as the Second Italian War raged, Louis XII's knights pressed southward
into Naples to confirm the king's claim to the Italian throne.
He had taken Ferdinand II of Spain as an ally, offering to divide the
spoils once Louis dominated Italy.
Ferdinand had agreed, but once Naples was taken, the two bickered over
which lands would go to whom.
Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.Aragon and France turned on each
other, each taking up allies and mercenaries from the locals.
During the war, a group of French knights were out imbibing the local
wine, Rosso Barletta, and began raucously remarking about the quality of
Italian knights, namely the lack thereof. Hearing that Charles de la Motte
had called them cowards, the Italian knights challenged the French to a
tournament. The thirteen-on-thirteen contest went well for the Italians,
so much so that unsportsmanlike activity broke out. During a scuffle, an
Italian page pulled an arquebus and fired, spooking the horses and
injuring one of the French knights. The Italians broke off the contest,
embarrassed at the break of chivalry, and the French learned a valuable
lesson about the effective power of small arms.
They returned to the French army, and word of the fight worked its way up
to the Duke of Nemours. He and his advisers discerned the effectiveness of
the small arms, just as they had for the long range cannon, of which the
French had much more than the Spanish. Over the next months, he encouraged
his pike-wielding Swiss to emulate the Spanish Coronelias, which fought
with mixed pikes, swords, and arquebuses.
In late April, Nemours moved on the Spanish at Cerignola. The French
outnumbered them 32,000 to 8,000 and had twice as many cannon, but the
Spanish "El Gran Capitan" Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba had expertly
fortified the high ground with trenches, walls, and stakes. Heavy Spanish
artillery fire broke up the initial French charges, and Nemours first
planned an attack on the right flank against arquebusiers. However, as he
recalled the effectiveness of the arquebus against a knight from the
tournament a couple of months before, he decided on a new strategy. War
had changed, and to be victorious, the French army would have to adapt
beyond artillery.
Nemours moved his artillery and began pounding the Spanish infantry. When
they seemed softened, he moved forward the Swiss and assaulted, taking the
first volley from the arquebuses with an exchange of fire. Before the
Spanish could reload, the French knights charged past the Swiss and
stormed the trench. The Swiss followed after the breach, and the numbers
of the French army overwhelmed the Spanish defenders. While the French
took massive casualties, the Spanish were thoroughly defeated, and expert
commander Cordoba was captured.
The next year, the Louis signed the Treaty of Lyon with Ferdinand,
securing French control over mainland Italy. Spain still held Sicily, but
Louis had built a league with Venice and the Papal States that would
dominate Italy and, perhaps more importantly, the growing trade with the
East. During the rebuilding of Italy, Francis I instituted imperialistic
laws to dominate the Italian banking, shifting the financial center of
Europe from northern Italy to Paris. Portugal flourished with trade from
India, and Spain grew wealthy on gold from the New World, and France
launched its own expeditions to dominate Africa and the Mediterranean,
interrupting the expansion of the Ottomans, as well as colonizing much of
what would become North America.
During the nationalistic revolutions toward the end of the Age of
Enlightenment, the Italians would rally to unify themselves in revolt
against France in 1798, creating a new state and key player in Europe.