The city of
Brescia had rebelled against French rule and was subsequently garrisoned by Venetian troops.
Gaston of Foix, Duke of Nemours, recently arrived with the French armies in Italy, ordered the city to surrender; when it refused, they attacked. The French attack took place in torrential rain on a muddy field. Gaston ordered his men to remove their shoes for a better grip. The defenders inflicted heavy casualties on the French, but the French entered the city anyhow.
Gascon infantry and
Landsknechts proceeded to sack the city, massacring thousands of civilians over the next five days. The French soldiers even disregarded places of worship, massacring both the clergy and the civilian population who had sought refuge there. Two of the survivors were the young
Nicolo Tartaglia, who was wounded in the throat and left with a speech impediment, and the painter
Floriano Ferramola, who was saved by Gaston of Foix personally, on the condition that he made a painting of him. The Venetian commander and future Doge
Andrea Gritti was also spared and imprisoned in the Sforza Castle in Milan, until November 1512, when an alliance between France and Venice was formed. To avoid a simular fate, the city of
Bergamo paid the French approximately 60,000 ducats. Brescia remained under French control until its return to the Republic of Venice in 1520. ==References==