In 1809, Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of the
French, was at the height of his power. He had just won another crushing victory against
Austria at Wagram, and imposed a humiliating peace treaty. But the war he’d started in Spain and Portugal,
with his ill-judged invasion the previous year, continued to rage. Napoleon had placed his own brother Joseph
on the Spanish throne – uniting a proud country against him. His troops had dealt ruthlessly with popular
uprisings, while routing a succession of Spanish armies. In February 1809, Marshal Lannes overcame
the heroic defence of Zaragoza, in a brutal siege that cost 54,000 Spanish lives and 10,000
French. But still… the Spanish and Portuguese remained
defiant. And 3 months after their escape from Corunna,
the British were back. In April, Sir Arthur Wellesley landed in Lisbon
to lead a small Anglo-Portuguese army: British redcoats would fight alongside Portuguese
troops, who, with the help of British training, would soon prove themselves highly effective. Three weeks after arriving in Portugal, Wellesley
moved against Marshal Soult’s Second Corps, which had recently taken Porto. Soult and his troops, preoccupied with plundering
the region, had no warning of the British advance, and were soon in headlong retreat,
back through the mountains into Spain. Having secured Portugal, for the time being,
Wellesley planned a joint campaign with General Cuesta, commanding the Spanish Army of Extremadura. On 10th July, the two commanders met at Casas
de Miravete to discuss strategy. Relations between these two allies were not
straightforward. Britain and Spain had a long history of conflict: The Spanish were deeply suspicious of British
intentions in Spain, while the British had a low opinion of the Spanish army, which they
considered poorly trained, and badly led. Wellesley’s request to take over command
of Spanish forces was rejected. But the generals agreed to a joint advance
up the Tagus valley towards Madrid, to be supported by General Venegas, advancing from
La Mancha. In the face of their advance, Marshal Victor’s
First Corps withdrew to Talavera, where he was joined by King Joseph and General Sebastiani’s
Fourth Corps. The French plan was for Joseph’s army to
defend Madrid, while Marshal Soult led three corps down from the north, to get behind and
trap the Anglo-Spanish forces. But Joseph, worried by Soult’s slow progress,
and General Venegas’ advance on Madrid, decided to attack at Talavera. The Battle of Talavera saw British infantry
bear the brunt of the French assault: they stood firm, and repelled the enemy with disciplined
musket-fire and bayonet charges. Talavera was a small battle compared to the
great clashes fought that year in Austria. But it proved that under Wellesley, Britain’s
small, well-drilled army was a force to be reckoned with… even though in the short
term, victory achieved little. Warned of Soult’s approach from captured
despatches, the victorious Anglo-Spanish army… retreated. … while King Joseph and Fourth Corps marched
against Venegas’ army, which they smashed at the Battle of Almonacid. That autumn the Supreme Junta in Seville,
free Spain’s effective government, raised two new armies for another attempt to liberate
Madrid, planning to converge on the capital from north and south. But Wellesley, ennobled as Viscount Wellington
for his victory at Talavera, had been so disgusted by the lack of Spanish co-operation that summer,
that he refused to risk his army. Predictably, Spain’s inexperienced armies
met with disaster: at Ocaña, they suffered their biggest defeat of the war, when a smaller
force under Marshal Soult routed the Spanish army, taking 14,000 prisoners and 50 cannon. A week later, the Army of the Left was heavily
defeated at Alba de Tormes. There was more bad news when Girona fell to
the French, after an epic 7 month siege. The Supreme Junta’s plans to retake Madrid
were in tatters... And Southern Spain was now wide open to French
attack. In January 1810, King Joseph marched south
with an army of 60,000 men. In the face of his advance, Spanish resistance...
evaporated. Spain’s Supreme Junta was overthrown in
a coup, as Cordoba and Seville fell without a fight. Joseph, who still hoped to win over the Spanish
with his progressive reforms, was welcomed by many as a saviour from anarchy. Only Cadiz held out - its defences reinforced
by a British naval squadron - and was besieged by Victor’s First Corps. Meanwhile Napoleon sent Marshal Masséna to
Spain with 65,000 reinforcements. He was reckoned one of Napoleon’s best marshals,
and had just been made ‘Prince of Essling’ for his heroics in the recent war against
Austria. Masséna was to lead a third French invasion
of Portugal, take Lisbon, and chase the British back into the sea. He laid siege to Ciudad Rodrigo, a fortified
city controlling one of the main routes into Portugal, which surrendered after two weeks’
bombardment. Wellington, with only 33,000 men to face Masséna’s
50,000, retreated. Masséna crossed the Portuguese frontier,
and besieged Almeida. After just 13 hours of bombardment, a lucky
French shot hit the Portuguese magazine… 70 tons of gunpowder went up in a devastating
explosion, that made all further resistance useless. It was a serious blow to Wellington, who’d
been relying on Almeida’s strong defences to buy him time. At Buçaco, he found a strong defensive position
and made a stand. Masséna’s uphill, frontal attack failed
at a cost of 4,000 casualties. But the next day, the French found a way to
outflank Wellington’s position, and his retreat continued. As Masséna’s army neared Lisbon, his scouts
reported something completely unexpected: Stretching across the Lisbon peninsula, protecting
the city from attack, they found a new chain of fortifications, in two major lines. Known as the Lines of Torres Vedras, the British
and Portuguese had been constructing these defences for more than a year. Now the Lines bristled with more than a hundred
forts, redoubts and batteries, manned by 30,000 troops and 250 guns. Masséna soon discovered the Lines were far
too strong for him to attack. What’s more, a ‘scorched earth’ strategy
had stripped the surrounding countryside of anything that might help the French… While Portuguese partisans attacked French
supply columns, as they struggled through the mountains to reach Masséna’s army. Masséna faced a grim predicament: starved
of supplies, too weak to attack… unwilling to retreat. But throughout this stand-off, it was Portuguese
peasants who suffered most of all. When their villages and farms were burned,
many took refuge in Lisbon, where thousands died of starvation and disease. Back in France, Napoleon had been preoccupied
with his divorce from the Empress Josephine… and then a new marriage Archduchess Marie
Louise, daughter of the Emperor of Austria. She was now expecting their first child. Nevertheless, from Paris, Napoleon sent frequent
orders to his Marshals in Spain and Portugal, urging them to take more aggressive action. But when these orders arrived, weeks later,
they were usually out of date, and showed little understanding of the problems his Marshals
faced. He now ordered Soult, based in Andalucia,
to go on the offensive, to draw enemy forces away from Lisbon, so Masséna could take the
city. Soult laid siege to Badajoz, a fortified city
that controlled the southern route into Portugal. When 12,000 men of the Army of Extremadura
marched to its relief, they were routed by Soult… after which the city tamely surrendered,
giving up 8,000 prisoners and vast quantities of stores. It was another heavy blow to Spain’s armed
forces. But remarkably, despite such disasters, and
their many blundering generals, Spanish troops remained willing to fight, the courage of
the rank-and-file undimmed. Victor’s First Corps, besieging Cadiz, had
now been so weakened to support other operations, that the Anglo-Spanish garrison decided to
attack. The allies landed along the coast, to strike
at the French siege lines from the rear. But they were ambushed by the French at Barossa. Despite heavy losses, the Anglo-Portuguese
rearguard fought off the enemy - but a furious falling out between British commander Sir
Thomas Graham, and his Spanish counterpart General La Peña, threw away any advantage. Soult, alarmed at these developments, marched
back to Andalucia. Meanwhile Masséna, out of food and with no
prospect of reinforcement, had no option but to retreat. Wellington’s army pursued, discovering evidence
of several appalling atrocities, committed by the French against Portuguese villagers. There were running battles with the French
rearguard, brilliantly commanded by Marshal Ney, until he was sacked by Masséna for criticising
his leadership. Having chased the French out of Portugal,
Wellington besieged Almeida. Masséna’s army, now rested and reinforced,
marched to its aid. The two armies clashed again at Fuentes de
Oñoro. In two days of heavy fighting, Masséna failed
to break through Wellington’s position to relieve Almeida. The fortress fell the next week, but to Wellington’s
fury, British bungling allowed most of the French garrison to escape. Masséna had lost 25,000 men in Portugal. Now he’d lost Almeida too. And a string of bad decisions, not least to
bring his mistress with him on campaign, had cost him the respect of his officers. The Marshal, whom Napoleon had once nicknamed
‘the dear Child of Victory’, was recalled to France in disgrace, never to hold senior
command again. Napoleon sent Marshal Marmont to replace him. Meanwhile Marshal Beresford, the British commander
of Portugal’s army, was sent to retake Badajoz with 20,000 British and Portuguese troops. When Soult approached with a relief force,
Beresford marched to meet him at Albuera: it was one of the bloodiest battles of the
war – around 6,000 casualties on each side, with more than a third of the British infantry
killed, wounded or captured. Marshal Soult declared, "There is no beating
these troops, in spite of their generals. I always thought they were bad soldiers, now
I am sure of it. I had turned their right, pierced their centre
and everywhere victory was mine – but they did not know how to run!" Soult had been checked, but he was determined
to save Badajoz. The newly-arrived Marshal Marmont marched
to his aid, and they advanced again. This combined army forced the British to abandon
the siege - But when Wellington withdrew to a strong defensive
position across the Portuguese border, Soult and Marmont did not pursue. French commanders in Spain had learned grudging
respect for Wellington, and for the steadiness of his troops. For now, the war in Spain had entered stalemate. While British, French and Spanish armies criss-crossed
Spain and Portugal, another war was fought every day in the mountains, hills and woods. From 1808 Spanish and Portuguese civilians,
militias and ex-soldiers began taking up arms against the hated French invader. They waged a war of ambushes and hit-and-run
raids, known in Spanish as la guerrilla - ‘the little war’. Its fighters became known, in English, as
guerrillas. Britain’s Royal Navy supplied vital weapons,
stores and money, often landing them behind enemy lines. Much of Spain’s rugged countryside fell
under the control of the guerrillas: North of Madrid, Juan Martín Diez, an ex-soldier
known as El Empecinado, ‘the Stubborn’, led a guerrilla band 6,000 strong. In Navarre, Espoz y Mina, a former peasant,
ran a highly organised band that caused havoc for the French, capturing convoys and couriers
on the strategic Burgos-Bayonne road, and branding ‘Viva Mina’ on the forehead of
collaborators. While in the west Julian Sanchez, known as
El Charro, led the self-styled ‘Lanceros de Castilla’. El Charro himself wore a French hussar’s
cap, its eagle symbolically turned upside down. There were dozens more bands operating across
Spain – though a few were no better than bandits, terrorising civilians as often as
the enemy. The guerrilla war was merciless, marked by
hideous atrocities on both sides. A French soldier’s greatest fear was to
be taken alive by the guerrillas, who often tortured their prisoners before killing them. Tens of thousands of French troops were tied
down by this ‘people’s war’ – guarding outposts, or patrolling the countryside. The roads were so dangerous for French messengers
that they required cavalry escorts of 200 men or more. Many still didn’t get through - their valuable
despatches forwarded to Wellington, for whom they became an invaluable source of intelligence. The war in Spain would ultimately cost the
lives of 260,000 French soldiers: As was typical in wars of this era, the great
majority – 3 out of 4 - died from disease. The twin threats faced by the French in Spain
- a well-led, regular army under Wellington, alongside a popular insurgency, left them
with an impossible strategic dilemma: If their armies remained dispersed, to fight
the guerrillas – Wellington could attack. But if they concentrated to defeat Wellington
in battle – huge swathes of the country would quickly fall to the guerrillas. This was ‘Napoleon’s Vietnam’ - or his
‘bleeding ulcer’ as he called it – a war that cost his empire an average of 100
casualties every day, with little prospect of victory. And in 1812, as Napoleon launched his gigantic
invasion of Russia, Wellington and the guerrillas launched their own offensive... that would
turn the war in Spain on its head. By 1812, Napoleon’s French Empire had a
quarter of a million troops stationed in Spain, bogged down in a war that seemed to have no
end. They faced a bitter struggle against the people
of Spain, who’d taken up arms in a guerrilla war… as well as the remnants of Spain’s
field armies… and an Anglo-Portuguese army under Lord Wellington. But French forces in Spain remained formidable,
and in firm control of the capital Madrid and most major cities. And the year began with another great French
victory, in the south… and a calamity for Spain. Spain and Portugal would become a graveyard
not just for young French conscripts… but for the reputation of some of France’s most
famous generals. General Junot… Marshal Soult… and Marshal Jourdan had all
tasted defeat. Marshal Masséna had been recalled in disgrace. Marshal Louis-Gabriel Suchet was the exception. French generals in Spain were notorious for
their looting. Soult, based in Andalucia, was probably the
worst, reckoned to have stolen one and half million francs’ worth of art from Spanish
monasteries and churches. As Governor of Aragon, Marshal Suchet behaved
very differently. He enforced strict discipline on his troops,
punishing any who tried to steal or extort money from the Spanish, while treating local
authorities with respect. He combined this hearts and minds strategy
with ruthless military action against the guerrillas… and was able to establish firm
control of Aragon. In June 1811, after a particularly bloody
assault, Suchet took the port of Tarragona, for which Napoleon rewarded him with his Marshal’s
baton. The Emperor then sent him reinforcements,
and ordered him to take Valencia. First he routed a much larger Spanish army
that attacked him at Saguntum, before he laid siege to Valencia. The city was packed with Spanish troops and
refugees, and to avoid starvation, General Blake surrendered Valencia on 8th January
1812. The French took 18,000 prisoners, including
23 generals, and nearly 500 guns. It was a devastating blow to the Spanish cause. But to reinforce Suchet, Napoleon had stripped
troops from other armies in Spain… and then withdrawn 25,000 of the best troops for his
imminent invasion of Russia. The result was that French forces in Spain
were now severely overstretched… just as Wellington prepared to strike. Spanish guerrillas kept Wellington well-informed
of French movements, and learning that the forces facing him in western Spain had been
much weakened, he decided to go on the offensive, to strike a blow before the French could concentrate
against him. On the day that Valencia fell, he laid siege
to Ciudad Rodrigo, on the Portuguese-Spanish frontier. Eager to take the city before Marshal Marmont
could march to its relief, he ordered an assault after just 10 days. It succeeded, though Major General Craufurd
of the Light Division was among 300 killed. Wellington then marched south, to besiege
the much more strongly defended city of Badajoz. An assault was made on the night of 6th April. The first wave attacking the main breach were
slaughtered… but what was supposed to be a diversionary attack on the city’s castle
with scaling ladders… succeeded, and the city soon fell. The storming of Badajoz cost the British 3,700
casualties. In the aftermath, survivors went on the rampage:
drinking, looting, and raping, and killing more than 100 Spanish civilians… before
British officers finally restored order. Wellington had secured the two main routes
between Spain and Portugal. Now he sent his most reliable subordinate,
General Hill, with a small Anglo-Portuguese force to destroy the bridge over the Tagus
at Almaraz. This was a vital link between Marmont’s
Army of Portugal and Soult’s Army of the South, as the next usable bridge was at Toledo,
90 miles east. The bridge was well guarded by forts and redoubts,
but Hill led a swift and daring assault. The French defences were taken by surprise,
the bridge itself and all the engineering equipment burned, for the cost of just 177
casualties. Wellington was now ready to begin his advance
into Spain. Spanish regular forces and guerrilla bands
began operations to tie down as many French troops as possible... While from the Bay of Biscay, Sir Home Popham’s
naval raiding force made diversionary attacks on French coastal targets. In four days, Wellington was at Salamanca,
as Marmont, outnumbered, withdrew behind the Douro River. But when reinforcements arrived, he crossed
the river again. For six days Marmont tried to march around
Wellington’s flank, but the British general matched him move for move, their two armies
marching in parallel, often within sight of each other. But on the seventh day, Marmont blundered. On the morning of 22nd July, Wellington’s
army occupied high ground four miles south of Salamanca. Marmont was not interested in a direct assault
– he still sought to outflank Wellington, threaten his line of retreat to Portugal,
and force him to fall back. Around 8am, the French won a dash for a hill
known as the Greater Arapil, which Marmont made his observation point. The French army began to swing round behind
him. Marmont had convinced himself that Wellington
was an overly cautious general, who would not risk attack. The hills hid most of Wellington’s army
from view… And when Marmont saw dust clouds to the west,
he assumed it was Wellington’s baggage train leaving Salamanca, beginning their retreat. But it was the British 3rd Division and a
Portuguese cavalry brigade, moving up to strengthen Wellington’s flank… Because he wasn’t planning a retreat…
he was about to attack. Around 2pm, Marmont ordered the five infantry
divisions waiting in the woods behind him to march west… to cut off Wellington’s
imagined retreat. General Maucune’s 5th Division, in the lead,
stopped to engage what was presumed to be the British rearguard, in the village of Los
Arapiles. General Thomières’ 7th Division continued
west, past it. Wellington watched as the French left flank
became increasingly strung out, and knew it was an opportunity too good to miss. He galloped three miles across country to
the 3rd Division, to give the crucial orders in person. Many of his staff officers struggled to keep
up. On arrival, he instructed the division’s
commander, his own brother-in-law Edward Pakenham, to attack ‘and drive everything before him.’ 3rd Division’s advance was hidden by low
hills until the last minute. Thomières’ division was caught completely
unawares, and shattered by the assault. Thomières himself was killed, half his division
killed or captured, the rest soon put to flight. At this crucial moment, Marshal Marmont was
hit by a British shell, and carried from the field seriously wounded. His second-in-command, General Bonnet, was
himself wounded an hour later, so command passed to General Clauzel. 45 minutes later the British 5th Division
attacked, supported by two Portuguese brigades, and General Le Marchant’s dragoons. The French saw the cavalry coming and formed
square, but were hit first by the British infantry, who unleashed a close-range volley
then charged with the bayonet. The French were routed and charged down by
Le Marchant’s cavalry. French 6th Division was caught up in the collapse. Le Marchant himself was shot from the saddle,
but his brigade had helped destroy eight French battalions and capture two eagles. Wellington’s echelon attack continued, as
Cole’s 4th Division advanced in the centre. But Pack’s Portuguese brigade was thrown
back from the Greater Arapil, and the whole division was soon falling back in disorder. Despite the devastation of his army’s left
flank, General Clauzel decided to launch an attack on the Lesser Arapil, the hinge of
Wellington’s position. If it could be taken, he might still snatch
victory from the jaws of defeat. But the French advance was met by fresh troops
of Clinton’s 6th Division, who poured volleys of musket fire into the French columns. They began to fall back. The French army had lost the will to fight
on, its soldiers streaming away into the woods behind them. General Ferrey’s 3rd Division mounted a
brave rearguard action, to buy the rest of the army time to escape. But it faced a hopeless task. It was soon outflanked by the British 5th
Division, and Ferrey himself was killed. Only General Foy’s 1st Division escaped
in good order. With darkness falling, and his army exhausted,
Wellington called off the pursuit. Wellington had smashed Marmont’s army, taking
7,000 prisoners and killing or wounding 6,000 more – a French casualty rate of 25%....
