This is a list of sieges, land and naval battles of the War of the Second Coalition (1798/9 – 1801/2, depending on periodisation). It includes the battles of:
- the French campaign in Egypt and Syria (July 1799 – September 1801);[1]
- the Naples campaign in central and southern Italy (November 1798 – January 1799);[2]
- the Sanfedisti campaign in central and southern Italy (February–June 1799);[3]
- the Austro–Russian expedition in Italy and Switzerland (April–December 1799);[3]
- the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland (August–November 1799);[2]
- the Marengo campaign in northern Italy (April–June 1800);[4]
- the Danube campaign in southern Germany (May–June 1800);[4]
- the Hohenlinden campaign in Bavaria (November–December 1800);[4]
- the War of the Oranges in Portugal (May–June 1801);[5]
- overseas naval or colonial battles (insofar these were not part of the Haitian Revolution or East Indies theatre); and
- insurrections in Paris that overtook or threatened to overtake the central government.
It does not include battles from the Haitian Revolution (1791–1804), nor the East Indies theatre of the French Revolutionary Wars (1793–1801), nor the Chouannerie (1794–1800), nor the Anglo-Spanish War (1796–1808) (including the 1801 Algeciras campaign), nor the French invasion of Switzerland (January–May 1798), nor the Irish Rebellion of 1798, nor Mediterranean campaign of 1798, nor the Peasants' War (1798), nor the Quasi-War (1798–1800), nor the Stecklikrieg (1802), as these did not involve the Second Coalition as such.
Date | Battle | Front | French forces | Coalition forces | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
13 July 1798 | Battle of Shubra Khit (Battle of Chobrakit) |
Egypt and Syria |
![]() • Mamluks |
French victory | |
21 July 1798 | Battle of the Pyramids (Battle of Embabeh) |
Egypt and Syria |
![]() • Mamluks |
French victory | |
1–3 August 1798 | Battle of the Nile (Battle of Aboukir Bay) |
Egypt and Syria |
British[note 1] key victory | ||
12 / 23 October 1798 | Battle of Nicopolis (Battle of Preveza) |
Greece | ![]() |
Ottoman[note 1] victory | |
21–22 October 1798 | Revolt of Cairo | Egypt and Syria |
Cairene rebels | French victory | |
4 November 1798 – 3 March 1799 | Siege of Corfu | Greece | ![]() |
Coalition[note 2] victory | |
29 November 1798 | Capture of Rome[6] | Italy Naples |
![]() |
![]() |
Neapolitan[note 3] victory |
5 December 1798 | Battle of Civita Castellana[6] | Italy Naples |
![]() |
French victory | |
9 December 1798 | Capture of Turin[7] | Italy | ![]() |
French victory Piedm. Republic proclaimed[note 4] | |
23 January 1799 | Capture of Naples[6] | Italy Naples |
![]() |
French victory Parth. Republic proclaimed | |
8–20 February 1799 | Siege of El Arish | Egypt and Syria |
![]() • Mamluks |
French victory | |
6 March 1799 | Battle of Chur | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French victory | |
7 March 1799 | (First) Battle of Feldkirch | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French victory | |
20–21 March 1799 | Battle of Ostrach | Germany | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
20 March – 21 May 1799 | Siege of Acre | Egypt and Syria |
![]() |
Coalition key victory | |
23 March 1799 | (Second) Battle of Feldkirch | Italian and Swiss |
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Coalition victory | |
25 March 1799 | Battle of Stockach | Germany | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
29 March 1799 | Battle of Verona | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Draw | |
5 April 1799 | Battle of Magnano | Italy | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
April–July 1799 | Siege of Mantua | Italy | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
16 April 1799 | Battle of Mount Tabor | Egypt and Syria |
![]() |
French victory | |
27 April 1799 | Battle of Cassano | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
12 May 1799 | Battle of Bassignana | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French victory | |
16 May 1799 | First Battle of Marengo (Battle of San Giuliano) |
Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
25 May 1799 | Battle of Frauenfeld | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
![]() |
Draw |
27 May 1799 | Battle of Winterthur | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
4–7 June 1799 | First Battle of Zurich | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
12 June 1799 | Battle of Modena | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French victory | |
?–19 June 1799 | Siege of Naples | Italy Sanfedisti |
![]() |
![]() |
Coalition victory Kingdom of Naples restored |
18 June 1799 | Coup of 30 Prairial VII | Paris | Anti-Jacobin victory Sieyès seizes power | ||
19 June 1799 | Battle of Trebbia | Italian and Swiss |
with Polish Legions |
![]() |
Coalition victory |
20 June 1799 | Second Battle of Marengo (Battle of Cascina Grossa) |
Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French victory | |
25 July 1799 | Battle of Abukir (1) (Aboukir / Abu Qir) |
Egypt and Syria |
![]() * Mamluks |
French victory | |
14–15 August 1799 | Battle of Schwyz | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French victory | |
14–16 August 1799 | Battle of Amsteg | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French victory | |
15 August 1799 | (First) Battle of Novi | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
27 August 1799 | Battle of Callantsoog (Battle of Groote Keeten) |
Holland | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
30 August 1799 | Vlieter incident | Holland | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
10 September 1799 | Battle of Krabbendam (Battle of Zijpedijk) |
Holland | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
18 September 1799 | Battle of Mannheim | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
19 September 1799 | Battle of Bergen (1799) (Battle of Bergen-Binnen) |
Holland | ![]() |
French victory | |
24–26 September 1799 | Battle of Gotthard Pass | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
25–26 September 1799 | Second Battle of Zurich | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
French key victory | |
25–26 September 1799 | Battle of Linth River | Italian and Swiss |
![]() * Swiss rebels |
French victory | |
1 October 1799 | Battle of Muotathal | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
6 October 1799 | Battle of Castricum | Holland | ![]() |
* Prince of Orange |
French key victory |
24 October 1799 | Second Battle of Novi (Battle of Bosco) |
Italian and Swiss |
* Polish Legions |
![]() |
French victory |
4 November 1799 | Battle of Genola (Battle of Fossano) |
Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
9 November 1799 | Coup of 18 Brumaire | Paris | Napoleonic key victory Consulate proclaimed | ||
3 December 1799 | Battle of Wiesloch | Italian and Swiss |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
20 March 1800 | Battle of Heliopolis | Egypt and Syria |
![]() * Mamluks |
French victory | |
6 April – 4 June 1800 | Siege of Genoa | Italy Marengo |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
10 April 1800 | Battle of Sassello | Italy Marengo |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
1 May 1800 | Battle of Büsingen | Germany Danube |
![]() |
French victory | |
3 May 1800 | Battles of Stockach and Engen |
Germany Danube |
![]() |
French victory | |
4–5 May 1800 | Battle of Messkirch | Germany Danube |
![]() |
French victory | |
9 May 1800 | Battle of Biberach | Germany Danube |
![]() |
French victory | |
14 May – 1 June 1800 | Siege of Fort Bard | Italy Marengo |
![]() ![]() |
French victory | |
31 May 1800 | Combat of Turbigo | Italy Marengo |
![]() |
French victory | |
9 June 1800 | Battle of Montebello | Italy Marengo |
![]() |
French victory | |
14 June 1800 | Battle of Marengo | Italy Marengo |
![]() |
French key victory[note 5] | |
19 June 1800 | Battle of Höchstädt | Germany Danube |
![]() |
French victory | |
27 June 1800 | Battle of Neuburg | Germany Danube |
![]() |
French victory | |
1 December 1800 | Battle of Ampfing | Germany Hohenlinden |
![]() |
Coalition pyrrhic victory | |
3 December 1800 | Battle of Hohenlinden | Germany Hohenlinden |
![]() ![]() |
French key victory | |
25–26 December 1800 | Battle of Pozzolo (Mincio River / Monzambano) |
Italy | ![]() |
French victory | |
8 March 1801 | Battle of Abukir (2) | Egypt and Syria |
Coalition tactical victory | ||
13 March 1801 | Battle of Mandora | Egypt and Syria |
Coalition victory | ||
21 March 1801 | Battle of Alexandria (Battle of Canope) |
Egypt and Syria |
Coalition victory | ||
2 April 1801 | Battle of Copenhagen | Denmark | ![]() |
Coalition victory | |
8–19 April 1801 | Siege of Fort Julien | Egypt and Syria |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
May–June 1801 | Siege of Cairo | Egypt and Syria |
![]() |
Coalition victory | |
17 August – 2 September 1801 | Siege of Alexandria | Egypt and Syria |
Coalition[note 6] victory |
See also[]
- List of battles of the War of the First Coalition (20 April 1792 – 18 October 1797)
- List of battles of the War of the Third Coalition (1803/1805–1805/1806)
- List of battles of the War of the Fourth Coalition (9 October 1806 – 9 July 1807)
- List of battles of the War of the Fifth Coalition (10 April – 14 October 1809)
- List of battles of the War of the Sixth Coalition (3 March 1813 – 30 May 1814)
- List of battles of the Hundred Days (War of the Seventh Coalition) (15/20 March – 8 July / 16 August 1815)
Notes[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 At this time, the British and Ottomans were co-belligents; no formal alliance would be concluded until December 1798. The Battle of the Nile may be considered part of both the Mediterranean campaign of 1798 and the French campaign in Egypt and Syria.
