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Battle of Lippa
Part of part of the Illyrian Campaign of 1813
Date7 September 1813
Location
Lippa, Illyrian Provinces, French Empire
Result Austrian victory
Belligerents

France French Empire

 Austrian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of Italy (Napoleonic) GdB Gillot Rougier Austrian Empire GM Laval Nugent von Westmeath
Strength
2,563 men ca. 2,100 men and 9 guns
Casualties and losses
104 killed, 200 captured (Not all units were engaged) Not known, but very light.

The Battle of Lippa was an engagement which took place on 7 September 1813 in what is now Croatia, then part of Kingdom of Croatia, part of the Austrian Empire. Though a small engagement, the battle marked the turning point of the Illyrian Campaign of 1813, which would lead to the fall of the Illyrian Provinces.

Background

When the War of the Sixth Coalition broke out, the Austrian Empire remained loyal to the French Empire, and foreign minister Klemens von Metternich aimed to mediate in good faith a peace between France and its continental enemies, but it became apparent that the price was to be the dismantling of the Confederation of the Rhine, the Napoleon-controlled union of all German states aside from Prussia and Austria, and the return to France's pre-Revolutionary borders. Napoleon was not interested in any such compromise that would in effect end his empire, so Austria joined the allies and declared war on France in August 1813.

The new Austrian Army of Italy was to attack in the direction of Northern Italy/Piedmont and force a southern front in France. In September the Austrians opened up their Invasion of Illyria, and on 7 September a small Italian garrison fought an Austrian brigade on its way towards Trieste. This action became known as the Battle of Lippa.[1]

The battle ended in an Austrian victory, and the Italians fell back to Trieste.[1]

Order of Battle

Franco-Italian Forces

Austrian Forces

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d Smith 1998, p. 452.

References