NAPOLEONIC CAMPAIGNS
Colonel Frederic Natusch Maude C.B.
Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th edition, 1910,
vol. 19, pgs, 216-236
The era of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars falls into two main
divisions, the first of which (1792-1801) is dealt with under the heading
FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS. In the present
article are described the campaigns in central and eastern Europe, directed by
Napoleon-no longer one amongst many French generals, nor even a simple
primus inter pares, but "Emperor " in the fullest sense
between the years 1805 and 1814. Napoleon's short Spanish Campaign of 1809 is
dealt with under PENINSULAR WAR (this article
covering the campaigns in Spain, Portugal and southern France 1808-1814), and
for the final drama of Waterloo the reader is referred to WATERLOO CAMPAIGN
(coming soon). Please see also the article on
Napoleon. (Since the maps
in the Encyclopedia Britannica article are inadequate we are providing links to
the excellent atlas of military maps at the US Military academy.)
General
map Europe in 1805.
The campaigns described below are therefore
(a) The Austrian War of 1805 (Ulm and Austerlitz).
(I) The Conquest of Prussia and the Polish Campaign (Jena, Auerstadt, Eylau and
Friedland).
(c) The Austrian War of 1809 (Eckmuhl, Aspern and Wagram),
(d) The Russian War of 1812 (Borodino and the retreat from Moscow).
(e) The German "War of Liberation," culminating in the Battle
of the Nations around Leipzig.
(f) The last campaign in France, 1814.
The naval history of 1803-1815 includes the culmination and the sequel of
the struggle for command of the sea which began in 1793 and reached its maximum
intensity on the day of Trafalgar.
2. The Campaign of 1805 may be regarded as a measure of
self-defence forced upon Napoleon by the alliance of Russia (April 11th),
Austria (August 9th) and other powers with Great Britain. The possibility had
long been before the emperor, and his intention in that event to march straight
on Vienna by the valley of the Danube is clearly indicated in his reply
(November 27th, 1803) to a Prussian proposal for the neutralization of the
South German states. In this he says, "It is on the road from Strassburg
to Vienna that the French must force peace on Austria, and it is this road
which you wish us to renounce." When, therefore, on the 25th of August
1805, he learnd definitely that Villeneuve (see Naval operations below)
had failed in his purpose of securing the command of the Channel, which was the
necessary preliminary to the invasion of England, it was but the affair of a
few hours to dictate the dispositions necessary to transfer his whole army to
the Rhine frontier as the first step in its march to the Danube. On this date
the army actually lay in the following positions:-
I. Corps Bernadotte Hanover (Gottingen)
II. Corps Marmont Holland
III.Corps Davout and
IV.Corps Soult and
V. Corps Lannes and
VI.Corps Ney Camp of Boulogne and other points on the English channel
VII. Corps Augereau Paris
Guard Bessieres Paris.
The corps were, however, by no means fit for immediate service.
Bernadotte's corps in Hanover was almost in the position of a beleaguered
garrison, and the marshal could only obtain his transport by giving out that he
was ordered to withdraw to France. Marmont and Davout were deficient in horses
for cavalry and artillery, and the troops in Boulogne, having been drawn
together for the invasion of England, had hardly any transport at all, as it
was considered this want could be readily supplied on landing. The composition
of the army, however, was excellent. The generals were in the prime of life,
had not yet learnt to distrust one another, and were accustomed to work under
the emperor and with one another. The regimental officers had all acquired
their rank before the enemy and knew how to manage their men, and of the men
themselves nearly two-thirds had seen active service. The strength of the army
lay in its infantry, for both cavalry and artillery were short of horses, and
the latter had not yet acquired mobility and skill in manoeuvring. Napoleon's
determination to undertake the invasion of England has often been disputed, but
it is hard to imagine what other operation he contemplated, for the outbreak of
hostilities with his continental enemies found him ill-supplied with
intelligence as to the resources of the country he had then to traverse. To
remedy this, Murat and other general officers as well as minor agents were sent
ahead and instructed to travel through South Germany in plain clothes with a
view to collecting information and mastering the topography. The emperor was,
moreover, imperfectly acquainted with the degree of preparation of his
adversaries' designs, and when he dictated his preliminary orders he was still
unaware of the direction that the allies' advance would assume. That he foresaw
the march of events which ultimately drew Mack to Ulm is inconceivable. On the
26th of August, however, he learnt that 100,000 Russians were about to enter
Bohemia thence to unite with an Austrian army of 80,000 near the junction of
the Inn and Danube, and this information compelled him to alter the general
direction of his advance so as to traverse the defiles of the Black Forest
north of the Neckar, cavalry only observing the passes to the south.
3. Austrian Army. The Austrians after the defeats of 1800 had
endeavoured to reorganize their forces on the French model, but they were soon
to learn that in matters of organization the spirit is everything, the letter
very little. They had copied the Organization of the French corps, but could
find no corps commanders fit to assume the responsibility for these commands.
As always in such conditions, the actual control of the smallest movements was
still centralized in the hands of the army commanders, and thus the rate of
marching was incredibly slow. They had decided that in future their troops in
the field should live by requisition, and had handed over to the artillery,
which needed them badly, a large number of horses thus set free from the
transport service, but they had not realized that men accustomed to a regular
distribution of rations cannot be transformed into successful marauders and
pillagers by a stroke of the pen; and they had sent away the bulk of their
army, 120,000 under their best general, the archduke Charles, into Italy,
leaving Lieut. Field Marshal Mack von Leiberich in Germany, nominally as chief
of the staff to the young Prince Ferdinand, but virtually in command, to meet
the onset of Napoleon at the head of his veterans. Mack was a man of unusual
attainments. He had risen from the ranks in the most caste-ridden army in
Europe, and against untold opposition had carried through army reforms which
were correct in principle, and needed only time to develop. It was his fate to
be made the scapegoat for the disasters which followed, though they need no
further explanation than that, at the head of 80,000 men and exercising only
restricted powers of command, he was pitted against the greatest strategist of
all ages who was responsible to no overlord and commanded, in the fullest sense
of the term, an army considerably more than twice as strong.
4. The March on Ulm.-The outbreak of the campaign was hastened by
the desire of the Austrian government to feed their own army and leave a bare
country for Napoleon by securing the resources of Bavaria. It was also hoped
that the Bavarians with their army of 20,000 men would join the allies. In the
latter hope they were deceived, and the Bavarians under General Wrede slipped
away to Bamberg in time. In the former, however, they were successful, and the
destitution they left in their wake almost wrecked Napoleon's subsequent
combinations. Mack's march to Ulm was therefore a necessity of the situation,
and his continuance in this exposed position, if foolhardy against such an
adversary, was at any rate the outcome of the high resolve that even if beaten
he would inflict crippling losses upon the enemy. Mack knew that the Russians
would be late at the rendezvous on the Inn. By constructing an entrenched camp
at Ulm and concentrating all the available food within it, he expected to
compel Napoleon to invest and besiege him, and he anticipated that in the
devastated country his adversary would be compelled to separate and thus fall
an easy prey to the Russians. For that blow he had determined to make his own
army the anvil. But these views obviously could not be published in army
orders, hence the discontent and opposition he was destined to encounter.
5. Movements of the French.-It was on the 21st that Napoleon learnt
of Mack's presence in Ulm. On that date his army had crossed the Rhine and was
entering the defiles of the Black Forest. It was already beginning to suffer.
Boots were worn out, greatcoats deficient, transport almost unattainable and,
according to modern ideas, the army would have been considered incapable of
action. (Map of Ulm Campaign Central Europe
2-25
Sept 1805)
The locations of the French corps on selected dates are shown in this
table.
Commander |
Sept 28 |
Oct 6 |
Oct 9 |
Oct 16 |
Bernadotte |
Wurzburg |
Anspach |
Nurnberg |
Regensburg |
Marmont |
Wurzburg |
Anspach |
Nurnberg |
Regensburg |
Davout |
Mannheim |
Mergentheim |
Anspach |
Dietfurt |
Ney |
Selz |
Crailsheim |
Weissenburg |
Ingolstadt |
Lannes |
Strassburg |
Gmund |
Nordlingen |
Neuburg |
Soult |
Landau |
Aalen |
Donauworth |
|
On the 26th of September, its deployment beyond the mountains was
complete, and as Napoleon did not know of Mack's intention to stay at Ulm and
had learned that the Russian advance had been delayed, he directed his columns
by the following roads on the Danube, between Donauworth and Ingolstadt, so as
to be in a position to intervene between the Austrians and the Russians and
beat both in detail. On the 7th of October this movement was completed - the
Austrians abandoned the Danube bridges after a show of resistance, retreating
westward - and Napoleon, leaving Murat in command of the V. and VI. corps and
cavalry to observe the Austrians, pressed on to Augsbuig with the others so as
to be ready to deal with the Russians. Learning, however, that these were still
beyond striking radius, he determined to deal with Mack's army first, having
formed the fixed conviction that a threat at the latter's communications would
compel him to endeavour to retreat southwards towards Tirol. Bernadotte in his
turn became an army of observation, and Napoleon joining Murat with the main
body marched rapidly westward from the Lech towards the Iller.
6. Austrian Plans Mack's intentions were not what Napoleon
supposed. He had meanwhile received (false) information of a British landing at
Boulogne, and he was seriously deceived as to the numbers of Napoleon's forces.
He was also aware that the exactions of the French had produced deep
indignation through out Germany and especially in Prussia (whose neutrality had
been violated, see 14, below). All this, and the almost mutinous discontent of
his generals and his enemies of the court circle, shook his resolution of
acting as anvil for the Russians, of whose delay also he was aware, and about
the 5th of October he determined to march out north-eastward across the French
lines of communication and save his sovereign's army by taking refuge if
necessary in Saxony. Believing implicitly in the rumours of a descent on
Boulogne and of risings in France which also reached him, and knowing the
destitution he had left behind him in his movement to Ulm, when he heard of the
westward march of French columns from the Lech he told his army, apparently in
all good faith, that the French were in full march for their own country.
Actually the French at this moment were suffering the most terrible distress -
up to the Danube they had still found sufficient food for existence, but south
of it, in the track of the Austrians, they found nothing. All march discipline
disappeared, the men dissolved into hordes of marauders and even the sternest
of the marshals wrote piteous appeals to the emperor for supplies, and for
permission to shoot some of their stragglers. But to all these Berthier in the
emperor's name sent the stereotyped reply- "The emperor has ordered you to
carry four days' provisions, therefore you can expect nothing further-you know
the emperor's method of conducting war."
7. Action of Albeck or Haslach Meanwhile Murat, before the emperor
joined him, had given Mack the desired opening. The VI. corps (Ney) should have
remained on the left bank of the Danube to close the Austrian exit on that
side, but by mistake only Dupont's division had been left at Albeck, the rest
being brought over the river. Mack on the 8th had determined to commence his
withdrawal, but fortune now favoured the French. The weather during the whole
of October had been unusually wet, the swollen Danube overflowed the low ground
and the roads had become quagmires. On the south bank, owing to better natural
drainage and a drier subsoil, movement was fairly easy, but the Austrians found
it almost impossible. On the 11th of October, when they began their march, the
road along the Danube was swept into the river, carrying with it several guns
and teams, and hours were consumed in passing the shortest distances. At length
in the afternoon they suddenly fell upon Dupont's isolated division atAlbeck,
which was completely surprised and severely handled. The road now lay
completely open, but the Austrian columns had so opened out owing to the state
of the roads that the leading troops could not pursue their advantage - Dupont
rallied and the Austrians had actually to fall back towards Ulm to procure
food. (Map of Central Europe
26
Sept - 9 Oct 1805)
(Map of Central Europe
9-11 Oct. 1805) 8. Elchingen.-For three more days Mack struggled
with an unwilling staff and despondent men to arrange a further advance. (Map
of Central Europe
11-14
Oct, 1805) During these very three days, through a succession of staff
blunders, the French failed to close the gap, and on the morning of the 14th of
October both armies, each renewing their advance, came in contact at the bridge
of Elchingen. This bridge, all but a few road-bearers, had been destroyed, but
now the French gave an example of that individual gallantry which was
characteristic of the old revolutionary armies. Running along the beams under a
close fire a few gallant men forced their way across. The floor of the bridge
was rapidly relaid, and presently the whole of the VI. corps was deploying with
unexampled rapidity on the farther side. The Austrians, still in their
quagmire, could not push up reinforcements fast enough, and though Mack
subsequently alleged deliberate obstruction and disobedience on the part of his
subordinates, the state of the roads alone suffices to explain their defeat.
Only the right column of the Austrians was, however, involved; the left under
General Werneck, to whom some cavalry and the archduke Ferdinand attached
themselves, did indeed succeed in getting away, but without trains or supplies.
They continued their march, famished but unmolested, until near Heidenheim they
suddenly found themselves confronted by what from the diversity of uniforms
they took to be an overwhelming force; at the same time the French cavalry sent
in pursuit appeared in their rear. Utterly exhausted by fatigue, Werneck with
his infantry, some 8000 strong, surrendered to what was really a force of
dismounted dragoons and foot-sore stragglers improvised by the commanding
officer on the spot to protect the French treasure chests, which at that moment
lay actually in the path of the Austrians. The young archduke with some cavalry
escaped.
9 Mack surrounded. The defeat at Elchingen on the 14th of October
sealed the fate of the Austrians, though Mack was still determined to endure a
siege. As the French columns coming up from the south and west gradually
surrounded him, he drew in his troops under shelter of the fortress and its
improvised entrenched camp, and on the 15th he found himself completely
surrounded. On the 16th the French field-guns fired into the town, and Mack
realized that his troops were no longer under sufficient control to endure a
siege. When, therefore, next morning, negotiations were opened by the French,
Mack, still feeling certain that the Russians were at hand, agreed to an
armistice and undertook to lay down his arms if within the next twenty-one days
no relief should arrive. To this Napoleon consented, but hardly had the
agreement been signed than he succeeded in introducing a number of individual
French soldiers into the fortress, who began rioting with the Austrian
soldiery. Then, sending in armed parties to restore order and protect the
inhabitants, he caused the guards at the gates to be overpowered, and Mack was
thus forced into an unconditional surrender. On the 22nd of October, the day
after Trafalgar, the remnant of the Austrian army, 23,000 strong, laid down its
arms. About 5000 men under Jellachich had escaped to Tirol, 2000 cuirassiers
with Prince Ferdinand to Eger in Bohemia, and about 10,000 men under Werneck,
had surrendered at Heidenheim. The losses in battle having been insignificant,
there remain some 30,000 to account for- most of whom probably escaped
individually by the help of the inhabitants, who were bitterly hostile to the
French.
(Map of Central Europe
26
Oct - 15 Nov. 1805) 10. Napoleon's Advance to Vienna. Napoleon now
hastened to rejoin the group of corps he had left under Bernadotte in
observation towards the Russians, for the latter were nearer at hand than even
Mack had assumed. But hearing of his misfortune they retreated before
Napoleon's advance along the right bank of the Danube to Krems, where they
crossed the river and withdrew to an entrenched camp near Olmtitz to pick up
fresh Austrian reinforcements. The severe actions of Durrenstein (near Krems)
on the 11h, and of Hollabrun on the 16th of November, in which Napoleon's
marshals learned the tenacity of their new opponents, and the surprise of the
Vienna bridge (November 14) by the French, were the chief incidents of this
period in the campaign.