and more than double Wellington’s own losses. The next day, dragoons of the King’s German
Legion attacked the French rearguard… and achieved the almost unheard-of feat of charging
down a French infantry square, and taking another thousand prisoners. Wellington now decided to march on Madrid,
forcing King Joseph to abandon the capital, and retreat to Valencia to join up with Marshal
Suchet. On 12th August Wellington liberated the city,
to scenes of wild celebration. Soult, now at risk of being cut off in Andalucía,
abandoned the siege of Cadiz, which had dragged on for two and a half years… and marched
east to join Joseph and Suchet. The following month, Wellington marched north,
pushing the French back from Valladolid, and besieging the castle of Burgos. But his army lacked heavy guns, and the French
garrison fought bravely. As powerful French armies gathered to the
north… and south… Wellington himself was now in danger of being
trapped. He had no choice but to withdraw. Wellington’s retreat turned into a desperate
forced march through autumn rain. The supply system collapsed, and many starving
soldiers looted what food they could find from Spanish villages. Madrid was abandoned, and re-occupied by the
French on 1st November. Wellington was back where he’d started five
months before. But despite the campaign’s dismal conclusion,
his strike into Spain had led to the liberation of huge swathes of the country, and left the
French more overstretched than ever. Reinforced and resupplied, Wellington would
be back the next year, to deliver the final blow to Joseph’s Spanish kingdom. 1812 had seen the tide of war turn. And not just in Spain… Because 2,000 miles to the east, in Russia,
catastrophe had engulfed La Grande Armée... In 1807, following his defeat of the Russian
army at Friedland, Napoleon had travelled to Tilsit to meet the Russian Emperor, Alexander. During their celebrated encounter, the two
emperors formed a friendship, and made an alliance. But it was not to last… Over the next five years, relations between
France and Russia cooled dramatically. The Russians were irritated by Napoleon’s
creation of a ‘Duchy of Warsaw’ in Poland, which they regarded as meddling in their own
front yard. They feared it would lead to the return of
a fully-fledged Polish state – a traditional thorn in Russia’s side. Then there was Napoleon’s offer to marry
Alexander’s sister, Grand Duchess Anna Pavlovna, to cement their alliance. But the Romanovs hated the idea, and after
a year of Russian prevarication, Napoleon married Marie Louise, daughter of the Austrian
Emperor, instead. Later that year, Napoleon broke a guarantee
made at Tilsit, and annexed the Duchy of Oldenburg, ruled by Alexander’s sister’s father-in-law. Worst of all, was the fallout over ‘the
Continental System’, Napoleon’s not very effective economic blockade against Britain,
designed to cripple his most steadfast enemy. Alexander had agreed to join the Continental
System at Tilsit, but it was hugely unpopular in Russia, and ruinous to her finances during
a period of economic crisis. When Napoleon found out that Russia was flouting
the rules of the System, and had resumed an illicit trade with Britain, he was furious. With both emperors accusing the other of bad
faith, their two countries began preparing for war. Napoleon knew an invasion of Russia was a
massive undertaking – especially as he still had an unfinished war in Spain, that was tying
down more than 200,000 troops. Nevertheless in 1811 he began to assemble
the largest army Europe had ever seen… Around 600,000 men… though less than half
of them were French. The rest came from allied states across Europe. There was a Polish corps from the Dutchy of
Warsaw, led by Prince Poniatowksi, a corps from each of the German Kingdoms of Saxony,
Westphalia and Bavaria, from the Kingdom of Italy, as well as Swiss, Dutch, Croat, Spanish
and Portuguese units scattered throughout the army. There were even contingents from Prussia and
Austria – France’s recent enemies, now uneasy allies. Some of these allied troops, such as the Poles
and Germans, were as reliable as their French counterparts. Others were very inexperienced, or like the
Prussians and Austrians – reluctant to be there at all. This gigantic formation was deployed in three
armies, the main force under Napoleon himself, another led by his stepson Eugène, Viceroy
of Italy, and a third led by his younger brother Jérôme, King of Westphalia. Neither of these two were experienced commanders,
though one would distinguish himself on campaign… the other would not. On their left flank Marshal Macdonald led
Tenth Corps, with a large Prussian contingent… While the right flank was guarded by General
Schwarzenberg’s Austrian Corps. Another 100,000 troops were in reserve, including
Marshal Victor’s Ninth Corps. Initially the Russians only had 220,000 men
to face this juggernaut, organised into Barclay de Tolly’s First Army;
Prince Bagration’s Second Army; and General Tormasov’s Third Army. They would be outnumbered two-to-one. But in the run-up to war, Russia scored two
crucial diplomatic triumphs: Sweden had been at war with Russia just three
years earlier, a conflict which cost her Finland. By a curious turn of events, Sweden was now
ruled by Napoleon’s ex-marshal, Bernadotte. But after Napoleon occupied Swedish Pomerania
without warning, a furious Bernadotte promised Russia that Sweden would remain neutral. Meanwhile a peace treaty with the Ottoman
Empire ended Russia’s six-year war against its southern rival. These two agreements secured Russia’s flanks
from any strategic threat, and freed up troops to face Napoleon’s invasion. On 24th June 1812, French troops began crossing
the Niemen River into Russian territory. The army was so large, the crossing took five
days. Napoleon’s plan was to attack north of the
impassable Pripet Marshes, and defeat Barclay’s army, while Jérôme pinned Bagration in place. French forces would then swing south to trap
Bagration. Napoleon expected the campaign to be over
in five weeks. But the sheer size of the French army convinced
the cautious Barclay that retreat was his only option. Prince Bagration, a much more aggressive commander
by instinct, and often Barclay’s fierce critic, was forced to agree. As they withdrew they burned villages and
crops - part of a scorched earth strategy to deny supplies to the enemy. In four days Napoleon had reached Vilnius,
but Barclay was gone. To the south, Jérôme failed to pin down
Bagration, so when Davout’s First Corps swung southeast to trap him, he’d already
withdrawn to safety. Napoleon’s younger brother was out of his
depth. Stung by the Emperor’s criticism, humiliated
when his troops were put under Marshal Davout’s command, he resigned his post and returned
to Westphalia. The campaign was already beginning to expose
serious flaws in Napoleon’s plan. Knowing his troops would struggle to live
off the land in this impoverished region, he’d organised huge supply depots and transport
units to feed the army. But wagons rolled slowly along Russia’s
bad roads, which were turned to rivers of mud by summer thunderstorms. The army had to make frequent stops to allow
its supplies to catch up – bad news for Napoleon’s plan to catch the Russians, but
a much-needed relief for the many thousands of young conscripts in his army, not used
to hard marches day after day. Many were soon dropping out with exhaustion;
others deserted. There were also huge problems of command and
control, over a vast, multi-national army that was three times bigger than any Napoleon
had commanded before. La Grande Armée, once famed for its speed
of manoeuvre, had become a lumbering beast. After a pause to rest and regroup at Vilnius,
Napoleon resumed his advance. Barclay continued his retreat to Vitebsk,
where he hoped Bagration’s Second Army would be able to join him. But Davout blocked Bagration’s path at Saltanovka,
forcing him to make for Smolensk instead. At Vitebsk, Napoleon clashed with Barclay’s
rearguard, but once more the Russians escaped, after setting fire to all the stores they
couldn’t take with them. Meanwhile, 300 miles away, on Napoleon’s
southern flank, Russian Third Army attacked and defeated the Saxon Seventh Corps, forcing
Napoleon to divert Schwarzenberg’s Austrian corps to their aid. By the end of July, Napoleon had advanced
250 miles into Russia – much further than he’d planned. And the long marches in extreme, summer heat
continued to take a heavy toll on his men. Without fighting a major battle, the army
had already suffered 20% casualties - from exhaustion and illness, particularly typhus
and dysentery. The army had entered Russia with quarter of
a million horses, but they were now dying at a rate of a thousand every day, from exhaustion
and lack of fodder. It wasn’t just cavalry horses that were
dying, but the very horses that were supposed to haul the army’s transport wagons, making
a bad situation worse. This crisis in horsepower came just as the
French light cavalry, Napoleon’s eyes and ears, met their match… in Russia’s Cossacks. Cossacks – self-reliant, proud, ruthless,
and superb horseman - didn’t play by the same rules as other European cavalry. Every day they shadowed Napoleon’s army,
swooping in whenever they saw an easy target, but melting away into the forests if they
were attacked by a stronger force. Cossacks, as well as Russian partisans, made
hit and run attacks on French supply lines and depots, forcing Napoleon to divert thousands
of troops to their defence. Alongside Russian regular light cavalry, they
also prevented French patrols from carrying out reconnaissance, which meant that Napoleon
often lacked good information about roads, or the enemy’s whereabouts. Napoleon stayed 16 days at Vitebsk, resting
his troops and considering his options. Among his many mounting concerns was the security
of his long, exposed flanks. But at Vitebsk he received news that Schwarzenberg
had defeated the Russians at Gorodeczna… A week later at Polotsk, a French-Bavarian
force fought Wittgenstein’s Russian First Corps to a standstill. Napoleon’s flanks were secure, for now. Although his main force had been reduced to
less than half its original strength, Napoleon decided to push on to Smolensk, and try to
force the Russians into a decisive battle for the city. Barclay was indeed under pressure to give
battle, from fellow commander Prince Bagration and Emperor Alexander in St.Petersburg: the
army’s morale and Russia’s honour required it, they told him. With the First and Second Russian Armies finally
linking up near Smolensk, Barclay decided to attack Napoleon’s army, which he believed
was concentrated around Rudnya. The offensive was led by General Platov’s
Cossacks, who surprised a French cavalry division at Inkovo. But alarmed by false reports that Eugène’s
Fourth Corps was outflanking him to the north, Barclay called off the attack. Napoleon, reassured that Barclay’s offensive
posed no real threat, began a grand outflanking move to the south, to take Smolensk and cut
off the Russian retreat. The so-called ‘Smolensk Manoeuvre’ was
Napoleon at his best. Using Murat’s cavalry to screen his movements
and keep Barclay in the dark, the Emperor reached the Dnieper on the evening of 13th
August. His engineers quickly threw up four pontoon
bridges, and by dawn the next day, his army was across. Marshal Davout led a second column across
the river at Orsha. But a single Russian division, the 27th , fought
a heroic fighting retreat from Krasny, delaying the French advance… and buying time for
Bagration to reinforce the Smolensk garrison. The chance for a surprise assault on the city
was lost. And as the Russian army began to pull back,
Napoleon displayed an uncharacteristic lack of urgency, even halting the army for a parade
to mark his 43rd birthday. When the main attack on Smolensk began two
days later, Napoleon opted for a frontal assault. 150 French guns battered the city, as three
French corps attacked its medieval fortifications. The Russians resisted bravely. But Barclay, fearing encirclement, ordered
another retreat. With Smolensk in flames, the Russians began
to pull out… just as the French fought their way into the city, to scenes of utter devastation. Bagration’s Second Army withdrew first… As Barclay’s army followed, its rearguard
was caught by Ney’s Third Corps at Valutino… General Junot, commanding the Westphalian
Eighth Corps, had orders to cut off Barclay’s retreat - but having crossed the river, he
did nothing, and the opportunity was lost. A furious Napoleon swore that Junot would
never now win his Marshal’s baton. The Battle of Smolensk cost both sides around
10,000 casualties, and destroyed one of Russia’s most historic and holy cities – but settled
nothing. After the missed chance to defeat the Russians
at Smolensk, Napoleon paused once more to consider his options. His men were weary and far from home, and
it was already late in the campaigning season. He considered sitting out the Russian winter
at Smolensk, and resuming the campaign in 1813. But now he was just 230 miles from Moscow. A century earlier, Peter the Great had moved
Russia’s capital to St.Petersburg, but Moscow remained its historic and spiritual heart
– a prize for which the Russians had to fight. Napoleon, always a gambler, decided to push
on. The Russians faced their own dilemma. Emperor Alexander had experienced a kind of
religious epiphany that summer, and rallied the Russian people to the country’s defence,
describing the war with Napoleon as a war to save Holy Mother Russia from the Antichrist. For months the Emperor had received conflicting
advice – to stand and fight, or retreat. Now he decided change was needed. The cautious General Barclay kept his job,
but the Emperor summoned General Mikhail Kutuzov to take overall command of Russia’s armies. Kutuzov had been beaten by Napoleon at Austerlitz
seven years before, but he’d since won several victories against the Ottoman Empire, and
was a ‘true Russian’, loved by the troops. Although Kutuzov agreed with Barclay’s strategy
of delay, he saw that constant retreats were destroying the soldiers’ and the nation’s
morale. If Moscow was given up without a battle, the
fallout could be disastrous. And so, 70 miles west of the city, near the
village of Borodino, the Russian army prepared to make a stand. Europe was about to witness the bloodiest
day’s fighting of the Napoleonic Wars. September 1812. 10 weeks had passed since Napoleon invaded
Russia with more than half a million men. The French Emperor wanted a quick victory
over the Russians, one that would force Emperor Alexander to make peace, and agree to French
terms. But at Vitebsk, and then Smolensk, the outnumbered
Russian army had narrowly escaped his clutches. The holy city of Smolensk had been virtually
destroyed. Napoleon had advanced deep into Russia, and
months of marching had left his army decimated by disease and exhaustion. It was now half its original strength, and
summer was nearly over. But finally, 70 miles west of Moscow, near
the village of Borodino, the Russians had turned to offer battle. Napoleon would have a chance to win the decisive
victory, that he believed would end the war. The Russian army, commanded by the 67-year-old,
one-eyed veteran General Kutuzov, occupied a defensive position across the two main roads
leading from Smolensk to Moscow. General Barclay de Tolly’s First Army was
on the right, its front protected by the Kalatsha River, steep-banked but shallow and easily
forded. Prince Bagration’s Second Army was on the
left, a more open position, but reinforced by major earthworks – the Great Redoubt,
and what the French nicknamed, for their shape, the Flèches – the arrows. Another forward redoubt at Shevardino was
expected to delay the enemy’s advance. Historians still dispute the size of the Russian
army, but it’s likely Kutuzov had around 121,000 men and 680 guns at Borodino. On 5th September, Napoleon’s army began
to arrive from the west: around 130,000 men, and 585 guns. Napoleon quickly saw that the Shevardino Redoubt
