The entrance to Piedmont . The Russian field marshal's impatience was soon satisfied: while General Moreau was retreating before him, Suvorov received news that General Étienne Jacques Macdonald (aka MacDonald) was coming up from
Naples with 40,000 men to help the retreating French troops. Sensing the danger deriving from a possible reunion of the French forces, he decided to move immediately and attack Macdonald before turning again against Moreau: his plan was to march towards Piedmont crossing the Po with the bulk of his forces, defeat the arriving general and then quickly return towards Turin to face Moreau. Suvorov then sent Vukassovich to the Ticino River near
Boffalora while he himself headed for
Melegnano with the main army of 44,000 men dividing it into two columns: on the right wing the Russians towards
Parpanese, on the left the Austrians towards Lodi and Piacenza with the order to try to advance as far as
Parma and the
Modena area. In the absence of bridges over the Po at Piacenza and Parpanese, Suvorov decided to cross near
Mezzana Corti and Pavia, where he sent his Cossacks under the command of Bagration to occupy the city: the latter arrived there on 3 May and quickly repaired the bridge over the Ticino which he had found damaged. On 4 May the Field Marshal arrived in Pavia and was informed that the French had abandoned
Tortona on the
Scrivia, so he sent Bagration there to capture the fortress and continue towards
Novi Ligure and
Gavi. Bagration found that the information was incorrect and that the French actually still occupied the town with at least 4,000 men, but were apparently unable to use their guns due to lack of ammunition. He then received orders to wait for the Commander-in-Chief at Voghera. On 7 May Rosenberg crossed the Ticino and reached
Dorno, while Suvorov left the bulk of his forces and joined Bagration at Voghera. Here the Russian commander reorganised his forces, sending Prince Pyotr to cut French communications between Tortona and
Genoa and placing his armies on both banks of the Po, with Rosenberg between Dorno and
Lomello, Melas at
Castel San Giovanni and Bagration marching towards
Pozzolo Formigaro. The previous day Kray had captured Peschiera and moved towards Mantua. General Ott was ordered to station himself between Parma and Modena to observe Macdonald's movements. At this point in the campaign the Allied soldiers began to suffer from a lack of supplies and the Russians in particular often fought hungry: supplies were the responsibility of the Austrians and the
intendants were not always able to organize them properly. This was the cause of friction with the local populations: indeed, on May 3, Bagration, after three days of fasting for his troops, seized the bread supplies by force. The French meanwhile were reorganising: Moreau managed to concentrate around 20,000 men between
Valenza and Alessandria at the
strategic confluence of the Po, the
Tanaro and the
Bormida, which also gave him a clear
tactical advantage. Strategically, Moreau thus controlled the southern part of Piedmont and the main communication routes with the
Italian Riviera, he was able to act quickly on both banks of the Po and blocked the access routes to Turin: if Macdonald had arrived in time to attack the allies, he could have engaged them from behind, forcing them to fight on two fronts. Tactically, his flanks were covered by the fortresses of Valenza and Alessandria and, moreover, the northern bank of the river, on which the French were fortified, was in an elevated position compared to the southern one from which Moreau expected to be attacked, granting him a dominant position. The advance of the Allies continued however. On 10 May Bagration occupied
Marengo and at the same time the Austrian general Chasteler attacked the fortress of Tortona, from which the French garrison bombarded the city. Bagration reached Novi and verified that the French garrison had already retreated towards Genoa, leaving large quantities of provisions and as many as 70 wagons of ammunition destined for the main army. To further complicate the situation of the French troops, the discontent of the local populations was added. Once their initial enthusiasm had worn off, they realised that the revolutionaries, instead of bringing the promised freedom and national glory, had established a permanent state of war for three years, perpetrated outrages against religion, stripped museums, monuments and churches of works of art and caused all kinds of extortion and abuse, appearing more like invaders than liberators: the imminent arrival of the imperial troops was therefore the occasion for many cities and villages to rise up against the French garrisons. Bagration himself informed Suvorov that he had received letters from the city authorities of
Oneglia,
Asti and
Acqui Terme, which described the revolts against the French and offered support to the allied armies.