(Map of Central Europe
25
Nov. 1805) 11. Campaign of Austerlitz. Napoleon continued down the
right bank to Vienna, where he was compelled by the condition of his troops to
call a halt to refit his army. After this was done he continued his movement to
Brunn. Thither he succeeded in bringing only 55,000 men. He was again forced to
give his army rest and shelter, under cover of Murat's cavalry. The allies now
confronted him with upwards of 86,000 men, including 16,000 cavalry. About the
20th of November this force commenced its advance, and Napoleon concentrated in
such a manner that within three days he could bring over 80,000 French troops
into action around Brunn, besides 17,000 or more Bavarians under Wrede. On the
28th Murat was driven in by the allied columns. That night orders were
despatched for a concentration on Brunn in expectation of a collision on the
following day; but hearing that the whole allied force was moving towards him
he decided to concentrate south-east of Brunn, covering his front by cavalry on
the Pratzen heights. Meanwhile he had also prepared a fresh line of retreat
towards Bohemia, and, certain now of having his men in hand for the coming
battle, he quietly awaited events. The allies were aware of his position, and
stil adhering to the old "linear " system, marched to turn his right
flank (see AUSTERLITZ). As soon as their strategic purpose of cutting him off
from Vienna became apparent, the emperor moved his troops into position, and in
the afternoon issued his famous proclamation to his troops, pointing out the
enemy's mistakes and his plan for defeating them. At the same time he issued
his orders for his first great battle as a supreme commander. The battle of
Austerlitz began early next morning and closed in the evening with the thorough
and decisive defeat of the allies. (Map Austerlitz Campaign
1800
hours 1 Dec 1805 - map
0900
hours 2 Dec. 1805 - map
1400
hours 2 Dec 1805)
(Map
Central Europe 1806) 12. Jena, 1806 Around the Prussian army, and
particularly the cavalry, the prestige of Frederick the Great's glory still
lingered; but the younger generation had little experience of actual warfare,
and the higher commanders were quite unable to grasp the changes in tactics and
in the conduct of operations which had grown out of the necessities of the
French Revolution. The individual officers of the executive staff were the most
highly trained in Europe, but there was no great leader to co-ordinate their
energies. The total number of men assigned to the field army was 110,000
Prussians and Saxons. They were organized in corps, but their leaders were
corps commanders only in name, for none were allowed any latitude for
individual initiative. Ill-judged economies had undermined the whole efficiency
of the Prussian army. Two-thirds of the infantry and one-half of the cavalry
were allowed furlough for from ten to eleven months in the year. The men were
unprovided with greatcoats. Most of the muskets had actually seen service in
the Seven Years? War, and their barrels had worn so thin with constant
polishing that the use of full charges at target practice had been forbidden.
Above all, the army had drifted entirely out of touch with the civil
population. The latter, ground down by feudal tradition and law, and at the
same time permeated by the political doctrines of the late 18th century,
believed that war concerned the governments only, and formed no part of the
business of the "honest citizen." In this idea they were supported by
the law itself, which protected the civilian against the soldier, and forbade
even in war-time the requisitioning of horses, provisions and transport,
without payment. Up to the night of the battle of Jena itself, the Prussian
troops lay starving in the midst of plenty, whilst the French everywhere took
what they wanted. This alone was a sufficient cause for all the misfortunes
which followed.
13 Outbreak of tke War.-During the campaign of Austerlitz Prussia,
furious at the violation of her territory of Anspach, had mobilized, and had
sent Haugwitz as ambassador to Napoleon's headquarters. He arrived on the 30th
of November, and Napoleon, pleading business, put off his official reception
till after the battle of Austerlitz. Of course the ultimatum was never
presented, as may be imagined; Haugwitz returned and the king of Prussia
demobilized at once. But Napoleon, well knowing the man he had to deal with,
had determined to force a quarrel upon Prussia at the earliest convenient
opportunity. His troops therefore, when withdrawn from Austria, were cantoned
in south Germany in such a way that, whilst suspicion was not aroused in minds
unacquainted with Napoleonic methods, they could be concentrated by a few
marches behind the Thuringian forest and the upper waters of the Main. Here the
Grand Army was left to itself to recuperate and assimilate its recruits, and it
is characteristic of the man and his methods that he did not trouble his corps
commanders with a single order during the whole of the spring and summer. As
the diplomatic crisis approached, spies were sent into Prussia, and
simultaneously with the orders for preliminary concentration the marshals
received private instructions, the pith of which cannot be better expressed
than in the following two quotations from Napoleon's correspondence:- Mon
intention est de concentrer toutes mes forces sur l'cxtremite de ma droite en
laissant tout l'espace entre le Rhin et Bamberg entirement degarni, do maniere
a' avoir pres do 200,000 hommes reunis sur un memo champ do bataille; mes
premieres marches menacent le cocur de la monarchic prussienne " (No.
10,920). Avoc cette immense superiorite do forces reunis sur un espace si
etroit, vous sontez que je suis dans la volonte de ne rein hasarder et
d'attaquer l'ennemi partout ou' il voudra tenir. Vous pensez bien que ce serait
une belle affaire que do se porter sur cette place (Dresden) en un bataillon
carre' de 200,000 hommes" (Soult, No.10,941).
(Map Jena Campaign
6
Oct. 1806) 14. Advance of the Grande Armee.- On the 7th of October
the Grande Arme'e lay in three parallel columns along the roads leading
over the mountains to Hof, Schleiz and Kronach; on the right lay the IV. corps
(Soult) about Bayreuth; with his cavalry in rear, and behind these the VI.
corps (Ney) at Pegnitz; in the centre, Bernadotte's I. corps from Nordhalben,
with the III. corps (Davout) Lichtenfels; Guard and headquarters, Bamberg The
left column was composed of the V. (Lannes) at Hemmendorf,with the VIII
Augereau) extending south to the Main at Burgebrach.
Napoleon's object being surprise, all the cavalry except a few vedettes
were kept back behind the leading infantry columns and these latter were
ordered to advance, on the signal being given, in "masses of
manoeuvre," so as to crush at once any outpost resistance which was
calculated upon the time required for the deployment of ordinary marching
columns. This order has never since found an imitator, but deserves attentive
study as a masterpiece (see H. Bonnal, Manauvre d'Iena).
(Map Jena Campaign
8-10
Oct. 1806) To meet the impending blow the Prussians had been extended in a
cordon along the great road leading from Mainz to Dresden, Blucher was at
Erfurt, Ruchel at Gotha, Hohenlohe at Weimar, Saxons in Dresden, with outposts
along the frontier. An offensive move into Franconia was under discussion, and
for this purpose the Prussian staff had commenced a lateral concentration about
Weimar, Jena and Naumburg when the storm burst upon them. The emperor gathered
little from the confused reports of their purposeless manoeuvres, but, secure
in the midst of his " battalion square" of 200,000 men, he remained
quite indifferent, well knowing that an advance straight on Berlin must force
his enemy to concentrate and fight, and as they would bring at most 127,000 men
on to the battlefield the result could hardly be doubtful. On the 9th of
October the cloud burst. Out of the forests which clothe the northern slopes of
the Thuringer Wald the French streamed forth, easily overpowering the
resistance of the Prussian outposts on the upper Saale,1 and once the open
country was reached the cavalry under Murat trotted to the front, closely
followed by Bernadotte's corps as "general advance guard." The result
of the cavalry scouting was however unsatisfactory. On the night of the 10th,
the emperor was still unaware of the position of his principal foe, and Murat
with Bernadotte behind him was directed on Gera for the 11h, the remainder of
the army continuing along the roads previously assigned to them.
1 At the action of Sanlfeld on the 10th, the young and gallant Prince
Louis Ferdinand of Prussia was killed.
In the meanwliile, however, the Saxons had been moving from Naumburg
through Gera on Jena, Hohenlohe was near Weimar, and all the other divisions of
the army had closed in a march eastwards, the idea of an offensive to the
southward which Napoleon had himself attributed to them having already
disappeared.
(Map Jena Campaign
10-12
Oct. 1806) Reaching Gera at 9 A.M. Murat reported the movement of the
Saxons on the previous day, but omitted to send a strong detachment in pursuit.
The traces of the Saxons were lost, and Napoleon, little satisfied with his
cavalry, authorized Lasalle to offer up to 6000 frs. reward for information of
the Prussian point of concentration. At 1 A.M. of the 12th Napoleon issued his
orders. Murat and Bernadotte via Zeitz to Naumburg; Davout (III. corps and a
dragoon division) also to Naumburt; lannes to Jena, Augereau following; Soult
to Gera.
15. Prussian Movements.-In the meantime the Prussians were effecting their
concentration. Rtlchel, who with 15,000 men had been sent into the mountains as
an advanced guard for the projected offensive, was recalled to Weimar, which he
reached on the 13th. The main body were between Weimar and Apolda during the
12th, and the Saxons duly effected their junction with Hohenlohe in the
vicinity of Vierzehnheiligen, whilst the latter had withdrawn his troops all
but some outposts from Jena to the plateau about Capellendorf, some 4 m. to the
N.W. The whole army, upwards of 120,000 men, could therefore have been
concentrated against Lannes and Augereau by the afternoon of the 13th, whilst
Soult could only have intervened very late in the day, and Davout and
Bernadotte were still too distant to reach the battlefield before the 14th. All
the French corps, moreover, were so exhausted by their rapid marches over bad
roads that the emperor actually ordered (at 1 A.M. on the 13th) a day of rest
for all except Davout, Bernadotte, Lannes and Murat.
The Prussian headquarters, however, spent the 12th and 13th in idle
discussion, whilst the troop commanders exerted them selves to obtain some
alleviation for the suffering of their starving men. The defeats undergone by
their outpost detach ment had profoundly affected the nerves of the troops, and
on the afternoon of the 11th, on the false alarm of a French approach, a panic
broke out in the streets of Jena, and it took all the energy of Hohenlohe and
his staff to restore order. On the morning of the 12th the Saxon commanding
officers approached Hohenlohe with a statement of the famishing condition of
their men, and threatened to withdraw them again to Saxony. Hohenlohe pointed
out that the Prussians were equally badly off, but promised to do his best to
help his allies. Urgent messages were sent off to the Commissary von Goethe
(the poet), at Weimar for permission to requisition food and firewood. These
requests, however, remained unanswered, and the Prussians and Saxons spent the
night before the battle shivering in their miserable bivouacs.
(Map Battles of Jena and Auerstadt
13
Oct. 1806) 16. The 13th of October.-During the early morning of the
13th the reports brought to Napoleon at Gera partially cleared up the
situation, though the real truth was very different from what he supposed.
However, it was evident that the bulk of the Prussians lay to his left, and
instructions were at once despatched to Davout to turn westward from Naumburg
towards Kosen and to bring Bernadotte with him if the two were still together.
The letter, however, ended with the words "but I hope he is already on his
way to Dornburg." Now Bernadotte. had neglected to keep the emperor
informed as to his where abouts. He was still with Davout, but, concluding that
he had missed an order directing him to Dornburg, he thought to conceal his
error by assuming the receipt of the order evidently alluded to in the last
words, and as a result he marched towards Dornburg, and his whole corps was
lost to the emperor at the crisis of the next day's battle.
On the road from Gera to Jena Napoleon was met by intelligence from Lannes
announcing his occupation of Jena and the discovery of Prussian troops to the
northward. Knowing the emperor's methods, he wisely restrained the ardour of
his subordinates and asked for instructions whether to attack or wait. The
emperor rode forward rapidly, reached Jena about 3 P.M., and with Lannes
proceeded to the Landgrafenberg to reconnoitre. From this point his view was,
however, restricted to the immediate foreground, and he only saw the camps of
Hohenlohe's left wing. At this moment the Prussians were actually on parade and
ready to move off to attack, but just then the "evil genius "of the
Prussian army, von Massenbach, an officer of the Headquarter Staff, rode up and
claiming to speak with the authority of the king and commander-in-chief,
induced Hohenlohe to order his troops back to camp. Of all this Napoleon saw
nothing, but from all reports he came to the conclusion that the whole Prussian
army was actually in front of him, and at once issued orders for his whole army
to concentrate towards Jena, marching all night if need be. Six hours earlier
his conclusion would have been correct, but early that morning the Prussian
headquarters, alarmed for the safety of their line of retreat on Berlin by the
presence of the French in Naumburg, decided to leave Hohenlohe and Ruchel to
act as rear-guard, and with the main body to commence their retreat towards the
river Unstrutt and the Eckhardtsberge where Massenbach had previously
reconnoitred an "ideal" battlefield. This belief in positions was the
cardinal principle of Prussian strategy in these days. The troops had
accordingly commenced their march on the morning of the 13th, and now at 3 P.M.
were settling down into bivouac; they were still but a short march from the
decisive field.
(Map Jena and Auerstadt
1000
hrs 14 Oct. 1806) 17. Battle of Jena.- On the French side, Lannes'
men were working their hardest, under Napoleon's personal supervision, to make
a practicable road up to the Landgrafenberg, and all night long the remaining
corps struggled through darkness towards the rendezvous. By daybreak on the
14th, the anniversary of Elchingen, upwards of 60,000 men stood densely packed
on the narrow plateau of the mountain, whilst, below in the ravines on either
flank, Soult on the right, and Augereau on the left, were getting into
position. Fortunately a dense fog hid the helpless masses on the Landgrafenberg
from sight of the Prussian gunners. Hohenlohe had determined to drive the
French into the ravine at daybreak, but had no idea as to the numbers in front
of him. For want of room, only a few Prussian battalions were sent forward, and
these, delaying their advance till the fog had sufficiently lifted, were met by
French skirmishers, and small columns, who rapidly overlapped their flanks and
drove them back in confusion. Hohenlohe now brought up the remainder of his
command, but in the meanwhile the French had poured across the neck between the
Landgrafenberg and the main plateau, and the troops of Soult and Augereau were
working up the ravines on either hand. In view of these troops the Prussian
line, which had advanced faultlessly as if on parade, halted to prepare its
bayonet attack by fire, and, once halted, it was found impossible to get them
to go on again. The French who had thrown themselves into houses, copses,
&c., picked off the officers, and the flanks of the long Prussian lines
swayed and got into confusion. The rival artilleries held each other too
thoroughly to be able to spare attention to the infantry, whilst the Prussian
cavalry, which had forgotten how to charge in masses of eighty or more
squadrons, frittered away their strength in isolated efforts. By 10 A.M. the
fourteen battalions which had initiated this attack were outnumbered by three
to one, and drifted away from the battlefield. Their places were taken by a
fresh body, but this was soon outnumbered and outflanked in its turn. By 2 P.M.
the psychic moment had come, and Napoleon launched his guards and the cavalry
to complete the victory and initiate the pursuit. - Ruchel's division now
arrived and made a most gallant effort to cover the retreat, but their order
being broken by the torrent of fugitives, they were soon overwhelmed by the
tide of the French victory and all organized resistance had ceased by 4 P.M.
(Map Jena and Auerstadt
1400
hours 14 Oct. 1806) Briefly summarized, the battle came to this-in four
successive efforts the Prussians failed because they were locally out numbered.
This was the fault of their leaders solely, for, except for the last attack,
local superiority was in each case attainable. Organization and tactics did not
affect the issue directly, for the conduct of the men and their junior officers
gave abundant proof that in the hands of a competent leader the "linear
" principle of delivering one shattering blow would have proved superior
to that of a gradual attrition of the enemy here, as on the battlefields of the
Peninsula and at Waterloo, and this in spite of other defects in the training
of the Prussian infantry which simultaneously caused its defeat on the
neighbouring field of Auerstadt.
