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  1. Apr 19, 2023 · The Italian campaign of 1796-1797, waged by a young Napoleon Bonaparte, was a decisive campaign in the French Revolutionary Wars (1792-1802). It led to the defeat of Austria, the beginning of French control of northern Italy, and the end of the war, but most importantly, it launched Bonaparte himself to new heights of fame and power.

  2. Jul 31, 2006 · Leaving 3,000 men to garrison Verona, Bonaparte and the entire French army hurried north to Rivoli. As in the beginning of the campaign, the Italian terrain provided several good roads for the French to travel north, but the Austrians traveling south found only two roads on which to move troops and artillery, making maneuvering very difficult.

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  4. Napoleon’s Italian Campaign: A Year Against the Odds. The young Napoleon Bonaparte displayed a brilliant use of strategy in the Italian Campaign of 1796-1797. This article appears in: June 2003. By Jeremy Green. The newly appointed 26-year-old commander-in-chief of the French Army of Italy arrived at Nice headquarters on March 27, 1796.

  5. In the spring of 1796, Beaulieu was installed as the new commander of the combined armies of Austria and the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont in northwest Italy. His opposite number was also new to the job of army commander. Napoleon Bonaparte arrived from Paris to direct the French Army of Italy.

  6. Jul 11, 2017 · Napoleon’s 1796 invasion of Italy was one of the most significant campaigns of his career. It was the offensive that turned him from a rising star into a commander with an unassailable reputation for excellence. It began a string of French victories and Napoleon’s rise from leading an army to leading a nation. Old Tools, New Tactics.

  7. Nov 18, 2009 · The Italian Campaign, from July 10, 1943, to May 2, 1945, was a series of Allied beach landings and land battles from Sicily and southern Italy up the Italian mainland toward Nazi Germany.

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