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Date:
c. 1801 - 1815
Location:
Europe
Context:
British Empire

Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden abdicated in March 1809. His uncle, who succeeded him as Charles XIII, made peace with Russia by the treaty of Fredrikshamn of September 17, ceding Finland. Sweden next made peace with France by the treaty of Paris of January 6, 1810, and joined the Continental System (officially at least). When Bernadotte was chosen heir to the Swedish crown as Charles XIV John, Napoleon obtained a declaration of war by Sweden against Great Britain (November 17). This had no effect, and Bernadotte soon told Alexander that he would remain independent of French influence and loyal to the treaty of Fredrikshamn.

Franco-Russian relations were exacerbated early in 1810 when Napoleon’s betrothal to the Austrian archduchess Marie-Louise was announced before Alexander had declared his mother’s refusal of Napoleon’s overtures for a marriage alliance with the Russian imperial family. If the suggestion had been unwelcome, the denouement was slighting, and the growth of French influence in Vienna increased Alexander’s impatience of French tutelage. The difficulties occasioned to Russia by the Continental System, together with Napoleon’s own example in permitting relaxation of his commercial measures where French interests were involved, prompted Alexander to issue the ukase (“decree”) of December 31, 1810. It forbade some imports by land (whose provenance was the French empire and the satellite states), doubled the duty on some French merchandise, and opened Russian ports to neutral shipping and British goods. Before this, Napoleon had taken the unmistakably hostile course of annexing Oldenburg. Thenceforward France and Russia both prepared for war.

Early in 1811 Napoleon had only the 50,000 troops of the duchy of Warsaw and the 45,000 French garrisoned in Germany to protect his eastern frontier. The Russians could soon put 240,000 men in the field. Alexander concluded that if the Poles would join him, together with the 50,000 Prussians who could, he believed, then also join him without risk, he “could advance to the Oder without striking a blow.” This plan was dropped when the Poles refused to change sides despite Alexander’s offer to reconstitute Poland. Napoleon remained on the alert in the spring of 1811, and by August 16 he was discussing the general plan of a Russian campaign to begin in June 1812.

In December 1811 Napoleon secured Austria’s informal agreement to furnish 30,000 men for his campaign against Russia; and by a treaty of February 24, 1812, Frederick William of Prussia, to the dismay of Prussian patriots, consented to the occupation of his country by the Grande Armée on its way to Russia and undertook to provide supplies and materials to it (the cost to be set against the balance of the Tilsit indemnity) and also to send and maintain at full strength a contingent of 20,000 men. Both Austria and Prussia, however, informed Alexander that they would make no serious effort in the forthcoming campaign. Napoleon offended Bernadotte by opposing the latter’s plan for the annexation of Norway to Sweden and by occupying Swedish Pomerania (January 1812) in reprisal for Sweden’s failure to exclude colonial goods. Bernadotte therefore sought alliance with Russia; and by the agreement of April 5–9, 1812, it was arranged that the Swedes should invade Germany when the French were deeply enough engaged in Russia and that the Russians should later help the Swedes to annex Norway. On May 28 Russia made peace with Turkey.

The Russian campaign, 1812

For the campaign of 1812 Napoleon summoned the largest army that Europe had ever seen. He also made unprecedented efforts to assemble supplies and transport, but these preparations were quite insufficient for an advance with such disproportionate forces far into Russia. He wrongly supposed that the campaign would be ended within 30 days. Late in February the various elements of the Grande Armée set out on the long journeys which were to bring them to the frontier along the Neman in June.

The invasion of Russia

The main French army began to cross the Neman into Russia on June 24, 1812. The total invading force then numbered approximately 453,000; about 612,000 were to enter Russia during the campaign, and little more than 200,000 of them were French. The non-French contingents were destined for employment in secondary tasks, as the spearhead of the invasion force was composed of French troops. Napoleon divided his forces into armies, commanding the principal one himself and providing two auxiliary armies to protect the flanks and rear of his striking force. With him on the Neman were 227,000 men; to his right Eugène led 80,000; on the right wing at Grodno (Hrodna) were Jérôme with 76,000 and, beyond him, Karl Philipp, Fürst (prince) zu Schwarzenberg’s Austrian contingent of nearly 30,000, charged with the observation of the southernmost of the dispersed Russian forces. On the extreme French left were Macdonald and Johann Yorck with the Prusso-Polish force of 40,000. Behind the Neman the Russian commander Mikhail Bogdanovich, Prince Barclay de Tolly’s army numbered 118,000. Pyotr Ivanovich, Prince Bagration commanded approximately 35,000 regular troops as well as several thousand Cossacks behind the Bug, while Alexander Tormasov, who was observing Schwarzenberg, led about 40,000. In the north Peter Wittgenstein was advancing westward with 25,000 to defend the Western Dvina. For reserves, the Russians could call on recruits under training and Cossack and militia formations, but as these were not at once available, the Russian command decided to retreat before Napoleon’s greatly superior forces.