- ↑ Russia and the Ottoman Empire concluded an alliance in December 1798.
- ↑ Although a formal alliance between Austria and Naples had been concluded on 19 May 1798, and Austrian general Karl Mack von Leiberich commanded the Neapolitan troops, there were no Austrian troops and formally no Austrian involvement in this campaign. France did declare war on Naples on 6 December 1798, but would not declare war on Austria until 12 March 1799.[2]
- ↑ Following the refusal to enter in alliance against the Two Sicilies, France declared war on both Naples and Piedmont-Sardinia the same day, December 6. The Piedmontese Republic was proclaimed on 10 December 1798. The Sardinian king Charles Emmanuel IV fled to Cagliari.
- ↑ The following day, the Convention of Alessandria was signed: a truce between France and Austria that would last from 15 June until 22 November 1800.
- ↑ At this time, the British and Ottomans were still allies fighting against France (since December 1798), even though most other members of the Second Coalition had already signed separate peace treaties. The alliance would be suspended by the Franco–Ottoman truce of Paris (9 October 1801), come to an end by the Anglo-French Treaty of Amiens (25 March 1802), and the war would be formally concluded by the Franco–Ottoman Treaty of Paris (25 June 1802).
References[]
- ↑ Dinç, Güven (2016). "The Ports of Cyprus and the French Invasion of Egypt (1798–1801)". Mediterranean Studies Association / Penn State University Press. pp. 39. Digital object identifier:10.5325/mediterraneanstu.24.1.0023. https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/psup/mediterranean-studies/article-abstract/24/1/23/247303/The-Ports-of-Cyprus-and-the-French-Invasion-of. "For this reason, the French invasion of Egypt, which was a part of the War of the Second Coalition, is regarded as the end of French supremacy in the Levant."
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Michael Ray, Robert Curley (14 February 2017). "French Revolutionary wars § Formation of the Second Coalition, French dispositions and the campaigns of 1799". Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/event/French-revolutionary-wars/Formation-of-the-Second-Coalition.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Moskal, Jeanne (2001). Rebellious Hearts: British Women Writers and the French Revolution. Albany, New York: SUNY Press. pp. 165. ISBN 9780791490648. https://books.google.com/books?id=pi4C_jMaT0MC&pg=PA165. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Michael Ray, Gloria Lotha (18 March 2020). "Napoleonic Wars § The Marengo campaign, The Danube campaign and Hohenlinden". Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/event/Napoleonic-Wars/The-Marengo-campaign.
- ↑ Folsom, Bradley (2017). Arredondo: Last Spanish Ruler of Texas and Northeastern New Spain. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 28. ISBN 9780806158242. https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=CRo6DgAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PA28. Retrieved 26 June 2022. "...a brief affair known as the War of the Oranges, a proxy conflict of the War of the Second Coalition, which had begun in 1798."
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Durant, Will; Durant, Ariel (2011). The Age of Napoleon: The Story of Civilization, Volume XI. Simon and Schuster. p. 589. ISBN 9781451647686. https://books.google.com/books?id=JiE3GbPcJcwC&pg=PT589. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
- ↑ A.Mathiez/G.Lefebvre, La Rivoluzione francese, vol. II, pp. 432–434.
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