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Welcome. This page is your link to all the important battles that
relate to Napoleon. The links to the battles are in alphabetical
order. The descriptions of the battles are in chronological order.
Enjoy!
The War of the First Coalition
(1793-1797)
- France vs. Austria, Prussia, UK, Spain, the Netherlands, and Sardinia
Siege of Toulon
7 September - 19 December, 1793
During the revolution in France, a major port, Toulon became the
site of one of Napoleon's first battles.
August 28, 1793, Toulon was taken by the Bourbons and was occupied
by British and Spanish military forces. In several days, September
7, the French retaliated and made several attempts to take back
the city. All these attacks failed due to poor leadership. Thus,
no gains were made; that is until a young artillery officer (he
was twenty-four at the time) by the name and rank of Captain Napoleone
Buonaparte (as he used to spell it before it was changed) submitted
to his commander his plans to storm a key enemy fort in a diversionary
attack which would allow the French to go after the British fleet
in the harbor. On December 17 the attack was carried out and in
less than a day of fighting, the British fleet (commanded by Admiral
Lord Hood) retreated and sailed away. By December 19, the harbor
was once again controlled by France and the successful attack resulted
in the promotion of Buonaparte to General of Brigade.
Italian Campaign (1796 - 1798)
Montenotte
April 12, 1796
Napoleon chose the conquest of Italy as a warm-up. He knew that
the Italians would be an easy target due to their weak offense.
Being a country run by city-states, it was very vulnerable to any
invasion and could fall if any of its key cities were taken. Napoleon
saw this as a chance to gain rank both militarily and politically
and as a chance to gain port cities.
Entering Lombardy, Napoleon met up against both a Piedmontese army
of 25,000 men and an Austrian army of 35,000 men. Finding the area
with the smallest concentration, Napoleon used 10,000 men to break
through this weak link in the Austrian forces but his forces weren't
strong enough to win.
Mondovi
April 21, 1796
Following the battle at Montenotte, Napoleon again met up with
the Piedmontese at Mondovi. Although his first attacks had failed,
Napoleon was able to win this time due to an advantage in numbers.
Armistice at Cherasco
August 23, 1796
The Piedmontese, having been defeated, signed an armistice at Cherasco.
Lodi (Followed by the seizure of Milan)
May 10, 1796
Throughout the Italian Campaign, Napoleon's forces were inferior
compared to the combined Austrian forces. Luckily, for Napoleon,
the Austrians kept their forces divided up. By continually outmarching
the Austrians, and keeping his army together, Napoleon was able
to defeat the Austrians piece by piece rather than having to fight
them all at once.
Setting his sites on the seizure of Milan, Napoleon avoided the
Austrian defensive line waiting for him at Milan and instead moved
south. At Lodi (town South of Milan), he met up with Beaulieu (Veteran
Austrian General). Beaulieu's forces were crushed and Napoleon entered
Milan on May 15, 1796.
Castiglione
August 5, 1796
Austria readied three armies to keep Napoleon from taking Mantua
and these armies were set to join forces there. The battle started
too soon for all the armies to arrive and the French held off the
largest of these armies, keeping it from joining the other two.
At the attack, Napoleon decided to send one of his armies, led by
General Massena, to fight on the front line while his other troops
got ready for a surprise flank attack. The attack happened too early
and the Austrians were able to avoid being severely affected by
it, though the French were still able to break through the line
and win. The Austrians lost twice as many men as Napoleon did.
Bassano
September 8, 1796
Using his divide and conquer techniques, Napoleon was able to
split the Austrian army in two by sending out two of his armies,
led by General Augereau and General Massena, to attack from different
sides. This forced one division of the Austrian army to give up
while the other was defeated on the battlefield. As a result of
the defeat, the Austrian army was ordered to be increased to 28,000
men.
Arcola
November 15 - 17, 1796
The French tried to push the Austrians back past the Arcola Bridge.
After three days of fighting, the French were able to cross the
river and force the Austrians to retreat. The French were now in
position to take Mantua.
