battle of magenta
The French and Sardinian forces celebrate their victory at the Battle of Magenta.
Proper noun A specific historical military engagement that took place in 1859, part of the Second Italian War of Independence, in which the combined French and Sardinian army, commanded by Napoleon III, achieved victory over the Austrian army led by Emperor Francis Joseph I.
The term is used to refer to this singular historical event. It is typically capitalized as it is a proper noun naming a specific battle. * The Battle of Magenta was a decisive conflict in the struggle for Italian unification. * Historians often analyze the tactics used at the Battle of Magenta.
- The battle is notable for giving its name to the color magenta, which was named after the battle shortly after the dye was discovered in the same year (1859).
- It can be used metaphorically to describe any intense, large-scale, and consequential conflict or effort, though this is a less common literary usage.
- The legislative session turned into a real Battle of Magenta over the new policy.
- Magenta: (noun) The vivid purplish-red color named after this battle.
- Second Italian War of Independence: (proper noun) The broader war of which this battle was a part.
- Engagement at Magenta
- Fight at Magenta
- Conflict at Magenta
Note: These synonyms are descriptive but are not standard proper names for the event.
The French and Sardinian forces celebrate their victory at the Battle of Magenta.
- a battle in 1859 in which the French and Sardinian forces under Napoleon III defeated the Austrians under Francis Joseph I