Battle of Bassignana Between 11 and 12 May Suvorov made his move and, giving credence to initial erroneous information, which said the French were retreating from Valenza, ordered Rosenberg to move from Lomello and cross the Po at
Mugarone to attack the French on the left flank. Immediately afterwards, having learned the falsity of the previous news, he ordered him to turn back. Rosenberg however crossed anyway and, having set out towards
Bassignana with 10,000 men, chose to head towards an area between Valenza and the Tanaro; in the meantime he had another 4,000 men under the command of General Nikolay Andreyevich Chubarov cross, positioning them on a large river island located near Mugarone. Chubarov, eager to attack, crossed with all his troops but ran into the French division of Grenier, 4,000 strong, which, coming from Valenza, under the command of General
Colli, attacked him on the right flank and inflicted heavy losses, forcing him to retreat in disorder to the islet from which he had just forded, in an extremely chaotic situation with scattered men and immobilized wagons, under constant fire from French rifles and without the possibility of retreating quickly beyond the Po, as the cable to reach the left bank by hand had broken. Nevertheless, the Russian soldiers of Bagration's
brigade held their position for eight hours, resisting until after sunset; under cover of darkness all of Rosenberg's troops finally managed to recross the river and march to rejoin Suvorov, leaving behind on the field at least 1,500 men, one general, fifty-eight officers and two guns. The French lamented the loss of 600 men. Suvorov, furious, immediately called Rosenberg to report to him to account for the defeat, threatening him with a court martial; in the meantime he decided to move his headquarters to
Castelnuovo Scrivia. Meanwhile, on May 11th, the fortress of Pizzighettone had surrendered after a day of shelling. Contemporary sources tell that, although overwhelmed, Russian cavalry and infantry allowed themselves to be killed in vain even at Bassignana rather than surrender, because Suvorov had the habit of terrorising his men by telling them the macabre and obviously false details of the alleged tortures that the revolutionary republicans inflicted on the soldiers who fell into their hands: the prisoners were stripped naked, tied up, laid on a grill and roasted; or their noses, hands and ears were cut off. A chronicler of the French army reported that 800 Russians preferred to throw themselves into the Po rather than be captured.
The clash at Marengo By mid-May the Russo-Austrians were firmly established on the southern bank of the Po: Austrian troops at
Torre, Förster at
Sale, Bagration at Novi with his Russian troops deployed between Scrivia and
Bormida in support of Major General
Andreas Karaczay at Marengo. Suvorov now had about 36,000 men at his disposal, of whom 17,500 were Russian, not counting Vukassovich's 5,000 men at Boffalora; he had to face only about 25,000 French, who, however, were very well placed because they enjoyed an advantageous position, made even more formidable by the swollen rivers. The Russian field marshal had to admit that he was not in a position to attack them successfully. In reality, Moreau was in a difficult situation: the Directory was not able to send him any reinforcements, Bagration was making communications with Genoa very difficult for him and the revolts in Piedmont were threatening the supply routes from France. General
Catherine-Dominique de Pérignon, who controlled the passes to the Riviera, was in danger of being easily crushed, causing him to lose not only the last communication route with France, but also with the
Apennine Mountains and the army of the approaching Macdonald. Furthermore, he had the problem of bringing home a large number of wagons with the proceeds of the looting of precious works of art stolen in Italy. The French commander then decided to reinforce General Pérignon with a part of his troops, to protect himself on the left with another contingent and to set out on the road from Turin to
Nice by the
Col de Tende, crossing
Cuneo, preparing to retreat to the
Apennines with the ultimate aim, without too much difficulty and at the right moment, of rejoining Macdonald, who at that moment had reached the border with Tuscany. Nevertheless, intelligence reports suggested to Moreau that Rosenberg's failed attempt to cross Bassignana and news of Vukassovich's subsequent bombardment of
Casale Monferrato heralded a surge of Suvorov's Russian troops along the Po. He imagined that the Allies were concentrating their forces by moving north, leaving only a few Austrian troops to besiege Tortona, and so decided to take action with a surprise counterattack between the Bormida and Scrivia rivers that would allow him to liberate the fortress and keep open the
Bocchetta Pass to Genoa. Moreau gathered two divisions near Alessandria and on the night of 15-16 May he had a bridge built over the Bormida between Marengo and
San Giuliano Vecchio, allowing General Victor's division (5,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry) to cross it, while Grenier's unit held its position on the river. The attack was initially successful and threw
Kaim's and
Lusignan's troops into disarray as they advanced as far as San Giuliano. There he encountered
Fröhlich's division, which had arrived in haste to take command of General Lusignan, and General Bagration's brigade: the two officers commanded a total of eleven battalions and nine
squadrons and successfully resisted until they pushed Victor back across the river. Finally Moreau, having spotted other enemy troops rushing from Tortona, understood that his attempt had failed and ordered a general retreat; at 18:00 the last
grenadier recrossed the Bormida. The French suffered losses of up to 1,500 men killed, wounded, captured or missing, while the Allied losses amounted to 720 and Suvorov, given the uncertain progress of the day, did not dare to claim his forty-second victory.
