pittoni
  2. ^ Chandler (1966), 62
  3. ^ Fiebeger (1911), 18
  4. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 168
  5. ^ Pivka (1979), 82-84. This source provided the regiment numbers only.
  6. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 128-129
  7. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 145-146
  8. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 170-171
  9. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 185
  10. ^ Boycott-Brown (2011), 194
  11. ^ Smith (1998), 111. This source states that the Uhlans belonged to the Mészáros Regiment.
  12. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 196-199
  13. ^ Smith (1998), 111-113
  14. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 296
  15. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 316
  16. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 348
  17. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 352-353
  18. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 349-351
  19. ^ Fiebeger (1911), 38. This source spelled it Kummer instead of Gummer.
  20. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 378-381
  21. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 396-397
  22. ^ Smith (1998), 119
  23. ^ Fiebeger (1911), 62
  24. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 444
  25. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 449
  26. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 450-452
  27. ^ Smith (1998), 126
  28. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 467
  29. ^ Boycott-Brown (2001), 474-475
  30. ^ Smith (1998), 127

References edit

  • Boycott-Brown, Martin (2001). The Road to Rivoli. London: Cassell & Co. ISBN 0-304-35305-1.
  • Chandler, David G. (1979). Dictionary of the Napoleonic Wars. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 0-02-523670-9.
  • Chandler, David G. (1966). The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York: Macmillan.
  • Fiebeger, G. J. (1911). The Campaigns of Napoleon Bonaparte of 1796–1797. West Point, New York: US Military Academy Printing Office.
  • Pivka, Otto von (1979). Armies of the Napoleonic Era. New York, NY: Taplinger Publishing. ISBN 0-8008-5471-3.
  • Smith, Digby (1998). The Napoleonic Wars Data Book. London: Greenhill. ISBN 1-85367-276-9.
  • Smith, Digby; Kudrna, Leopold. "A Biographical Directory of all Austrian Generals during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars: 1792-1815". Retrieved 31 March 2012.

philipp, pittoni, dannenfeld, philipp, pittoni, freiherr, dannenfeld, died, october, 1824, fought, army, habsburg, austria, during, french, revolutionary, wars, promoted, general, officer, 1795, brigade, commander, northwestern, italy, time, when, napoleon, bo. Philipp Pittoni Freiherr von Dannenfeld died 6 October 1824 fought in the army of Habsburg Austria during the French Revolutionary Wars Promoted to general officer in 1795 he was a brigade commander in northwestern Italy at the time when Napoleon Bonaparte was appointed to lead the opposing French Army of Italy He led one of the two main columns at Voltri in April 1796 At Borghetto in May he unsuccessfully defended the bridge He led a brigade at Castiglione in August and at Second Bassano and Arcole in November 1796 He retired from service the following year and died at Gorizia in 1824 Philipp Pittoni von DannenfeldDied6 October 1824AllegianceHabsburg monarchyRankGeneral majorBattles warsBattle of Voltri 1796 Battle of Borghetto 1796 Battle of Castiglione 1796 Second Battle of Bassano 1796 Battle of Arcole 1796 Contents 1 Montenotte Campaign 2 Borghetto to Arcole 3 Notes 4 ReferencesMontenotte Campaign editNeither Pittoni s place and date of birth are known nor are his early military dates of advancement On 1 May 1795 he was promoted to the rank of General major 1 In early 1796 Johann Peter Beaulieu was the newly appointed commander of the combined armies of Habsburg Austria and the Kingdom of Sardinia Piedmont Beaulieu s left wing consisted of 19 500 troops Half of these were on garrison duty while the rest were led by Pittoni and Josef Philipp Vukassovich The 11 500 man Austrian right wing was posted to cover Acqui Terme and was commanded by Eugene Guillaume Argenteau The 20 000 Piedmontese troops were led by Michelangelo Alessandro Colli Marchi and included an Austrian contingent under Giovanni Marchese di Provera Colli s men were strung out in a chain from Cosseria Castle in the east to Cuneo in the west Further west the 20 000 Piedmontese under the Prince of Corrigan were faced by Francois Christophe de Kellermann s Army of the Alps 2 According to one authority on 1 April 1796 Pittoni s 7 battalion brigade was stationed near Alessandria and belonged to Karl Philipp Sebottendorf s wing of Beaulieu s Austrian army 3 Another authority asserted