Pedro Navarro, Count of Oliveto ( 1460 – 28 August 1528) was a Navarrese military engineer and general who participated in the War of the League of Cambrai. At the Battle of Ravenna in 1512, he commanded the Spanish and Papal States infantry, but was captured by the France. In the service of Francis I of France, he would supervise the French crossing of the Alps before the Battle of Novara in 1513.
He is widely regarded as the inventor of modern Tunnel warfare.
After returning to Spain in 1507, he had a falling out with Córdoba, who retired from the battlefields. Navarro took part in the North Africa expeditions of Cardinal Cisneros. Navarro assisted in the capture of the Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera in 1508 by employing a floating battery of his own design during the battle. He went on to fight at the capture of Mazalquivir (Mers-el-Kébir) and Oran in 1509. Navarro personally led the Spanish forces during the conquest of Bougie (Béjaïa), Algiers, Tunis, Tlemcen, and Tripoli in 1510. He enlisted in the service of Ramon de Cardona viceroy of Naples and returned to Italy upon hearing of a new war against France in 1511. He constructed a number of War wagon mounted with light artillery pieces in Ribauldequin shape designed to break up enemy formations in 1512.
Despite his efforts, the Spanish Papal army was defeated in the Battle of Ravenna on 11 April 1512, and he was captured by the French, whose Gaston de Foix had died at the battle. Ferdinand II of Aragon refused to ransom him, and Navarro eventually entered the service of Francis I of France. Navarro went on to accompany the French armies in their campaign against Milan (1515–1516), and he fought alongside King Francis against the Swiss at the battle of Marignano (13–14 September 1515). Continuing in French service, he fought at the Battle of Bicocca (27 April 1522) and was taken prisoner when the Spaniards under Prospero Colonna and Fernando d'Ávalos captured Genoa early the following year (1523). Released after the Treaty of Madrid (14 January 1526), he returned to French service, again being taken prisoner while serving the French expedition in Italy (1527). He died, aged around 68, in the prison of Castel Nuovo at Naples at the end of August 1528, possibly smothered with a pillow.
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