would have to be taken before he could deploy his army, and ordered an immediate assault. The attack was led by Compans’ 5th Division
of the First Corps, supported by the Polish Fifth Corps to the south. In several hours of heavy fighting, the redoubt
changed hands more than once. But late that evening the Russians finally
withdrew to their main line, and the redoubt fell to the French. Its capture had cost them an estimated 4,000
casualties, while the Russians lost around 6,000 men. Napoleon noted how few prisoners were taken
– a worrying sign of the enemy’s unbroken resolve. Both sides spent the next day preparing for
battle. Marshal Davout, commanding French First Corps,
and widely considered Napoleon’s most able subordinate, appealed to the Emperor to use
his Corps to make a wide, outflanking attack to the south… But Napoleon dismissed the idea as too risky,
and instead began preparing for a massive frontal assault on the Russian defences. Shortly after dawn on 7th September, Orthodox
priests paraded one of Russia’s holiest icons, Our Lady of Smolensk, before the Russian
army. It was a stirring sight for many devout, Russian
soldiers, thousands of whom would not live to see dusk. The battle began at 6 am, as French batteries
opened a deafening cannonade against the Russian defences. Eugène’s Fourth Corps advanced on Borodino
village, lightly held by Jaegers of the Russian Imperial Guard. After clearing the village, his infantry crossed
the Kalatsha and advanced towards the Great Redoubt, but were driven back with heavy losses. The Russians burned the bridge across the
river, but did not launch a counterattack, and Eugene was able to move cannon into the
village, to put flanking fire on the Great Redoubt. In the centre, Davout’s First Corps began
its advance against the Flèches, coming under heavy fire… While on the right, the Polish Fifth Corps,
ordered to take Utitsa, got held up in the woods and ravines… Their slow advance allowed Tuchkov’s Third
Corps to send a division north to reinforce the Fléches defences. Kutuzov, at his headquarters in Gorki, took
little part in the battle, leaving tactical decisions to his subordinates. Barclay.. and Bagration.. had spent most of
the summer arguing furiously over strategy, but in the hour of crisis, they put their
differences aside. They could see the main French attack was
falling on the Russian centre and left… so Barclay ordered General Baggovut’s Second
Corps south to reinforce Bagration. Fighting around the Flèches intensified,
as the French captured one of the earthworks, only to be driven out by a Russian counterattack. Davout himself was injured in the fighting
as he fell from his dying horse, but he refused to leave the field. When Russian cavalry counterattacked, Marshal
Murat himself led the French cavalry forward to meet them. Ney’s Third Corps now joined the attack
on the Flèches. A charge by Russian cuirassiers forced Murat
to take shelter in a square of Württemberg infantry. Murat, with his flamboyant dress and reckless
courage, had now even made a name for himself among the Russians – the Cossacks in particular
saw him as a kindred spirit, and were eager to capture him alive if they could. To the south, Polish troops now took Utitsa,
which the Russians set ablaze before withdrawing. But General Baggovut’s reinforcements arrived
just in time to shore up the Russian flank. Around 10am, Eugène launched another attack
on the Great Redoubt. It was briefly captured by Morand’s First
Division, before his men were thrown out by a ferocious Russian counterattack. The Russian army’s 27-year-old artillery
commander, General Kutaisov, was killed leading one of these counterattacks. A heroic death, but a blow to the organisation
of Russian artillery for the rest of the day. Fighting continued to rage around the Flèches
earthworks. Some counted as many as six major French assaults,
involving 45,000 troops, with hundreds of cannon on both sides pouring fire into the
packed ranks. More than once, French infantry fought their
way into one of the Russian positions, only to be driven out again at bayonet point. Junot’s Westphalian Corps was sent forward
in support, helping to clear Russian skirmishers from the woods to the south. General Bagration was close to the action,
overseeing the defence of the Flèches, leading forward reinforcements and ordering counterattacks. Around 10am he was hit in the leg by shell
fragments. Mortally wounded, he was carried from the
field. Shaken by the loss of their iconic commander,
the exhausted Russian infantry began to fall back, and the French finally took the Flèches. Marshal Murat then led forward Friant’s
division – First Corps’ last reserve – supported by waves of heavy cavalry on both flanks. Russian Grenadiers formed squares to ward
off the French cuirassiers… While their own Guard cavalry fought the French
in a giant, confused melee… with heavy losses on both sides. The Russians resisted doggedly, but the combined
onslaught of French artillery, cavalry and infantry proved irresistible. As the Russians pulled back, Friant’s infantry
fought their way into the village of Semënovskaya. The Russian centre was in disarray… and
seemed close to breaking. Surely now was the time for Napoleon to deliver
the knockout blow. For most of the day, Napoleon remained at
his headquarters near Shevardino. Those around him later said that illness,
as well as the exertions of the long campaign, had left him tired and irritable. As the Russian centre buckled, Murat and his
staff urged him to send forward his last reserve, the Imperial Guard. The Emperor refused. “If there is another battle tomorrow,”
he asked them, “where is my army?” But he did make one exception... Barclay was continuing to move troops from
his unengaged right wing to bolster the centre. As Ostermann-Tolstoy’s Fourth Corps arrived
behind the Russian centre, French observers feared they were massing for an attack. So Napoleon ordered forward General Sorbier’s
Guard artillery. His batteries opened a devastating fire on
the enemy. Yet even as they were mown down in their ranks,
the Russian infantry stood their ground. On the Russian right wing, all remained quiet,
so General Platov, commander of the Don Cossacks, proposed that he lead an attack on the lightly-defended
Borodino village. Permission received, Generals Platov and Uvarov
led a force of 8,000 Cossacks and cavalry across the Kalatsha River They fell on French and Italian troops around
Borodino with complete surprise, spreading panic and disorder. Grouchy’s Third Cavalry Corps had to be
pulled back across the river to drive off the Russians. Russian commanders saw this raid as a missed
opportunity. But it had delayed the next French attack
by two hours… and may have persuaded Napoleon that he was right to hold back his reserve. Around 3pm, the French launched their biggest
assault yet on the Great Redoubt.. Russian gunners targeted the French infantry
advancing to their front, allowing French cavalry to outflank the Redoubt, and charge
it from the rear. Saxon cavalry were first in, cutting down
Russian infantry and gunners, almost to the last man. It was an astonishing feat by the horsemen,
against all the rules of war – and testament to the ferocity of the fighting. As Eugène’s infantry consolidated their
hold on the Redoubt, he ordered forward all the available cavalry to exploit this success. But they were met, and checked by the last
Russian cavalry reserves. Eugène now implored Napoleon to commit the
Imperial Guard. But again, the Emperor refused. “I will not destroy my Guard,” he told
his staff, “I am 800 leagues from France and I will not risk my last reserve.” By 5pm, both armies were in a state of utter
exhaustion. The battlefield was strewn with dead and wounded. Some infantry battalions could muster only
a third of their strength. Cavalry could advance no faster than a trot. Gun crews were collapsing with fatigue. As dusk approached, fighting slowly died out
across the battlefield. Napoleon and the French army expected the
fighting to resume the next day. But by dawn, Kutuzov, having learned the full,
horrifying scale of Russian losses, had ordered a withdrawal. The losses on both sides were enormous. Russian casualties are estimated at 44,000. French losses: around 30,000, including 49
generals – 12 of them killed. Borodino would prove to be the bloodiest single
day of the Napoleonic Wars. The Russian army could not fight another battle
until it had received major reinforcements. And so Kutuzov decided that he must abandon
Moscow. On 15th September, a week after his victory
at Borodino, Napoleon entered the city. He would find it virtually deserted, and already,
the first fires starting to burn. 15th September 1812. 83 days after invading Russia; a week after
his costly victory at Borodino; Napoleon entered Moscow. He expected to be greeted by dignitaries,
formally offering the city’s surrender. Instead, he discovered that 90 per cent of
Moscow’s inhabitants had fled. A fire had started the previous night, and
was blamed on drunken soldiers. But over the next 48 hours, fires continued
to break out across Moscow, until most of the city was ablaze. Count Fyodor Rostopchin, the city’s governor,
had ordered that Moscow be destroyed rather than allowed to fall into enemy hands. And now fires were being started deliberately
by Russian criminals, freed from jail and acting on police orders. French soldiers rounded up and shot any they
could catch, but the inferno was impossible to contain. In four days, two-thirds of Moscow was destroyed. With the fires finally under control, Napoleon’s
soldiers turned their attention to systematically looting the ruined city… While from his new quarters in the Kremlin,
Napoleon sent a letter to Emperor Alexander in St. Petersburg, inviting him to make peace,
and end the war. He received no reply. Napoleon waited, confident that Alexander
would eventually negotiate. But as the days passed, he grew increasingly
uneasy. Cossack raids were disrupting his vital communications
with Paris, as well as the arrival of supplies. While the steady attrition of French forces,
and Russian reinforcements, meant Napoleon was outnumbered for the first time in the
campaign. Rumours also reached him that his reluctant
allies, Prussia and Austria, were in secret talks with his enemies. Napoleon had proposed that the army winter
in Moscow – but that now looked too dangerous. Reluctantly, he accepted that the army would
have to move back to Smolensk to find safe winter quarters. Napoleon knew how severe Russian winters could
be, but continued to put off his departure, reassured by fine October weather, and hoping
that at the last minute, there might be a message from Alexander, offering peace. It never came. On 13th October, the first light snow fell. Five days later, Kutuzov launched a surprise
attack on Murat’s advance guard at Vinkovo, and defeated it. Napoleon, stung into action, gave the order
for the army to leave Moscow the next day. 100,000 men of the Grande Armée left Moscow
in a column 10 miles long, with an estimated 40,000 carriages and carts. There were women and children too: army wives
and the vivandières, the women who cooked for the soldiers, as well as some civilians. Every wagon and pack was stuffed with as much
food and loot as possible. As he set off, Sergeant Bourgogne of the Imperial
Guard made an inventory of his pack. It contained: “several pounds of sugar, some rice, some
biscuit, half a bottle of liqueur, a woman's Chinese silk dress embroidered in gold and
silver, several gold and silver ornaments, amongst them a piece of the cross of Ivan
the Great... Besides these I had my uniform, a woman's
large riding-cloak, two silver pictures in relief, 12 inches long and 8 high, all in
the finest workmanship. Also several lockets and a Russian Prince's
spittoon, set with precious stones. I wore over my shirt a yellow silk waistcoat,
which I had made myself out of a woman's skirt; over that a large cape lined with ermine,
and a large pouch hung at my side by a silver cord. This was full of various things - amongst
them, a crucifix in gold and silver and a little Chinese porcelain vase. Then there were my firearms, powder-flask
and sixty cartridges in the box.” This heavily-encumbered army did not yet realise
it was in a race against time. The Russians were beginning to move against
the flanks of Napoleon’s 550 mile-deep salient. That very day, Wittgenstein’s army was driving
back Marshal Saint-Cyr’s outnumbered force at Polotsk… and drawing Victor’s Ninth
Corps west to support them. In the south, Admiral Chichagov’s advance
had Schwarzenberg’s Austrian corps falling back to cover Warsaw. The corridor was closing. And then there was the weather… though Napoleon
was confident his army could reach winter quarters in Smolensk in twenty days – well
before the more extreme temperatures were due to hit. Napoleon planned to withdraw via Kaluga, through
unspoilt country where the army could forage for supplies. But Kutuzov sent General Dokhturov’s Sixth
Corps to block the road at Maloyaroslavets. In fierce fighting, Italian troops of Eugène’s
Fourth Corps drove the Russians out of the town. It was a hard-won victory, reminiscent of
the fighting at Borodino. Kutuzov now stood between Napoleon and Kaluga. Napoleon now took the unusual step of conferring
with his marshals. And after discussing various options, he decided
that rather than seek another major battle, they would retreat the way they’d come,
along the Smolensk road. Napoleon had hoped to avoid this route, as
it meant marching back through country already stripped bare of supplies. The day after the fighting at Maloyaroslavets,
Napoleon was nearly captured by a group of Cossacks, and saved only by General Rapp’s
charge at the head of his escort. After this close shave, Napoleon had a phial
of poison made up, which he carried around his neck in case of capture. Napoleon’s army set off on its new course,
shadowed, at a respectful distance, by Kutuzov’s army to the south. They passed the old battlefield of Borodino:
a grisly, unnerving sight, where crows pecked at half-buried corpses. Relentless marching quickly began to tire
out men and horses. A few days later, the temperature fell below
freezing. The army’s overworked, starving horses died
en masse. Discipline began to break down, as some drivers
simply dumped the sick and wounded by the roadside, to try to ensure their own survival. As the French column became increasingly strung
out, General Miloradovich, commanding Kutuzov’s advance guard, fell on Davout’s rearguard
outside Vyazma. For a few hours Davout’s First Corps was
cut off, until Eugène and Ney came to his rescue. The battle ended with street-fighting in Vyazma,
as the French hastily evacuated the burning town. For the soldiers of the Grande Armée, so
unaccustomed to retreats and routs, Vyazma was an alarming, demoralising blow. On 4th November it began to snow heavily. The next night temperatures plummeted to minus
20 degrees Centigrade. Few men or women had proper winter clothing,
or access to shelter. Many froze to death overnight. The next morning wagons and guns were abandoned. Many soldiers now sought to save themselves,
ignoring officers, stealing horses and food, and leaving the column to scour the countryside
for supplies. Many of these foragers were found by the Cossacks,
some cut down or lanced, others robbed of every possession and left to freeze. In a few cases, they were handed over to peasants,
eager for retribution against the foreign invaders who’d plundered all they owned. As the army struggled on towards Smolensk
through blizzards, Napoleon ordered Eugène’s Fourth Corps to strike out for Vitebsk, where
there were large French supply depots. But Vitebsk had already fallen to the Russians. Fourth Corps was too weak to fight its way
through, and rejoined the army, minus its artillery, and most of its baggage. A colonel who saw Fourth Corps at this stage