that he led a division sized command that included three battalions of the Reisky Infantry Regiment Nr 13 two battalions of the Nadasdy Infantry Regiment Nr 39 one battalion of the Terzi Infantry Regiment Nr 16 one battalion of the Lattermann Infantry Regiment Nr 45 and one battalion of the Szluiner Grenz Infantry Regiment Nr 63 4 5 nbsp Map shows the Battle of Voltri on 10 April 1796 Pittoni s division began its march at Campomorone and engaged the French near Pegli Because the neutral Republic of Genoa had refused to loan the French money the representative on mission Antoine Christophe Saliceti asked the French army commander Barthelemy Louis Joseph Scherer for 6 000 men to advance in order to intimidate the civic authorities 6 On 27 March Pittoni reported to Beaulieu about the movement of these troops to Voltri Bonaparte who had just taken command ordered the movement halted the next day At first he wanted to withdraw the exposed unit but later decided to hold the position at Voltri 7 To counter this threat on 31 March Beaulieu ordered Pittoni in invade the Republic of Genoa and cross the Bocchetta Pass Pittoni occupied Novi Ligure with 2 800 men and started his men on the road up the pass The Lattermann Regiment was left to guard Novi Beaulieu apparently was on hand because he noted that the weather was uncomfortably cold and that Pittoni was not well though he did his soldierly duty The army commander sent one 12 pound cannon one 6 pound cannon and two 7 pound howitzers to join Pittoni s force 8 By 8 April Pittoni was in position at the Bocchetta Pass but informed Beaulieu that he was so isolated that it would take him six hours of marching over bad roads to link with Vukassovich near Masone 9 On 10 April 1796 Pittoni s column advanced with four squadrons of the Meszaros Uhlans two battalions of the Reisky Regiment and one battalion each of the Terzi Nadasdy and Szluiner Regiments Pittoni s force numbered 3 350 infantry and 624 cavalry 10 11 The troops got a remarkably late start At 8 00 AM 250 volunteers set out to cover the right flank by marching via the mountaintop Madonna della Guardia The main column left Campomorone at 11 00 AM and marched down to the coast before turning right through Sestri di Ponente Pittoni s Szluiner battalion and the volunteers attacked the French 75th Line Infantry Demi Brigade near Pegli at 3 00 PM in the Battle of Voltri After a three hour fight the 75th Line withdrew That evening Pittoni occupied Voltri with three battalions and the cavalry He was joined at midnight by Beaulieu who came via Masone and the Turchino Pass with Sebottendorf and Vukassovich The Austrians lost about 50 casualties while the French reported losing 16 dead 45 wounded and 148 captured 12 The remaining actions of the Montenotte Campaign went badly for the Austrians They lost the Battle of Montenotte on 11 and 12 April and the Second Battle of Dego on 14 and 15 April Soon after the Piedmontese were defeated at the Battle of Mondovi on 22 April their government sued for peace 13 Borghetto to Arcole edit nbsp This view shows the western approaches to the Borghetto bridge which is at the far left of the photo The Mincio can be seen amid the trees in the foreground Pittoni s brigade held a position near Gropello Cairoli in early May 14 He missed the Battle of Lodi on 10 May 1796 since he was marching with Beaulieu via the village of Acquanegra Cremonese toward Cremona 15 When the Austrians formed a defense line behind the Mincio River Sebottendorf placed Pittoni s brigade and Prince di Cuto s Neapolitan cavalry near Valeggio sul Mincio 16 At 7 00 AM on the morning of 30 May 1796 the division of Charles Edward Jennings de Kilmaine attacked the Austrian cavalry outposts on the west side of the Mincio to open the Battle of Borghetto By 9 00 AM the French reached the Borghetto bridge on the west side of Valeggio and put great pressure on the one battalion each from the Strassoldo Infantry Regiment Nr 27 and Jordis Infantry Regiment Nr 59 Pittoni arrived to direct the fighting but no reserves arrived By noon the Austrians ran low on ammunition and withdrew to Valeggio The French followed and pushed them out of the town as well 17 To face Kilmaine s 1 500 cavalry and six battalions of grenadiers Pittoni only had half of the 920 men from the two battalion Strassoldo Regiment and 761 soldiers from the Jordis Regiment 18 When the new Austrian army commander Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser advanced to the relief of the Siege of Mantua in late July he formed his forces into four columns See the Castiglione 1796 Campaign Order of Battle The Right Center Column was led by Michael von Melas and comprised the brigades of Peter Gummer Adam Bajalics von Bajahaza Franz Nicoletti and Pittoni The latter two reported to Sebottendorf 19 While Melas