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David G. Chandler - The Campaigns of Napoleon

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David G. Chandler The Campaigns of Napoleon
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Napoleonic war was nothing if not complex -- an ever-shifting kaleidoscope of moves and intentions, which by themselves went a long way towards baffling and dazing his conventionally-minded opponents into that state of disconcerting moral disequilibrium which so often resulted in their catastrophic defeat. The Campaigns of Napoleon is an exhaustive analysis and critique of Napoleons art of war as he himself developed and perfected it in the major military campaigns of his career. Napoleon disavowed any suggestion that he worked from formula (Je nai jamais eu un plan dop?rations), but military historian David Chandler demonstrates this was at best only a half-truth. To be sure, every operation Napoleon conducted contained unique improvisatory features. But there were from the first to the last certain basic principles of strategic maneuver and battlefield planning that he almost invariably put into practice. To clarify these underlying methods, as well as the style of Napoleons fabulous intellect, Mr. Chandler examines in detail each campaign mounted and personally conducted by Napoleon, analyzing the strategies employed, revealing wherever possible the probable sources of his subjects military ideas. The book opens with a brief account of Bonapartes early years, his military education and formative experiences, and his meteoric rise to the rank of general in the army of the Directory. Introducing the elements of Napoleonic grand tactics as they developed in his Italian, Egyptian, and Syrian campaigns, Mr. Chandler shows how these principles were clearly conceived as early as the Battle of Castiglione, when Napoleon was only twenty -six. Several campaigns later, he was Emperor of France, busily constructing the Grande Arm?e. This great war machine is described in considerable detail: the composition of the armies and the ?lite Guard; the staff system and the methods of command; the kind of artillery and firearms used; and the daily life of the Grande Arm?e and the all-seeing and all-commanding virtuoso who presided over every aspect of its operation in the field. As the great machine sweeps into action in the campaigns along the Rhine and the Danube, in East Prussia and Poland, and in Portugal and Spain, David Chandler follows closely every move that vindicates -- or challenges -- the legend of Napoleons military genius. As the major battles take their gory courses -- Austerlitz, Jena, Fried-land -- we see Napoleons star reaching its zenith. Then, in the Wagram Campaign of 1809 against the Austrians -- his last real success -- the great man commits more errors of judgment than in all his previous wars and battles put together. As the campaigns rage on, his declining powers seem to justify his own statement: One has but a short time for war. Then the horrors of the Russian campaign forever shatter the image of Napoleonic invincibility. It is thereafter a short, though heroic and sanguinary, road to Waterloo and St. Helena. Napoleon appears most strikingly in these pages as the brilliant applier of the ideas of others rather than as an original military thinker, his genius proving itself more practical than theoretical. Paradoxically, this was both his chief strength and his main weakness as a general. After bringing the French army a decade of victory, his methods became increasingly stereotyped and, even worse, were widely copied by his foes, who operated against him with increasing effectiveness toward the end of his career. Yet even though his enemies attempted to imitate his techniques, as have others in the last century and a half, no one ever equaled his success. As these meticulous campaign analyses testify, his multifaceted genius was unique. Even as the end approached, as David Chandler points out, his eclipse was the failure of a giant surrounded by pygmies. The flight of the eagle was over; the ogre was safely caged at last, and an exhausted Europe settled down once more to attempt a return to former ways of life and government. But the shade of Napoleon lingered on irresistibly for many years after his death in 1821. It lingers yet.

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THE CAMPAIGNS OF NAPOLEON DAVID G CHANDLER VOLUME I SCRIBNER S - photo 1

THE
CAMPAIGNS
OF
NAPOLEON

DAVID G. CHANDLER

VOLUME I

SCRIBNER

SCRIBNER 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York NY 10020 - photo 2

Picture 3

SCRIBNER
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com

Copyright 1966 by David G. Chandler

Copyright 1966 by Simon & Schuster

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

Maps and diagrams drawn by Shelia Waters from sketches prepared by the author.

Designed by Abe Lerner.

SCRIBNER and design are trademarks of Macmillan Library Reference USA, Inc. under license by Simon & Schuster, the publisher of this work.