described men ‘without shoes, almost without clothes, exhausted and famished, sitting on
their packs, sleeping on their knees and only rousing themselves out of this stupor to grill
slices of horsemeat or melt bits of ice’. Just three weeks after leaving Moscow, a third
of the army was dead or captured. About half the rest formed a growing army
of stragglers: men without units, prepared to fight only to survive. Napoleon reached Smolensk on 9th November. The first troops into town ransacked the supply
depots, leaving nothing for those who followed… including Ney’s rearguard, which arrived
six days later. Napoleon had hoped to make Smolensk his winter
base, but the state of the army and lack of supplies meant the retreat had to continue. But the five days he spent there gave Kutuzov
time to circle ahead and prepare an ambush. When the French retreat resumed, he struck
thirty miles west of Smolensk at Krasny. In three days of desperate fighting through
knee-deep snow, Napoleon used his Imperial Guard to hold open the road, as Eugène and
Davout’s corps fought their way through the ambush with heavy losses. Two regiments of the Young Guard were ordered
to make a sacrificial counterattack to keep the Russians at bay.. and were virtually annihilated. Kutuzov held back many of his troops, and
was blamed for not trying to destroy Napoleon’s army when he had the chance. It’s possible he was concerned at the number
of raw conscripts in his own army, also suffering terribly in the freezing conditions. Not every French corps broke through at Krasny. Marshal Ney and his 6,000 strong rearguard
arrived on 18th November, to find the road blocked by 60,000 Russian troops, and no sign
of the promised support from Davout’s First Corps. Ney’s men hurled themselves against the
Russian lines with desperate courage, but were mown down. Rejecting several invitations to surrender,
Ney led the survivors in a daring, night-crossing of the Dnieper river, then across 45 miles
of open country under constant attack from Platov’s cossacks, to reach Orsha. By the time Ney rejoined the army, his rearguard
was down to just 800 fighting men, leading a column of several thousand stragglers. The army regarded his escape as a miracle,
and when Napoleon heard of it, he immediately dubbed Marshal Ney ‘the bravest of the brave’. Napoleon had escaped one trap, but now three
Russian armies were closing in from different directions, and outnumbered him nearly 3-to-1. From the east, Kutuzov’s main army, with
65,000 men. From the north, Wittgenstein with 30,000,
steadily driving back Marshal Victor’s Ninth Corps. And from the south, Admiral Chichagov’s
Army of Moldavia, with 34,000, having detached General Osten-Sacken with 30,000, to prevent
Schwarzenberg’s Austrians and Reynier’s Saxon corps marching to Napoleon’s aid. Napoleon was heading for Minsk, a major French
supply base with vast stores of the food, clothing, shoes and ammunition that his army
so desperately needed. But on 21st November, disastrous news arrived: Minsk had fallen to Chichagov. He’d then marched on Borisov, driven out
the Polish garrison, and captured its bridge over the Berezina River. By rights, the Berezina ought to have frozen
solid by now, so Napoleon could have crossed anywhere, but a sudden thaw had turned the
river into a torrent of ice and freezing water. Napoleon was, at least, joined by the hard-fighting
Marshal Oudinot and his Second Corps, which hadn’t suffered as badly as the main column
on its retreat from Polotsk. Oudinot launched an immediate counterattack
on Borisov and retook the town, but couldn’t stop the Russians burning the bridge. With no other bridge for miles in either direction,
it seemed Napoleon’s exhausted army was finally doomed. But there was one sliver of hope - Polish
cavalry had found a ford across the river near the village of Studienka. Napoleon issued a flurry of orders: Second
Corps was to fake preparations for a river crossing south of Borisov, Victor’s Ninth
Corps, arriving from the north, was to form a rearguard east of Studienka to hold the
Russians at bay… while engineers worked as quickly as possible to build pontoon bridges
across the river… and win Napoleon’s army a fighting chance of escape. On the afternoon of 25th November, General
Eblé’s Dutch engineers began building two 300-foot pontoon bridges across the Berezina
River. They worked day and night, sometimes chest-deep
in freezing water, and completed both bridges in less than 24 hours. Few of the engineers survived the ordeal. Chichagov had been totally fooled by the diversion
south of Borisov, and was moving his troops south to face it – allowing Napoleon’s
army to begin crossing its rickety bridges virtually unopposed. Oudinot’s Second Corps led the way, to secure
a bridgehead, followed the next day by the remnants of the main army. Priority was given to formed troops, still
able to fight. For the time being, the army’s vast crowd
of stragglers remained on the far bank. By the time Chichagov realised his mistake
and began moving north, Napoleon had troops in place to defend the crossing. On the east bank, General Partonneux’s 12th
Division – 4,000 relatively fresh troops from Victor’s Ninth Corps - formed the rearguard. As Platov’s Cossacks approached from the
east – the vanguard of Kutuzov’s main army – Partonneux tried to rejoin Ninth
Corps. But caught in a swirling blizzard, with visibility
down to 50 metres, he marched straight into Wittgenstein’s army. His entire division was killed or captured. The next morning, Chichagov and Wittgenstein
launched co-ordinated attacks on both sides of the river. There was desperate fighting on the west bank,
where Marshal Oudinot was (yet again) seriously wounded, but his Swiss infantry held the line…
until General Doumerc’s cuirassiers, the army’s last heavy cavalry, charged and routed
the Russians. At great cost, Polish and German troops of
Victor’s rearguard held off the Russians until dark… then pulled back across the
bridges. For two nights, officers had been trying to
get the vast camp of stragglers to cross the bridges when they weren’t being used. But with temperatures reaching minus 30 centigrade,
they’d preferred to stay put, huddled around their fires. At dawn on the 29th, with the army leaving
and the Russians approaching, thousands of stragglers surged in panic towards the bridges. Dozens were crushed underfoot. Others fell or were pushed into the water,
or tried to swim, which was certain death. When French engineers burned the bridges at
9am, thousands were cut off, and left to the mercy of the advancing Cossacks. Some became prisoners, others were simply
put out of their misery. Since the retreat began 43 days earlier, the
Grande Armée had marched nearly 500 miles - under constant attack, starved, exhausted…
and for the last 23 days, in lethal sub-zero temperatures without proper clothing or shelter. In that time, the fighting strength of the
Grande Armée had been reduced from around 124,000 men to 20,000, with as many stragglers
still following the army. As the retreat continued to Vilna, the weather
turned even worse, with temperatures falling to minus 37 degrees centigrade. The Russian armies at least now held back,
leaving the winter, Cossacks and Russian peasants to finish off the invaders. On 5th December, Napoleon left the army, travelling
incognito across Europe at breakneck speed… and reaching Paris in just 13 days. Naturally, English satirists capitalised on
Napoleon seeming to abandon his defeated army… and many soldiers did regard it as an act
of betrayal. But his generals supported his decision to
leave – there’d already been one attempted coup against Napoleon in Paris, and there
was much work to be done to rebuild the army, and reassure France’s allies. On 9th December, 51 days after the retreat
began, around 20,000 ragged survivors of the Grande Armée began crossing the Niemen River,
back into friendly, Polish territory. According to legend, Marsal Ney was the last
man across. Napoleon’s invasion of Russia had proved
to be one of the greatest military disasters in history. He had made fatal miscalculations about geography,
logistics, and above all: Russia’s political and strategic response to his invasion. These blunders cost his empire around half
a million men… as well as a quarter of a million horses, and 1,000 cannon. Put another way, of every 12 men who marched
into Russia with the Grande Armée: One was killed in action or died of wounds. Two were taken prisoner, one of whom died
in captivity. Seven died from disease or the effects of
climate. Just two returned alive. Contrary to myth, many more soldiers had died
in the summer advance - from heat, typhus and dysentery – than were lost in the winter
retreat. Russian military casualties were estimated
at 150,000, and a huge but unknown number of civilian deaths. The Russian campaign was a catastrophe for
Napoleon. Not just in lost troops and resources, but
in damage to prestige and reputation. That winter all his enemies sensed weakness,
and prepared to join forces against him for the first time… But the Emperor wasn’t going down without
a fight. Back in Paris he admitted to his ministers,
“Fortune has dazzled me, gentlemen. I’ve let it lead me astray. Instead of following my plan I went to Moscow. I thought I’d make peace there. I stayed too long. I’ve made a grave mistake… but I’ll
have the means to repair it.” 1812 had been a disastrous year for Napoleon. His invasion of Russia had led to the almost
total destruction of an army of half a million men. Now Poland and Germany were wide open to Russian
attack. Some advised Emperor Alexander that this was
the time to make a favourable peace with Napoleon – Russia’s own armies had been mauled,
and western Russia devastated. But Alexander was determined to see Napoleon
defeated for good – to free Europe from his clutches, and avenge Moscow’s destruction…
by taking Paris. Napoleon’s allies were deserting him: Prussian
troops had already agreed a truce with the Russians. Schwarzenberg’s corps marched back to Austria,
which assumed a policy of watchful neutrality. Napoleon had left Marshal Murat in charge
of the remnants of the army. But he left for the Kingdom of Naples, hoping
to cut a deal with the Allies that would let him keep his throne. He was replaced by Napoleon’s stepson Eugène,
who’d proved himself a brave and able soldier in Russia, but was unused to independent command,
and now faced odds of four-to-one. As Russian forces advanced through Poland,
he continued to retreat west, leaving garrisons to hold strategic fortresses, most of which
were soon besieged. On 7th February Russian troops entered Warsaw
unopposed: Napoleon’s Polish client state, the Duchy of Warsaw, effectively ceased to
exist. Three weeks later, Russian troops entered
Berlin… while Sweden joined the Allies. Sweden was ruled by Napoleon’s former marshal
Bernadotte, now officially known as Crown Prince Karl Johan. Many would accuse him of betraying Napoleon,
but he’d always been clear that once he became Sweden’s Crown Prince, he’d pursue
Swedish interests – which is what he now claimed to do. In exchange for Norway, to be taken from France’s
ally Denmark, and one million pounds from Britain, Bernadotte agreed to join what was
now the Sixth Coalition against France since the Revolution, with an army of 30,000 troops. Ten days later King Frederick William of Prussia
declared war on France. It followed weeks of indecision – the king
was widely seen as a weak character, and terrified of Napoleon. But with guarantees of Russian military support,
the return of lost territory, and enormous financial and material aid from Britain, he
agreed to field an army of 80,000 men. On 17th March he issued a proclamation to
the people of Prussia and Germany, ‘An Mein Volk’, ‘To My People’… summoning them
to fight for Prussia and Germany’s honour, in what would soon be known as the ‘German
War of Liberation’. The Prussian army had been greatly reformed
since its humiliating defeat to Napoleon in 1806. A military commission, headed by General von
Scharnhorst, had sacked nearly 200 old generals and abolished flogging; expanded recruitment
and introduced exams for officers; and overhauled training, tactics and drill. When Napoleon met the new Prussian army in
battle two month later, he remarked, ‘These animals have learned something!’ Small consolation, they’d learned most of
it from him. As his enemies massed in Germany, Napoleon
was in Paris working tirelessly to build a new army with which to face them. 137,000 new conscripts joined the army, and
laws passed to call up 100,000 more, while 40,000 veterans from the army in Spain, 16,000
marines, and 80,000 men of the National Guard – a home defence force – were transferred
to Germany. The new conscripts were nicknamed ‘Marie
Louises’, after Napoleon’s young wife, who’d passed the new conscription laws in
his absence. They were young and raw: two-thirds were teenagers. And there was a severe lack of experienced
officers and NCOs … in short, the countless, irreplaceable veterans now lying beneath Russian
soil. There was also a critical shortage of cavalry
– a crisis mocked by British satirists. It would take Napoleon longer to replace the
many thousands of horses and trained horsemen who’d perished in Russia. When Napoleon left Paris for Germany in mid-April,
the French situation was precarious: Eugène had been forced back behind the River
Elbe, to the fortified city of Magdeburg... Dresden, the capital of Saxony, had fallen
to the Prussians. The Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin became the
first German state to defect from Napoleon’s Confederation of the Rhine... Russian Cossacks raided as far as Hamburg,
inspiring local revolts against French occupying forces… Meanwhile Austria stood on the sidelines – so
far declining to back either side. Napoleon’s miraculous feat of organisation
meant he now had more than 200,000 troops in Germany. And the Emperor’s personal magnetism was
undimmed: the morale of his army was high. The Russians, on the other hand, lost their
iconic commander, Field Marshal Kutuzov, to pneumonia, on 28th April. His role was taken over by General Wittgenstein. Russian troops were exhausted and far from
home, their army weakened by the need to contain French garrisons across Poland and Germany. Prussia and Sweden had yet to fully mobilise
their strength, and Allied forces barely mustered 100,000 men. They were now heavily outnumbered by Napoleon,
and the French Emperor decided to strike quickly. He ordered Marshal Davout to Hamburg with
35,000 men, to secure his northern flank. He would march against the Russian and Prussian
forces converging on Leipzig, to force a decisive battle. Victory would make Austria think twice about
joining the Allies, allow him to rescue the 90,000 men trapped in garrisons across Germany
and Poland, and re-establish his dominance over Europe. As Napoleon advanced on Leipzig, the Allies
faced a predicament: to risk battle against Napoleon’s larger army, or give up Germany
without a fight, a potentially devastating blow to Allied morale, and any chance of winning
Austria over to their cause. Allied Headquarters made the bold decision
to attack: they knew most of Napoleon’s army was made up of raw conscripts; that their
own troops were better trained, and had a great superiority in cavalry and artillery. The Allies agreed that as Napoleon crossed
the Saale River, they would hit his right flank, before he could concentrate the full
mass of his forces. The two armies were on a collision course. But Napoleon’s shortage of cavalry meant
he lacked information about Allied movements. On 1st May Marshal Bessières, commanding
the cavalry in Murat’s absence, was carrying our reconnaissance himself… when he was
hit by a cannonball, and killed instantly. Bessières was the second of Napoleon’s
marshals to be killed-in-action, and like Lannes, an old comrade and trusted friend. The Allies were able able to surprise Napoleon,