Rivoli
January 14, 1797
This battle was Austria's final attempt to defend Mantua. They
tried to trick Napoleon into being distracted by several diversionary
attacks, but it didn't work and when the real attack came, Napoleon
was ready. By moving his limited supply of artillery from one side
to the other, he was able to fend off Austria's numerous, dispersed,
attacks. After two days of fighting, the Austrians gave up. The
Austrians lost three times as many men as Napoleon when he finally
took Mantua.
Egyptian Campaign (1798-1799)
Malta
June 11-12, 1798
Given a choice between an attack on England and an attack on Egypt,
Napoleon chose the less risky of the two. In an attempt to block
English dominance in the Mediterranean, Napoleon decided to take
Egypt. His first stop was Malta, an island off the coast of Italy.
It had been held since 1520 by the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem
but it was no longer as powerful as it once was. After only a day
of fighting, the Knights surrendered and Napoleon won Malta.
Battle of the Pyramids (Cairo)
July 21, 1798
Marching to Cairo, Napoleon's army was stopped by Murad Bey's
(a prominent military figure in Egypt) troops and some Turkish troops
at a small village called Embabeh. The French continually beat off
attacks by Murad's army and Murad's forces were soon defeated. Murad
lost almost twenty times as many troops as Napoleon and Lower Egypt
was won for France.
Battle of the Nile (Aboukir)
August 1, 1798
Admiral Lord Nelson (commander of the British naval fleet) decided
to attack Napoleon's ships at Aboukir Bay. Nelson threw all his
ships at one point in the French line, breaking it in two. Then
he finished off each side. Using this tactic, Nelson was able to
destroy the French fleet (only four ships escaped) and Napoleon
was trapped. This victory for Britain ended Napoleon's chances of
ever taking all of Egypt.
Syrian Campaign (1799)
Jaffa
March 7, 1799
Napoleon changed his plans and decided to invade Egypt through
Syria. Jaffa was the first battle of this campaign and the city
fell after only one day. The town was then pillaged and ransacked.
2000-3000+ Turkish soldiers were put to death because there wasn't
enough food to feed the prisoners.
Saint John d'Acre
March 18, 1799 to May 20, 1799
The second battle in the Syrian Campaign didn't go as smoothly
as the first; Napoleon failed in his attempts to take the port of
Acre (indefensible medieval stronghold). Before the attack began,
Napoleon's siege artillery had already been defeated by Commodore
Sidney Smith (a British naval commander). After eight unsuccessful
attempts to break into the city, Napoleon gave up and marched his
war-weary, diseased, downtrodden troops back to Egypt. He informed
France that a plague was ravaging the city (which was what caused
all his casualties).
Aboukir
July 25, 1799
After returning to Cairo, Napoleon got word that a Turkish army
had just landed in Aboukir. In ten days, he was there with a force
of 10,000 men and, thereby, crushed them. The toll of lives on their
part (Turks) was massive and Napoleon turned around the failure
at Acre and left for Paris with a brilliant victory under his belt.
The War of the Second Coalition
(1799 - 1802)
- France vs. UK, Ottoman Empire, Portugal, Austria, Naples, and
Russia
After Napoleon became the First Consul of France, the rest of Europe
(Russia, UK, Ottoman Empire, Naples, Portugal, and Austria) decided
that they didn't want to be taken over by France. They formed a
coalition and tried to stop Napoleon. However, due to a failure
to negotiate, they got little done and Napoleon emerged as the dominant
power in Europe. Though, due to Britain's exceptional navy and Napoleon's
inability to take Egypt, France never conquered England.
Marengo
June 14, 1800
By spreading his troops out, Napoleon was defeated by the attack
that the Austrians had planned at Marengo. By 3:00 P.M., the Austrians
had broken through the line and the French surrender (presumably).
What the Austrians hadn't expect was that the French General Desaix
and his troops arrived minutes later to lead another attack that
the French won. This battle cost the Austrians twice as many lives
as it did the French (though Gen. Desaix did die in the battle)
and resulted in the French seizure of everything from Lombardy,
Italy to the Minicio River. If it hadn't been for Desaix, this battle
might have cost Napoleon his army and career.
The War of the Third Coalition
(1805)
- France vs. Britain, Austria, Russia, Sweden, and Naples
Ulm
October 19, 1805
In a brilliant maneuver, Napoleon was able to move his troops around
the Austrian forces at Ulm while intercepting their supply lines.
