Meanwhile, Giuseppe Garibaldi arrived in
Marseille on October 7, to help the Republic which had succeeded the
Second French Empire of
Napoleon III, whose armies had defeated him
in Rome in 1849 and at the
Battle of Mentana in 1867. In mid-October, the general was charged by the provisional government to organize an army in the east of France (it is in
Dole the October 13). This mission was similar to that carried out between the Lombard lakes in 1848 and 1859, and to operations in Trentino in 1866: it involved action in a secondary area of operations but with a significant strategic role. The army, which initially numbered less than 4,000 men, was made up of colonials, national guards from
Aveyron, the
Alpes-Maritimes and
Savoie, Frankish corps (east and south-east of France), and foreign volunteers (Polish, Hungarian, Spanish, American and, above all, Italian). Garibaldi was assisted by his sons,
Menotti and
Ricciotti, his son-in-law Canzio, and Joseph Bordone, an Avignonnais of Italian origin who had followed Garibaldi in the
Expedition of the Thousand, and who was promoted general and chief of staff for the occasion. From the following month, Garibaldi set up his own headquarters in
Autun, and began attacks on the Prussian army, disrupting supply lines from
Strasbourg to
Paris. He enjoyed some success from the victorious shock of
Châtillon-sur-Seine on November 19, when Ricciotti Garibaldi took 200 prisoners and captured convoys of arms and ammunition. On November 26, however, the army failed in its attempt to retake Prussian-occupied Dijon. The battle took place on December 18, in the plain which extends in front of the town of
Nuits-Saint-Georges, when the Germans made contact with the volunteers who barred their way to the south. After a day of fighting, the Frankish corps retreated, leaving around 1,200 French prisoners, 97 German officers shot dead, and
Prince Wilhelm wounded, with overall losses amounting to a few hundred men. The Prussians captured fugitives on the roads of the village, except some survivors sheltered by the populace, who dressed them in civilian clothes. The victors looted the hospital, the shops, and the inns, set fire to buildings and sifted through the city house by house. ==Third Battle of Dijon==