A forced march brought the French to Vilnius on June 28, 1812, but by then Barclay had moved toward the fortified camp of Drissa on the Dvina. Bagration, against whom Jérôme was making a lengthy march from the south, avoided Davout’s attempt to cut his line of retreat by a thrust through Minsk with two divisions and was able to cross the Dnieper (July 25). Barclay meanwhile had abandoned Drissa and withdrawn first to Vitsyebsk (July 23), then to Smolensk, where Bagration joined him on August 3, bringing their combined forces to 110,000.

Napoleon, whose march from Vilnius to Vitsyebsk had failed to separate the two Russian armies, now turned southeastward, crossing the Dnieper in the night of August 13–14, 1812. On August 14 an engagement at Krasnoe (Krasny) left Barclay in no doubt of his intentions. The French appeared, 180,000 strong, before Smolensk on August 16 and, despite the resistance of Barclay’s rear guard, entered the suburbs next day. Early on August 18 the Russians withdrew, having destroyed the bridges and fired the town. Although their rear guard was defeated by Ney and Murat at Valutina on August 19, the mass of the Russian army eluded pursuit. The French lost nearly 15,000 killed and wounded in the actions of August 16–19.

Meanwhile on August 17, 1812, Laurent, marquis de Gouvion-Saint-Cyr replaced Oudinot on Napoleon’s left flank and defeated Wittgenstein at Polotsk. A few days later Schwarzenberg won a success at Gorodechno. Although the French extreme left flank in this sector had been able to contain Tormasov, Pavel Chichagov’s approach from the south threatened to double the Russian numbers there. Napoleon halted at Smolensk until August 25, summoning Claude Victor-Perrin’s corps to Smolensk to protect his lines of communication and ordering Augereau’s from Germany to Vilnius.

Prolonged and rapid marching and commissariat problems, not combat, had already taken heavy toll of Napoleon’s strength. The failure of the transport columns to supply the marching troops reduced the effectiveness of the infantry, but the cavalry, so essential to his methods of warfare, were particularly vulnerable. Forage was lacking for the 300,000 horses, and disease and excessive work increased their death rate.

Fruitful though Barclay’s cautious methods had been, he was replaced by the veteran Kutuzov on August 17, 1812. The new commander was determined to fight a major battle before abandoning Moscow. The French arrived before his positions around the village of Borodino on September 5. The next day was spent in concentrating the army, reconnaissance, and preparations, and the inconclusive Battle of Borodino was fought on September 7. The Russians fell back southeastward to the Nara River, and Napoleon entered Moscow with 95,000 men on September 14. That night the city was fired, partly at least by the Russians themselves.

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The retreat from Moscow

The Russians refused to come to terms, and both military and political dangers could be foreseen if the French were to winter in Moscow. After waiting for a month, Napoleon began his retreat, his army now 110,000 strong, on October 19, 1812. His first intention was to retire via Kaluga and thus to make a long detour through more fertile and unexhausted territory before regaining Smolensk, but after the successful combat of Maloyaroslavets (October 24), where he found Kutuzov in his path, he decided to return by the direct route.

At Vyazma, on November 12, 1812, Napoleon’s forces had already fallen to 55,000 men. It was not until November 6 that the first snowstorm overtook the army, to be followed by alternate thaws and frosts until early December, when bitter cold set in. Thus the large majority of Napoleon’s losses occurred before the first snowfall. On leaving Smolensk, which had been ravaged in August and was now virtually destitute of supplies, the French found Kutuzov threatening their path at Krasnoe. Kutuzov however declined to bring on a general engagement, and in the intermittent fighting that ensued (November 15–17) the main French forces secured their retreat. Ney, trapped with the rear guard on November 18, was able to escape, with heavy losses, only by crossing the unreliable ice on the Dnieper.

The Grande Armée now numbered 8,000 combatants and 40,000 stragglers. Victor-Perrin’s corps, 15,000 men who had gone northwestward from Smolensk, and Oudinot’s, fewer still, rejoined the army west of Orsha. In their rear Wittgenstein had crossed the Western Dvina. The French approached the Berezina only to learn that the vital bridge at Borisov had been captured by Chichagov, whom Schwarzenberg had failed to pursue on his march from the south. Oudinot’s corps took Borisov, but the Russians burned the bridge before they withdrew. During the night of November 25–26, 1812, two bridges were constructed upstream at Studyanka while a feint to the south distracted the Russians’ attention. Oudinot’s 7,000 men crossed on November 26, the main body of the army next day. On November 28 the rear guard under Victor-Perrin held off Wittgenstein’s attacks along the east bank while Chichagov’s assaults on the west bank were contained by the rest of the army. At 9:00 am on November 29 Victor-Perrin’s men fired the bridges. From Smorgon (Smarhon) the French continued their march, now in extreme cold, to Vilnius (December 9) and thence to Kovno, where a few broken thousands crossed the Neman to find refuge at Königsberg. A further 40,000 men in isolated detachments subsequently made their way to the Vistula. From the north, Macdonald’s corps retired with 16,000 men, and in the south, Schwarzenberg and Jean Reynier fell back to the Bug with 40,000. The exhausted Russians, their own forces reduced to 40,000, suspended their advance at the Vistula. Their casualties had also been extremely high: fewer than 30 percent of the troops who began the pursuit at Maloyaroslavets reached Vilnius.

