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Mantua Must Fall: The Siege That Defined Napoleon's Italian Conquest

Mantua Must Fall: The Siege That Defined Napoleon's Italian Conquest

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In the spring of 1796, Napoleon Bonaparte took command of a starving, undersupplied Army of Italy and proceeded to tear apart a combined Austro-Piedmontese force nearly double his strength. This episode covers the most concentrated burst of military success of his career — six engagements in fifteen days, the rapid neutralisation of Piedmont, and the drive eastward that brought him into Milan as Europe's most celebrated soldier.

The tactical genius on display here wasn't recklessness — it was architecture. Napoleon identified that the Austrian and Piedmontese armies were operating as two separate forces pretending to be one, and he drove a wedge between them before they could concentrate. Montenotte, Millesimo, Ceva, Mondovi — each battle a deliberate blow against an isolated portion of a divided enemy. Twenty-one captured standards. Fifty-five artillery pieces. Fifteen thousand prisoners. From a campaign Paris had considered a sideshow.

But Milan was only the symbolic prize. Mantua was the strategic one — a fortress city at the confluence of the Mincio River and the Lombardy lakes, held by a disciplined Austrian garrison capable of holding for months. As long as Austria held Mantua, it held leverage over all of northern Italy. Napoleon couldn't bypass it. He had to break it.

This episode examines the operational logic behind Napoleon's speed, the audacious Po River crossing without a bridging train, the political reality of 'liberation' versus extraction, and the opening of the Mantua siege that would define the next phase of the campaign. Essential listening for anyone tracing how a twenty-six-year-old transformed European warfare.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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