Manufactured in the United States of America

30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication-Data

Chandler, David G

The campaigns of Napolean by David G. Chandler. xliii, 1172 p. illus., facsims., maps, (part col.), ports. 24 cm. Bibliography: p. 1143-1147

1. Napolon I, Emperor of the French, 1769-1821. 2. EuropeHistory1789-1815. 3. FranceHistory, Military1789-1815. I. Title.

DC151.C48 940.270924 66-12970

ISBN: 0-02-523660-1 MARC

ISBN: 978-0-0252-3660-8

eISBN: 978-1-4391-3103-9

This book is respectfully dedicated to the memory ofHUBERT WYLIE(1894-1965)

Assistant Master, Marl borough College, 1927-1959

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

T

HE AUTHOR wishes to thank the following publishing houses for permission to quote passages from their books:

Cassell and Co., Ltd., London, for extracts from the Memoirs of Caulaincourt; The Clarendon Press, Oxford, for extracts from The French Army before Napoleon and The Rise of General Bonaparte, both by Spencer Wilkinson, and from The Armies of the First French Republic (5 vols.) by Colonel R. W. Phipps;

William Morrow and Co., Inc., New York, for extracts from With Napoleon in Russia, the American edition of Caulaincourts memoirs; Routledge and Kegan Paul, Ltd., London, for extracts from the works of A. Becke, An Introduction to the History of Tactics and Napoleon and Waterloo.

Acknowledgment is also due to the following museums and libraries for permission to reproduce illustrations and maps:

La Bibliothque Nationale, Paris; the Trustees, the British Museum, London; Muse de lArme, Paris; the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich; Museu Militar, Lisbon; Museo del Prado, Madrid; the National Portrait Gallery, London; the Library, the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst; Les Muses de la Ville de Strasbourg; Muse de Versailles; the Victoria and Albert Museum, London;

and the following companies for photographic and other assistance:

J. R. Freeman and Co., London; Marshalls, Ltd., Camberley; R. Viollet, Documentation Gnrale Photographique, Paris.

Contents
Picture 4
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS EXPLANATORY KEY TO MAPS LIST OF MAPS PREFACE AUTHORS NOTE GENERAL INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION: FIRST EMERGENCE 1. PREPARATION 2. TOULON 3. BRIGADIER GENERAL OF ARTILLERY 4. THE SWORD OF PAUL BARRAS 5. COMMANDER IN CHIEF 6. THE DEFEAT OF PIEDMONT 7. THE BRIDGE OF LODI 8. THE ACHIEVEMENT IN PERILMANTUA 9. CALDIERO AND ARCOLA 10. RIVOLI 11. ADVANCE TO LEOBEN 12. THE MEASURE OF SUCCESS INTRODUCTION: THE MASTERS WORDS 13. DOCTRINAL INHERITANCE 14. THE INGREDIENTS OF NAPOLEONIC WAR 15. STRATEGIC CONCEPTS 16. GRAND TACTICS ON THE BATTLEFIELD 17. THE EMBRYONIC SYSTEM: CASTIGLIONE INTRODUCTION: THE SANDS OF MARABOUT 18. ORIENTAL OPPORTUNITIES 19. MEDITERRANEAN CHASE 20. THE PYRAMIDS LOOK DOWN 21. EXPEDITION TO SYRIA 22. THE BALANCE SHEET OF FAILURE 23. THE RIPENED FRUIT 24. FIRST CONSUL 25. PLANS OF CAMPAIGN 26. THE PASSAGE OF THE ALPS 27. MARENGO 28. PEACE RESTORED 29. RULER AND LAWGIVER 30. THE CAMP OF BOULOGNE 31. PROSPECTS OF WIDER WAR 32. LA GRANDE ARME 33. IMPERIAL HEADQUARTERS INTRODUCTION: THE EVE OF AUSTERLITZ 34. PLANS AND PREPARATIONS 35. STRATEGIC TRIUMPHULM 36. THE WARRIORS OF HOLY RUSSIA 37. THE BATTLE OF THE THREE EMPERORSAUSTERLITZ 38. THE INGREDIENTS OF SUCCESS 39. HOHENZOLLERN HYPOCRITE 40. PLANS FOR WAR 41. LE BATAILLON CARR 42. JENAAUERSTADT 43. THE TRIUMPH ANALYZED 44. THE ADVANCE TO WARSAW 45. MEN AND MATERIEL 46. THE MANEUVER ON THE NAREW 47. INTERLUDE IN WARSAW 48. THE TRAP THAT FAILEDIONKOVO 49. THE BATTLE OF EYLAU 50. CONCLUSIONS: THE FIRST CHECK