led Gummer and Bajalics over Monte Baldo by footpaths Sebottendorf s two brigades fought their way down the road through Ferrara di Monte Baldo and Brentino Belluno They accomplished their mission by driving back the French so that the Left Center Column under Paul Davidovich could join them via the Adige River valley The 900 man 11th Light Infantry Demi Brigade and four guns were isolated and captured during the successful operation 20 Pittoni and Sebottendorf are not specifically mentioned in a detailed account of the Battle of Castiglione on 5 August 1796 In a preliminary action on 3 August 1 000 Austrians became casualties and Pittoni s fellow brigadier Nicoletti was wounded 21 On the 5th the Austrians were beaten with losses of 2 000 killed and wounded plus 1 000 men and 20 guns captured The French counted 1 100 casualties 22 nbsp Fanciful Horace Vernet painting shows Bonaparte leading his troops across the Arcole bridge In 1796 Jozsef Alvinczi led the Austrian army in the third relief of Mantua Peter Vitus von Quosdanovich s 28 699 man Friaul Corps was divided into six brigades under Pittoni Anton Lipthay de Kisfalud Anton Schubirz von Chobinin Gerhard Rosselmini Adolf Brabeck and Prince Friedrich Franz Xaver of Hohenzollern Hechingen 23 Another authority stated that Pittoni commanded the 4 376 man army Reserve with four battalions one squadron See the Arcola 1796 Campaign Order of Battle The Friaul Corps was accompanied by Alvinczi in person 24 Provera took Lipthay and Brabeck on a southerly road toward Fontaniva while Hohenzollern and a newly arrived brigade under Anton Ferdinand Mittrowsky took a northerly road toward Bassano del Grappa 25 The Second Battle of Bassano was fought on 6 November 1796 Lipthay supported by Brabeck and Schubirz repelled French attacks near Fontaniva while Hohenzollern and the main part of the division held their ground near the village of Nove on the west side of Bassano 26 The Austrian victory cost Provera s wing 208 killed 873 wounded and 109 captured Quosdanovich s wing suffered 326 killed 858 wounded 449 men and two guns captured This bloody contest cost the French 3 000 killed and wounded plus 508 men and one gun captured 27 Pittoni was not specifically noted during a thorough account of the Battle of Arcole on 15 to 17 November Beginning on the second day Alvinczi entrusted Mittrowsky with 14 battalions for the defense of Arcole while Provera was given six battalions to hold Belfiore 28 At 4 00 PM on the third day a powerful column of Hungarian grenadiers was committed to the combat at Arcole which suggests that Pittoni s Reserve was being fed into the battle Soon afterward the grenadiers fell into an ambush and retreated By 5 00 PM the French were masters of Arcole and Mittrowsky finally withdrew 29 The Austrians lost 600 killed including Brabeck 1 600 wounded and 4 000 men and 11 guns captured in the 3 day fight French losses numbered 1 200 killed and 2 300 wounded 30 Pittoni retired from the army on 28 February 1797 He died in Gorizia on 6 October 1824 1 Notes edit a b Smith amp Kudrna Pittoni Chandler 1966 62 Fiebeger 1911 18 Boycott Brown 2001 168 Pivka 1979 82 84 This source provided the regiment numbers only Boycott Brown 2001 128 129 Boycott Brown 2001 145 146 Boycott Brown 2001 170 171 Boycott Brown 2001 185 Boycott Brown 2011 194 Smith 1998 111 This source states that the Uhlans belonged to the Meszaros Regiment Boycott Brown 2001 196 199 Smith 1998 111 113 Boycott Brown 2001 296 Boycott Brown 2001 316 Boycott Brown 2001 348 Boycott Brown 2001 352 353 Boycott Brown 2001 349 351 Fiebeger 1911 38 This source spelled it Kummer instead of Gummer Boycott Brown 2001 378 381 Boycott Brown 2001 396 397 Smith 1998 119 Fiebeger 1911 62 Boycott Brown 2001 444 Boycott Brown 2001 449 Boycott Brown 2001 450 452 Smith 1998 126 Boycott Brown 2001 467 Boycott Brown 2001 474 475 Smith 1998 127References editBoycott Brown Martin 2001 The Road to Rivoli London Cassell amp Co ISBN 0 304 35305 1 Chandler David G 1979 Dictionary of the Napoleonic Wars New York Macmillan ISBN 0 02 523670 9 Chandler David G 1966 The Campaigns of Napoleon New York Macmillan Fiebeger G J 1911 The Campaigns of Napoleon Bonaparte of 1796 1797 West Point New York US Military Academy Printing Office Pivka Otto von 1979 Armies of the Napoleonic Era New York NY Taplinger Publishing ISBN 0 8008 5471 3 Smith Digby 1998 The Napoleonic Wars Data Book London Greenhill ISBN 1 85367 276 9 Smith Digby Kudrna Leopold A Biographical Directory of all Austrian Generals during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars 1792 1815 Retrieved 31 March 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philipp Pittoni von Dannenfeld amp oldid 1081132038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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