The Austrians tried to fight back but, since they were surrounded,
were forced to surrender. In all, 50,000 Austrians surrendered.
Trafalgar
October 21, 1805
In an attempt to break the British blockade on France, Napoleon
decided to send his naval fleet to Spain so that they could lead
the British fleet over with them, join up with the Spanish fleet,
and use the Franco-Spanish fleet to defeat the British. This plan
backfired when the French fleet, after meeting up with the Spanish,
got trapped in a harbor without any defenses or backup. Nelson,
seeing his opportunity, destroyed the Franco-Spanish fleet. The
losses for France were ten times the losses of England's, but Nelson
was killed in the battle. This battle destroyed any chance of Napoleon
ever taking England.
Austerlitz
December 2, 1805
Napoleon, by making the Russian and Austrian armies think that
he had less troops than he actually did, tricked the two allied
armies into creating a battle plan that worked for them in the beginning.
However, when Napoleon's scheduled reinforcements arrived, the French
army was soon able to crush its enemies. The Allies' losses were
a staggering three and a half times the losses of Napoleon's army.
This battle is often characterized as Napoleon's finest victory.
The Prussian Campaign (1806 - 1808)
- Also The War of the Fourth Coalition
Jena
October 14, 1806
The battle began when Marshal Lannes came upon Prussian General
Hohenloe's force of 35,000 men. French reinforcements kept coming
until Napoleon had 90,000 men. With superior numbers, Napoleon pushed
the Prussians into open ground. The battle was going well until
Ney launched an unauthorized attack upon the center of the Prussian
line. He fell right into a trap and would have been destroyed if
not for the French cavalry. Soon the Prussian line fell and they
fled. Napoleon lost 5000 men, but the Prussians lost 25,000 men.
Auerstadt
October 14, 1806
Expecting to only cut the line of retreat of what Napoleon had
thought was the main enemy force, Marshal Davout came upon the main
Prussian army (more than twice the size of his force). Going on
the defensive, Davout fortified a small village called Hassenhausen
and held off the Prussian attacks. However, Davout realized that
the Prussians had low moral and went on the offensive. Frederick
William III ordered a retreat to escape the ferocious assault of
III Corps. Prussia lost 13,000 men and 115 guns.
Eylau
February 8, 1807
Russian General Bennigsen managed to force Marshal Ney from camp
with an all out offensive near Konigsberg. However, Napoleon attacked
Bennigsen's force of 74,500 men with fewer than 50,000. A snowstorm
hindered his assaults. The arrival of Davout's reinforcements was
countered by the arrival of Prussian reinforcements and Ney's reinforcements
didn't help the French to gain an advantage. After fighting in what
is regarded as the worst weather of the era, the Russians withdrew.
Russia had 23,000 casualties and Napoleon had 22,000 casualties.
Freidland
June 14, 1807
With over three times as many men, (Russia had 60,000 and France
had 17,000) the Russian General Bennigsen confidently sent his troops
in to crush Marshal Lannes's troops. What he didn't expect was that:
one, the Alle River split his troops in two, making them more vulnerable
to attack; and two, Napoleon's troops arrived in the middle of the
battle with 80,000 men to relieve the troops fighting. After Napoleon
arrived, the battle was over in a matter of hours. Russian lost
total 20,000 while the French lost only 12,000.
The Austrian War (1809)
Eckmuhl
April 22, 1809
Thinking that there was a smaller number of Austrians at Eckmuhl,
Napoleon sent General Davout to go there and win. To his surprise,
there were 75,000 troops there compared to Davout's 20,000, and
when the attack commenced, Davout's strong line began to fall to
Austria's greater numbers. Luckily, Marshal Lannes arrived with
30,000 of his troops and was able to attack the other side of the
Austrian army with fresh soldiers. Due to this, France won. The
losses were not great but the victory was. The Austrians lost 12,000
men as opposed to the French's 6,000.
Aspern - Essling
May 21-22, 1809
On May 21, Napoleon crossed the Danube River over a single bridge
and attacked the Austrian army, led by Archduke Charles, at two
villages, Aspern and Essling. For two days, both sides were unyielding.