18. Battle of Auerstadt Here the superiority of French mobility, a
consequence of their training and not necessarily of their system, showed its
value most conclusively. Davout in obedience to his orders of the previous
morning was marching over the Saale at Kosen, when his advanced guard came in
contact with that of the Prussian main army. The latter with at least 50,000
men was marching in two columns, and ought therefore to have delivered its men
into line of battle twice as fast as the French, who had to deploy from a
single issue, and whose columns had opened out in the passage of the Kosen
defile and the long ascent of the plateau above. But the Prussians attacked at
the old regulation speed of seventy-five paces to the minute, and the French
manoeuvred at the quick or double of 120 or 150. The consequence was that the
French always succeeded in reinforcing their fighting line in time to avert
disaster. Nevertheless by mid-day their strength was well-nigh exhausted,
whilst the Prussian reserve, eighteen battalions of guards under Kalckreuth,
stood intact and ready to engage. But at the critical moment the duke of
Brunswick fell mortally wounded, and Scharnhorst, his chief of the staff, was
at the time absent on another part of the field. Meanwhile rumours from the
battlefield at Jena, magnified as usual, began to reach the staff, and these
may possibly have influenced Kalckreuth, for when appealed to to attack with
his eighteen battalions and win the day, he declined to move without the direct
order of the commander-in-chief to do so, alleging that it was the duty of a
reserve to cover the retreat and he considered himself personally responsible
to the king for the guards entrusted to his care. Even then the day might have
been saved had Blucher been able to find even twenty squadrons accustomed to
gallop together, but the Prussian cavalry had been dispersed amongst the
infantry commands, and at the critical moment it proved impossible for them to
deliver a united and decisive attack.
Seeing further efforts hopeless, Scharnhorst in the duke's name initiated
the retreat and the troops withdrew N.W. towards Buttelstedt, almost unmolested
by the French, who this day had put forth all that was in them, and withstood
victoriously the highest average punishment any troops of the new age of
warfare had as yet endured. So desperate had been their resistance that the
Prussians unanimously stated Davout's strength at double the actual figure.
Probably no man but Davout could have got so much out of his men, but why was
he left unsupported?
Bernadotte, we have seen, had marched to Dornburg, or rather to a point
overlooking the ford across the Saale at the village of that name, and reached
there in ample time to intervene on either field. But with the struggle raging
before him he remained undecided, until at Jena the decision had clearly
fallen, and then he crossed the river and arrived with fresh troops too late
for their services to be required.
(Map
of Central Europe 1806) 19. Prussian Retreat During the night the
Prussians continued their retreat, the bulk of the main body to Sommerda,
Hohenlohe's corps towards Nordhausen. The troops had got much mixed up, but as
the French did not immediately press the pursuit home, order was soon
re-established and a combined retreat was begun towards the mouth of the Elbe
and Lubeck. Here help was expected to arrive from England, and the tide might
yet have turned, for the Russian armies were gathering in the east. It was now
that the results of a divorce of the army from the nation began to be felt.
Instead of seizing all provisions and burning what they could not remove, the
Prussian generals enforced on their men the utmost forbearance towards the
inhabitants, and the fact that they were obeyed, in spite of the inhumanity the
people showed to their sick and wounded country men, proves that discipline was
by no means so far gone as has generally been believed. The French marching in
pursuit were received with open arms, the people even turning their own wounded
out of doors to make room for their French guests. Their servility awakened the
bitterest contempt of their conquerors and forms the best excuse for the
unparalleled severity of the French yoke. On the 26th of October Davout reached
Berlin, having marched 166 m. in twelve days including two sharp rearguard
actions, Bernadotte with his fresh troops having fallen behind. The inhabitants
of Berlin, headed by their mayor, came out to meet him, and the newspapers
lavished adulation on the victors and abuse on the beaten army. On the 28th
Murat's cavalry overtook the remnant of Prince Hohenlohe's army near Prenzian
(N. of Berlin) and invited its capitulation. Unfortunately the prince sent
Massenbach to discuss the situation, and the latter completely lost his head.
Murat boasted that he had 100,000 men behind him, and on his return Massenbach
implored his chief to submit to an unconditional surrender, advice which the
prince accepted, though as a fact Murat's horses were completely exhausted and
he had no infantry whatever within call. Only Blucher now remained in the
field, and he too was driven at length into Lubeck with his back to the sea.
(Map
of Europe 1806) 20. Campaigns in Poland and East Prussia.- Hitherto
the French had been operating in a rich country, untouched for half a century
past by the ravages of war, but as the necessity for a campaign against the
Russians confronted the emperor, he realized that his whole supply and
transport service must be put on a different footing. After the wants of the
cavalry and artillery had been provided for, there remained but little material
for transport work. Exhaustive orders to organize the necessary trains were
duly issued, but the emperor seems to have had no conception of the
difficulties the tracks-there were no metalled roads-of Poland were about to
present to him. Moreover, it was one thing to issue orders, but quite another
to ensure that they were obeyed, for they entailed a complete transformation in
the mental attitude of the French soldier towards all that he had been taught
to consider his duties in the field. Experience only can teach the art of
packing wagons and the care of draught animals, and throughout the campaign the
small ponies of Poland and East Prussia broke down by thousands from over
loading and unskilful packing.
21. Tke Russian Army formed the most complete contrast to the
French that it is possible to imagine. Though clad, armed and organized in
European fashion, the soldiers retained in a marked degree the traditions of
their Mongolian forerunners, their transport wagons were in type the survival
of ages of experience, and their care for their animals equally the result of
hereditary habit. The intelligence of the men and regimental officers was very
low, but on the other hand service was practically for life, and the regiment
the only home the great majority had ever known. Hence obedience was
instinctive and initiative almost undreamt of. Moreover, they were essentially
a war- trained army, for even in peace time their long marches to and fro
within the empire had most thoroughly inured them to hardship and privation.
Napoleon might have remembered his own saying, " La misere est l'e'cole du
hon soldat." In cavalry they were weak, for the Russian does not take
kindly to equitation and the horses were not equal to the accepted European
standard of weight, while the Cossack was only formidable to stragglers and
wounded. Their artillery was numerous and for the most part of heavy calibr
-18- and 24-pounders were common-but the strength of the army lay in its
infantry, with its incomparable tenacity in defence and its blind confidence in
the bayonet in attack. The traditions of Suvarov and his victories in Italy
(see FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS) were still
fresh, but there was no longer a Suvarov to lead them.
22. Advance to the Vistula. Napoleon had from the first been aware
of the secret alliance between Prussia and Russia, sworn by their respective
sovereigns over the grave of Frederick the Great, and this knowledge had been
his principal reason for precipitating hostilities with the former. He
remained, however, in complete ignorance of the degree of preparation attained
on the Russian side, and since the seizure of Warsaw together with the control
of the resources of Poland in men and material its occupation would afford, was
the chief factor in his calculation, he turned at once to the eastward as soon
as all further organized resistance in Prussia was ended by the surrender of
Prenzlau and Lubeck. Scarcely leaving his troops time to restore their wornout
footgear, or for the cavalry to replace their jaded horses from captured
Prussian resources, he set Davout in motion towards Warsaw on the 2nd of
November, and the remainder of the army followed in successive echelons as
rapidly as they could be despatched.
The cavalry, moving well in advance, dispersed the Prussian depots and
captured their horses, as far as the line of the Vistula, where at last they
encountered organized resistance from the outposts of Lestocq's little corps of
15,000 men-all that was left of Frederick the Great's army. These, however,
gave way before the threat of the advancing French and after a few trifling
skirmishes. Davout entered Warsaw on the 30th of November, being followed by
the V., IV. and Guard corps during the succeeding fortnight, whilst the VI. and
VII. were echeloned to their left, and the VIII. (Mortier) and IX. (Jerome
Napoleon) and X. (Lefebvre), all new formations since the outbreak of the war,
followed some marches in the rear. Jerome's corps was composed of the
Bavarians, Wurttembergers and Badensers.
Behind these all Prussia was overrun by newly formed units, (3rd and 4th
battalions) raised from depot companies, conscripts for 1807, and old soldiers
rejoining after sickness or wounds. Napoleon caused these to be despatched to
the front immediately after their formation. He had much territory to occupy,
and in the long march of on an average 85 days, he considered that they could
be organized, equipped and drilled en route.
23. Pultusk. The Russians meanwhile had been moving slowly forward
in two bodies, one under Bennigsen (50,000), the other under Buxhowden
(25,000), and the French being at this time in Warsaw, they took up threatening
positions about Pultusk, Plock and Prassnitz. From this triangle they harried
the French communications with Berlin, and to secure a winter's rest for his
men Napoleon determined to bring them to action. On the 23rd of December
operations were commenced, but the difficulties of securing information and
maintaining communication between the respective columns, so unlike what any of
the French had previously encountered, led to a very partial success. The idea
had been to induce the Russians to concentrate about Pultusk and, turning their
position from its left, ultimately to cut them off from Russia, and if possible
to surround them. But in this new and difficult country the emperor found it
impossible to time his marches. The troops arrived late at their appointed
positions, and after a stubborn rearguard action at Pultusk itself and
undecisive fighting elsewhere (Soldau-Golymin) the Russians succeeded in
retreating beyond the jaws of the French attack, and Napoleon for the first
time found that he had exceeded the limit of endurance of his men. Indeed, the
rank and file bluntly told him as much as he rode with the marching columns.
Yielding to the inevitable, but not forgetting to announce a brilliant victory
in a bulletin, he sent his troops into winter quarters along the Passarge and
down the Baltic, enjoining on his corps commanders most strictly to do nothing
to disturb their adversary.
14.Campaign of Eylau Bennigsen, now commanding the whole Russian
army which with Lestocq's Prussians amounted to 100,000, also moved into winter
quarters in the triangle Deutsch-Eylau-Osterode-Allenstein, and had every
intention of remaining there, for a fresh army was already gathering in Russia,
the 1st corps of which had reached Nur about 50 m. distant from the French
right.
Unfortunately, Ney with his VI. corps about Gilgenberg had received the
most poverty-stricken district in the whole region, and to secure some
alleviation for the sufferings of his men he incautiously extended his
cantonments till they came in contact with the Russian outposts. Apparently
seeing in this movement a recommencement of hostilities, Bennigsen concentrated
his troops towards his right and commenced an advance westwards towards Danzig,
which was still in Prussian hands. Before his advance both Ney and Bernadotte
(the latter, between Ney and the Baltic, covering the siege of Danzig) were
compelled to fall back. It then became necessary to disturb the repose of the
whole army to counter the enemy's intentions. The latter by this movement,
however, uncovered his own communication with Russia, and the emperor was quick
to seize his opportunity. He received the information on the 25th of January.
His orders were at once issued and complied with with such celerity that by the
31st he stood prepared to advance with the corps of Soult, Ney, Davout and
Augereau, the Guard and the reserve cavalry (80,000 men on a front of 60 m.)
from Myszienec through Wollenberg to Gilgenberg; whilst Lannes on his right
toward Ostrolenka and Lefebvre (X.) at Thorn covered his outer flanks.
Bernadotte, however, was missing, and this time through no fault of his
own. His orders and the despatch conveying Napoleon's instructions fell into
the hands of the Cossacks, and just in time Bennigsen's eyes were opened.
Rapidly renouncing his previous intentions, he issued orders to concentrate on
Allenstein; but this point was chosen too far in advance and he was anticipated
by Murat and Soult at that place on the 2nd of February. He then determined to
unite his forces at Joukendorf, but again he was too late. Soult and Murat
attacked his rear-guard on the 3rd, and learning from his Cossacks that the
French corps were being directed so as to swing round and enclose him, he
withdrew by a night march and ultimately succeeded in getting his whole army,
with the exception of von Lestocq's Prussians, together in the strong position
along the Alle, the centre of which is marked by Preussisch-Eylau. The
opportunity for this concentration he owed to the time gained for him by his
rearguard at Joukendorf, for this had stood just long enough to induce the
French columns to swing in to surround him, and the next day was thus lost to
the emperor as his corps had to extend again to their manoeuvring intervals.
The truth is that the days were too short and the roads too bad for Napoleon to
carry out the full purpose his "general advanced guard" was intended
to fulfil. It was designed to hold the enemy in position by the vigour of its
attack, thus neutralizing his independent will power and compelling him to
expend his reserves in the effort to rescue the troops engaged. But in forests
and snowdrifts the French made such slow progress that no sufficient deployment
could be made until darkness put a stop to the fighting. Thus, when late on the
7th of February 1807 Murat and Soult overtook the enemy near Eylau (q.v.) the
fighting was severe but not prolonged. This time, however, Bennigsen, with over
60,000 men in position and 15,000 Prussians expected to arrive next morning,
had no desire to avoid a battle, and deployed for action, his front protected
by great batteries of guns, many of them of heavy calibre, numbering some 200
in all.
During the night Augereau and the Guards had arrived, and Ney and Davout
were expected on either flank in the fore noon. This time the emperor was
determined his enemy should not escape him, and about 8 A.M. ordered Soult and
Augereau on the left and right respectively to assail the enemy, Murat and the
Guards remaining in the centre as reserve. Napoleon's own forces thus became
the "general advanced guard " for Ney and Davout, who were to close
in on either side and deliver the decisive stroke. But here too the weather and
the state of the roads operated adversely, for Ney came up too late, while
Davout, in the full tide of his victorious advance, was checked by the arrival
of Lestocq, whose corps Ney had failed to intercept, and the attack of
Augereau's corps (VII.), made in a blinding snowstorm, failed with the
appalling loss of over 40% killed and wounded. Augereau himself was severely
wounded, and the remnant of his corps was subsequently distributed amongst the
other corps. Bennigsen, however, drew off on Ney's arrival, and the French were
too much exhausted to pursue him. Again the emperor had to admit that his
troops could do no more, and bowing to necessity, he distributed them into
winter quarters, where, however, the enterprise of the Cossacks, who were no
strangers to snow and to forests, left the outposts but little repose.
A protracted period of rest followed, during which the emperor exerted
himself unremittingly to re-equip, reinforce and supply his troops. Hitherto he
had been based on the entrenched camp of Warsaw, but he had already taken steps
to organize a new line of supply and retreat via Thorn, and this was now
completed. At the same time Lefebvre was ordered to press the siege of Danzig
with all vigour, and on the 5th of May, after a most gallant resistance,
Kalckreuth, who redeemed here his failure of Auersadt, surrendered. English
assistance came too late. By the beginning of June the French had more than
made good their losses and 210,000 men were available for field service.
25. Heilsberg and Friedland. Meanwhile Bennigsen had prepared for
a fresh undertaking, and leaving Lestocq with 20,000 Prussians and Russians to
contain Bernadotte, who lay between Braunsberg and Spandau on the Passarge, he
moved southwards on the 2nd, and on the 3rd and 4th of June he fell upon Ney,
driving him back towards Guttstadt, whilst with the bulk of his force he moved
towards Heilsberg, where he threw up an entrenched position. It was not till
the 5th that Napoleon received tidings of his advance, and for the moment these
were so vague that he contented himself by warning the remainder of his forces
to be prepared to move on the 6th. Next day, however, all doubts were set at
rest, and as the Russians advanced south of Heilsberg, he decided to wheel his
whole force to the right, pivoting on the III. corps, and cut Bennigsen off
from Konigsberg and the sea. On the 8th the VI., III., VIII. and Guard corps,
together with a new cavalry reserve corps under Lannes, in all 147,000, stood
ready for the operation, and with Murat and Soult as general advanced guard the
whole moved forward, driving the Russian outposts before them. Bernadotte, who
was to have attacked Lestocq, again failed to receive his orders and took no
part in the following operations.
