, painted by
Raphael (oil on wood, ). Julius attempted to secure Papal authority in Italy by creating the League of Cambrai, an alliance aimed at curbing Venetian power. After the creation of the League of Cambrai, the danger to the Republic of Venice became imminent. Already in January 1509, the French ambassador left Venice, and by April the French king formally declared war to the Republic. On 27 April, pope Julius II issued the
interdict against the Venetians. In the same time, the
Venetian Senate ordered to assemble an army of about 50,000 soldiers in
Pontevico, along the
Oglio river, while the main Venetian generals assembled in its
Castle. On 9 May 1509, Louis crossed the
Adda River at the head of a French army of about 40,000 soldiers and moved rapidly into Venetian territory. To oppose him, Venice had hired a
condottiere army under the command of the
Orsini cousins—Bartolomeo d'Alviano and
Niccolò di Pitigliano—but had failed to account for their disagreement on how best to stop the French advance. On 14 May, Alviano confronted the French at the
Battle of Agnadello; outnumbered, he sent requests for reinforcements to his cousin, who replied with orders to break off the battle and continued on his way. Alviano, disregarding the new orders, continued the engagement; his army was eventually surrounded and destroyed. Pitigliano managed to avoid encountering Louis; but his mercenary troops, hearing of Alviano's defeat, had deserted in large numbers by the next morning, forcing him to retreat to
Treviso with the remnants of the Venetian army. The Venetian collapse was complete. Louis proceeded to occupy Venetian territory as far east as Brescia without encountering any significant resistance; the Venetians lost all the territory that they had accumulated in northern Italy during the previous century. The major cities that had not been occupied by the French—Padua, Verona, and Vicenza—were left undefended by Pitigliano's withdrawal, and quickly surrendered to Maximilian when Imperial emissaries arrived in the Veneto. Julius invaded the Romagna and captured Ravenna with the assistance of
Alfonso d'Este, Duke of Ferrara. D'Este, having joined the League and been appointed Gonfalonier on 19 April, seized the
Polesine for himself. The newly arrived Imperial governors, however, quickly proved to be unpopular. In mid-July, the citizens of Padua, aided by detachments of Venetian cavalry under the command of the
proveditor Andrea Gritti, revolted. The
landsknechts garrisoning the city were too few in number to mount effective resistance, and Padua was restored to Venetian control on 17 July. The success of the revolt finally pushed Maximilian into action. In early August, a massive Imperial army, accompanied by bodies of French and Spanish troops, set out from
Trento into the Veneto. Because of a lack of horses, as well as general disorganization, Maximilian's forces were slow to begin the
siege of Padua, giving Pitigliano the time to concentrate such troops as were still available to him in the city. Although French and Imperial artillery successfully breached Padua's walls, the defenders managed to hold the city until Maximilian, growing impatient, lifted the siege on 1 October and withdrew to Tyrol with the main part of his army. In mid-November, Pitigliano returned to the offensive,
recapturing Vicenza,
Este,
Feltre, and
Belluno; an attack on Verona failed, but Pitigliano destroyed a Papal army under
Francesco II of Gonzaga in the process.
Angelo Trevisan organized a river attack on
Ferrara by the Venetian
galley fleet, but the resulting
Battle of Polesella ended in another defeat for the Republic when the Venetian ships anchored in the
Po River were sunk by Ferrarese artillery. Faced with a shortage of both funds and men, the Senate decided to send an embassy to Julius in order to negotiate a settlement. The terms insisted on by the Pope were harsh: the Republic lost her traditional power to appoint clergy in her territory, as well as all jurisdiction over Papal subjects in Venice, the Romagnan cities that had prompted the war were to be returned to Julius, and reparations were to be paid to cover his expenses in capturing them. The Senate argued over the terms for two months, but finally accepted them in February 1510; even before the Venetian ambassadors had presented themselves to Julius for
absolution, however, the
Council of Ten had privately resolved that the terms had been accepted under duress and were therefore invalid, and that Venice should violate them at the earliest opportunity. The peace agreement between the pope and the Venetians was concluded on 15 February 1510, and already on 24 February Julius officially revoked the
interdict, that was imposed on the Venetians in 1509. This apparent reconciliation between Venice and the Pope did not stop multiple French, Ferrarese, and Imperial armies from invading Venetian territory in May 1510.
Gianpaolo Baglioni and Andrea Gritti, left in command of the Venetian forces by Pitigliano's death in January, withdrew to Padua; by 24 May, the League's armies had taken Vicenza and the Polesine, and were advancing on
Legnago. Gritti fortified Padua for an expected attack by a combined Franco-Imperial army, but Louis, frustrated by Maximilian's failure to appear in person and distracted by the death of his advisor, the
Cardinal d'Amboise, abandoned his plans for a siege. ==Decline of the League of Cambrai==