The French fought hard because they didn't want to cross the Danube
to retreat and the Austrians were fighting hard because they saw
this as an ideal chance to defeat Napoleon and his army. In the
end, the battle was a stalemate. Napoleon lost 19,000 men and the
Austrians lost 24,000 men.
Wagram
July 5-6, 1809
Learning from the mistakes he made at Aspern-Essling, Napoleon
set up a port and supply chain that was well guarded. With his troops
ready for anything, Napoleon led a surprise attack on the Austrians
east of Aspern-Essling. This caught them off guard and drove them
off for the time being. The next day, Austria retaliated with several
early surprise attacks that caught Napoleon's forces off guard and
resulted in the loss of important land holdings and bridges. However,
backup forces arrived, commanded by Marshal Davout and Marshal MacDonald,
which allowed France to defeat the Austrians for good. The losses
among the two sides were equal but Austria wanted peace and so the
Treaty of Schonbrunn was signed on October 14, 1809.
Russian Campaign and Napoleon's
Downfall (1810-1814)
Borodino
September 7, 1812
The Russians had been continuously retreating from the French Grande
Armee. However, fewer than 120 kilometers from Moscow, Russian General
Mikhail Kutusov decided to face the French. After fortifying the
area, Kutusov's force of 120,000 men and 640 cannons waited for
Napoleon's force. With 133,000 men and 587 cannons, Napoleon launched
a bloody frontal assault. The battle became a mere battle of attrition,
with neither side gaining a decisive foothold. By the end of the
day, both sides were exhausted and the Russians had retreated. The
Russians had 44,000 casualties and the French had 33,000 casualties.
Lutzen
May 2, 1813
Thinking he could take Russia, Napoleon marched his troops in
during the winter. Due to bad weather and no decisive victories,
Napoleon was forced to turn back. Prussia, seeing Napoleon in a
particularly weak position, decided to declare war on France.
Napoleon, seeing the Prusso-Russian army move on his army at Leipzig,
decided to attack at Lutzen (south of Leipzig) to "cut them
off at the pass." When the Prussian and Russians had realized
this, they moved the bulk of their troops to Lutzen, only to meet
a fully prepared French army. Sending in battalion after battalion,
Napoleon was able to make the Prusso-Russian army retreat before
nightfall. Losses on both sides were equal, about 20,000 each.
Bautzen
May 20-21, 1813
After the defeat at Lutzen, the leaders of the Prusso-Russian army
decided to stop retreating and hold their ground at Bautzen. Having
considerably more men than the Allies, Napoleon felt very confident
going into this battle. The first day was successful until Marshal
Ney, a French army leader, messed up Napoleon's plans. By placing
his troops in the wrong area, he ruined Napoleon's strategy of encircling
and demolishing the Allies and thus let them get away. The next
day of fighting was no more successful and more mistakes by Marshal
Ney ensured there would be no solid defeat of the Allies. Both armies
lost 20,000 men and victory for the French was by no means spectacular.
Dresden
August 26-27, 1813
Napoleon accepted a 10-week truce with the Allies so he could resupply
his armies after Lutzen and Bautzen. However, after the truce, the
French found themselves against an enemy of more than 400,000 men.
Enemy forces tried to occupy Dresden, the capital of Saxony and
a key city for the war, but French Marshal Gouvion St Cyr got there
first. After fortifying the city, Cyr's corps of 20,000 men faced
Schwarzenberg's army of 160,000 men. However, the enemy attacks
were weak and the French held them off until Bonaparte arrived with
50,000 men. When Cyr's men finally got exhausted and lost key positions,
the Imperial Guard retook them by the end of the day.
After reinforcements had arrived in the night, Napoleon commanded
an army of 150,000 at dawn. He launched several successful attacks
against the Allies throughout the day. By nightfall, the Allies
retreated. The Allies had 40,000 casualties including General Jean
Moreau, while the French had only 10,000 casualties.
Leipzig (Battle of Nations)
October 16-19, 1813
200,000 French and allied troops faced 400,000 enemy troops at
Leipzig. Napoleon was forced to spread his forces, because the enemy
approached from different directions. Assaults by Austria's General
Schwarzenberg and Prussia's Marshal Blucher on the city were unsuccessful.