Murat attacked the Russians, who had halted in their entrenched position,
on the 11h and drove in their outposts, but did not discover the entrenchments.
Meanwhile Soult had followed with his infantry in close support, and the
emperor himself arriving, ordered him to attack at once. Now the Russians
uncovered their entrenchisents, and in the absence of artillery preparation
Soult's leading troops received most severe punishment. Fresh troops arriving
were sent in to his support, but these also proved insufficient, and darkness
alone put an end to the struggle, which cost the French 12,000 killed and
wounded.
Bennigsen, however, learning that his right was threatened by the III.
corps, and not having as yet completed his concentration, retreated in the
night to Bartenstein, and the following day turned sharp to right towards
Schippenbeil. The emperor now pressed on towards Friedland, where he would
completely control the Russian communications with Konigsberg, their immediate
base of supply, but for once the Russians outmarched him and covered their
movement so successfully that for the next three days he seems to have
completely lost all knowledge of his enemy's whereabouts. Lestocq in the
meantime had been forced northwards towards Konigsberg, and Soult with Murat
was in hot pursuit. The III.,VI., VIII. and Guard corps followed the main road
towards Konigsberg, and the former had reached Muhlhausen, the remainder were
about Preussisch-Eylau, when Latour Maubourg's dragoons sent in intelligence
which pointed to the presence of Bennigsen about Friedland. This was indeed the
case. The Russians after passing Schippenheil had suddenly turned northwards,
and on the evening of the 13th were taking up a strong position on the river
Alle with Friedland as a centre.
What followed presents perhaps the finest instance of the Napoleonic
method. The enemy lay direct to his right, and Murat, the IV. and III. corps
had well overshot the mark. Lannes's reserve corps (cavalry), to whom Latour
Maubourg reported, lay at Domnau some 10 m. to the right. The latter at once
assumed the role of advanced guard cavalry and was ordered to observe the enemy
at Friedland, Ney following in close support. Davout was turned about and
directed on the enemy's right, and the VIII. corps (Mortier), the Guards and
the reserve cavalry followed as main body. On the 14th (the anniversary of
Marengo) Lannes carried out his role of fighting advanced guard or screen, the
emperor's main body gradually came up, and the battle of Friedland (q.v.),
notable chiefly for the first display of the new artillery tactics of the
French, ended with a general attack about 5 P.M. and the retreat of the
Russians, after severe losses, over the Alle. Lestocq was, meanwhile, driven
through Konigsberg (which surrendered on the 15th) on Tilsit, and now that he
was no longer supported by the Russians, the Prussian commander gave up the
struggle. (Map of Europe
Continental
System 1807). (Map of
Strategic
situation in 1808)
(Map of
Strategic
Situation 1 Feb. 1809) 26. The Austrian Army in 1809. Ever since
Austerlitz the Austrian officers had been labouring to reconstitute and reform
their army. The archduke Charles was the foremost amongst many workers who had
realized that numbers were absolutely needed to confront the new French
methods. With these numbers it was impossible to attain the high degree of
individual efficiency required for the old line tactics, hence they were
compelled to adopt the French methods of skirmishers and columns, but as yet
they had hardly realized the increased density necessary to be given to a line
of battle to enable it to endure the prolonged nervous strain the new system of
tactics entailed. Where formerly 15,000 men to the mile of front had been
considered ample for the occupation of a position or the execution of an
attack, double that number now often proved insufficient, and their front was
broken before reinforcements could arrive. Much had been done to create an
efficient staff, but though the idea of the army corps command was now no new
thing, the senior generals entrusted with these commands were far from having
acquired the independence and initiative of their French opponents. Hence the
extraordinary slowness of their maneuvres, not because the Austrian infantry
were bad marchers, but because the preparation and circulation of orders was
still far behind the French standard. The light cavalry had been much improved
and the heavy cavalry on the whole proved a fair match for their opponents.
27. The French Army. After the peace of Tilsit the Grand Army was
gradually withdrawn behind the Rhine, leaving only three commands, totalling
63,000 men, under Davout in Prussia, Oudinot in west central Germany, and
Lefebvre in Bavaria to assist the princes of the Confederation of the Rhine in
the maintenance of order and the enforcement of the French law of conscription,
which was rigorously insisted on in all the States comprised in this new
federation.
In exchange for the subsistence of the French troops of occupation, a
corresponding number of these new levies were moved to the south of France,
where they commenced to arrive at the moment when the situation in Spain became
acute. The Peninsular War (q.v.) called for large
forces of the old Grande Armee and for a brief period Napoleon directed
operations in person; and the Austrians took advantage of the dissemination and
weakness of the French forces in Germany to push forward their own preparations
with renewed energy.
But they reckoned without the resourcefulness of Napoleon. The moment news
of their activity reached him, whilst still in pursuit of Sir John Moore, he
despatched letters to all the members of the Confederation warning them that
their contingents might soon be required, and at the same time issued a series
of decrees to General Clarke, his war minister, authorizing him to call up the
contingent of 1810 in advance, and directing him in detail to proceed with the
formation of 4th and 5th battalions for all the regiments across the Rhine. By
these means Davout's, Oudinot's and Lefebvre's commands were augmented, whilst
in February and March new corps wore formed and rapidly pushed towards the
front.
On his return from Spain, seeing war imminent, he issued a series of march
orders (which deserve the closest study in detail) by which on the 15th of
April his whole army was to be concentrated for manoeuvres between Regensburg,
Landshut, Augsburg and Donauworth, and sending on the Guard in wagons to
Strassburg, he despatched Berthier to act as commander-in-chief until his own
arrival.
(Map of
Central
Europe 15 April 1809) 28. Austrian Offensive.-The position of
assembly was excellently chosen, but unfortunately the Austrians took the
initiative. On the 9th of April their main body of six corps crossed the Inn
between Braunau and Passau, and simultane ously two additional corps moved from
Pilsen in Bohemia on Regensburg. At this moment Davout was entering Regens burg
with his leading troops, the remainder still some marches in rear, and it was
evident that the whole concentration could no longer be carried out before the
Austrians would be in a position to intervene. Berthier received the news while
still on his way to the front, and quite failed to grasp the situation.
Reaching Donauworth at 8 P.M. on the 13th of April, he ordered Davout and
Oudinot to remain at Regensburg, whilst Lefebvre and Wrede (Bavarians) who had
fallen back before the Austrians were directed to reoccupy Landshut. This was
in direct contradiction with the instructions Napoleon had given him on the
28th of March in view of this very emergency. Davout obeyed, but remonstrated.
On the 16th Berthier went on to Augsburg, where he learnt that Lefebvre's
advanced troops had been driven out of Landshut, thus opening a great gap
seventy-six miles wide between the two wings of the French army. Meanwhile
Napoleon, who had left Paris at 4 A.M. on the 13th of April, was hastening
towards the front, but remained still in ignorance of Berthier's doings until
on the 16th at Stuttgart he received a letter from the Marshal dated the 13th,
which threw him into consteraation. In reply he immediately wrote:
You do not inform me what has rendered necessary such an extraordinary
measure which weakens and divides my troops "- and-" I cannot quite
grasp the meaning of your letter yet, I should have preferred to see my army
concentrated between Ingolstadt and Augsburg, the Bavarians in the first line,
with the duke of Danzig in his old position, until we know what the enemy is
going to do. Everything would be excellent if the duke of Auerstadt had been at
Ingolstadt and the duke of Rivoll with the Wurtternbergers and Oudinot's corps
at Augsburg,..... so that just the opposite of what should have been done has
been done" (C. N. to Berthier, Ludwigsburg, 16th April).
(Map of
Ratisbon
and Vicinity 17-19 April 1809) 29. Napoleon takes command.- Having
despatched this severe reprimand he hastened on to Donauworth, where he arrived
at 4 A.M. on the 17th, hoping to find Berthier, but the latter was at Augsburg.
Nevertheless, at 10 A.M. he ordered Davout and Oudinot to withdraw at once to
Ingolstadt; and Lefebvre and Wrede on the right to support the movement. About
noon Berthier returned and after hearing his explanation Massena received
orders to move from Augsburg towards Ingolstadt. "Tomorrow will be a day
of preparation spent in drawing closer together, and I expect to be able by
Wednesday to manoeuvre against the enemy's columns accoring to
circumstances."
Meanwhile the Austrians had approached so near that by a single day's
march it would have been possible to fall upon and crush by superior numbers
either wing of the French army, but though the Austrian light cavalry
successfully covered the operations of the following troops they had not yet
risen to a conception of their reconnoitring mission, and the archduke, in
ignorance of his opportunity and possessed, moreover, with the preconceived
idea of uniting at Regensburg with the two corps coming from Bohemia, moved the
bulk of his forces in that direction, leaving only a covering body against
Davout altogether insufficient to retain him. Davout, however, had left a
garrison of 1800 men in Regensburg, who delayed the junction of the Austrian
wings until the 20th inst., and on the same day the emperor, having now
reunited his whole right wing and centre, overwhelmed the covering detachments
facing him in a long series of disconnected engagements lasting forty-eight
hours, and the archduke now found himself in danger of being forced back into
the-Danube. But with the Bohemian reinforcements he had still four corps in
hand, and Napoleon, whose intelligence service in the difficult and intersected
country had lamentably failed him, had weakened his army by detaching a portion
of his force in pursuit of the beaten right wing, and against the archduke's
communications.
(Map of
Ratisbon
and Vicinity 19-22 April 1809) 30. Eckmuhl. When, therefore, the
latter, on the 22nd, marched southward to reopen his communications by the
defeat of the enemy's army, always the surest means of solving this difficulty,
he actually reached the neighbourhood of Eckmuhl with a sufficient numerical
superiority had he only been prompt enough to seize his opportunity. But the
French had been beforehand with him. Napoleon, who had personally taken part in
the fighting of the previous day, and followed the pursuit as far as Landshut,
whence he had despatched Massena to follow the retreating Austrians along the
Isar, seems to have realized about 3 A.M. in the morning that it was not the
main body of the enemy he had had before him, but only its left wing, and that
the main body itself must still be northward towards Regensburg. Issuing orders
to Davout, Oudinot and his cavalry to concentrate with all speed towards
Eckmuhl, he himself rode back along the Regensburg road and reached the
battlefield just as the engagement between the advance troops had commenced.
Had the Austrians possessed mobility equal to that of the French the latter
should have been overwhelmed in detail, but whilst the French covered 17 and 19
m. the Austrians only marched 10, and, owing to the defect in their tactical
training alluded to above, the troops actually on the ground could not hold out
long enough for their reserves to arrive. The retreat of the front lines
involved the following ones in confusion, and presently the whole mass was
driven back in considerable disorder. It seemed as if nothing could save the
Austrians from complete disaster, but at the critical moment the emperor,
yielding to the protestations of his corps commanders, who represented the
excessive fatigue of their troops, stopped the pursuit, and the archduke made
the most of his opportunity to restore order amongst his demoralized men, and.
crossed to the north bank of the Danube during the night.
Map of
Southern
Germany 22 April- 22 May 1809) 31 Austrian Retreat. On the
following morning the French reached Regensburg and at once proceeded to
assault its medieval walls, but the Austrian garrison bravely defended it till
the last of the stragglers was safely across on the north bank. It was here
that for the only time in his career Napoleon was slightly wounded. Then,
leaving Davout to observe the archduke's retreat, the emperor himself rode
after Massena, who with the major portion of the French army was following the
Austrian weaker wing under Hiller. The latter was not so shaken as Napoleon
believed, and turning to bay inflicted a severe check on its pursuers, who at
Ebelsberg lost 4000 men in three fruitless assaults. Thus covered by his
rearguard Hiller gained space and time to pass his troops over to the north
bank of the Danube and remove all boats on the river. This left the direct road
to Vienna open, and Napoleon, hoping to find peace in the enemy's capital,
pushed the whole of his army down the right bank, and with Murat's cavalry
entered the city on the 12th of May, after somewhat severe resistance lasting
three days. Meanwhile the archduke and Hiller, both now unmolested, effected
their junction in the vicinity of Wagram, picketing the whole line of the
Danube with their outposts and collecting all the boats.
32. Aspern and Wagram. The reconnaissance of the river was at once
taken in hand by the French upon their arrival in Vienna, and a point opposite
the island of Lobau selected for the crossing. Thanks to the Austrian
precautions it took four days to collect the necessary material to span the
main branch of the river, here some 2000 yds. across, and though Napoleon
personally spurred on all to activity nearly four days more were required for
its construction. It was not till the night of the 19th of May that orders for
the passage were finally issued, and during the night the troops commenced to
occupy the island of Lobau. Surprise, of course, was out of the question, but
the Austrians did not attempt to dispute the passage, their object being to
allow as many French as they felt they could deal with to pass over and then to
fall on them. Thus on the 21st of May the battle of Aspern (q.v.) or
Essling began. It ended on the night of the 22nd with the complete defeat of
Napoleon, the first ever inflicted upon him. The French retreated into the
island of Lobau. By nightfall upwards of 100,000 men encumbered with at least
20,000 wounded, were crowded together on the little island scarcely a mile
square, short of provisions and entirely destitute of course of all hospital
accessories. The question then arose whether the retreat was to be continued
across the main stream or not, and for the second time in his career Napoleon
assembled his generals to take their opinion. They counselled retreat, but
having heard them all he replied, in substance: " If we leave here at all
we may as well retire to Strassburg, for unless the enemy is held by the threat
of further operations he will be free to strike at our communications and has a
shorter distance to go. We must remain here and renew operations as soon as
possible."
(Map of
Southern
Germany 22 May - 6 July 1809) Immediate orders were despatched to summon
every available body of troops to concentrate for the decisive stroke.
Practically the lines of communication along the Danube were denuded of
combatants, even Bernadotte being called up from Passau, and the viceroy of
Italy, who driving the archduke Johann before him (action of Raab) had brought
up 56,000 men through Tirol, was disposed towards Pressburg within easy call.
The arsenal of Vienna was ransacked for guns, stores and appliances, and
preparations in the island pushed on as fast as possible. By the end of June
200,000 troops were stationed within call, and on the 4th July the French began
to cross over to the left bank of the Danube. The events which followed are
described under WAGRAM. The great battle at this place, fought on the 5th and
6th of July, ended in the retirement of the Austrians. The only other event
which occurred before peace was made was an unimportant action at Znaym on the
11th of July.
(Please see also our extensive material on this
campaign at Borodino)
(Map of
Eastern
Europe 1 June -1July 1812) 33 The Russian War of 1812.-Whilst the
campaign of 1809 had seriously shaken the faith of the marshals and the higher
ranks in the infallibility of the emperor's judgment, and the slaughter of the
troops at Aspern and Wagram had still further accentuated the opposition of the
French people to conscription, the result on the fighting discipline of the
army had, on the whole, been for good. The panics of Wagram had taught men and
officers alike a salutary lesson.
Aware of the growing feeling against war in France, Napoleon had
determined to make his allies not only bear the expenses of the coming
campaign, but find the men as well, and he was so far master of Europe that of
the 363,000 who on the 24th of June crossed the Niemen no less than two-thirds
were Germans, Austrians, Poles or Italians. But though the battlefield
discipline of the men was better, the discipline in camp and on the march was
worse, for the troops were no longer eager to reach the battlefield, and
marched because they were compelled, not of their own goodwill. The result was
apparent in a sudden diminution in mobility, and a general want of punctuality
which in the event very seriously influenced the course of the campaign. On the
other hand, the Russians, once their fatherland was invaded, became dominated
by an ever-growing spirit of fanaticism, and they were by nature too obedient
to their natural leaders, and too well inured to the hardships of campaigning,
to lose their courage in a retreat.
