Battle of Custoza (1866)
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| Battle of Custoza | |||||||
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| Part of the Austro-Prussian War | |||||||
Battle of Custoza (1866) |
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| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders | |||||||
| Alfonso Ferrero la Marmora and Enrico Cialdini | Archduke Albert of Habsburg | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 120,000[1] | 60,000 | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 8,147 total: 720 killed |
5,650 total: 960 killed |
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The Battle of Custoza took place on 24 June 1866 during the Third Italian Independence War in the Italian unification process.
The Austrian Empire army, led by Archduke Albert of Habsburg, defeated the Italian army led by Alfonso Ferrero la Marmora and Enrico Cialdini, in spite of the Italians' strong numerical advantage.
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[edit] Background
In June 1866, the German kingdom of Prussia declared war on the Austrian Empire. The recently formed Italian kingdom decided to seize the opportunity and allied with Prussia with the intention of annexing Venetia and thus uniting the Italian Peninsula. The Italians rapdily built up an army twice the size of their Austrian counterparts defending Venetia.
[edit] The Battle
In the fourth week of May, the Italians divided their army into two equally-sized corps, one commanded by King Vittorio Emmanuele and the other by Generals Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora and Enrico Cialdini. The king's force was to move into the Trentino region, while Marmora's crossed the Mincio River and invaded Venetia. Meanwhile, Austrian soldiers under Archduke Albert of Habsburg marched west from Verona to the north of the Italians, in an attempt to move behind the Italians so as to cut them off from the rear and thus slaughter them. The maneuver failed, resulting in a confused and ferocious struggle. The Austrians' rifled artillery ouperformed the Italian smoothbore guns and an improvised charge by Austrian lancers sustained heavy losses, but unnerved the Italians.
[edit] Aftermath
The Austrians were decisively victorious, both strategically and tactically. The Italians were driven back across the Mincio out of Venetia. Despite this victory and a naval defeat of the Italians at Lissa, the Austrians surrenedered to the Prussians a month later and were forced to cede Venetia.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Only 65,000 of which crossed the Mincio.
[edit] Works Cited
Encyclopedia Britannica: Second Battle of Custoza