After the Swedish and Russian armies arrived, the Allies coordinated
an attack on the 18th. The French managed to hold 350,000 enemy
troops at bay for nine hours. Yet the odds were too great and Napoleon
ordered a withdrawal across a single escape bridge. Premature blowing
of the bridge resulted in 20,000 troops getting trapped and many
death, including French Marshal Poniatowski.
Hanau
October 30, 1813
After three days of fighting, Napoleon won. Elsewhere in Europe,
his troops were losing ground. The ravages of war wore hard on the
Grand Army. Napoleon's army grew weak and France's visions of additional
conquests shriveled. After a typhus epidemic and losses from excessive
battles, only 80,000 men were left. In a little over a year, Napoleon
had lost 400,000 men and all of Europe was now closing in on him.
Brienne, Champaubert, Montereau, Montmirail and Rheims
January 29 - March 31, 1814
After having his policies shot down in the Senate and his report
on governing the people lose overwhelmingly (in a vote of 231 to
31) in Senate, Napoleon began to lose faith in the French politicians
who had once been on his side. France didn't want to fight any more.
Fearing the loss of his power and identity as leader of France,
Napoleon went all out in his last days as emperor. He launched multiple
offensives and defeated the vastly superior (in numbers, soldiers,
and weapons) Allied army hands down at Brienne, Champaubert, Montmirail,
Montereau and Rheims. But his army began to succumb to numbers.
He had only 80,000 men while the Allies had 350,000. He was fighting
like mad, winning victory after victory against superior armies
but the numbers dwindled and his army lost faith in him. Finally
on March 31, 1814, his generals refused to fight anymore and Paris
surrendered.
On April 12, 1814, Napoleon abdicated his throne and got exiled
to Elba until May 1814, when he escaped to start again.
The 100 Days (1815)
Ligny
June 16, 1815
After escaping from Elba, Napoleon was joined by a French army
sent to stop him. His strategy was to keep the Anglo-Dutch and Prussian
armies separate and defeat them one at a time. Deciding to fight
the Prussians first, Napoleon devised a plan to attack on several
sides in order to trap the Prussian army in their fortifications
and then defeat them. This plan worked incredibly well and the French
won. The Prussian losses were 25,000 while the French losses were
only 11,000. However, many of the Prussians were able to escape
in the retreat. This was Napoleon's last great victory.
Waterloo
June 18, 1815
When Duke Wellington (leader of the Allied forces) heard that
Napoleon had defeated the Prussian army at Ligny, he moved quickly
north to meet up with the Anglo-Dutch army at Mount-Saint-Jean (a
town near Waterloo).
Napoleon, upon hearing that Wellington was moving, ordered Marshal
Ney to attack him (Wellington), but Ney, not believing that the
British were moving, decided to ignore Napoleon's orders. Angered
by this, Napoleon took command of Ney's forces and marched them
in pursuit of Wellington.
Napoleon's other general (now south of Mount-Saint-Jean), Marshal
Grouchy, failed to defeat the Prussian army and allowed them to
march North to meet up with the Anglo-Dutch army at Mount-Saint-Jean.
Grouchy was not able to locate the Prussian army after they moved
North, so their journey to Mount-Saint-Jean was unimpeded.
On June 18, 1815, the Allied and French armies faced off at Waterloo
(where they had met up on the way to Mount-Saint-Jean). Beginning
at 11:30 AM, Napoleon's first advances were unsuccessful. At 1:00
PM, the Prussian army (lead by General Blucher), that had evaded
Marshal Grouchy, was seen advancing from the east. At 4:00 PM, the
Prussian army joined the battle. The French launched a counterattack
on the Prussians that gained them some ground and at 6:00 PM, Marshal
Ney was able to briefly break the center of the Anglo-Dutch line
but was quickly pushed back.
With their characteristic square formations, the Anglo-Dutch armies
were able to beat the French attacks time and time again. At 8:00
PM, the Prussians broke through the right side of Napoleon's forces,
which scattered the French around and made it easy for them to be
picked off. Napoleon escaped by the skin of his teeth as the Prussian
and Anglo-Dutch armies decided to continue to push the French back
past the Sambre River, thus ending the Age and Empire of Napoleon.
Napoleon was once again forced to abdicate his throne to Louis XVIII
and was exiled to the island of St. Helena where he stayed until
his death.
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