The capture of Turin Even if the battle of Marengo had not been decisive, on 18 May Moreau decided to abandon his safe position between Valenza and Alessandria to retreat towards Turin, sending Victor instead southwards towards the western
Ligurian coast, in the hope of being able to join Macdonald there; in the meantime he managed to get the stolen works to France through
Mont Cenis pass. Suvorov, unaware of these manoeuvres, continued to march on the north bank of the Po towards Turin, moving the base of operations to
Candia Lomellina. Politically the hope was to continue to encourage the Piedmontese population to arm themselves and rise up against the revolutionary troops and against the
Jacobins, with the promise of the restoration of the Kingdom and the previous order; strategically the allies aimed to occupy the city for its position and the sure capture of a large number of weapons, ammunition and war material. In fact, the Piedmontese armed themselves and attacked the revolutionaries, especially in
Canavese and in
Carmagnola, and there were regular reports of massacres perpetrated in reprisal by the French against the civilian population. While the
engineers were throwing bridges over the river for a new crossing, Suvorov received the news that Moreau's troops had left Alexandria and sent a division there to occupy it and besiege the fortress which was still garrisoned. At this point Suvorov was perplexed by the continuous "disappearances" of the French troops before his eyes and by his inability to predict their moves: despite having at his disposal a large number of horsemen and scouts, in fact, he was never able to set up an effective espionage service. This was due in part to the poor knowledge of the territory by the Cossacks and their difficulty in interacting with the local populations, in part to the ineptitude of many Russian officers, who did not organize adequate reconnaissance, so that the French often managed to get away undisturbed; finally, Suvorov's own habit of taking every simple rumour as reliable, wasting time and resources, further complicated the situation. On 22 May the bridges were ready and, based on the information available on the French, the Russian general continued his approach to Turin, under whose walls Bagration and Vukassovich arrived first on the 26th, without encountering any resistance because Moreau had retreated to Cuneo. The French garrison consisted of 3,400 men under the command of General
Pascal Antoine Fiorella, overwhelmed by forces ten times superior and strongly disliked by the population. The allies asked for their unconditional surrender but Fiorella refused, preparing to resist until the last man. They then prepared to set up batteries on a nearby hill to bombard the city, while Vukassovich attacked the , with his cannons on the night of the 27th. However, the intervention of the
armed citizens who had risen up proved decisive. That same night they attacked the French guards at the site and joyfully opened the gate to the allies. The event was repeated at the , and the city was taken with ease. The allies seized 384 cannons, 20,000 muskets and large quantities of gunpowder. Suvorov entered the city at 3 pm, receiving acclamations for himself and for the emperors Paul I and Francis II. General Fiorella still retained possession of the fortified
citadel and, in retaliation against the population, ordered the
bombardment of the city, ceasing only after the promise that the garrison would not be attacked. On 18 June, however, the allies
stormed it under intense artillery fire and, having forced their way through two breaches in the fortification, forced it to capitulate on the 19th. Suvorov's entry into the Piedmontese capital was even more solemn and triumphal than in Milan and, as promised, he reconstituted the government in the name of the king of Sardinia, appointing a council with
Carlo Thaon di Sant'Andrea as governor, he worked to reorganise the royal regiments by promising an amnesty to the soldiers who had supported the French and had a few hundred patriots who had not had time to escape imprisoned. Shortly afterwards he sent for King Charles Emmanuel IV from his exile in Sardinia but his reinstatement on the throne was opposed by the Austrians: this was a precursor of the first frictions between Russia, Austria and the other allied powers on the policy to be applied and the new order to be defined in Northern Italy at the end of the war. While the Allies had denounced French reprisals in Piedmont against the civilian population, the French stigmatized Suvorov's excessive fury and anti-Jacobin exaltation, which bordered on religious fanaticism with the promise that whoever killed a revolutionary would earn himself paradise. The Piedmontese ended up fearing his power: again according to French sources, he granted to anyone who wanted it the written permission to kill Jacobins (real or presumed) and to plunder their homes and he also imprisoned and flogged simple citizens who were bold enough to denounce the illegalities committed by Cossacks and Austrian knights, "...left without restraint to rage like savages through the fields." Meanwhile, the forced inactivity was beginning to spread discontent among the Allied troops, sparking dangerous rivalries and triggering recriminations on both sides: the Russians mocked the Austrians for having had to ask for their help without which "...they would have been driven back by the Republicans to Vienna, with blows from the flat of their sabres"; Melas' Austrians remembered the reverses suffered by the Russians at Valenza and San Giuliano at the hands of Moreau: simple mockery was followed by insults, then duels. Only the increasingly insistent news of Macdonald's dangerous arrival gave Suvorov the opportunity to reconcile the Austro-Russians and to once again coordinate their efforts against the common enemy. ==The arrival of General Macdonald==