34. The Strategic Deployment By the middle of June 1812 the emperor
had assembled his army along the line of the Niemen. On the extreme right stood
the Austrian contingent under Schwarzenberg (34,000 men). Next, centring about
Warsaw, a group of three corps (19,000 men) under the chief command of
Napoleon's brother Jerome. Then the main army under Napoleon in person (220,000
men; with 80,000 more under the viceroy of Italy on his right rear); and on the
extreme left at Tilsit a flanking corps, comprising the Prussian auxiliary
corps and other Germans (in all 40,000 strong). The whole army was particularly
strong in cavalry; out of the 450,000, 80,000 belonged to that arm, and
Napoleon, mindful of the lessons of 1807, had issued the most minute and
detailed orders for the supply service in all its branches, and the forwarding
of reinforcements, no less than 100,000 men being destined for that purpose in
due course of time.
Information about the Russians was very indifferent; it was only known
that Prince Bagration with about 33,000 men lay grouped about Wolkowysk;
Barclay de Tolly with 40,000 about Vilna; and on the Austrian frontier lay a
small corps under Tormassov in process of formation, while far away on the
Turkish frontiers hostilities with the sultan retained Tschitschagov with
50,000 more. Of the enemy's plans Napoleon knew nothing, but, in accordance
with his usual practice, the position he had selected met all immediate
possible moves.
35. Opening of The Campaign. On the 24th of June the passage of the
Niemen began in torrid heat which lasted for a few days. The main army, with
the emperor in person, covered by Murat and the cavalry, moved on Vilna, whilst
Jerome on his right rear at once threatened Bagration and covered the emperor's
outer flank. From the very first, however, the inherent weakness of the vast
army, and the vicious choice of time for the beginning of the advance, began to
make itself felt. The crops being still green, and nothing else available as
forage for the horses, an epidemic of colic broke out amongst them, and in ten
days the mounted arms had lost upwards of one-third of their strength; men died
of sunstroke in numbers, and serious straggling began. Still everything pointed
to the concentration of the Russians at Vilna, and Jerome, who on the 5th of
July had reached Grodno, was ordered to push on. But Jerume proved quite
inadequate to his position, listening to the complaints of his subordinates as
to want of supplies and even of pay; he spent four whole days in absolute
inertia, notwithstanding the emperor's reprimands. Meanwhile the Russians made
good their retreat-Barclay towards the entrenched camp of Drissa on the Dvina,
Bagration towards Mohilev.
The emperor's first great coup thus failed. Jerome was replaced by
Davout, and the army resumed its march, this time in the hope of surrounding
and overwhelming Barclay, whilst Davout dealt with Bagration. The want of
mobility, particularly in the cavalry, now began to tell against the French.
With horses only just recovering from an epidemic, they proved quite unequal to
the task of catching the Cossacks, who swarmed round them in every direction,
never accepting an engagement but compelling a constant watchfulness for which
nothing in their previous experience had sufficiently prepared the French.
Before their advance, however, the Russian armies steadily retired,
Barclay from Vilna via Drissa to Vitebsk, Bagration from Wolkowysk to Mohilev.
Again arrangments were made for a Napoleonic battle; behind Murat's cavalry
came the "general advanced guard " to attack and hold the enemy,
whilst the main body and Davout were held available to swing in on his rear.
Napoleon, however, failed to allow for the psychology of his opponents, who,
utterly indifferent to the sacrifice of life, refused to be drawn into
engagements to support an advance or to extricate a rearguard, and steadily
withdrew from every position when the French gained touch with them.
(Map of
Eastern
Europe 1- 24 July 1812) Thus the manoeuvre against Vitebsk again
miscarried, and Napoleon found himself in a far worse position, numerically and
materially, than at the outset of the campaign. Then he had stood with 420,000
men on a front of 160 m., now be had only 229,000 men on a front of 135; he had
missed three great opportunities of destroying his enemy in detail, and in five
weeks, during which time he had only traversed 200 m., he had seen his troops
reduced numerically at least one-third, and, worse still, his army was now far
from being the fighting machine it bad been at the outset.
(Map of
Eastern
Europe 24 July - 14 August 1812) 36. Smolenlsk.-Meanwhile the
Russians had not lost a single gun and the moral of their men had been
improved by the result of the many minor encounters with the enemy; further,
the junction of Bagration and Barclay was now assured in the vicinity of
Smolensk. Towards this place the French advance was now resumed, and the
Russian generals at the head of a united force of 130,000 men marched forward
to meet them. Here, however, the inefficiency of the Russian staff actually
saved them from the disaster which must certainly have overtaken them had they
realized their intention of fighting the French. The Russians marched in two
columns, which lost touch of one another, and as it was quite impossible for
either to engage the French single handed, they both retired again towards
Smolensk, where with an advanced guard in the town itself-which possessed an
old- fashioned brick enceinte not to be breached by field artillery
alone -the two columns reunited and deployed for action behind the unfordable
Dnieper.
(Map of
Eastern
Europe 27 Aug 1812) Murat and Ney as "general advanced guard"
attacked the town in the morning of the 16th of August, and whilst they fought
the main body was swung round to attack the Russian left and rear. The whole of
the 17th was required to complete the movement, and as soon as its purpose was
sufficiently revealed to the Russians the latter determined to retreat under
cover of night. Their manoeuvre was carried out with complete success, and then
began a series of rearguard actions and nocturnal retreats which completely
accomplished their purpose of wearing down the French army. The Russian
government, however, failed to see the matter in its true light, and Marshal
Kutusov was sent to the front to assume the chief command. His intention was to
occupy a strong position and fight one general action for the possession of
Moscow, and to this end he selected the line of the Kalatscha where the stream
intersects the great Moscow road.
(See
Borodino) 37 Borodiuo. Here he was overtaken by Murat and Ney, but
the French columns had straggled so badly that four whole days elapsed before
the emperor was able to concentrate his army for battle and then could only
oppose 128,000 men to the Russians' 110,000. About 6 a.m. the battle began, but
Napoleon was suffering from one of those attacks of illness and depression
which henceforth became such an important factor in his fate. Till about midday
he followed the course of the action with his usual alertness; then he appears
to have been overcome by a kind of stupor and allowed his marshals to fight by
themselves. There was no final decisive effort as at Wagram and the Guard was
not even called on to move. Ultimately the sun went down on an undecided field
on which 25,000 French and 38,000 Russians had fallen, but the moral reaction
on the former was far greater than on the latter.
Map of
Eastern
Europe 4 Oct. 1812) 38. Moscow. Kutusov continued his retreat, and
Murat with his now exhausted horsemen followed as best he might. Sebastiani,
commanding the advanced guard, overtook the Russians in the act of evacuating
Moscow, and agreed with the latter to observe a seven hours' armistice to allow
the Russians to clear the town, for experience had shown the French that street
fighting in wooden Russian townships always meant fire and the consequent
destruction of much-needed shelter and provisions. Towards nightfall Napoleon
reached the scene, and the Russians being now clear the troops began to enter,
but already fires were observed in the farther part of the city. Napoleon
passed the night in a house in the western suburb and next morning rode to the
Kremlin, the troops moving to the quarters assigned to them, but in the
afternoon a great fire began and, continuing for two days, drove the French out
into the country again.
The emperor was now in the direst perplexity. Kutusov was hovering on the
outskirts of the city, his main body at Kaluga, some marches to the S.W., where
he was in full communication with the richest portion of the empire; and now
news arrived that St. Cyr, who had relieved Macdonald on his extreme left, had
only 17,000 men left under arms against upwards of 40,000 Russians under
Witgenstein; and to the south Tschitschagov's army, being no longer detained on
the Turkish frontier, peace having been made, was marching to join Tormassov
about Brest-Litewski with forces which would bring the total of the two well
over 100,000 men. Meanwhile Schwarzenberg's force opposing these had dwindled
to a bare 30,000.
The French army was thus disposed almost in an equilateral triangle with
sides of about 570 m., with 95,000 men at the apex at Moscow opposed to
120,000; 30,000 about Brest opposite 100,000, and 17,000 about Drissa
confronted by 40,000, whilst in the centre of the base at Smolensk lay Victor's
corps, about 30,000. From Moscow to the Niemen was 550 m. In view of this
situation Napoleon on the 4th of October sent General Lauriston to the Russian
headquarters to treat. Whilst waiting his return Murat was enjoined to skirmish
with Kutusov, and the emperor himself worked out a scheme to assume the
offensive with his whole army towards St Petersburg, calling in Victor and St
Cyr on the way. This project was persisted with, until on the 18th Murat was
himself attacked and severely handled (action of Tarutino or Vinkovo). On the
morning of the 19th the whole army moved out to accept this challenge, and the
French were thoroughly worsted on the 24th in the battle of Maloyaroslavetz.
(Map of
Eastern
Europe 18 Oct. 5 Dec 1812) 39. The Retreat from Moscow. Then began
the celebrated retreat. It has generally been forgotten that the utter want of
march discipline in the French, and not the climatic conditions, was
responsible for the appalling disasters which ensued. Actually the frost came
later than usual that year, the 27th of October, and the weather was dry and
bracing; not till the 8th of November did the cold at night become sharp. Even
when the Beresina was reached on the 26th November, the cold was far from
severe, for the slow and sluggish stream was not frozen over, as is proved by
the fact that Eble's pioneers worked in the water all through that terrible
day. But the French army was already completely out of hand, and the degree to
which the panic of a crowd can master even the strongest instinct of the
individual is shown by the conduct of the fugitives who crowded over the
bridges, treading hundreds under foot, whilst all the time the river was easily
fordable and mounted men rode backwards and forwards across it.
To return to the actual sequence of events. Kutusov had been very slow in
exploiting his success of the 24th and indeed had begun the pursuit in a false
direction; but about the 2nd of November, headquarters of the French being at
Vyazma, the Cossacks became so threatening that the emperor ordered the army to
march (as in Egypt) in hollow square. This order, however, appears only to have
been obeyed by the Guards, with whom henceforward the emperor marched.
Kutusov had now overtaken the French, but fortunately for them he made no
effort to close with them, but hung on their flank, molesting them with
Cossacks and picking up stragglers. Thus the wreck of the Grande Armee,
now not more than fifty thousand strong, reached Smolensk on the 9th and
there rested till the 14th. The march was then resumed, the Guard leading and
Ney commanding the rearguard. Near Krasnoi on the 16th the Russian advanced
guard tried to head the column off. Napoleon halted a whole day to let the army
close up; and then attacked with his old vigour and succeeded in clearing the
road, but only at the cost of leaving Ney and the rearguard to its fate. By a
night march of unexampled daring and difficulty Ney succeeded in breaking
through the Russian cordon, but when he regained touch with the main body at
Orcha only 800 of his 6000 men were still with him (21st).
40. The Beresina. From here Napoleon despatched orders to Victor to
join him at Borisov on the Beresina. The cold now gave way and thaw set in,
leaving the country a morass, and information came that Tschitschagov from the
south had reached Borisov. He now selected Viesselovo as the point of passage
and at 1 A.M. on the 23rd sent orders to Oudinot to march thither and construct
bridges. In the execution of these orders Oudinot encountered the Russian
advanced guard near Borisov and drove the latter back in confusion, though not
before they had destroyed the existing bridge there. This sudden reassumption
of the offensive threw Tschitschagov into confusion. Thus time was gained for
Victor also to come up and for Oudinot to construct the bridges at Studienka
near the above-mentioned place, but a spot in many respects better suited for
the purpose. Thither therefore Napoleon sent his pontonniers under General
Eble', but on their arrival they found that no preparations had been made and
much time was lost. Meanwhile Victor, in doubt as to the real point of passage,
had left the road to Studienka open to Wittgenstein, who had followed hard on
his heels.
By 4 p.m. on the 26th the bridges were finished and the passage began, but
not without resistance by the Russians, who were gradually closing in. The
crossing continued all night, though interrupted from time to time by failures
of the bridges. All day during the 27th stragglers continued to cross, covered
by such combatants as remained under sufficient discipline to be employed. At 8
A.M. on the 28th, however, Tschitschagov and Wittgenstein moved forward on both
banks of the river to the attack, but were held off by the splendid
self-sacrifice of the few remaining troops under Ney, Oudinot and Victor, until
about 1 p.m. the last body of regular troops passed over the bridges, and only
a few thousand stragglers remained beyond the river.
The number of troops engaged by the French that day cannot be given
exactly. Oudinot's and Victor's men were relatively fresh and may have totalled
20,000, whilst Ney can hardly have had more than 6000 of all corps fighting
under him. How many were killed can never be known, but three days later the
total number of men reported fit for duty had fallen to 8800 only.
41. Final Operations Henceforward the retreat of the army became
practically a headlong flight, and on the 5th of December, having reached
Smorgoni and seeing that nothing further could be done by him at the front, the
emperor handed over the command of what remained to Murat, and left for Paris
to organize a fresh army for the following year. Travelling at the fullest
speed, he reached the Tuileries on the 18th, after a journey of 312 hours.
After the emperor's departure the cold set in with increased severity, the
thermometer falling to 23o. On the 8th of December Murat reached Vilna, whilst
Ney with about 400 men and Wrede with 2000 Bavarians still formed the
rearguard; but it was quite impossible to carry out Napoleon's instructions to
go into winter quarters about the town, so that the retreat was resumed on the
10th and ultimately Konigsberg was attained on the 19th of December by Murat
with 400 Guards and 600 Guard cavalry dismounted.
Meanwhile on the extreme French right Schwarzenberg and his Austrians had
drifted away towards their own frontier, and the Prussian contingent, which
under Yorck (see YORCK von WARTENBURG) formed part of Macdonald's command about
Riga, had entered into a convention with the Russians at Tauroggen (December
30) which deprived the French of their last support upon their left. Konigsberg
thus became untenable, and Murat fell back to Posen, where on the 10th of
January he handed over his command to Eugene Beauharnais and returned to Paris.
The Russian pursuit practically ceased at the line of the Niemen, for
their troops also had suffered terrible hardships and a period of rest had
become an absolute necessity.
(Map of
Germany
1813) 42. Tke War of Liberation. The Convention of Tauroggen became
the starting-point of Prussia's regeneration. As the news of the destruction of
the Grande Armee spread, and the appearance of countless stragglers
convinced the Prussian people of the reality of the disaster, the spirit
generated by years of French domination burst out. For the moment the king and
his ministers were placed in a position of the greatest anxiety, for they knew
the resources of France and the boundless versatility of their arch-enemy far
too well to imagine that the end of their sufferings was yet in sight. To
disavow the acts and desires of the army and of the secret societies for
defence with which all north Germany was honeycombed would be to imperil the
very existence of the monarchy, whilst an attack on the wreck of the Grand Army
meant the certainty of a terrible retribution from the new armies now rapidly
forming on the Rhine.
