Battle of Crevola | |||||||
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Part of the Transalpine campaigns | |||||||
The battle of Crevola in the Luzerner Schilling | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Duchy of Milan[1] |
Old Swiss Confederacy:[2] Valais Lucerne | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Renato Trivulzio Giberto Borromeo Giampietro Bergamino [5][6] |
Jost von Silenen Albin von Silenen (POW) [4][7][8] | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1,200 Cavalry [9][10] 2,000 Infantry [9][10] total of 3,500 troops [11] |
6,000 Infantry [9][11] 1,000 Swiss joined from the Saluzzo Campaign | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Unknown |
800-1000 killed [2][9][10][12] |
The Battle of Crevola was fought in the spring of 1487, between a marauding Swiss army from the Valais and Lucerne[1][12] and troops from the Duchy of Milan,[1] for the supremacy of the Val d'Ossola (Eschental) .
In the year 1487, for unknown but petty reasons, Bishop Jost von Silenen entered into dispute with the Count of Arona,[2] whose seignory was the Duke of Milan.[13] The Knight Albin von Silenen, brother of Bishop Jost von Silenen, was appointed the leader of this military expedition.[8] As soon as the Simplon pass was passable, the Swiss crossed into the Val d'Ossola; here they were joined by another 1,000 Swiss, who were returning from Savoy.[9]
The Swiss besieged Domo, occupied the castle of Mattarella, and terribly ravaged the impoverished valleys.[1] The Duke of Milan, however, ordered the Ossolani to keep the Swiss inactive with false peace negotiations, until the duchy could dispatch a sufficient army.[13] Once the troops were assembled, they were split into three separate corps under the command of Renato Trivulzio, Count Borromeo, and Gio. Pietro Bergamino.[5] The Swiss were once again marauding in the villages of the Valle Vigezzo, when they were assaulted by the Milanese troops from three sides.[13] The Swiss formed a square and a murderous combat ensued, in which the Swiss lost 800-1000 men and all their baggage.[9][5] The rest of the Swiss troops were allowed to flee into the impassable mountain range.[12] The corpses of the dead Swiss were desecrated by the local peasants: the heads and fingers were cut off, the heads put on pikes and the fingers used as hat decorations.[9]
Further bloodshed was however prevented, when a legation of the Old Swiss Confederacy negotiated a peace treaty with the Duchy of Milan on July 23, 1487.[1][12] At ponte di Crevola, the Ossolani dedicated an Oratory to Martyr Saint Vitalis in honour and remembrance of this victorious battle.[5]