Napoleonic Wars: Battle of Austerlitz 1805 DOCUMENTARY

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
The War of the Third Coalition started at sea as the British Admiral Nelson and his French counterpart Villeneuve wrestled for control of the Atlantic and fought the Battle of Trafalgar. However the land war was more crucial for Napoleon and the fate of the war was decided during the Battle of the three Emperors on the snow perched fields of Austerlitz. French victories at Marengo and Hohenlinden in 1800 forced Austria to sue for a separate peace. The Treaty of Lunéville acknowledged the new French satellites in the Netherlands, Switzerland and Italy alongside holdings in Tuscany and the left bank of the river Rhine. Meanwhile Russian Tsar Paul I. was getting closer to Napoleon and even considered a campaign against Britain in India. In 1801 Paul was assassinated by a group of conspirators funded by the British government. The new Tsar Alexander I. was more lenient towards Britain but he didn't re-enter the conflict and in 1802 France and Britain signed a treaty in Amiens that ended the war of the Second Coalition. Despite that the two countries still had ample reasons to fight and a year later Britain declared war again. The initial phase of the conflict that would be known as the War of the Third Coalition took place at sea. Napoleon needed to gain naval dominance to transport 200,000 troops to the British Isles so the British tried to get rid of the French fleet and that of the new French allies, the Spanish. Other European powers were not eager to join the conflict but two events changed that. In March of 1804 one of the representatives of the toppled French dynasty of Bourbon, Duke d'Enghien was seized by the dragoons of Napoleon in the neutral Baden and then executed for treason. The news shocked the royal courts of Europe. In the same year Napoleon was coronated as the Emperor of the French and in 1805 as the king of Italy which meant that he considered himself an equal of the Austrian and Russian Emperors. All this forced Sweden, Naples, Austria and Russia to ally with Britain and enter the war. The Allies outnumbered Napoleon almost two to one. They planned to move 90,000 Russian troops to the Prussian border to force it to join the alliance while a 50,000 strong Russian army under Kutuzov had to move into the Holy Roman Empire and help the 120,000 Austrian troops. 40,000 Russians and Swedes were to land in northern Germany to threaten the Low Countries and northern France. 100,000 Austrians were to enter Italy to push the French out while Britain and Russia promised to help the armies of Naples in southern Italy. It was clear for the French Emperor that he needed to make a decisive strike against one of these forces and take it out of the game to have any chance of winning the war. The Allies expected him to move to Italy as he did in the first two wars. He had around 300,000 men near Boulogne and sent 70,000 commanded by Massena to Italy to defend the southern borders of France. 30,000 were left in Boulogne while the rest of the army, some 180,000 started moving toward to the Rhine and reached it by the 25th of September where they were reinforced by 10,000 troops from Bavaria and Württemberg. Meanwhile Austrian general Mack and his 70,000 men were ordered to defend the road to the capital Vienna along the river Inn and wait for Kutuzov. But the Austrian commander decided to move his base to Ulm to defend the mountainous Black Forest region. Now he was 700 kilometers away from Kutuzov. Some historians claim that there was miscommunication between the Austrians and Russians as the former used the Gregorian calendar and the latter the older Julian which meant that there was a 12 day discrepancy. This prevented could solve from reaching the area in time. Napoleon knew that Mack could be easily dislodged but then he would either move to the east to unite with Kutuzov or to the south to enter Italy. Instead the French troops crossed the Rhine on the 26th. Two corps were moving close to the Black Forest to delude Mack into thinking that he would be attacked from the front while only one Corps was threatening the Austrians from the north. French troops were moving extremely fast and by the 6th of October Mack was cut off from his supply lines to the east. Mack attempted to break the encirclement on the 8th but his general lost at Wertingen and the French used that time to move behind the Austrians. Two more attempts were made to break out but the French won the resulting battles and by the 14th the Austrian army was blockaded at Ulm. A group of cavalry managed to break through the French line but was then caught. Mack surrendered on the 20th upon receiving irrefutable proof that Kutuzov was still weeks away. More than 60,000 Austrians became prisoners of war while the French had lost around 2,000 troops. The Ulm campaign is considered to be one of the most significant victories for Napoleon. "If I can't be in London in 15 days, I will be in Vienna by the middle of November." On the 26th French troops were grouped and started moving east. Kutuzov learned about Mack's defeat and decided to retreat with his 60,000 towards the secondary Russian army under Buxhoevden. The Allied army moved slowly fighting a number of regard battles and wasn't