falling on Marshal Ney’s Third Corps, near Lützen. Ney’s troops had to cling on in the face
of a Russian and Prussian onslaught, while Napoleon rapidly redirected his other corps
to fall on the enemy’s flanks. At one stage Napoleon had to personally help
rally routing troops, as they broke in the face of determined Prussian assaults. But on the whole his young conscripts fought
with courage, and despite hours of savage fighting, Wittgenstein could not exploit his
early advantage. As French reinforcements arrived, the battle
turned against him. Towards dusk the Allies were forced to break
off the engagement, though they’d inflicted around 22,000 casualties, losing just half
as many men. General von Scharnhorst, mortally wounded,
was among them. Crucially, Napoleon’s lack of cavalry meant
he was unable to pursue the enemy, who retreated in good order. Expecting the Prussians to fall back on Berlin,
Napoleon sent Marshal Ney in pursuit, while he continued east. But the Allied army stayed together, withdrawing
to a defensive position at Bautzen, deliberately close to the Austrian border – hoping to
entice Schwarzenberg to intervene, and daring Napoleon to violate Austrian neutrality. Neither happened. Instead, Napoleon ordered Ney to swing south,
to fall on the Allies’ northern flank, while he launched a frontal assault to pin them
in place. The battle lasted two days, as French infantry
struggled forward against the Prussian and Russian lines. But a misunderstanding over Ney’s orders
caused a delay, that allowed the Allies to narrowly escape Napoleon’s trap. Once more, the Allies fought with great determination,
and inflicted many more losses than they suffered. There were more casualties during the pursuit
– including, the next day, General Duroc, Grand Marshal of the Palace, responsible for
Napoleon’s personal arrangements, and his closest surviving friend. Riding with Napoleon’s staff, a freak cannon
shot ricocheted off a tree and disembowelled him. His slow, painful death deeply upset Napoleon. The Emperor continued his pursuit to Breslau,
once again hindered by his lack of experienced cavalry… while Oudinot was sent north to
take Berlin… but was held at Luckau by von Bülow’s Prussian corps. On 2nd June, with both sides strained to breaking
point, neutral Austria proposed a ceasefire… which, to the surprise of many, Napoleon accepted. The Armistice of Pläswitz would last more
than two months - a period of intense diplomacy, and military mobilisation, by both sides. Napoleon wanted time to rebuild his cavalry
– a shortage of which had allowed the Allies to escape twice. But he also wanted to keep Austria on side,
which he feared might join the Allies with 200,000 troops – even though Emperor Francis
I was now his father-in-law, since Napoleon’s marriage to his daughter, Marie Louise, in
1810. Austrian foreign minister Klemens von Metternich,
who’d become one of 19th century Europe’s most influential statesmen, now took centre
stage. Metternich wanted peace, and to see Austria
restored as a great European power - which meant Napoleon contained, but not crushed,
which would hand too much power to Russia. In June he travelled to Dresden, to ask Napoleon
to make concessions, while promising the Allies that if he did not, Austria would join them. But Napoleon dismissed Metternich’s terms
out of hand: he would not return the Illyrian Provinces to Austria, agree to the re-partition
of Poland, or the break-up of the Confederation of the Rhine. All were out of the question. Napoleon famously threw his hat to the ground
in fury. “Peace and war lie in Your Majesty’s hands,”
Metternich is said to have warned him, “Today you can still make peace. Tomorrow it may be too late.” But Napoleon preferred war to what he called
‘a humiliating peace’. On 12th August 1813, Austria joined the Sixth
Coalition, and declared war on France. The Allies now had a numerical advantage of
three-to-two, and a new strategy: the Trachenberg Plan. Recognising Napoleon’s genius, the Allies
would avoid battle with the Emperor, and instead target his marshals, threaten his flanks,
and wear down French forces… until it was time to close in for the kill. Over the next few months, the coalition would
also receive massive material support from Britain, including 8 million pounds in silver and gold coin
200 cannon with transport 120,000 firearms
18 million rounds of ammunition 23,000 barrels of gunpowder
30,000 swords and sabres 150,000 uniforms
175,000 pairs of boots 1.5 million pounds of beef, biscuit and flour
and 28,000 gallons of rum and brandy. The total value of British aid to the Coalition
in 1813 was 11.3 million pounds, today worth around half a billion dollars. Napoleon, meanwhile, had turned Dresden into
a major supply depot, and strengthened his cavalry arm, though it remained a pale shadow
of its glorious past. Murat returned to lead it - his secret approach
to the Allies having been rebuffed. But when news arrived of King Joseph’s disastrous
defeat to Wellington’s Anglo-Spanish-Portuguese army… at the Battle of Vitoria… Napoleon had to send Marshal Soult, one of
his best commanders, to salvage the situation. On 15th August Napoleon left Dresden, and
advanced against what he considered the most urgent threat: the joint Prussian-Russian Army of Silesia,
commanded by General Gebhard von Blücher – soon to win the nickname ‘Marschall
Vorwärts’ – Marshal Forwards, for his aggressive leadership. But Blücher followed the new plan, and retreated
when he learned of Napoleon’s advance. Napoleon then received news from Marshal St.Cyr,
holding Dresden with 20,000 men, that Schwarzenberg’s gigantic Army of Bohemia was approaching,
and the city and its supplies were in danger. Napoleon left Marshal Macdonald to keep an
eye on Blücher, and raced back to Dresden, sending Vandamme’s First Corps to threaten
Schwarzenberg’s communications. By the time the Allied assault began, enough
reinforcements had arrived to fight off the attack. The next day Napoleon, despite being heavily
outnumbered, ordered a counterattack. Struggling through mud and heavy rain, Marshal
Murat’s advance, supported by Victor’s Second Corps, broke the Allied left flank
and took 13,000 prisoners. The Allies had suffered a disastrous defeat,
because they’d ignored their own rule – don’t take on Napoleon in battle. But news soon arrived that turned the situation
on its head. Marshal Oudinot had resumed his advance on
Berlin with 66,000 men, but in three days of heavy combat around Grossbeeren, he was
defeated by Bernadotte’s Army of the North. Some of the most savage fighting was between
Napoleon’s Saxon allies and von Bülow’s Prussians – two German states that, for
now, remained on opposing sides. Three days later at the Katzbach River, Blücher
inflicted a crushing defeat on Marshal Macdonald, driving some French troops into the river
itself. Macdonald lost 30,000 men, 3 eagles and 100
guns, for Blücher’s 22,000 casualties. Three days after Napoleon’s victory at Dresden,
as Vandamme’s corps pursued the Allies, it became trapped in wooded valleys around
Kulm, and was overrun. General Vandamme himself was dragged from
his horse by Cossacks, as he and 10,000 of his men were made prisoner. Napoleon sent Ney to take over from Oudinot,
who engaged Bulow’s Prussian corps at Dennewitz. The Prussians, fighting to save Berlin, held
their own… until Russian and Swedish reinforcements arrived, to turn the battle decisively in
the Allies’ favour. Ney’s retreat became a rout, with the loss
of another 22,000 men. Napoleon’s brilliant victory at Dresden
had been completely overturned in just ten days. The Allied plan was working. Napoleon became increasingly frustrated, as
Allied armies withdrew wherever he advanced, and advanced wherever he was not. His teenage conscripts were exhausted by constant
marching, and famished, as Saxony had been stripped bare of supplies. Thousands fell sick, thousands more deserted. Russian and Prussian light troops were now
operating behind Napoleon’s army, harassing his communications with France. Many of Napoleon’s marshals advised him
to pull back to the River Rhine – but Napoleon wasn’t giving up Germany without a fight. By October 1813, Napoleon faced a third of
a million Allied troops in Germany, converging on him from three directions. 900 miles away, Field Marshal Wellington was
crossing the Bidasoa River into France – the first enemy army on French soil in nearly
twenty years. While the Kingdom of Bavaria, a French ally
since the days of Austerlitz, had secretly agreed to switch sides, and would declare
war on France on 14th October. Napoleon planned to defend the line of the
River Elbe. But the arrival of General Bennigsen’s Reserve
Russian Army freed up Blücher – who suddenly marched to join forces with Bernadotte…
and forced his way across the Elbe at Wartenburg. Napoleon went north with 150,000 men, seeking
the decisive battle that would change his fortunes. But once more, Blücher narrowly escaped him. Then came news from Murat, who’d been left
with 67,000 men to cover Schwarzenberg: the enemy had bypassed Dresden, and was heading
for Leipzig. If the city fell, Napoleon would be cut off
from France. Once more he was advised to fall back to the
Rhine. But instead Napoleon ordered all his forces
to concentrate at Leipzig. He would risk everything in one great battle,
to decide the fate of his Empire… and the fate of Europe. May 1813. While Napoleon’s Grande Armée began its
fightback in Central Europe, following the disastrous invasion of Russia… 1200 miles away… at the other end of Napoleon’s
embattled empire, another enemy was poised to strike. The previous year, Wellington’s Anglo-Portuguese
army had won a brilliant victory at Salamanca, but been held at Burgos, and forced into a
long, demoralising retreat back to the Portuguese frontier. But after a winter of rest, reinforcement
and training, Wellington’s army was stronger than ever: 100,000 men, many of them battle-hardened
veterans. And for the first time, he had sufficient
cavalry and artillery, while transport and medical services had also been improved. Morale was sky high. Their chief, known to the troops as Old Nosey,
was cheered wherever he went. “I never saw the British army so healthy
or so strong”, Wellington informed London. In contrast, the French position in Spain
was weaker than ever. Napoleon severely underestimated the threat
posed by Wellington, and had just withdrawn 20,000 French troops for his own use in Germany. As commander-in-chief, King Joseph knew his
forces were overstretched. Napoleon allowed him to give up Madrid, and
move his capital to the more easily-defended Valladolid. But withdrawing further, to a strong position
like the Ebro River, was out of the question. That would send the wrong message to neutral
Austria, and Napoleon’s wavering German allies. And so, with serious concerns, Joseph and
his Chief of Staff Marshal Jourdan awaited Wellington’s offensive. Wellington’s plan was for his army to advance
in two wings, concentrate at Toro, then move against Joseph’s forces. In the south, Murray’s Anglo-Sicilian-Spanish
force, based in Alicante, had just repelled an attack by Marshal Suchet at the Battle
of Castalla. Murray would now mount a diversionary landing
on the Mediterranean coast, to coincide with Wellington’s advance, and prevent Suchet
sending reinforcements north. Wellington had also counted on large-scale
support from Spanish regular forces, of which he was, since November 1812, theoretically
Commander-in-Chief. But the Spanish Cortes based in Cádiz was
deeply divided … with many still highly suspicious of British motives. The result was that Wellington would only
receive direct support from a few reliable Spanish divisions. Fortunately, he would receive considerable
Spanish support from the guerrillas - now better armed, organised and operating in greater
numbers than ever before. A large area of Valencia had effectively been
liberated by El Fraile – ‘the Friar’. Espoz y Mina had captured major towns in Navarre…
and was currently keeping General Clauzel’s Army of the North busy... While Juan Martín Diaz, aka El Empecinado,
was tying down large numbers of French troops near Madrid. On 22nd May, Wellington bid farewell to Portugal,
and began his advance. Four days later he was in Salamanca, from
where he joined the northern wing of his army under Sir Thomas Graham. Joseph and Jourdan expected Wellington’s
main thrust to come from Salamanca, so planned to defend the line of the Douro River. But Graham’s rapid advance north of the
river meant they’d already been outflanked, and they ordered a retreat. By a series of brilliant marches, Wellington
continued threatening the French right flank… forcing Joseph to keep falling back. Wellington’s army was able to use small
roads and mountain tracks north of the main highway, which the French had dismissed as
impassable. But thanks to his Spanish allies, Wellington
knew better. Backed by British sea power, he was also now
able to switch his supply base from Lisbon to Santander, drastically reducing the length
of his supply lines – another feat the French had written off as impossible. At the Ebro River, the French found themselves
outflanked yet again, and fell back to Vitoria. Here Joseph decided that he must make his
stand. The Zadorra river valley west of Vitoria seemed
to offer a strong defensive position. Expecting an attack from the west, French
forces were drawn up in 3 lines: General Gazan’s Army of the South formed
the first line. Then General D’Erlon’s Army of the Centre. Then General Reille’s Army of Portugal. Joseph hoped that he could, at least, buy
time for the vast wagon convoy assembled east of the city to get away. It contained not only military supplies, but
his government’s treasury... And - as satirised by this contemporary British
cartoon - the accumulated loot of 5 years’ French occupation of Spain, including priceless
works of art, jewels and antiques. He also expected General Clauzel to arrive
with 20,000 reinforcements any day. However, thanks to the guerrillas, Wellington
was better informed of Clauzel’s whereabouts than Joseph himself. Knowing that Clauzel couldn’t reach Joseph
before the 22nd June, he decided to attack on the 21st. The day before, French patrols reported enemy
troop movement to the north. So Reille’s troops were moved to cover any
threat to the army’s line of communications. … Apart from one division, which left to
escort part of the wagon convoy to France – an odd decision that deprived the army
of 4,000 men on the eve of battle. Marshal Jourdan had been bedridden with fever
that day. The next morning, he reconnoitred the army’s
position with King Joseph. They agreed that their position was overextended,
and should be shortened. But by the time their orders reached General
Gazan, it was too late. He was already under attack… Wellington, enjoying the advantage in numbers
for once, had decided to attack in four columns across a 10-mile front, with General Graham’s
left-hand column threatening Joseph’s line of retreat. It was a bold plan, with the potential to
trap and destroy Joseph’s army, but required careful co-ordination and precise timing. Fortunately, the French had not thought it
necessary to destroy any of the bridges over the Zadorra River, which was also fordable
in several places. At 8am, General Hill’s column began its
attack on the allied right: Spanish and British troops advanced up the western Heights of
Puebla, driving off French skirmishers, and forcing General Gazan to send reinforcements
to secure his left flank. Hill’s troops then seized the village of
Subijana, but French cannon-fire and counterattacks prevented any further advance. Convinced that Hill’s attack was the main
assault, and that troop movements to the north were probably a diversion, Jourdan continued
to send troops from the centre to reinforce the left. This was exactly what Wellington wanted. But at 11am, he was waiting, with growing
impatience, for his other columns to go into action. Lord Dalhousie’s 7th Division, supposed