But the Russians and the soldiers were resolved to continue the campaign,
and working in collusion they put pressure on the not unwilling representatives
of the civil power to facilitate the supply and equipment of such troops as
were still in the field; they could not refuse food and shelter to their
starving country men or their loyal allies, and thus by degrees the French
garrisons scattered about the country either found themselves surrounded or
were compelled to retire to avoid that fate. Thus it happened that the viceroy
of Italy felt himself compelled to depart from the positive injunctions of the
emperor to hold on at all costs to his advanced position at Posen, where about
14,000 men had gradually rallied around him, and to withdraw step by step to
Magdeburg, where he met reinforcements and commanded the whole course of the
lower Elbe.
43. Napoleon's Preparations. Meanwhile the emperor in Paris had
been organizing a fresh army for the reconquest of Prussia. Thanks to his
having compelled his allies to fight his battles for him, he had not as yet
drawn very heavily on the fighting resources of France, the actual percentage
of men taken by the conscriptions during the years since 1806 being actually
lower than that in force in continental armies of today. He had also created in
1811-1812 a new National Guard, organized in ''cohorts'' to distinguish it from
the regular army, and for home defence only, and these by a skilful
appeal to their patriotism and judicious pressure applied through the prefects,
became a useful reservoir of half-trained men for new battalions of the active
army. Levies were also made with rigorous severity in the states of the Rhine
Confederation, and even Italy was called on for fresh sacrifices. In this
manner by the end of March upwards of 200,000 men were moving towards the
Elbe,5 and in the first fortnight of April they were duly
concentrated in the angle formed by the Elbe and Saale, threatening on the one
hand Berlin, on the other Dresden and the east.
1 Napoleon always gave them out as 300,000, but this number was never
attained
(Map Leipzig Campaign -
Europe
1813) 44. Spring Campaign of 1813. The allies, aware of the gradual
strengthening of their enemy's forces but themselves as yet unable to put more
than 200,000 in the field, had left a small corps of observation opposite
Magdeburg and along the Elbe to give timely notice of an advance towards
Berlin; and with the bulk of their forces had taken up a position about
Dresden, whence they had determined to march down the course of the Elbe and
roll up the French from right to left. Both armies were very indifferently
supplied with information, as both were without any reliable regular cavalry
capable of piercing the screen of outposts with which each endeavoured to
conceal his disposition, and Napoleon, operating in a most unfriendly country,
suffered more in this respect than his adversaries.
On the 25th of April Napoleon reached Erfurt and assumed the chief
command. On this day his troops stood in the following positions. Eugene, with
Lauriston's, Macdonald's and Regnier's corps, on the lower Saale, Ney in front
of Weimar, holding the defile of Kosen; the Guard at Erfurt, Marmont at Gotha,
Bertrand at Saalfeld, and Oudinot at Coburg, and during the next few days the
whole were set in motion towards Merseburg and Leipzig, in the now stereotyped
Napoleonic order, a strong advanced guard of all arms leading, the
remainder-about two- thirds of the whole following as "masse de
manoeuvre," this time, owing to the cover afforded by the Elbe on the
left, to the right rear of the advanced guard.
Meanwhile the Russians and Prussians had concentrated all available men
and were moving on an almost parallel line, but somewhat to the south of the
direction taken by the French. On the 1st of May Napoleon and the advanced
guard entered Lutzen. Wittgenstein, who now commanded the allies in place of
Kutusov, hearing of his approach, had decided to attack the French advanced
guard, which he took to be their whole force, on its right flank, and during
the morning had drawn together the bulk of his forces on his right in the
vicinity of Gross Gorschen and Kaya.
(Map
Germany
1813) 45. Battle of Lutzen. About 9 a.m. on May 2nd he began an
attack on the French advance guard in Lutzen, whilst the remainder of his army
was directed against Napoleon's right and rear. Just as the latter were moving
off the heads of the French main body suddenly appeared, and at 11 a.m.
Napoleon, then standing near the Gustavus Adolphus monument on the field of
Lutzen, heard the roar of a heavy cannonade to his right rear. He realized the
situation in a moment, galloped to the new scene of action, and at once grouped
his forces for decisive action-the gift in which he was supreme. Leaving the
leading troops to repulse as best they might the furious attack of both
Russians and Prussians, and caring little whether they lost ground, he rapidly
organized for his own control a battle-reserve. At length when both sides were
exhausted by their efforts he sent forward nearly a hundred guns which tore
asunder by their case-shot fire the enemy's line and marched his reserve right
through the gap. Had he possessed an adequate cavalry force the victory would
have been decisive. As it was, the allies made good their retreat and the
French were too exhausted for infantry pursuit.
Perhaps no battle better exemplifies the inherent strength of the
emperor's strategy, and in none was his grasp of the battlefield more
brilliantly displayed, for, as he fully recognized, " These Prussians have
at last learnt something-they are no longer the wooden toys of Frederick the
Great," and, on the other hand, the relative inferiority of his own men as
compared with his veterans of Austerlitz called for far more individual effort
than on any previous day. He was everywhere, encouraging and compelling his
men-it is a legend in the French army that the persuasion even of the imperial
boot was used upon some of his reluctant conscripts, and in the result his
system was fully justified, as it triumphed even against a great tactical
surprise.
46. Bautzen.-As soon as possible the army pressed on in pursuit,
Ney being sent across the Elbe to turn the position of the allies at Dresden.
This threat forced the latter to evacuate the town and retire over the Elbe,
after blowing up the stone bridge across the river. Napoleon entered the town
hard on their heels, but the broken bridge caused a delay of four days, there
being no pontoon trains with the army. Ultimately on the 18th of May the march
was renewed, but the allies had continued their retreat in leisurely fashion,
picking up reinforcements by the way. Arrived at the line of the Spree, they
took up and fortified a very formidable position about Bautzen (q.v.).
Here, on the 20th, they were attacked, and after a two days' battle
dislodged by Napoleon; hut the weakness of the French cavalry conditioned both
the form of the attack, which was less effective than usual, and the results of
the victory, which were extremely meagre.
The allies broke off the action at their own time and retired in such good
order that the emperor failed to capture a single trophy as proof of his
victory. The enemy's escape annoyed him greatly, the absence of captured guns
and prisoners reminded him too much of his Russian experiences, and he
redoubled his demands on his corps commanders for greater vigour in the
pursuit. This led the latter to push on without due regard to tactical
precautions, and Blucher took advantage of their carelessness when at Haynau
(May 26), with some twenty squadrons of Landwehr cavalry, he surprised, rode
over and almost destroyed Maison's division. The material loss inflicted on the
French was not very great, but its effect in raising the moral of the
raw Prussian cavalry and increasing their confidence in their old commander was
enormous.
Still the allies continued their retreat and the French were unable to
bring them to action. In view of the doubtful attitude of Austria, Napoleon
became alarmed at the gradual lengthening of his lines of communication and
opened negotiations. The enemy, having everything to gain and nothing to lose
thereby, agreed finally to a six weeks' suspension of arms. This was perhaps
the gravest military error of Napoleon's wliole career, and his excuse for it,
" want of adequate cavalry," is the strongest testimony as to the
value of that arm.
(Map of
Germany
16 Aug. 1813) 47. The Autumn Campaign. As soon as a suspension of
arms (to 15th of August) had been agreed to, Napoleon hastened to withdraw his
troops from the dangerous position they occupied with reference to the passes
leading over the mountains from Bohemia, for he entertained no doubt now that
Austria was also to he considered as an enemy. Finally he decided to group his
corps round Gorlitz and Bautzen whence they could either meet the enemy
advancing from Breslau or fall on his flank over the mountains if they
attempted to force their way into Saxony by the valley of the Elbe. This latter
manoeuvre depended, however, on his maintenance of Dresden, and to this end he
sent the I. Corps up the Elbe to Pirna and Konigstein to cover the
fortifications of Dresden itself. His instructions on this point deserve the
closest study, for he foresaw the inevitable attraction which a complete
entrenched camp would exercise even upon himself, and, therefore, limited his
engineers to the construction of a strong bridge head on the right bank and a
continuous enceinte, broken only by gaps for counter attack, around the town
itself.
Then he turned his attention to the plan for the coming campaign. Seeing
clearly that his want of an efficient cavalry precluded all ideas of a resolute
offensive in his old style, he determined to limit himself to a defence of the
line of the Elbe, making only dashes of a few days' duration at any target the
enemy might present.
Reinforcements had been coming up without ceasing and at the beginning of
August he calculated that he would have 300,000 men available about Bautzen and
100,000 along the Elbe from Hamburg via Magdeburg to Torgau. With the latter he
determined to strike the first blow, by a concentric advance on Berlin (which
he calculated he would reach on the 4th or 5th day), the movement being
continued thence to extricate the French garrisons in Ktistrin, Stettin and
Danzig. The moral effect, he promised himself, would be prodigious, and there
was neither room nor food for these 100,000 elsewhere.
Towards the close of the armistice he learned the general situation of the
allies. The crown prince of Sweden (Bernadotte), with his Swedes and various
Prussian levies, 135,000 in all, lay in and around Berlin and Stettin; and
knowing his former marshal well, Napoleon considered Oudinot a match for him.
Blucher with about 95,000 Russians and Prussians was about Breslau, and
Schwarzenberg, with nearly 180,000 Austrians and Russians, lay in Bohemia. In
his position at Bautzen he felt himself equal to all his enemy's combinations.
(Map of
Germany
26 Aug. 1813) 48. Dresden. The advance towards Berlin began
punctually with the expiration of the armistice, but with the main army he
himself waited to see more clearly his adversaries' plans. At length becoming
impatient he advanced a portion of his army towards Blucher, who fell back to
draw him into a trap. Then the news reached him that Schwarzenberg was pressing
down the valley of the Elbe, and, leaving Macdonald to observe Blucher, he
hurried back to Bautzen to dispose his troops to cross the Bohemian mountains
in the general direction of Konigstein, a blow which must have had decisive
results. But the news from Dresden was so alarming that at the last moment he
changed his mind, and sending Vandamme alone over the mountains, he hurried
with his whole army to the threatened point. This march remains one of the most
extraordinary in history, for the bulk of his forces moved, mainly in mass and
across country, 90 m. in 72 hours, entering Dresden on the morning of the 27th,
only a few hours before the attack of the allies commenced. For the events
which followed see DRESDEN (battle).
Dresden was the last great victory of the First Empire. By noon on the
27th August the Austrians and Russians were completely beaten and in full
retreat, the French pressing hard behind them, but meanwhile Napoleon himself
again succumbed to one of his unaccountable attacks of apparent intellectual
paralysis. He seemed unaware of the vital importance of the moment, crouched
shivering over a bivouac fire, and finally rode back to Dresden, leaving no
specific orders for the further pursuit.
49. French Defeats. The allies, however, continued to retreat, but
unfortunately Vandamme, with his single corps and unsupported, issued out of
the mountains on their flank, threw himself across their line of retreat near
Kulm, and waz completely overwhelmed by sheer weight of numbers (29th). In
spite of this misfortune, Napoleon could claim a brilliant success for himself,
but almost at the same moment news reached him that Oudinot at Grossbeeren near
Berlin and Macdonald on the Katzbach opposed to Blucher, had both been severely
defeated.
(Map of
Germany
26 Aug. - 6 Sept. 1813) 50. Napoleon's Movements .-During the next
two days the emperor exainined his situation and dictated a series of notes
which have been a puzzle to every strategical thinker ever since. In these he
seems suddenly to have cut adrift from every principle the truth of which he
had himself so brilliantly demonstrated, and we find him discussing plans based
on hypothesis, not knowledge, and on the importance of geographical points
without reference to the enemy's field army. From these reveries he was at
length awakened by news which indicated that the consequences of Macdonald's
defeat had been far more serious to the moral of that command than he had
imagined. He immediately rode over to establish order, and his manner and
violence were so improper that Caulaincourt had the greatest difficulty in
concealing the scandal. Blucher, however, hearing of his arrival, at once
retreated and the emperor followed, thus uncovering the passes over the
Bohemian mountains, a fact of which Schwarzenberg was quick to take advantage.
Learning of his approach, Napoleon again withdrew to Bautzen. Then hearing that
the Austrians had counter-marched and were again moving towards Dresden, he
hastened back there, concentrated as many men as could conveniently be handled,
and advanced beyond Pirna and Konigstein to meet him. But the Austrians had no
intention of attacking him, for time was now working on their side and, leaving
his men to starve in the exhausted district, the emperor again returned to
Dresden, where for the rest of the month he remained in an extraordinary state
of vacillation. On the 4th of October he again drew up a review of the
situation, in which he apparently contemplated giving up his communications
with France and wintering in and around Dresden, though at the same time he is
aware of the distress amongst his men for want of food.
(Map of
Germany
6 Sept.-2 Oct. 1813) 51. Campaign of Leipzig. In the meanwhile
Blucher, Schwarzenberg and Bernadotte were workiug round his flanks. Ney, who
had joined Oudinot after Grossbeeren, had been defeated at Dennewitz (6th
Sept.), the victory, won by Prussian troops solely, giving the greatest
encouragement to the enemy. Suddenly Napoleon's plans are again reviewed and
completely changed. Calling up St Cyr, whom he had already warned to remain at
Dresden with his command, he decides to fall back towards Erfurt, and go into
winter quarters between that place and Magdeburg, pointing out that Dresden was
of no use to him as a base and that if he does have a battle, he had much
better have St Cyr and his men with him than at Dresden. (Map of
Germany
2 -9 Oct. 1813) He then on the 7th of October drew up a final plan, in
which one again recognizes the old commander, and this he immediately proceeded
to put into execution, for he was now quite aware of the danger threatening his
line of retreat from both Blucher and Schwarzenberg and the North Army; yet
only a few hours afterwards the portion of the order relating to St Cyr and
Lobau was cancelled and the two were finally left behind at Dresden. From the
10th to the 13th Napoleon lay at Duben, again a prey to the most extraordinary
irresolution,.but on that day he thought he saw his opportunity. Blucher was
reported near Wittenberg, and Schwarzenberg was moving slowly round to the
south of Leipzig. The North Army under Bernadotte, unknown to Napoleon, lay on
Blucher's left around Halle. The emperor decided to throw the bulk of his force
on Blucher, and, having routed him, turn south on Schwarzenberg and sever his
comunications with Bohemia. His concentration was effected with his usual
sureness and celerity, but whilst the French moved on Wittenberg, Blucher was
marching to his right, indifferent to his communications as all Prussia lay
behind him.
(Map of
Germany
9-13 Oct. 1813) This move on the 14th brought him into touch with
Bernadotte, and now a single march forward of all three armies would have
absolutely isolated Napoleon from France; but Bernadotte's nerve failed him,
for on hearing of Napoleon's threat against Wittenberg he decided to retreat
northward, and not all the persuasions of Blucher and Gneisenau could move him.
Thus if the French movement momentarily ended in a blow in the air, it was in
directly the cause of their ultimate salvation.
52. The "Battle of the Nations."- On the 15th Napoleon
concentrated his forces to the east of Leipzig, with only a weak detachment to
the west, and in the evening the allies were prepared to attack him.
Schwarzenberg, with 180,000 men available at once and 60,000 on the following
day; Blucher had about 60,000, but Bernadotte now could not arrive before the
18th.
Napoleon prepared to throw the bulk of his force upon Schwarzenberg and
massed his troops south-east of the town, whilst Schwarzenberg marched
concentrically against him down the valley of the Elster and Pleisse, the mass
of his troops on the right bank of the latter and a strong column under Giulay
on the left working round to join Blucher on the north. The fighting which
followed was most obstinate, but the Austrians failed to make any impression on
the French positions, and indeed Giulay felt himself compelled to withdraw to
his former position. On the other hand, Blucher carried the village of Mockern
and came within a mile of the gates of the town. During the 17th there was only
indecisive skirmishing, Schwarzenberg waiting for his reinforcements coming up
by the Dresden road, Blucher for Bernadotte to come in on his left, and by some
extraordinary oversight Giulay was brought closer in to the Austrian centre,
thus opening for the French their line of retreat towards Erfurt, and no
information of this movement appears to have been conveyed to Blucher. The
emperor when he became aware of the movement, sent the IVth Corps to Lindenau
to keep the road open.