When the remnant of his army was 60 miles (roughly 100 km) east of Vilnius, on December 5, 1812, Napoleon had handed the command over to Murat and had hastened on ahead in order to reach Paris before the news of his disaster. It is estimated that of the 612,000 combatants who entered Russia only 112,000 returned to the frontier. Among the casualties, 100,000 are thought to have been killed in action, 200,000 to have died from other causes, 50,000 to have been left sick in hospitals, 50,000 to have deserted, and 100,000 to have been taken as prisoners of war. The French themselves lost 70,000 in action and 120,000 wounded, as against the non-French contingents’ 30,000 and 60,000. Russian casualties have been estimated at 200,000 killed, 50,000 dispersed or deserting, and 150,000 wounded. The dissolution of the Grande Armée meant that the French army could no longer absorb new recruits into well-established formations. Nor could it find trained men and horses on a scale to replace the magnificent cavalry arm destroyed in Russia.

The campaign of 1813

It was not immediately certain that the Russians would carry the war into Germany. Alexander, however, intended to exploit his new opportunities and resolved to continue his advance. Napoleon hoped, mistakenly, that Austria and Prussia would send reinforcements to assist Murat in maintaining a front until he himself returned with a new army.

Prussia changes sides

Prussian resistance to Napoleon was precipitated by the initiative of Yorck, commander of the Prussian contingent under Macdonald. Instead of marching as Macdonald’s rear guard, Yorck chose to sign his own convention of neutrality with the Russians at Tauroggen on December 30, 1812. Yorck’s force retired to the Prussian territory between Königsberg and Memel so that Macdonald had to continue his retreat to Danzig. On the other wing of the French front, Schwarzenberg signed an armistice on January 30, 1813, and withdrew southward with his Austrian troops, exposing Reynier’s corps in its retreat to the Oder. The Poles offered no resistance to the Russian advance, which stood at the Neman on January 13, reached the Vistula on January 18, and gained Warsaw on February 7.

King Frederick William’s first reaction to Yorck’s Convention of Tauroggen was to declare it the act of “an insubordinate soldier.” Gaining confidence, however, he decided to join the patriotic advocates of resistance to France and to capture a leading role in the German War of Liberation. Meanwhile, the exiled Prussian statesman Karl, Reichsfreiherr vom und zum Stein, whom Frederick William had dismissed from the government in 1808 and who was known as a spokesman of the anti-French movement in Germany, was installed by the Russians as provisional governor in Königsberg. There the estates of East Prussia met to call for the formation of a Landwehr. Frederick William agreed on February 3 to an appeal for volunteers, and within a week he had abolished exemption from military service.

After negotiation and the use of some pressure on Frederick William, Alexander concluded an alliance with him at Kalisz on February 28, 1813. Frederick William undertook not to make peace until the kingdom of Prussia had been restored to an area and population equivalent to what it had had before Tilsit, though almost all the territory gained in the second and third partitions of Poland was to be renounced. On March 16 Prussia declared war on Napoleon and on March 19 Alexander and Frederick William issued a proclamation declaring the Confederation of the Rhine to be dissolved and summoning its rulers to change sides or forfeit their states.

Prussian support was essential to Alexander’s plans, since the Russian field army numbered only 64,000 at the end of March 1813. Prussia had 61,500 troops ready for campaign, 28,000 in garrison, and 32,000 in Pomerania and in East Prussia. In addition the Landwehr would be available for service in August. The practical results of Prussian enthusiasm for the German national movement in 1813 have been subject to some exaggeration: it furnished 22,000 volunteers between March and May, while the Landwehr contributed more than 120,000 men, to supply half of the Prussian effectives in the autumn campaign.

Eugène, who had replaced Murat in command of the French forces on January 16, 1813, retreated from Poznań on February 12 and paused only briefly on the Oder (February 18–22) before falling back on Berlin. On March 4, he withdrew from Berlin to defend the line of the upper Elbe, exposing Hamburg, which was captured by Russian cavalry on March 18, and abandoning Dresden, the Saxon capital, where Blücher and his Prussians arrived on March 27.

In April 1813 the British offered subsidies to Frederick William on the condition that Hanover, which Prussia had undertaken to forgo, was enlarged and that Prussia would agree with Russia not to make peace without Great Britain’s consent. Acceding to the Russo-Swedish agreement of 1812, the British not only assigned Norway to Bernadotte (Treaty of Stockholm, March 3, 1813), but allotted him Guadeloupe and £1,000,000 toward the cost of the contingent of 24,000 with which he landed in Pomerania on May 18.