to be leading the attack by the centre-left column, had got held up in the mountains…
while further east, Graham’s flanking move had got off to a cautious start. But seeing the size of the approaching force,
General Reille decided to pull his troops back across the Zadorra River. This encouraged Graham to get things moving. Colonel Longa’s Spanish division advanced
on Durana, held by Spanish troops loyal to King Joseph, and a bitter struggle for the
village ensued. British and Portuguese infantry advanced against
Gamarra Major. They were soon engaged in bloody street fighting
with the French. This scene shows an attack by the 4th King’s
Own Regiment of Foot and the 47th Lancashire Regiment. Though they succeeded in driving the French
out of the village, they could not cross its bridge over the Zadorra, which was expertly
covered by French guns. Around noon, a Spanish peasant informed Wellington
that the bridge at Tres Puentes was completely unguarded. He immediately ordered Kempt’s elite light
infantry brigade to dash across it, and secure a bridgehead. But there was still little sign of Dalhousie’s
Seventh Division. General Picton, the notoriously short-tempered
commander of the ‘Fighting’ Third Division, ran out of patience. Fed up with waiting for Dalhousie, he ordered
his men to advance. They charged across the Mendoza bridge and
a nearby ford, driving back light French defences. General Gazan, with his left flank pinned
down at Subijana, was now about to be outflanked on his right, and had no option but to pull
back his troops. Wellington’s army was now crossing the Zadorra
River in force. Heavy fighting continued to rage on the Heights
of Puebla. But here the French also had to give ground,
to maintain the cohesion of their new line. Scottish Highlanders and Connaught Rangers
- supported by riflemen and Portuguese troops, now stormed the village of Ariñez, routing
the defenders, who retreated southeast… and a gap began to emerge in the French centre,
between Gazan’s Army of the South, and d’Erlon’s Army of the Centre. The allied advance continued, with heavy pressure
on both French flanks. Wellington’s army appeared to be building
unstoppable momentum – with Graham’s column poised to cut off Joseph’s escape. By 4pm, Wellington’s army was formed up
across the Zadorra, ready to strike a decisive blow. But his infantry came under heavy fire from
76 French guns, blasting great holes in their ranks. Allied guns were brought forward to provide
support. The biggest artillery duel of the Peninsular
War began, more than 70 guns on each side. Allied skirmishers, exploiting the gap in
the French centre near Gomecha, were able to work their way behind the French guns,
and shoot down their crews. Gazan found himself threatened on both flanks
– but instead of trying to close up with D’Erlon to his north, on his own initiative,
he ordered a retreat, that left D’Erlon’s own left flank completely exposed. Around the same time, Longa’s Spanish troops
finally captured Durana… and rumours swept the French army that their escape route had
been cut. D’Erlon’s Army of the Centre fought on
bravely, withdrawing to another new defensive line, just one mile west of Vitoria. French guns kept up a steady fire on the advancing
allied lines, but once more the position was outflanked. Around 5.30pm, King Joseph bowed to the inevitable,
and ordered a general retreat. As the main road to France had now been cut
by Longa’s Spanish troops, the army would have to retreat east towards Pamplona – along
a single narrow road, with boggy fields on either side. Bad enough for thousands of troops and guns…
but there had been no attempt to move off the army’s enormous convoy of wagons earlier
in the day. The result was pandemonium, as military units
and artillery tried to force their way through the streets of Vitoria, and the congested
lanes and fields beyond. The task of forming a rearguard fell to General
Reille’s Army of Portugal, which conducted an organised withdrawal, covered by its cavalry. Wellington hoped that Graham’s column would
now be surging across the Zadorra River, to cut off the French army’s retreat. But Graham, overestimating the enemy’s strength,
continued to take a cautious approach. East of Vitoria, the French retreat descended
into total chaos. The single, narrow road became blocked. Wagons that took to the fields got stuck and
were abandoned. Allied cavalry fell upon this confused mass,
spreading panic and meeting little serious opposition. King Joseph and Marshal Jourdan themselves
narrowly escaped capture. Among the abandoned wagons - many civilians
including officers’ wives and children, priceless paintings, jewels and furniture…
and more than 5 million gold francs. Troops on both sides broke ranks and dived
into an orgy of plundering. One British officer described the scene: “About dusk, the head of our column came
suddenly on some wagons which had been abandoned by the enemy. Someone called out, "They are money-carts!" No sooner were the words uttered than the
division broke, as if by word of command, and in an instant the covers disappeared from
the wagons, and nothing was seen but a mass of inverted legs, while the arms were groping
for dollars; for money it certainly was. The scene was disgraceful, but at the same
time ludicrous.” Wellington, however, was furious. Not only did the plundering delay pursuit
of the enemy… But giant sums of cash, which might have paid
for his army’s supplies, vanished into private pockets instead. Of 5.5 million francs, only 250,000 were ever
recovered by the army. Vitoria was a great victory for the Coalition… Not as crushing as it might have been - reflected
in relatively light French casualties. But in the chaotic retreat that followed,
the allies did capture all but 2 of 153 French guns, and even Jourdan’s Marshal’s baton. French military power in Iberia was broken;
the Bonapartist kingdom of Spain was at an end. Joseph returned to France to face his brother’s
criticism; Marshal Jourdan retired from active service. Napoleon sent Marshal Soult to replace them. But even his shrewd military mind could not
turn the tide in Spain. Counterattacks to relieve the French garrisons
at Pamplona and San Sebastian were defeated. That autumn, Wellington began what proved
an unstoppable advance across the Pyrenees, and into France. In southern Spain, where Marshal Suchet remained
undefeated, the disaster at Vitoria forced him also to withdraw towards the frontier,
leaving behind just a few isolated garrisons. After a bitter five-year struggle, the allies
had brought the Peninsular War - to the Spanish, their War of Independence - to a victorious
conclusion. It had been a long, hard road, steeped in
blood and suffering. The alliance between Britain and Spain had
been particularly treacherous to navigate. But ultimately both nations had fought together,
with Portugal, to drive the French back across the Pyrenees. New research provides a clearer insight than
ever into the huge attrition of French manpower in Iberia: An estimated total of 260,000 lives lost. Three-quarters died of sickness. Of approximately 66,000 deaths from combat,
43% were in actions against Spanish regular forces; 38% fighting British-led armies. And 19% fighting guerrillas. By contrast, British military deaths are estimated
at 52,000, Portuguese 15,000, with many more thousands of civilian deaths, while Spanish
deaths are unknown – though the country as a whole may have lost as many as half a
million lives in 5 years of war and occupation. For Napoleon, this disaster had been an unnecessary
and largely self-inflicted wound: an intervention born of arrogance and false assumptions…
with dire strategic consequences. But as the Napoleonic Empire crumbled in Spain,
an even greater struggle neared its climax in central Europe – where Napoleon faced
the most powerful coalition of his enemies yet. If the French Emperor was victorious in Germany,
Wellington might soon be scrambling back across the Pyrenees… The fate of Europe was about to be decided…
at the Battle of Leipzig. October 1813. Napoleon Bonaparte faced his greatest crisis
since becoming Emperor of the French, nine years before. His long war in Spain had ended in defeat,
and an Anglo-Spanish Portuguese army had now crossed the Pyrenees to invade France itself. In Germany, the Kingdom of Bavaria had switched
sides, and joined the Sixth Coalition against France. While in Saxony, Napoleon faced four armies
converging on him from all directions. What’s more, these were not the same bunglers
he’d crushed in 1805 and ‘6, at Austerlitz and Jena. Prussia, Austria and Russia had all learned
from their mistakes; they were now better organised, trained and led, and more wary
of Napoleon… The largest Coalition force was the Army of
Bohemia, commanded by Austrian Field Marshal the Prince of Schwarzenberg. His was a huge mixed Austrian-Russian-Prussian
army of 194,000 men and 790 guns. To the north, Blücher’s Army of Silesia,
and the Army of the North, under Napoleon’s ex-Marshal Bernadotte, now Crown Prince of
Sweden. Together, 130,000 men and 536 guns. To the southeast, General Bennigsen’s Army
of Poland, besieging Dresden. Another 34,000 men and 135 guns. In total, the Coalition had fielded 360,000
men and 1500 guns, with Russia supplying the bulk of the troops. One unique addition to Bernadotte’s Army
of the North was a single troop of British rocket artillery - an experimental weapon-system
based on the Congreve rocket, a type seen here in 1830. Although wildly inaccurate, their high explosive
warhead could be devastating at close range. Napoleon’s forces around Leipzig were outnumbered
almost two-to-one. But with 200,000 men and 700 guns, the Grande
Armée was still a force to be reckoned with, with many experienced troops and commanders,
even though it increasingly relied on young conscripts to make up numbers. There were another 140,000 men that Napoleon
could not call on… General Rapp’s Tenth Corps besieged in Danzig,
Marshal St.Cyr’s First Corps besieged in Dresden, Marshal Davout’s Thirteenth Corps
holding Hamburg, as well as several smaller besieged garrisons across Germany and Poland. Napoleon was currently about 20 miles north
of Leipzig with the bulk of his army. Marshal Murat was 40 miles to the south with
90,000 men, covering Schwarzenberg. Napoleon now decided to rapidly join Murat,
and with their temporary superiority in numbers, defeat Schwarzenberg, before Bernadotte and
Blücher could intervene. Murat had orders to conduct a fighting withdrawal
northwards, but at Liebertwolkwitz, he was drawn into major combat with the enemy’s
advance guard. Around 12,000 horsemen fought what some have
described as the largest cavalry battle in Europe’s history. Murat, in the thick of it as usual, was very
nearly captured by Prussian dragoons. The battle ended in a minor Coalition victory,
with around 2,000 casualties on each side. The next day Napoleon arrived to take command. By 16th October, Napoleon had concentrated
most of his forces south of Leipzig. Field Marshal Schwarzenberg meanwhile, against
Russian advice, had deployed his army on either side of the Pleisse River, which would hinder
his movements throughout the battle. Napoleon had entrusted the northern sector
to Marshal Ney, with orders to keep an eye out for Blücher and Bernadotte. But Napoleon didn’t expect them for at least
another day, and so Ney had orders to transfer most of his troops south for the attack on
Schwarzenberg. Schwarzenberg, however, knew that Blücher
and Bernadotte were closer than Napoleon suspected, and that Bennigsen was also marching up from
Dresden. This was the moment the Coalition had been
waiting for - all their armies converging on Napoleon with overwhelming superiority
in numbers. However the Coalition’s Headquarters were
nothing like Napoleon’s, were one man’s will decided all. Schwarzenberg had to attempt to co-ordinate
the actions of three large armies, from three separate states. And although he was Commander-in-Chief, his
plans still needed to be approved by Emperor Alexander, the Supreme Commander… whilst
he also managed relations with the King of Prussia and the Emperor of Austria, all of
whom were present at his headquarters. The plan finally agreed was for General Wittgenstein’s
corps-group to lead an attack in four main columns – with two Austrian flanking attacks
west of the Pleisse. At 8am, a bombardment began along the line,
as Russian, Austrian and Prussian infantry regiments advanced across cold, muddy fields. Wachau soon fell to Russian infantry, but
French artillery fire made it impossible for them to advance further. Victor’s Second Corps then counter-attacked,
retaking the village at bayonet-point. Wachau would change hands twice more that
morning. These bloody contests for small Saxon villages
would come to typify the fighting around Leipzig. At Markkleeberg, Kleist’s Prussian Second
Corps drove out the Polish defenders after bitter fighting. While on the left bank of the Pleisse, Merveldt’s
Austrian Second Corps struggled across broken ground to attack well-defended villages. Their assault on Connewitz stalled, but with
heavy losses, the Austrians got a toe-hold in Dölitz. On the right flank, around 10am Klenau’s
Fourth Corps occupied the high ground of the Kolmberg, and fought its way into Liebertwolkwitz. Napoleon, observing from Gallow’s Hill,
ordered up Augereau’s Ninth Corps and the Young Guard in support. Macdonald’s Eleventh Corps was now also
arriving in position on his left. His troops retook the Kolmberg, and counterattacked
Liebertwolkwitz, driving out the Austrians, and pursuing them over the fields beyond. The advance was only halted when Russian Cossacks
were sighted on their open left flank – a warning that Bennigsen’s army was not far
off. The Coalition offensive was going nowhere,
with most of its modest gains lost to French counterattacks. But there was one sector where the Coalition
had more success that morning: General Gyulai’s Austrian Third Corps, with
orders to threaten Napoleon’s line of retreat, advanced over marshy ground towards Lindenau. Ney had to divert Bertrand’s Fourth Corps
to reinforce the village, and ensure the road to France was kept open. Napoleon was waiting for Ney’s reinforcements
before launching his attack on Schwarzenberg. But now Fourth Corps was tied down at Lindenau…
and there was more bad news from Ney: Blücher’s Army of Silesia was approaching
from the northwest. Marmont’s Sixth Corps had had to turn about,
to keep the Prussians at bay. Heavy fighting broke out around Möckern,
the village itself held by elite French marines… while Dąbrowski’s Polish division clung
onto Wiederitzsch, under attack from an entire Russian corps. This was a nasty surprise for Napoleon, who’d
thought Blücher was still a day’s march away. But the old Prussian general, hearing cannon-fire
to the south, had urged his men on, and into the attack. Blücher intended to draw as many French troops
onto himself as possible, to assist Schwarzenberg’s Army of Bohemia. His actions, and the bloody fight for Möckern,
may just have saved the Coalition from defeat… Napoleon was outnumbered across the whole
battlefield, but in the south, he still had a numerical advantage… not as large as he’d
hoped, nor likely to last long. Schwarzenberg and Alexander were already moving
up reserves – though Schwarzenberg now found that his were on the wrong side of the Pleisse
River – costing precious hours. It was now or never for Napoleon. At 2pm he ordered the attack to begin. A grand battery of 180 guns blasted the enemy
lines…. Then Victor’s Second Corps, Lauriston’s
Fifth Corps and the Young Guard began their advance. In support, Murat gathered two entire cavalry
corps – 10,000 horsemen – and led them in one of the great mass cavalry charges of
the Napoleonic Wars. Cuirassiers of the 1st Heavy Cavalry Division
broke through to the main enemy battery. Some even nearly reached the three Coalition
monarchs. But the ground was marshy and broken by fences
