Contemporary etching of troop disposition at the beginning of the Battle of Breitenfeld (1631), painting in the
Musée historique de Strasbourg.
From the late 16th century into the 18th century battalia, was a description used both for the positioning of units in an army (or navy) on a battle field and the formation in which individual units deployed for battle (
battle array or battle order).[1][2] Sometimes it was used to describe the main body of an army deploy for battle but excluding the wings and other units such as those deployed in front of the main line in skirmishing formation etc.[3]Battalia differs from
battalion which is generally the smallest military unit capable of independent operations and would have formed up in its battalia when going into battle.[4]
See also
Pike and shot for details of different formation used in a battalia at the time the word was in common usage.
Gallery
A plan of the Royalist battalia at Marston Moor, drawn up by Sir
Bernard de Gomme
^Battalion is derived from the French battaillon which is derived from the Italian battaglione "augmentative or diminutive of battaglia battle n.; compare Spanish batallon 'a pettie battell or army'." (
OED staff, "Battalion")
Curtis, Thomas (1829),
"battalia", The London encyclopaedia: or Universal dictionary of science, art, literature, and practical mechanics, comprising a popular view of the present state of knowledge, vol. 3,
Thomas Tegg, p. 666
Further reading
Lenihan, Pádraig (2001),
"The Infantry Battle", Confederate Catholics at War, 1641–1649 (illustrated ed.), Cork University Press,
ISBN9781859182444 — "What does it mean to say that Preston drew his army into battalia?"