VOLUME II

51. RECONSTRUCTION 52. THE BATTLE OF HEILSBERG 53. THE BATTLE OF FRIEDLAND 54. THE MEETING OF THE EMPERORS 55. THE ROAD TO LISBON 56. AN ENGINEERED CRISIS 57. BAILEN AND VIMIERO 58. HARD BARGAINING AT ERFURT 59. IMPERIAL INTERVENTION 60. THE PURSUIT OF MOORE 61. INCOMPLETE ACHIEVEMENT 62. THE NEW CHALLENGE 63. CRISIS ON THE DANUBE 64. ASPERN-ESSLING 65. THE SECOND ATTEMPT: WAGRAM 66. THE ILLUSION OF SUCCESS 67. THE BREAKDOWN OF THE FRANCO-RUSSIAN ENTENTE 68. WAR PLANS AND PREPARATIONS 69. THE INVASION OF RUSSIA 70. BORODINO 71. PRECARIOUS POSITION 72. COLLAPSE OF AN ARMY 73. THE BEREZINA 74. BACK TO THE ELBE 75. FAILURE OF A GIANT 76. NEW ARMIES 77. LTZEN AND BAUTZEN 78. THE ARMISTICE 79. DRESDEN 80. THE BATTLE OF THE NATIONS 81. BACK TO THE NATURAL FRONTIERS 82. PLAYING FOR TIME 83. A PARLOUS OPENING 84. RAPID RECOVERY 85. THE ECLIPSE OF SCHWARZENBERG 86. CHECK IN THE NORTHLAON 87. THE LAST GAMBLE: ARCIS AND ABDICATION INTRODUCTION: MEETING AT LE CAILLOU 88. RETURN OF THE EMPEROR 89. A POUNDING FOR BLCHER 90. THE ERRORS OF MARSHAL NEY 91. THE FINAL MOVES 92. WATERLOO 93. POSTSCRIPT A. ORDER OF BATTLE OF THE ARMY OF ITALY, APRIL 12, 1796 B. EXAMPLES OF NAPOLEONS CHIEF Manoeuvres sur les Derrires C. THE STRENGTH AND POSITIONS OF LArmle de Rserve, JUNE 14, 1800 D. THE FORMATIONS OF La Grande Arme, AUGUST 29, 1805 E. THE ORGANIZATION OF LArme dEspagne IN NOVEMBER 1808 F. THE FORMATIONS OF THE RE-FORMED Grande Arme ON MARCH 30, 1809 G. ORGANIZATION OF La Grande Arme FOR THE CAMPAIGN OF 1812 H. ORGANIZATION OF LArme du Nord FOR THE CAMPAIGN OF 1815 I. SUMMARY OF SELECTED BATTLES J. THE IMPERIAL NOBILITY REFERENCES BIBLIOGRAPHY GLOSSARY OF MILITARY TERMS INDEXES
Illustrations
Picture 5

General Bonaparte (c. 1797). Jacques Louis David
By courtesy of the Muse du Louvre, Paris

Napoleon in Prison as a Young Man (Fort dAntibes, 1794). E. M. Ward
By courtesy of the Victoria & Albert Museum, London

The Empress Josephine in 1806. R. Lefvre
By courtesy of the Victoria & Albert Museum and Apsley House, London

Austrian Generals Wrmser and Alvintzi. E. Pape
Photograph by J. R. Freeman & Co., by courtesy of the Trustees, The British Museum, London

The Battle of the Bridge of Lodi. After C. Vernet
Photograph by R. Viollet, Paris

The Battle of Arcola. C. Vernet
Photograph by R. Viollet, Paris

The Battle of Rivoli. Philipotteaux
Photograph by R. Viollet, Paris

The Battle of the Pyramids. General Lejeune
By courtesy of Clich des Muses Nationaux, Versailles

The Battle of Castiglione. After C. Vernet
Photograph by R. Viollet, Paris

Rear Admiral Sir Horatio Nelson and Commodore Sir William Sidney Smith. L. Guzzardi and J. Eckstein

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