. In 1796, Wurmser descended into northern Italy, with 25,000 men from his old Army of the Rhine, to unite with Beaulieu's battered army of northern Italy. The two armies met at Trent and marched to Mantua in three columns. Wurmser's columns scored some initial successes. The forward column, under command of under
Peter Quasdanovich moved toward Lake Garda, Quasdanovich managed to occupy Lonato. The mopping up operations lasted until mid-August, isolated Quasdanovich's force by
Lake Garda, and freed the French to concentrate on Wurmser's main force at
Castiglione delle Stiviere, further south; Bonaparte's subsequent victory against Wurmser at the
Battle of Castiglione forced the old commander across the
Mincio river and allowed the French to return to the
siege of Mantua. The resumed siege was not without its problems. To move swiftly against Wurmser, Napoleon had abandoned his all his siege equipment, leaving it at Mantua. When he resumed the siege, it was much less effective without his guns. Wurmser's column fought its way to besieged
Mantua, but emerged suddenly, in an effort to escape, at the Battle of La Favorita near there on 15 September. This was the second attempt to relieve the fortress; as the Austrians withdrew from the battle, they retreated into Mantua itself, and from 15 September until 2 February 1797, Wurmser was trapped inside the fortress while the city was besieged. Following the Austrian loss at the
Battle of Rivoli, north of Mantua, on 14–15 January 1797, when clearly there would be no Austrian relief for Mantua, Wurmser sent one of his juniors, Johann von Klenau, to negotiate conditions of surrender with French General
Jean Sérurier, Additional evidence suggests that Bonaparte was present and dictated far more generous terms than the Austrians had expected. Wurmser, who Napoleon held in high esteem, left Mantua with his men and officers, and his battle honors, and marched back to Austrian lands. ==Legacy==