The Battle of Cassano, 1705. c.1720-30
Oil on canvas | 92.6 x 116.2 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 404896
-
Prince Eugene of Savoy was one of the most successful military commanders in European history. The offspring of a minor branch of the royal house of Savoy, he was born and brought up in the court of Louis XIV and spent his life fighting against that monarch in the service of three successive Emperors in Vienna. He was his master’s councillor and diplomat as well as general and a magnificent builder and patron of the arts in this own right. In 1708 Prince Eugene commissioned a series of records of his victories so far from Jan van Huchtenburgh, a Dutch artist in the tradition of Jan Wyck (see CW 262, 404737) and Adam Frans van der Meulen (1632-1690), who like them adapt panoramic topographical landscape to the service of military history. By 1720 Prince Eugene owned a set of ten battle scenes hanging in his country retreat, the Schlosshof, near Vienna (now in the Galleria Sabauda, Turin), as well as appearing in engraved form in the account of his victories by Jean Dumont, published in The Hague. This set of six copies or repetitions after these scenes was first recorded at Buckingham Palace in 1876. Nothing is known of their history before this, though they appear to be of reasonable quality, possibly from the artist’s studio, while clearly inferior to the Turin originals. There is no mystery about their appeal to an English audience: Prince Eugene fought alongside the Duke of Marlborough and the two great generals held each other in cordial esteem: Thomas Lediard calls them ‘Twin constellations in glory’. The six battles in the Royal Collection set include three where Marlborough and Prince Eugene fought together – Blenheim, Oudenard and Malplaquet – and one mislabelled as a depiction of Marlborough’s other great victory, Ramilies (in fact depicting the battle of Chiari). The other two are battles fought in Italy without British involvement, but also belonging to the same war, that of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714), in which British and the Empire were allies. On the 15 August 1705 the forces of France and Spain under Marshal Vendôme were engaged by Prince Eugene’s numerically inferior army, which was further weakened by disease and casualties. That the outcome was indecisive rather than a rout of the Imperial force is a tribute to Prince Eugene’s leadership. On the right, the Prince, mounted on a white charger, is in the centre of a cavalry skirmish, with wounded and dead men and horses on the ground; the River Adda runs across the middle ground, with Cassano on the far side, in the centre.
Provenance
First recorded in the Princesses' (now Principal) Corridor at Buckingham Palace in 1876
-
Creator(s)
Previously attributed to (artist)(nationality) -
Medium and techniques
Oil on canvas
Measurements
92.6 x 116.2 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
119.3 x 142.1 x 10.5 cm (frame, external)
Other number(s)