On the 18th the fighting was resumed and by about noon Bernadotte came up
and closed the gap to the N.E. of the town between Blucher and the Austrians.
At 2 p.m. the Saxons, who had remained faithful to Napoleon longer than his
other German allies, went over to the enemy. All hope of saving the battle had
now to be given up, but the French covered their retreat obstinately and by
daybreak next morning one-half of the army was already filing out along the
road to Erfurt which had so fortunately been left for them.
53 Retreat of the French and Battle of Hanau. It took Blticher time
to extricate his troops from the confusion into which the battle had thrown
them, and the garrison of Leipzig and the troops left on the right bank of the
Elster still resisted obstinately -hence no direct pursuit could be initiated
and the French, still upwards of 100,000 strong, marching rapidly, soon gained
distance enough to be reformed. Blucher followed by parallel and inferior roads
on their northern flank, but Schwarzenberg knowing that the Bavarians also had
forsaken the emperor and were marching under Wrede, 50,000 strong, to intercept
his retreat, followed in a most leisurely fashion. Blucher did not succeed in
overtaking the French, but the latter, near Hanau, found their way barred by
Wrede with 50,000 men and over 100 guns in a strong position.
To this fresh emergency Napoleon and his army responded in most brilliant
fashion. As at Krasnoi in 1812, they went straight for their enemy and after
one of the most brilliant series of artillery movements in history, directed by
General Drouot, they marched right over their enemy, practically destroying his
whole force. Henceforward their march was unmolested, and they reached Mainz on
the 5th of November.
54. The Defensive Campaign. When the last of the French troops had
crossed to the western bank of the Rhine, divided counsels made their
appearance at the headquarters of the allies. Every one was weary of the war,
and many felt that it would be unwise to push Napoleon and the French nation to
extremes.
(Map of
Europe
1814) Hence a prolonged halt arose, utilized by the troops in renewing
their equipment and so forth, but ultimately the Young German party, led by
Blucher and the principal fighting men of the army, triumphed, and on the 1st
of January 1814 the Silesian army (50,000) began its passage of the Rhine at
Kaub. They were to be supported by Schwarzenberg with 200,000 men, who was to
advance by Basel and Neu Breisach to the south, and Bernadotte with the
Northern army, about 120,000, was to move in support on the right flank through
the Netherlands and Laon; this force was not yet ready and did not, in fact,
reach the latter place till March.
To meet these forces the emperor could not collect 200,000 men in all, of
whom upwards of 100,000 were held by Wellington on the Spanish frontier, and
20,000 more were required to watch the debouches from the Alps. Hence less than
80,000 remained available for the east and north-eastern frontier. If, however,
he was weak in numbers, he was now again operating in a friendly country, able
to find food almost everywhere and practically indifferent as to his
communications.
On the 25th of January, Blucher entered Nancy, and, moving rapidly up the
valley of the Moselle, was in com munication with the Austrian advanced guard
near La Rothiere on the afternoon of the 28th. Here his headquarters were
surprised and he himself nearly captured by a sudden rush of French troops, and
he learnt at the same time that the emperor in person was at hand. He
accordingly fell back a few miles next morning to a strong position covering
the exits from the Bar-sur-Aube defile. There he was joined by the Austrian
advance guard, and together they decided to accept battle - indeed they had no
alternative, as the roads in rear were so choked with traffic that retreat was
out of the question. About noon the 2nd of February Napoleon attacked them; but
the weather was terrible, and the ground so heavy that his favourite artillery,
the mainstay of his whole system of warfare, was useless and in the drifts of
snow which at intervals swept across the field, the columns lost their
direction and many were severely handled by the Cossacks. At nightfall the
fighting ceased and the emperor retired to Lesmont, and thence to Troyes,
Marmont being left to observe the enemy.
55. Montmirail.- Owing to the state of the roads, more perhaps to
the extraordinary lethargy which always characterized Schwarzenberg's
headquarters, no pursuit was attempted. But on the 4th of February Blucher,
chafing at this inaction, obtained the permission of his own sovereign to
transfer his line of operations to the valley of the Marne; Pahlen's corps of
Cossacks were assigned to him to cover his left and maintain communication with
the Austrians.
Believing himself secure behind this screen, he advanced from Vitry along
the roads leading down the valley of the Marne, with his columns widely
separated for convenience of subsistence and shelter-the latter being almost
essential in the terrible weather prevailing. Blucher himself on the night of
the 7th was at Sezanne, on the exposed flank so as to be nearer to his sources
of intelligence, and the rest of his army were distributed in four small corps
at or near Epernay, Montmirail and Etoges; reinforcements also were on their
way to join him and were then about Vitry.
In the night his headquarters were again surprised, and he learnt that
Napoleon himself with his main body was in full march to fall on his scattered
detachments. At the same time he heard that Pahlen's Cossacks had been
withdrawn forty-eight hours previously, thus completely exposing his flank. He
himself retreated towards Etoges endeavouring to rally his scattered
detachments, but Napoleon was too quick for him and in three successive days he
defeated Sacken at Montmirail,York at Champ Aubert and Blucher and his main
body at Etoges, pursuing the latter towards Vertus. These disasters compelled
the retreat of the whole Silesian army, and Napoleon, leaving Mortier and
Marmout to deal with them, hurried back to Troyes with his main body to strike
the flank of Schwarzenberg's army, which had meanwhile begun its leisurely
advance, and again at Mormant on the 17th of February, Montereau the 18th and
Mery the 21st, he inflicted such heavy punishment upon his adversaries that
they fell back precipitately to Bar-sur-Aube.
56. Laon. In the meantime Blucher had rallied his scattered forces
and was driving Marmont and Mortier before him. Napoleon, as soon as he had
disembarrassed himself of Schwarzen berg, counter-marched his main body and
moving again by Sezanne, fell upon Blticher's left and drove him back upon
Soissons. This place had been held by a French garrison, hut had capitulated
only twenty-four hours beforehand, a fact of which Napoleon was naturally
unaware. The Silesian army was thus able to escape, and marching northwards
combined with Bernadotte at Laon this reinforcement bringing the forces at
Blucher's disposal up to over 100,000 men.
On the 7th of March Napoleon fell upon the advance guard of this force at
Craonne and drove it back upon Laon, where a battle took place on the 9th.
Napoleon was here defeated, and with only 30,000 men at his back he was
compelled to renounce all ideas of a further offensive, and he retired to rest
his troops to Reims. Here he remained unmolested for a few days, for Blucher
was struck down by sickness, and in his absence nothing was done. On the 14th
of March, however, Schwarzenberg, becoming aware of Napoleon's withdrawal to
Reims, again began his advance and had reached Arcis-sur-Aube -when the news of
Napoleon's approach again induced him to retreat to Brienne.
57. The Allies March on Paris.- Thus after six weeks' fighting the
allies were hardly more advanced than at the beginning. Now, however, they
began to realize the weakness of their opponent, and perhaps actuated by the
fear that Wellington from Toulouse might, after all1 reach Paris
first, they determined to march to Paris (then an open city), and let Napoleon
do his worst to their communications. Actually this was exactly what he was
preparing to do. He had determined to move eastward to St Dizier, rally what
garrisons he could find, and raise the whole country against the invaders, and
had actually started on the execution of this plan when his instructions fell
into the enemy's hands and his projects were exposed. Regardless of the threat,
the allies marched straight for the capital. Marmont and Mortier with what
troops they could rally took up a position on Montmartre heights to oppose
them, but seeing further resistance to be hopeless they gave way on the 31st of
March, just as Napoleon, with the wreck of the Guards and a mere handful of
other detachments, was hurrying across the rear of the Austrians towards
Fontainebleau to join them.
This was the end of the First Empire. The story of the Waterloo Campaign
is told under its own heading.
The Military Character of
Napoleon.
No military career has been examined more often and more freely than that
of Napoleon. Yet even so the want of complete documentary evidence upon which
to base conclusions has vitiated all but the most recent of the countless
rnonagraphs and histories that have appeared on the subject. Fortunately the
industry and ability of the military history section of the French General
Staff have rendered available, by the publication of the original orders issued
during the course of his campaigns, a mass of information which, taken in
conjunction with his own voluminous correspondence, renders it possible to
trace the growth of his military genius with a reasonable approach to accuracy.
Formerly we could only watch the evolution of his power of organization and the
purely psychic gifts of resolution and command. The actual working of his mind
towards that strategic and tactical ascendancy that rendered his presence on
the battlefield, according to the testimony of his opponents, equal to a
reinforcement of 40,000 men, was entirely undiscernible.
The history of his youth reveals no special predilection for the military
service~the bent of his mind was political far more than military, but unlike
the politicians of his epoch he consistently applied scientific and
mathematical methods to his theories, and desired above all things a knowledge
of facts in their true relation to one another. His early military education
was the best and most practical then attainable, primarily because he had the
good fortune to come under the influence of men of exceptional ability-Baron du
Keile, Bois Roger and others. From them he derived a sound knowledge of
artillery and fortification, and particularly of mountain warfare, which latter
was destined to prove of inestimable service to him in his first campaigns of
1794-95 and 1796. In these, as well as in his most dramatic success of Marengo
in 1800, we can discern no trace of strategical innovation. He was simply a
master of the methods of his time. Ceaseless industry, energy and conspicuous
personal gallantry were the principal factors of his brilliant victories, and
even in 1805; at Ulm and Austerlitz it was still the excellence of the tactical
instrument, the army, which the Revolution had bequeathed to him that
essentially produced the results.
Meanwhile the mathematical mind, with its craving for accurate data on
which to found its plans (the most difficult of all to obtain under the
conditions of warfare), had been searching for expedients which might serve him
to better purpose, and in 1805; he had recourse to the cavalry screen in the
hope of such results. This proved a palliation of his difficulty, but not a
solution. Cavalry can only observe, it cannot hold. The facts as to the
position of an opponent accurately observed and correctly reported at a given
moment, afford no reliable guarantee of his position 48 hours later, when the
orders based on this information enter upon execution. This can only be
calculated on the ground of reasonable probability as to what it may be to the
best interest of the adversary to attempt. But what may seem to a Napoleon the
best course is not necessarily the one that suggests itself to a mediocre mind,
and the greater the gulf which separates the two minds the greater the
uncertainty which must prevail on the side of the abler commander.
It was in 1806 that an improved solution was first devised. The general
advanced guard of all arms now followed immediately behind the cavalry screen
and held the enemy in position, while the remainder of the army followed at a
day's march in a "bataillon carree " ready to manoeuvre in any
required direction. The full reach of this discovery seems as yet scarcely to
have impressed itself upon the emperor with complete conviction, for in the
succeeding campaign in Poland we find that he twice departed from this form-at
Pultusk and Heilsberg- and each time his enemy succeeded in escaping him. At
Friedland, however, his success was complete, and henceforth the method recurs
on practically every battlefield. When it fails it is because its inventor
himself hesitates to push his own conception to its full development (Eckmuhl
1809, Borodino 1812). Yet it would seem that this invention of Napoleon's was
intuitive rather than reasoned; he never communicated it in its entirety to his
marshals, and seems to have been only capable of exercising it either when in
full possession of his health or under the excitement of action. Thus we find
him after the battle of Dresden itself a splendid example of its
efficacy-suddenly reverting to the terminology of the school in which he had
been hrought up, which he himself had destroyed, only to revive again in the
next few days and handle his forces strategically with all his accustomed
brilliancy.
In 1814 and in 1815 in the presence of the enemy he again rises supremely
to each occasion, only to lapse in the intervals even below the level of his
old opponents; and that this was not the consequence of temporary depression
naturally resulting from the accumulated load of his misfortunes, is
sufficiently shown by the downright puerility of the arguments by which he
seeks to justify his own successes in the St Helena memoirs, which one may
search in vain for any indication that Napoleon was himself aware of the
magnitude of his own discovery. One is forced to the conclusion that there
existed in Napoleon's brain a dual capacity - one the normal and reasoning one,
developing only the ideas and conceptions of his contemporaries, the other
intuitive, and capable only of work under abnormal pressure. At such moments of
crisis it almost excelled human comprehension; the mind seems to have gathered
to itself and summed up the balance of all human passions arranged for and
against him, and to have calculated with unerring exactitude the consequences
of each decision.
A partial explanation of this phenomenon may perhaps be found in the
economy of nervous energy his strategical method ensured to him. Marching
always ready to fight wherever his enemy might stand or move to meet him, his
mind was relieved from all the hesitations which necessarily arise in men less
confident in the security of their designs. Hence, when on the battlefield the
changing course of events left his antagonists mentally exhausted, he was able
to face them with will power neither bound nor broken. But this only explains a
portion of the mystery that surrounds him, and which will make the study of his
career the most fascinating to the military student of all times.
Amongst all the great captains of history Cromwell alone can be compared
to him. Both, in their powers of organization and the mastery of the tactical
potentialities of the weapons of their day, were immeasurably ahead of their
times, and both also understood to the full the strategic art of binding and
restraining the independent will power of their opponents, an art of which
Marlborough and Frederick, Wellington, Lee and Moltke do not seem ever even to
have grasped the fringe.
(F. N.M.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY.-Among the principal modern works on Napoleon's campaigns
1805-14 are the following: Yorck von Wartenburg, Napoleon als Feldherr
(1866, English and French translations);
H. Camon, La Guerre nopollonienue (Paris, 1903); H. Bonnal,
Esprit de la guerre moderne (a series of works, of which those dealing
with 1805-1812 are separately mentioned below). For 1805 see Alombert
and Cohn (French Gen. Staff), Campagne de 1805 en Allemagne
(Paris, 1898-1910); H. Bonnal, De Rosbach a Ulm (Paris, 1903)
; Sir D. Haig, Cavalry Studies (London, 1907); G.~A. Furse, Ulm,
Trafalgar and Austerlitz (London, 1905). For 1806-1807, Pr. Kraft zu
Hohenlohe-Ingfingen, Letters on Strategy (Eng. trans., vol. i.);
Freiherr v. d. Goltz, Rossbach und Jena; the new edition of the same
work, Von Rosslech bis Jena und Auerstadt (Berlin, 1906) and Von Jena
bis Preussisch-Eylau (Berlin, 1908); Studies in French Gen. Staff Revue
d'Histoire (1909); P. Foucart, Campagne de Prusse; H. Bonnal, La
lfaneuvre d'Iena (Paris, 1904); Memotrs of Bennigsen (trans. by E.