and ditches. The French horses were soon exhausted, and
the squadrons disordered. Austrian cuirassiers and Russian Guard cavalry
were coming up from the south. When these fresh Allied cavalry reserves charged
the French, a great melee ensued… but the French were eventually driven back to their
start line. Maison’s division of the Fifth Corps was
involved in a desperate struggle for Gülden-Gossa. The fighting swept back and forth through
the village, the streets filling with dead and wounded from both sides. But as Russian and Prussian Guard regiments
arrived to reinforce the village, the French were forced to fall back. Around 4pm, the Austrian Reserve Corps finally
arrived, and renewed the assault on Markkleeberg - one of the morning’s objectives, which
was finally secured. By 5pm it was clear that Napoleon didn’t
have enough reserves to force a decisive outcome in the south. To the north, Möckern was being stubbornly
held by French marines, with lethal close-range artillery support. But despite terrible losses, Yorck’s Prussian
corps continued to attack. Marshal Marmont himself was wounded twice,
but remained in command. Finally a brilliant charge by Prussian hussars
triggered a French rout. Möckern fell, as Marmont’s corps streamed
back towards Leipzig. As dusk fell around 6pm, fighting died out
across the battlefield. The first day of the battle had cost the French
an estimated 25,000 casualties; the Coalition, at least 30,000. Napoleon had come close, but failed to land
a decisive blow. The chance for victory was slipping from his
grasp. Sunday 17th October brought a lull, with both
armies exhausted by the previous day’s fighting. Napoleon needed to rest his troops and resupply
them with ammunition, which was running dangerously low. He also sent a message to his father-in-law,
Emperor Francis I, suggesting an armistice and finally offering concessions. But the allies were no longer interested. They knew time was on their side. The only major combat that day occurred in
the north, where Blücher continued to attack. Russian infantry stormed Eutritzsch… and
Gohlis… Russian hussars charged and routed part of
Arrighi’s Third Cavalry Corps. That day Napoleon received 14,000 reinforcements
when Reynier’s French-Saxon Seventh Corps arrived from the northeast. But the same day, the Coalition received more
than 100,000 reinforcements, as their armies continued to converge on Leipzig. Colloredo’s Austrian First Corps… Bennigsen’s Army of Poland… and Bernadotte’s
Army of the North – though the latter was widely criticised for his leisurely march
to the battlefield. The next day Napoleon would face odds of nearly
two to one – it was time for the emperor to begin planning his retreat. On Monday morning, the sun shone across 40
square miles of battlefield, on which nearly half a million troops and 2,000 cannon were
assembled: soldiers from France, Germany, Russia, Austria, Poland, Italy, Sweden, the
Netherlands, and even Britain. This was truly ‘the Battle of the Nations’. In preparation for his withdrawal, Napoleon
pulled back his forces into a tighter, defensive perimeter…. and ordered Bertrand’s Fourth Corps to march
west to secure the army’s line of retreat. Two divisions of the Young Guard, under Marshal
Mortier, took their place at Lindenau. Schwarzenberg, meanwhile, planned to close
the net on Napoleon, with six converging attacks. Fighting in the south began around 8am. The Austrians took Dölitz, but Marshal Oudinot
led a counterattack at the head of a Young Guard division, and drove them out again. Schwarzenberg was so alarmed by this reverse,
that he sent orders to recall Gyulai’s Third Corps. General Barclay’s troops initially faced
little opposition, as they took Wachau and Liebertwolkwitz, scenes of such bitter fighting
two days before, but now scarcely defended. Barclay then paused, waiting for Bennigsen
to get into position on his right, before continuing his attack. Bennigsen’s troops had more ground to cover,
but towards noon, they’d driven back Macdonald’s infantry and taken their objectives. They would now wait for Bernadotte’s army
to link up on their right. But the Army of the North was again making
slow progress, for which many, again, blamed its commander, who seemed exceedingly cautious
about facing his old master in battle. Blücher, in contrast, did not hesitate to
launch Russian infantry against Leipzig’s northern defences, though their attack failed
with heavy losses. By 2pm, Napoleon was hard-pressed on all fronts,
but holding his own. His attention was now focused on Probstheida,
key to his southern front, under attack from Kleist’s Prussian Second Corps. French troops had turned the village into
a fortress, and inflicted terrible losses on the advancing Prussians. Probstheida was soon engulfed in smoke and
fire, as fighting raged on all sides. Some Prussian regiments lost half their men
attacking the village, while three French generals were killed as they organised its
defence. Napoleon even sent in Friant’s division
of the Guard to reinforce the position. To the north, Bernadotte’s army was finally
joining the battle in earnest. Marmont had assembled 137 guns around Schönefeld,
which poured fire into the Russian ranks. In response, Bernadotte massed 200 guns of
his own. The fields were soon strewn with the dead
and wounded, as the sheer weight of fire made it impossible for either side to advance. Around 3pm, von Bulow’s Prussian corps,
supported by Austrian jaegers and its small British rocket detachment, attacked Paunsdorf. Reynier’s Seventh Corps could not withstand
the onslaught. An hour later, around 3,000 Saxon soldiers
rushed over to the enemy and surrendered. The Saxons were deeply disillusioned with
their French allies. Their main wish now was for a quick end to
a war that had ravaged their homeland for many months. The hole in the line created by the Saxons’
defection was soon plugged by Guard cavalry. But the Coalition juggernaut could not be
stopped. Towards dusk, under relentless Russian pressure,
Marmont abandoned the burning ruins of Schönefeld, while the Prussians took Sellerhausen. In the south, Probstheida still held, but
the situation was grim for Napoleon. The third day’s fighting cost both sides
another 25,000 casualties. Napoleon’s army was exhausted, outnumbered,
virtually encircled… and critically low on ammunition. Finally, the Emperor gave the order to retreat. Overnight, under cover of darkness and early
morning fog, the French army withdrew behind Leipzig’s walls… and at 4am began its
retreat west, crossing the single bridge over the Elster River, that led back to France. There’d been time and materials to build
extra bridges, but in what would prove a serious oversight, no one had given the necessary
orders. Furthermore, there was no clear plan for Leipzig’s
defence, which was left to a jumble of under-strength units, mostly Poles and Germans. Napoleon left Leipzig around 10am. Behind him, there were scenes of mounting
chaos and confusion, the city’s streets jammed with troops, guns and wagons. The 20,000 wounded troops in the city had
little hope of escape. 30 minutes later shells began to rain on the
city, as the Coalition launched an all-out assault from north, east and south. The rearguard held the city’s gates for
as long as they could. But they were soon overwhelmed by the enemy,
and savage street fighting broke out across the city. A barge, packed with gunpowder, had been moored
beneath the Elster bridge, so that it could be quickly destroyed after the rearguard crossed. Around 2pm, a corporal lit the fuse when he
saw Russian soldiers on the far bank… even though the bridge was still packed with troops,
wagons and horses. The bridge was destroyed in a gigantic explosion,
that trapped 30,000 men and 30 generals on the wrong side of the river. Panic broke out among those who suddenly found
themselves cut off. Most became prisoners, but some tried to swim
for it… including the Polish Prince Poniatowski, made a Marshal by Napoleon just three days
before. Weak from his wounds, he rode his horse into
the river, but as it tried to climb the steep far bank, it rolled over him, and he was drowned. Marshal Macdonald had also been cut off by
the blast, and resolved to escape, or die trying. He found a place where engineers had cut down
two trees as a makeshift bridge, and made his attempt: “… and there I was, one foot on either
trunk, and the abyss below me. A high wind was blowing. I was wearing a large cloak and fearing that
someone would grab at it, I got rid of it. I was already three-quarters of the way across,
when some men decided to follow me; their unsteady feet caused the trunks to shake…
and I fell into the water. Fortunately I could touch the bottom, but
the bank was steep, the soil loose and slippery… Some of the enemy’s skirmishers came up.... They fired at me point-blank, and missed me,
and some of our men who happened to be nearby drove them off, and helped me out. I was wet from head to foot, breathless and
sweating heavily from my efforts. Marshal Marmont, who had got across early
in the day, gave me a horse; I wanted dry clothes more, but they were not to be had.” The loss of the bridge turned what was already
a heavy defeat for Napoleon… into a disastrous one. Later that day the three Allied monarchs met
in the centre of Leipzig to celebrate their great victory. It had come at enormous cost. Exact numbers are impossible to establish,
but in four days’ fighting, the Coalition armies suffered at least 52,000 casualties. Napoleon, who could less afford such losses,
came off worse: 47,000 killed and wounded, 35,000 taken prisoner, 325 guns lost. More men were killed and wounded at Leipzig
than in any European battle before the First World War. Sir George Jackson, the British ambassador
to Austria, rode over the battlefield with Metternich, the Austrian foreign minister,
two days later: “A more revolting and sickening spectacle
I never beheld,” he wrote. “Scarcely could we move forward a step without
passing over the dead body of some poor fellow, gashed with wounds and clotted with blood…
another, perhaps, without an arm or a leg… here and there a headless trunk, or a head
only, which caused our horses to stumble or start aside… It made one’s blood run cold to glance upon
the upturned faces of the dead… We got over this ‘field of glory’ as quickly
as we could.” Napoleon had suffered a calamitous defeat. He had lost the battle for Germany – his
domination of Europe appeared at an end. With 80,000 survivors, he began a fighting
retreat to the French border. There was now no chance of rescue for the
100,000 men trapped in garrisons across Germany and Poland, though some would hold out for
another five months. Marshal Murat took his leave of the Emperor,
assuring him of his loyalty… but secretly planning to cut a deal with the Allies to
save his throne in Naples. It was the last time the two men saw each
other. Eleven days after the Battle of Leipzig, Napoleon’s
former allies, the Bavarians, tried to block his escape at Hanau, with 40,000 men. The Bavarian commander, von Wrede, had served
with Napoleon in many campaigns. But on seeing his deployment for battle, Napoleon
remarked, “I made him a count, but I couldn’t make him a general.” The French Emperor then ordered the Imperial
Guard to lead an attack, that forced the enemy to fall back in disarray. The French army reached the safety of Mainz
three days later. Napoleon himself pushed on to Paris, to contain
the political damage from his defeat. Behind him, his Empire was being dismantled. On 4th November the Coalition announced the
dissolution of the Confederation of the Rhine – several of its former members now joining
the war against France. In the Illyrian Provinces, local revolts,
Austrian invasion and British naval support brought an end to French rule. In North Italy, Eugène was retreating steadily
before the advance of von Hiller’s Austrian army. While in Hamburg, Marshal Davout, with 34,000
troops, would soon be cut off, and under siege. Napoleon’s situation was desperate. But in the next campaign… fought for France
itself… Napoleon would prove that he was still the
master of war. In October 1813, Napoleon had suffered his
heaviest ever defeat - at Leipzig… the Battle of the Nations. Surviving French forces, exhausted, sick,
and demoralized, retreated to the River Rhine, and prepared to defend France from invasion. But in November, the armies of the Sixth Coalition
paused their advance, and Austrian foreign minister Metternich offered peace terms: ‘The Frankfurt Proposals’ would allow
Napoleon to keep his throne, if France returned to her so-called ‘natural frontiers’. It was the best offer Napoleon was likely
to get, now that his back was to the wall, and all Europe’s great powers were united
against him. Even so, he did not accept the terms, he merely
agreed to reopen negotiations. To the Allies, and many in France itself,
it proved that Napoleon would not listen to reason. The war went on, and by January 1814, Napoleon’s
situation looked even worse. Many of his besieged garrisons in the east
were starved into surrender. Marshal Davout with 34,000 men in Hamburg
was now besieged. Denmark, one of France’s last allies, was
invaded by Bernadotte’s Swedish army, and made to join the Coalition. French troops evacuated the Netherlands, which
reasserted its independence after nearly 20 years of French control. In Italy, Eugène’s army faced a new enemy:
Joachim Murat, King of Naples - now marching north with 30,000 men, to honour his new alliance
with the Sixth Coalition. In Paris, Napoleon responded to the crisis
with a series of extreme measures: property taxes doubled, state salaries and pensions
suspended, 300,000 new conscripts called up… from a country already exhausted by 20 years
of war. He ordered the release of Pope Pius (under
French house arrest for the last five years), to try to shore up his support in Italy. He even agreed to release Fernando, the Bourbon
king of Spain, to take up his throne, in exchange for peace between France and Spain – a condition
that Fernando was in no position to honour. But these concessions were too little, far
too late. In January, two Coalition armies crossed the
Rhine into France: Blücher’s Army of Silesia… and Schwarzenberg’s
Army of Bohemia. Outnumbered French forces in their path could
only fall back. On 25th January, Napoleon said farewell to
his wife and son at the Tuileries Palace, before leaving for the front. He would never see either of them again. With just 70,000 men, he faced odds of four-to-one. Most of his troops were raw conscripts, some
without uniforms, many just learning how to hold a musket. But for the first time in years, Napoleon’s
army was so small that he’d be able to exercise direct command over all its movements. The result would be one of the most audacious
and brilliant campaigns in history. The battle for France would be fought east
of Paris, mostly across Champagne: a flat region divided by the rivers Marne… and
Seine… and their tributaries. In late January fields were dusted with snow,
and roads quickly turned to mud. Napoleon learned that the Coalition armies
were widely scattered, with part of Blücher’s army near Napoleon’s old college at Brienne. The Emperor advanced rapidly, hoping to trap
and destroy part of Blücher’s army. But after a hard day’s fighting that cost
both sides 3,000 casualties, Blücher was able to retreat towards Schwarzenberg’s
army. That evening, Napoleon was nearly skewered
by a charging Cossack – saved only by General Gourgaud’s good shooting. As Napoleon tried to work out the enemy’s
movements, Blücher, heavily reinforced by Schwarzenberg, made a surprise attack at La
Rothière. Allied troops advanced through swirling snow
to assault the village, defiantly held by young French conscripts. One was so inexperienced that Marshal Marmont
had to personally show him how to load his musket during the battle. By late afternoon, Wrede’s Bavarian corps
was falling on Napoleon’s flank. Heavily outnumbered, Napoeon had no option
