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    • Emperor Charles V's army

      • The battle ended in a clear victory for Emperor Charles V's army; King Francis I himself, after falling from his horse, was taken prisoner by the imperials.
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  2. Oct 31, 2021 · February 24, 1525. A day that is not marked in infamy but in the blood of France. On this date, the Battle of Pavia occurred – the decisive event in a longstanding war and rivalry, and the crushing blow for a king and his political desires.

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  3. On 24 February 1525, the Battle of Pavia was fought as part of the Italian Wars that began in 1521 and ended in 1526. The French troops, led by King Francis I, fought against the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V’s Imperial army, which was reinforced by Spanish troops. The battle lasted around four hours, with the French taking heavy casualties.

  4. The Battle of Pavia, fought on the morning of 24 February 1525, was the decisive engagement of the Italian War of 1521–1526 between the Kingdom of France and the Habsburg Empire of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor as well as ruler of Spain, Austria, the Low Countries, and the Two Sicilies.

  5. Jan 23, 2015 · Tweet. The battle of Pavia (24 February 1525) was the decisive battle of the First Hapsburg-Valois War, and was a French defeat that saw Francis I captured and that permanently undermined the French position in Italy. Background and the Pavia Campaign.

    • Prelude
    • Aftermath
    • Art
    • References

    The French, in possession of Lombardy at the start of the Italian War of 1521–26, had been forced to abandon it after their defeat at the Battle of Bicocca in 1522. Determined to regain it, Francis ordered an invasion of the region in late 1523, under the command of Guillaume Gouffier, Seigneur de Bonnivet; but Bonnivet was defeated by Imperial tro...

    The French defeat was decisive. Aside from Francis, a number of leading French nobles—including Montmorency and Flourance—had been captured; an even greater number—among them Bonnivet, Le Tremoille, La Palice, Richard de la Pole, and Lorraine—had been killed in the fighting. Francis was taken to the fortress of Pizzighettone, where he penned his fa...

    In Rome Cardinal Ippolito de' Medici, who acted as Florentine emissary to Charles V in 1535, expressed support for the Emperor's victory by commissioning a rock crystal low relief in the manner of an Antique cameo, from the gem engraver Giovanni Bernardi. The classicizing treatment of the event lent it a timeless, mythic quality and reflected on th...

    Black, Jeremy. "Dynasty Forged by Fire." MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History 18, no. 3 (Spring 2006): 34–43. ISSN 1040-5992.
    Blockmans, Wim. Emperor Charles V, 1500–1558. Translated by Isola van den Hoven-Vardon. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-340-73110-9.
    Guicciardini, Francesco. The History of Italy. Translated by Sydney Alexander. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984. ISBN 0-691-00800-0.
    Hackett, Francis. Francis the First.Garden City, New York: Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1937.
    • 24 February 1525
    • Decisive Spanish-Imperial victory
    • Pavia (in present-day Italy)
    • 5 min
  6. Author. English. This paper is about the fighting experience of soldiers who took part in the siege and battle of Pavia from October 1524 to February 1525. The hopes and suffering of soldiers, as well as forms of warfare are examined. For German and Swiss mercenaries, the money to be paid and the forthcoming spoils of war were of great importance.

  7. The Battle of Pavia tapestries commemorate Holy Roman Emperor Charles V’s 1525 victory over French King Francis I during the 16th-century Italian Wars. Among the most prized Renaissance arts, monumental tapestries served as dynamic tools for storytelling and political propaganda.

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