Cazalas, French Gen. Staff, 1909); F. N. Maude, The Jena Campaign
(London, '909); F. L. Petre, Napoleon's Campaign in Poland (London,
1902). For 1809, H. Bonnal, La Maneuvre de Landshut (Paris, 1905);
Saski, Campagne de 18o9 (Paris, 1899-1902); Ritter V. Angeli,
Erzherzog Karl (Vienna, 1895-1897); Lieut. Field Marshal von Woinovich
(ad.), Das Kriegsjahr 1809; Boat, De Ratisbonne d Zaxim
(Paris, 1910). For 1812, G. Fabry (French Gen. Staff), Campagne de 1812
(Paris, 1904); La Guerre nationale de 1812 (French translation from
the Russian general staff work, Paris, 1904); H. Bonnal, La Maneuvre de
Vilna (Paris, 1905); Freiherr v. d. Osten-Sacken, Feldeug 1812
(Berlin, 1899); H. B. George, Napoleon's Invasion of Russia (London,
'900). For 1813, F. N. Maude, The Leipzig Campaign (London, 1908);
Lanrezac, La Manruvre de Latzen; B. v. Quistorp, Gescil. der
Nordarmee 1813 (I 894); V. Holleben, Gesch. des Fru~hjahrs feldeug 1813
(Berlin, 1904); Friedrich, Der Herbseldlug 1813 (Berlin, 1903-1906).
For 1814, German Gen. Sta , Kriegsgesch. Einzelsehriften, No.13; V.
Janson, Der Feldzug 1814 in Frankreieh (Berlin, 1903-1905). See also
works mentioned under FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARs and under biographical
headings, as well as the genral histories of the time.
NAVAL OPERATIONS
David Hannay
The French navy came under the direct and exclusive control of Napoleon
after the 18th Brumaire. At the close of 1799 (see FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS)
he had three purposes to serve by the help of his fleet the relief of the
French garrison besieged by the British forces in Malta; the reinforcement of
the army he had left in Egypt; and the distraction of Great Britain by the
threat of invasion of England across the Channel, or of Ireland. The
deficiencies both in number and in quality of his naval resources doomed him to
fail in all three. Though he had control of what remained of the navies of
Holland and Spain, as well as of the French, he was outnumbered at every point,
while the efficiency of the British fleet gave it a mobility which doubled its
material superiority. All Napoleon's efforts to support his troops in Malta and
Egypt were necessarily made under the hampering obligation to evade the British
forces barring the road. The inevitable result was that only an occasional
blockade- runner could succeed in escaping detection and attack. The relief
thus brought to Malta and Egypt was not sufficient. In February 1800, the
" Genereux "(74), one of the few ships which escaped from the Nile,
sailed from Toulon with three corvettes, under Rear-admiral Perree. to relieve
Malta. On the 18th she was sighted by the blockading squadron, surrounded and
captured. Three other survivors of the Nile were at anchor in Malta-the "
Guillaume Tell " (8o), and two frigates, the " Diane" and the
Justice." On the 29th of July the " Guillaume Tell " en
deavoured to slip out in the night. She was sighted, pursued and overpowered,
after a singularly gallant resistance. The frigates made an attempt to get off
on the 24th of August, but only the "Justice," a solitary survivor of
the squadron which fought at the Nile, reached Toulon. Malta, starved out by
the British fleet, surrendered on the 5th of September 1800. Very similar was
the fate of the efforts to reach and reinforce the army of Egypt. The British
squadrons either stopped the relieving forces at their point of departure, or
baffled, when they did not take them, at their landfall. A squadron of seven
sail of the line, under Admiral Ganteaume, succeeded in slipping out of Brest,
when a gale had driven the British blockading force off the coast. Ganteaume
met with some measure of success in capturing isolated British men-of-war, one
of them being a 74, the "Swiftsure." But he failed to give effectual
help to the Egyptian army. He sailed on the 23rd of January 1801, entered the
Mediterranean and, his squadron being in a bad condition, steered for Toulon,.
which he reached on the 18th of February. On the 19th of March he sailed again
for Egypt, but was again driven back by the same causes on the 5th of April. On
the 25th he was ordered out once more. Three of his ships had to be sent back
as unfit to keep the sea. With the other four he reached the coast of Egypt, on
the 7th of May, only to sight a powerful British force, and to be compelled to
escape to Toulon, which he did not reach till the 22nd of July. The French in
Egypt were in fact beaten before he reached the coast. At the beginning of
1801, a British naval force, commanded by Lord Keith, had sailed from
Gibraltar, escorting an army of 18,000 men under General Abercromby. It reached
Marmorice Bay, in Asia Minor, on the 31st of January, to arrange a cooperation
with the Turks, and after some delay the army was transported and landed in
Egypt, on the 7th and 8th of March. Before the end of September the French army
was reduced to capitulate. In the interval another effort to carry help to it
was made from Toulon. On the 13th of June 1801 Rear-admiral Linois left Toulon
with three sail of the line, to join a Spanish squadron at Cadiz and go on to
Egypt. In the straits he was sighted by the British squadron under Sir J.
Saumarez, and driven to seek the protection of the Spanish batteries in
Algeciras. On the 6th of July he beat off a British attack, capturing the
Hannibal," 74. On the 9th a Spanish squadron came to his assistance, and
the combined force steered for Cadiz. During the night of the 12th/13th of July
they were attacked by Sir J. Saumarex. Two Spanish three-deckers blew up, and a
74-gun ship was taken. The others were blockaded in Cadiz. The invasion scheme
was vigorously pushed after the 3rd of March 1801. Flat-bottomed boats were
gradually collected at Boulogne. Two attempts to destroy them at anchor, though
directed by Nelson himself, were repulsed on the 4th and 16th of August. But
the invasion was so far little more than a threat made for diplomatic purposes.
On the 1st of October 1801 an armistice was signed in London, and the Peace of
Amiens followed, on the 27th of March 1802. (For the operations in the Baltic
in 1801, see COPENHAGEN, BATTLE OF.)
The Peace of Amiens proved to be only an uneasy truce, and it was
succeeded by open war, on the 18th of May 1803. From that date till about the
middle of August 1805, a space of some two years and two months, the war took
the form of a most determined attempt on the part of Napoleon to carry out an
invasion of Great Britain, met by the counter measures of the British
government. The scheme of invasion was based on the Boulogne flotilla, a device
inherited from the old French royal government, through the Republic. Its
object was to throw a great army ashore on the coast between Dover and
Hastings. The preparations were made on an unprecedented scale. The Republic
had collected some two hundred and forty vessels. Under the direction of
Napoleon ten times as many were equipped. They were divided into: prarnes,
ship-rigged, of 35 metres long and 8 wide, carrying 12 guns; chaloupes
cannonie'res, of 24 metres long and 5 wide~ carrying 5 guns and
brig-rigged; bateaux cannoniers, of 19 metres long by1.56 wide, carrying
2 guns and mere boats. All were built to be rowed, were flat-bottomed, and of
shallow draft so as to be able to navigate close to the shore, and to take the
ground without hurt. They were built in France and the Low Countries, in the
coast towns and the rivers-even in Paris-and were collected gradually, shore
batteries both fixed and mobile being largely employed to cover the passage. A
vast sum of money and the labour of thousands of men were employed to clear
harbours for them, at and near Boulogne. The shallow water on the coast made it
impossible for the British line-of-battle ships, or even large frigates, to
press the attack on them home. Smaller vessels they were able to beat off and
so, in spite of the activity of the British cruisers and of many sharp
encounters, the concentration was effected at Boulogne, where an army of
130,000 was encamped and was incessantly practised in embarking and
disembarking. Before the invasion was taken in hand as a serious policy, there
had been at least a profession of a belief that the flotilla could push across
the Channel during a calm. Experience soon showed that when the needful
allowance was made for the time required to bring them out of harbour (two
tides) and for the influence which the Channel currents must have upon their
speed, it would be extremely rash to rely on a calm of sufficient length.
Napoleon therefore came early to the conclusion that he must bring about a
concentration of his seagoing fleet in the Channel, which would give him a
temporary command of its waters.
He had a squadron at Brest, ships at L'Orient and Rochefort, some of his
vessels had taken refuge at Ferrol on their way back from San Domingo when war
broke out, one was at Cadix, and he had a squadron at Toulon. All these forces
were watched by British blockading squadrons. The problem was to bring them
together before the British fleet could be concentrated to meet them.
Napoleon's solution grew, as time went on and circumstances changed, in scope
and complexity. In July 1804 he ordered his admiral commanding at Toulon,
Latouche Treville, to seize an opportunity when Nelson, who was in command of
the blockade, was driven off by a northerly gale, to put to sea, with 10 sail
of the line, pick up the French ship in Cadix, join Villeneuve who was in the
Aix roads, and then effect a junction with Ganteaume and the 21 sail of the
line at Brest. He hoped that if the British ships in the North Sea concentrated
with the squadron in the Channel, he would be able to make use of Dutch vessels
from the Texel. The death of Latouche Treville, 20th of August 1804, supplied
an excuse for delay. He was succeeded by Villeneuve. Napoleon now modified the
simple plan prepared for Latouche Treville, and began laying elaborate plans by
which French vessels were to slip out and sail for distant seas, to draw the
British fleet after them, and then return to concentrate in the Channel. A
further modification was introduced by the end of 1804. Spain, which was bound
by treaty to join Napoleon, was allowed to preserve a show of neutrality by
paying a monthly subvention. The British government, treating this as a hostile
action-as it was seized the Spanish treasure ships on their way from America,
near Cape Santa Maria, on the 5th of October 1804, and Spain declared war on
the 12th of December. New plans were now made including the cooperation of the
Spanish fleet. Amid all the variation in their details, and the apparent
confusion introduced by Napoleon's habit of suggesting alternatives and
discussing probabilities, and in spite of the preparations ostensibly made for
an expedition to Ireland, which was to have sailed from Brest and to have
carried 30,000 troops commanded by Augereau, the real purpose of Napoleon was
neither altered nor concealed. He worked to produce doubt and confusion in the
mind of the British government by threats and attacks on its distant
possessions, which should lead it to scatter its forces. One of these ventures
was actually carried out, without, however, securing the cooperation, or
effecting the purpose he had in view. On the 11h of January 1805 Admiral
Missiessy left Rochefort with 5 sail of the line, undetected by the British
forces on the coast. Missiessy carried out a successful voyage of
commerce-destroying, and returned safely to Rochefort on the 20th of May, from
the West Indies. But the force sent in pursuit of him was small, and the
British government was not deceived into weakening its hold on the Channel. It
was in fact well supplied with information by means of the spy service directed
by an exiled French royalist, the count d'Antraigues, who was established at
Dresden as a Russian diplomatic agent. Through his correspondents in Paris,
some of whom had access to Napoleon's papers, the British government was able
to learn the emperor's real intentions. The blockade of Brest was so strictly
maintained that Ganteaume was allowed no opportunity to get to sea. Villeneuve,
who was to have cooperated with Missiessy, did indeed leave Toulon, at a moment
when Nelson, whose policy it was to encourage him to come out by not staying
too near the port, was absent, on the 17th of January 1805. The British
admiral, when informed that the French were at sea, justified Napoleon's
estimate of his probable course in such a contingency, by making a useless
cruise to Egypt. But Villeneuve's ill-appointed ships, manned by raw crews,
suffered loss of spars in a gale, and he returned to Toulon~on the 21st. His
last start came when he sailed, unseen by Nelson, on the 30th of March. Aided
by lucky changes of wind, he reached Cadiz, was joined by 1 French and 6
Spanish ships under Admiral Gravina, which, added to the 11 he had with him,
gave him a force of 18 sail. He left Cadiz on the night of the 9th/l0th of
April, and reached Fort de France in Martinique on the 14th of May. Here he was
to have remained till joined by Ganteaume from Brest. On the 1st of June he was
joined by a frigate and two line-of-battle ships sent with orders from
Rochefort, and was told to remain in the West Indies till the 5th of July, and
if not joined by Ganteaume to steer for Ferrol, pick up the French and Spanish
ships in the port, and come on to the Channel. Villeneuve learnt on the 8th of
June that Nelson had reached Barbadoes in pursuit of him on the 4th. The
British admiral, delayed by contrary winds, had not been able to start from the
entry to the Straits of Gibraltar till the 11h of May. An action in the West
Indies would have ruined the emperor's plan of concentration, and Villeneuve
decided to sail at once for Ferrol. Nelson, misled by false information, ranged
the West Indies as far south as the Gulf of Paria, in search of his opponent
whom he supposed to be engaged in attacks on British possessions. By the 13th
of June he had learnt the truth, and sailed for Gibraltar under the erroneous
impression that the French admiral would return to Toulon. He sent a brig home
with despatches; on the 19th of June, in lat. 330 12' N. and long. 580 W., the
French were seen by this vessel heading for the Bay of Biscay. Captain
Bettesworth who commanded the brig hurried home, and the information he brought
was at once acted on by Lord Barham, the First Lord of the Admiralty, who took
measures to station a force to intercept Villeneuve outside Ferrol. On the 22nd
of July, 35 leagues N.W. of Finisterre, Villeneuve was met by the British
admiral sent to intercept him, Sir Robert Calder. A confused action in a fog
ended in the capture of 2 Spanish line-of-battle ships. But Sir R. Calder, who
had only 15 ships to his opponent's 20 and was nervous lest he should be
overpowered, did not act with energy. He retreated to join the blockading fleet
off Brest. Villeneuve was now able to join the vessels at Ferrol. Nelson, who
reached Gibraltar on the very day the action off Ferrol was fought, was too far
away to interfere with him. But Villeneuve, who was deeply impressed by the
inefficiency of the ships of his fleet and especially of the Spaniards, and who
was convinced that an overwhelming British force would be united against him in
the Channel, lost heart, and on the 15th of August sailed south to Cadiz. By
this movement he ruined the emperor's elaborate scheme. Napoleon at once broke
up the camp at Boulogne and marched to Germany. The further movements of
Villeneuve's fleet are told under TRAFALGAR, BATTLE OF.
With the collapse of the invasion scheme, the naval war between Napoleon
and Great Britain entered on a new phase. It lost at once the unity given to it
by the efforts of the emperor to effect, and of the British government to
baffle the passage of the Channel by an army. In place of the movements of
great fleets to a single end we have a nine years' story (1805-1814) of
cruising for the protection of commerce, of convoy, of colonial expeditions to
capture French, Dutch or Spanish possessions and of combined naval and military
operations in which the British navy was engaged in carrying troops to various
countries, and in supporting them on shore. Napoleon continued to build
line-of-battle ships in numbers from Venice to Hamburg, but only in order to
force the British government to maintain costly and wearing blockades. He never
allowed his fleets to go to sea to seek battle. The operations of the British
fleet were therefore divided between the work of patrolling the ocean roads and
ancillary services to diplomacy, or to the armies serving in Italy, Denmark
and, after 1808, in Spain. The remaining colonial possessions of France, and of
Holland, then wholly dependent on her, were conquered by degrees, and the ports
in which privateers were fitted out to cruise against British commerce in
distant seas were gradually rendered harmless. Though privateering was carried
on by the French with daring and a considerable measure of success, it did not
put an appreciable check on the growth of British merchant shipping. The
function of the British navy in the long conflict with Napoleon was of the
first importance, and its services were rendered in every sea, but their very
number, extent and complexity render it impossible here to record them in
detail.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.-Captain Mahan, Influence of Sea Power upon the French
Revolution and the Empire (London, 1892); Chevalier, Histoire de la
marine fransaise sous le consulat et l'empire (Paris, 1886). All the
operations connected with the successive invasion schemes are recorded, with
exhaustive quotations of documentary evidence, in Projets et tentatives de
debarquement aux Iles Britan niques, by Captain Desbriere (Paris, 1901).
Captain Desbriere's exhaustive work was done for the historical section of the
French general staff, and is a fine example of the scholarly and conscientious
modern French historical school. (D. H.)
To return to Xenophon home page please click
here. To find information
on Russian - Ukrainian military history, please go to
Russia. Please send
questions and comments to Xenophon.