able to defend the Austrian capital. On the 12th of November Vienna was occupied by the French and Napoleon entered the city on the 15th as he predicted at the beginning of the campaign. Although Napoleon continued chasing Kutuzov, the latter finally united with Buxhoevden on the 20th and now had 90,000 soldiers and 318 guns under his command. By that point Napoleon's forces were scattered along the Danube river to contain the Austrians in Italy and he had only 53,000 troops and 157 guns with him. His troops were tired due to the constant marching and fighting and on the 23rd he ordered a halt at Brunn in the modern-day Czech Republic. Napoleon needed to win a decisive battle and he ordered the nearby corps amounting to 20,000 men to join him. At the same time he was projecting weakness to force the enemy to attack him. His troops abandoned the town of Austerlitz and the Pratzen Heights. Napoleon also tried to initiate negotiations with the Austrian Emperor Francis and Russian Tsar Alexander. The latter concluded that the French were in bad shape. Kutuzov, who was the overall commander of the Allied army, advised caution but he was deposed and hotheads gained the upper hand. The battle of Austerlitz took place on the 2nd of December 1805. The French Emperor deliberately weakened his right flank to lure the enemy in but then his nearby reinforcements were ordered to move to cover this position. The majority of the troops were concentrated in the center and on the left flank. Napoleon knew that his right flank would be perfect bait and that the enemy would stretch its forces to attack his right from both the front and sides. Indeed the Allied forces attacked here at 7:00 a.m. and French troops slowly retreated from the village of Tellnitz. A second column joined the attack and a third arrived as the French reached Sokolnitz Castle. The battle continued here until part of the corps of marshal Davout arrived and helped the French retake Tellnitz. Still the Allies outnumbered the French two-to-one and drove them back out of the village. The remainder of Davout forces joined the defense of Sokolnitz which was crucial to the French plans. Despite mounting pressure Napoleon's troops held their ground. The Allied right flank attacks the French left hoping that pinning it down would allow them to crush the French right. By 8 a.m. the sun finally dissipated the fog on the Pratzen Heights and Napoleon saw that only Kutuzov and his 4th column were there. The strong French center was hidden from the enemy's view so Tsar Alexander ordered this column forward to attack the French right from the north. At 9 a.m. Napoleon saw the Allied center was weak and sent his center ahead. The French attack stunned the Allies and they lost control of the Pratzen Heights. However, reinforcements from the Allied right arrived and helped retake this position. This weakened the remainder of the Allied right wing and this time Napoleon ordered his reserves to join the attack. The Pratzen Heights were taken once again and a wedge was driven between the center and the right of the Austro-Russian army. The majority of troops were now in play. The Allies attempted a counterattack in the north but it was stopped and the right flank of the allied army was forced to retreat. Russian guards tried to drive the French from the Heights but the French left attacked them from the north causing the guards to also leave the battlefield. The order to retreat to the east was sent to the Allied left but it was either ignored or impossible to implement as the French attacked from the north. The Russians attempted to move across the Satschan Pond which was covered in ice. A French artillery bombardment broke the ice and thousands of Russians drowned. The battle was a resounding French victory. 36,000 Allied soldiers were either killed or captured while Napoleon lost just 9,000. His troops were too tired to chase the enemy and that meant the war would continue. Napoleon would fight on and the War of the Third Coalition would morph into the War of the Fourth Coalition. Thank you for watching our documentary on the battles of Ulm and Austerlitz. In two weeks we will be back in your presence with the twin battles of Jena and Auerstedt. We would like to express our gratitude to our patreon supporters who make the creation of these videos possible. This video was narrated by me, Officially Devin. Don't forget to stop by my channel for my narrative Let's Plays. This is the Kings and Generals channel, and we will catch you on the next one.
Info
Channel: Kings and Generals
Views: 1,063,123
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: 1805, napoleonic wars, napoleonic, war of the third coalition, history, historical, invicta, bazbattles, epic history tv, Historia Civilis, rome, ancient battle, top 10, strategy, tactic, total war rome, next total war, kings and generals, thfe, lesson, documentary film, educational, history lesson, world history, extra credits history, 1402, battle, austerlitz, napoleon, documentary, waterloo, ulm, kutuzov, trafalgar, mack, bonaparte, full documentary, nelson, animated documentary, war - topic, study
Id: OaoNMLKDCQU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 11min 19sec (679 seconds)
Published: Sun Nov 19 2017
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.