but to retreat, having lost 5,000 casualties, and 73 guns, abandoned in the thick mud. The Allies’ frontal attacks meant their
losses were greater. But by combining their armies, they’d defeated
Napoleon on French soil for the first time. Believing Napoleon would now retreat towards
Paris, the Allies decided to advance along two routes, to ease pressure on the roads: Blücher would take a northern route along
the Marne; Schwarzenberg would follow the Seine. But dividing their armies again… would play
right into Napoleon’s hands. After two days to reorganise, Napoleon continued
his retreat to Nogent, where he learned that the Allies had split their armies. Not only that, they were advancing at different
speeds: the aggressive Blücher racing ahead, while the more cautious Schwarzenberg lagged
behind. Leaving Oudinot and Victor to guard the Seine
bridges and delay Schwarzenberg, Napoleon raced north through mud and rain with 30,000
men. The Army of Silesia was strung out on the
march, oblivious to the danger it was in. First Napoleon fell on General Olsufiev’s
Russian Ninth Corps at Champaubert, destroying it, taking its commander and 2,000 men prisoner. The next morning he marched on General Osten-Sacken’s
force near Montmirail. This was a much larger force, with two infantry
and one cavalry corps, and was expecting support from Yorck’s Prussian First Corps. But the Prussians were late… and Sacken’s
troops could not withstand the French onslaught. At this desperate hour, the Emperor’s elite
Old Guard were no longer held back, but were often thrown into the thick of the fighting. By the end of the day Napoleon had inflicted
another 3,500 casualties – twice his own losses – and the Allies were in rapid retreat. Napoleon had ordered Marshal Macdonald to
cut off the enemy’s escape, by seizing the Marne bridge at Château-Thierry. But Yorck’s Prussians got there first. The next day Napoleon could only batter their
rearguard, as the enemy fled across the Marne, destroying the bridge behind them. Sending Marshal Mortier to rebuild the bridge
and continue the pursuit, Napoleon doubled-back to re-join Marmont, who had been left to keep
watch on Blücher. Napoleon attacked at Vauchamps, using General
Grouchy’s cavalry to outflank Blücher’s army, which was soon in headlong retreat. A merciless French pursuit inflicted 6,000
Prussian and Russian casualties. Napoleon lost just 600 men. Napoleon had taken on an enemy army almost
twice his size, and beaten it four times in just six days. Blücher had lost an estimated 15,000 casualties
in battle, and another 15,000 in smaller engagements, as stragglers, or deserters. For now, the Army of Silesia had been scattered,
and neutralised. But in the south, Marshals Victor and Oudinot
had not been able to prevent Schwarzenberg’s Army of Bohemia from crossing the Seine in
three places. Austrian troops were now just 40 miles from
Paris. Leaving Mortier and Marmont to keep watch
on Blücher, Napoleon raced south. Schwarzenberg, alarmed by news of Blücher’s
defeat, and of Napoleon’s approach, immediately ordered a retreat. It was too late for Wittgenstein’s advance
guard, routed at Mormant, with 2,000 casualties. Napoleon sent Victor’s Second Corps to seize
the bridge at Montereau, but was so infuriated by its slow progress that he sacked Victor,
and gave his corps to General Gérard. The next day, at the Battle of Montereau,
the French drove the Allied Württemberg corps back across the river with 30% losses. According to some accounts, the Emperor sighted
the French cannon himself, as he had at Lodi, 18 years before. Napoleon had the Allies on the run. But how long could it last? Even as fighting continued, negotiations between
France and the Coalition reopened at Châtillon-sur-Seine on 5th February. The Allied terms were now more severe: a return
to France’s frontiers of 1791, which meant the additional loss of Belgium – a humiliation
that Napoleon refused to accept. Instead he tried to revive the Frankfurt Proposals
– hoping to play for time, and to split the Coalition, whose war aims varied from
Britain’s hard line… to Austria’s more ambiguous position. But this hope was thwarted by British foreign
secretary Lord Castlereagh. On 1st March, he persuaded the Allies to sign
the Treaty of Chaumont. In it, Russia, Prussia, Austria and Great
Britain agreed to keep 150,000 troops in the field, and not to negotiate separately with
France, while Britain added the sweetener of a 5 million pound subsidy to be shared
among the Allies. The treaty’s secret articles specified common
war aims, including the future independence of the German
states, Switzerland, and Italy, while Spain was to be returned to the Bourbons, and Holland
to the House of Orange. The four powers even agreed that once they’d
defeated Napoleon, they’d form a 20-year defensive alliance to maintain peace in Europe
– a sign of their newfound commitment to each other. A split in the Coalition had been Napoleon’s
last, best hope for a favourable peace. That was gone... And news from across the country was bleak. French cities were surrendering to the Allies
without a fight: Nancy, Dijon and Mâcon had all fallen. In the south, Wellington defeated Marshal
Soult at Orthez, forcing him to fall back on Toulouse. Two weeks later, as British troops approached
the city of Bordeaux, it declared loyalty to France’s Bourbon kings. The mayor himself rode out to greet the British
bearing a white cockade – the sign of Bourbon allegiance. Napoleon’s hope for ‘a nation in arms’
to resist the Allies had not materialised. Allied troops, particularly Cossacks, often
robbed French civilians, and committed some atrocities. French peasants took revenge when they could
– but there was no guerrilla war to mirror what French troops had encountered in Spain
or Russia. The chief desire among ordinary French people
was for peace, at almost any price. Any talk of Napoleon’s defeat in late February
was premature. The French Emperor was driving Schwarzenberg’s
Army of Bohemia before him, even though it was twice his size. But Schwarzenberg scrambled to safety behind
the River Aube. Napoleon knew he had to land another decisive
blow soon, so turned his attention back to Blücher. After an aborted attempt to join forces with
Schwarzenberg, Blücher had decided to resume his advance on Paris – gathering reinforcements
en route – and with only Marmont and Mortier’s weak corps to oppose him. Leaving Marshal Macdonald in command in the
south, Napoleon set off to intercept Blücher, covering 60 miles in 3 days along terrible
roads, choked with mud. At Napoleon’s approach, Blücher retreated
across the Marne, burning the bridges behind him. 24 hours later they’d been rebuilt by French
engineers, and Napoleon was poised to crush Blücher against the Aisne River… because
the major crossing point, at Soissons, was held by a Franco-Polish garrison. But after just a day’s fighting, the garrison
commander at Soissons tamely surrendered, allowing Blücher to escape. Napoleon continued his pursuit across the
Aisne, still hoping to cut off the Army of Silesia. But at Craonne, he encountered Russian troops
in a strong defensive position. The Russians fought stubbornly. The French finally forced the enemy to withdraw,
but only at the cost of 6,000 casualties, including many irreplaceable veterans from
Napoleon’s Guard. Napoleon pushed on to Laon. But by now Blücher had concentrated his forces,
98,000 troops in all, and outnumbered Napoleon two-to-one. French attacks were repulsed, while Marmont’s
corps was caught off-guard by a late Allied counter-attack, and routed. Napoleon was lucky to avoid a much heavier
defeat: Blücher, usually aggressive to the point of recklessness, was unwell, and had
been told Napoleon’s army was twice as big as it was, leading him to act with unusual
caution. Laon was a heavy blow to Napoleon – 6,500
casualties he could not afford. Undaunted, he fell back to Soissons, and after
a brief moment to reorganise… he marched on the city of Reims, which had just fallen
to Saint-Priest’s Russian corps. In a whirlwind assault, Napoleon retook the
city. Saint-Priest himself was mortally wounded,
his corps routed. Meanwhile in the south, Schwarzenberg had
resumed his offensive as soon as he found out Napoleon had gone north. In heavy fighting, he’d driven Oudinot and
Macdonald back from the River Aube. Five days later, the Allies had recaptured
Troyes… as Macdonald retreated behind the River Seine. Now, after four days to rest and reorganise
his battered army, Napoleon was coming south once more. Schwarzenberg, emboldened by news of Napoleon’s
defeat at Laon, decided that this time he would stand and fight. Napoleon advanced on Arcis-sur-Aube, ignoring
reports that the enemy was not retreating, as he believed, but gathering for battle. As heavy fighting broke out, Napoleon still
believed he faced only the enemy rearguard. It was a nasty surprise to discover that he
faced the entire might of the Army of Bohemia: 28,000 men against 80,000. In desperate fighting, Napoleon personally
rallied fleeing troops, and exposed himself to enemy fire, having his horse killed under
him by an exploding shell. But the odds were too great. At the end of the second day, Napoleon was
forced to order the retreat. Napoleon believed his army was now too weak
to take on the Allies directly. So he decided to change strategy. He would march into the rear of the Allied
armies, join up with some of his isolated garrisons, and cut the enemy’s lines of
communication, forcing them to abandon their advance on Paris. But the Allies, until now always one step
behind Napoleon, had just received crucial information. Talleyrand. The most brilliant French diplomat of the
age, and the most slippery. He’d served France’s monarchy, the Revolution,
then Napoleon… until in 1807 he fell out irrevocably with the Emperor over foreign
policy. He now believed that Napoleon was dragging
France into ruin, and worked behind the scenes to ensure his downfall. From Paris, he wrote to the Russian Emperor
Alexander at Allied headquarters, informing him that in the capital, support for Napoleon
was crumbling, and the city’s defences had been completely neglected. He urged the Allies to march immediately on
Paris, without allowing Napoleon to distract them. Talleyrand’s information was confirmed when
the Allies intercepted a report from Napoleon’s chief of police, General Savary, meant for
the Emperor: “The treasury, arsenals, and powder stores
are empty. We are completely at the end of our resources. The population is discouraged and discontented,
wishing peace at any price.” As Napoleon advanced on Saint-Dizier, the
Allies sent General Witzingerode and 10,000 cavalry to harass his army, and to screen
their own movements… then began their march on Paris. At Fère-Champenoise, they collided with Marmont
and Mortier’s corps, advancing to join Napoleon. An entire National Guard division, 5,000 men,
was virtually wiped out, as the marshals suffered a crushing defeat. Napoleon feared that the fall of Paris would
be a fatal blow to his regime. His political authority, and ability to wage
war, might not recover. So when he received news of the Allies’
movements, he tore up his plans, and ordered a forced march back to Paris, intending to
lead its defence in person. Napoleon’s wife and son were evacuated from
the capital, along with most of his ministers. His brother Joseph, the ex-King of Spain,
was in charge of the city’s defences, but had done little. Paris was awash with rumours of treachery
and defeat. Marmont and Mortier were able to reach Paris
before the Allies, adding their troops to the garrison. It now totalled 37,000 men, including some
hardened veterans of the Guard – but many more young conscripts, while a third were
part-time soldiers of the National Guard. The Allies had 120,000 seasoned troops outside
the city. And given the urgency of taking Paris before
Napoleon could intervene, their elite guards and grenadier divisions would lead the way. On 30th March they began their assault from
the north. Heavy fighting raged throughout the day. The city’s defenders fought bravely, inflicting
several thousand casualties on the advancing enemy. But defeat was inevitable. That night, to save Paris from destruction,
Marshal Marmont agreed to surrender the city, on condition the garrison was permitted to
leave with its weapons. At the Hôtel des Invalides, the 71-year old
Marshal Sérurier oversaw the burning of 1,400 flags and standards captured from France’s
enemies, as well as Frederick the Great’s sword and sash, so they would not fall into
Allied hands. Napoleon was just 15 miles from Paris when
he was informed of the city’s surrender. He sat, with his head in his hands, for 15
minutes. On 31st March 1814, France’s enemies marched
into Paris for the first time since the Hundred Years’ War. Parisian crowds cheered the three Allied monarchs,
bringers of peace. Everyone in Paris was suddenly a royalist,
once more. Above all they cheered for Emperor Alexander
of Russia, now hailed as Europe’s saviour. Don cossacks bivouacked on the Champs-Élysées. Allied troops generally behaved well. 35 miles away, Napoleon was at Fontainebleau
with 36,000 men, all of them hungry and exhausted after their 100-mile forced march. Nevertheless, Napoleon began planning an immediate
advance on Paris. But for the first time, he faced unanimous
opposition from his ministers, and marshals, including Ney, Macdonald, Oudinot and Berthier. They reminded him of his oath to act for the
good of France. He accused them of disloyalty, acting only
to save themselves. They told him the war was lost, and he must
abdicate - in favour of his son, if possible. On 4th April Marshal Marmont surrendered his
entire corps to the Coalition, which was marched over to the enemy lines, against the wishes
of many of its officers and men. This was a devastating blow to Napoleon, and
encouraged the Allies to reject his offer of a conditional abdication in favour of his
son. Two days later, he abdicated without conditions. “The Allied Powers having proclaimed that
the Emperor Napoleon is the only obstacle to the re-establishment of peace in Europe,
the Emperor Napoleon, faithful to his oath, declares that he renounces, for himself and
his heirs, the thrones of France and Italy and that there is no personal sacrifice, including
his life, that he is not ready to make in the interests of France.” Napoleon’s abdication was formalised by
the Treaty of Fontainebleau, by which he was allowed to keep the title of Emperor, become
sovereign of the small island of Elba, and retain a bodyguard of 400 men. News came too late to prevent Wellington’s
attack on Toulouse, leading to a costly and pointless battle, with more than 7,000 casualties. The night after his abdication, Napoleon tried
to commit suicide, using the poison that had been made for him in Russia, in case of capture. But it had lost its potency, and he survived. Two weeks later, Napoleon bade farewell to
his Old Guard at Fontainebleau Palace, and began his journey into exile. The Napoleonic Wars, which had raged on land
and sea for eleven years, seemed finally at an end. The death toll is unknown, but historians
estimate that 2 to 3 million lives were lost across Europe. Most soldiers died not in battle, but from
disease. Many thousands were left maimed and disfigured. For most of this period, Napoleon was master
of Europe: imposing treaties on defeated enemies, redrawing frontiers, overthrowing old regimes
and making new kings. He was the last figure in history to combine
total political power with frontline, military genius - in the mould of Alexander, and Caesar. But it seemed Napoleon’s reign was to end
in abject military defeat. However - exile on Elba did not prove to Napoleon’s
taste. In less than 10 months, he would return to
France to fight one last, great campaign, to reclaim his throne. Thank you to all our Patreon supporters for
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