Battle of Borodino
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{{Infobox Military Conflict |conflict=Battle of Borodino |partof=Napoleon's invasion of Russia |image=Image:Napoleon-borodino.jpg |caption=Napoleon I on the Borodino Heights, by Vasily Vereshchagin (1897) |date=September 7, 1812 |place=Borodino, Russia |result=Nominal French victory |combatant1=First French Empire |combatant2= Russian Empire |commander1=Napoleon Bonaparte |commander2=Mikhail Illarionovich Kutuzov |strength1=125,000 - 130,000 |strength2=154,800 - 157,000 |casualties1=29,000 - 31,000 |casualties2=38,500 - 58,000 }} Template:Campaignbox Napoleon's invasion of Russia
The Battle of Borodino (Russian: Бородино) (September 7, 1812, or August 26 in the Julian calendar then used in Russia), also called the Battle of the Moskva, was the largest and bloodiest single-day battle of the Napoleonic Wars, involving more than a quarter of a million soldiers.
It was fought by the French Grande Armée under Napoleon I of France and the Russian army of Alexander I near the village of Borodino, west from the town of Mozhaysk. The battle ended with inconclusive tactical results for both armies, and only strategic considerations forced the Russians to withdraw. Napoleon's conduct during the battle suggests that his tactical decisions were marred by his efforts to avoid a "Pyrrhic victory". He was also suffering from a fever at the time, which may explain his uncharacteristic detachment from the battle as well as his unusually simplistic battle plan.
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Background
The French Grande Armée had begun the invasion of Russia in June, 1812. Alexander I proclaimed a Patriotic War in defence of the fatherland. The Russian forces — previously massing on the Polish frontier — fell back before the invaders in the face of the speedy French advance (see main article on the invasion). Count Michael Barclay de Tolly was commander-in-chief of the Russian army. His attempts at forming a defensive line were thwarted time and again by the fast moving French line, but Barclay's constant retreat was nevertheless perceived as an unwillingness to fight, and he was removed. The new Russian commander, Prince Mikhail Kutuzov, although much more fierce in his rhetoric, was also unable to establish a defensive position until within 125 kilometers of Moscow. Kutuzov picked an eminently defensible area near the village of Borodino and from September 3 strengthened it with earthworks, notably the Rayevski Redoubt in the center-right of the line and three open arrow-shaped 'Bagration fleches' to the left.
The opposing armies
Earlier estimates placed the size of Kutuzov's army at 112,000, but this figure later grew to 125,000. Most recently, however, historians believe Template:Fact the true figure was much higher — in fact somewhere between 154,800 and 157,000. The reason for the disparity between the original figures and the modern ones is the presence of 30,000 Russian militia or opolcheniye as well as around 10,000 irregular Cossacks. Most of these never took part in the combat operations and so are discounted. However if this is to be done, then all 25,000 men of the French Imperial Guard should also be discounted as they never fired a shot all day. Either way the Russians had a numerical advantage (there were approximately 125,000 - 130,000 French and allied soldiers). Furthermore their fortified position and their artillery superiority — 640 pieces to 584 — further accentuated this advantage. All in all Kutuzov can be praised for setting himself up very effectively prior to the battle.
The Battle
Image:Battle of Borodino.jpg Image:Peter von Hess 002.jpg
When Napoleon was faced with the Russian defences his usual tactical skill appears to have left him, as he ordered a frontal assault straight at the Russians. This is often attributed to his ailment at the time. It is believed he was seeking a decisive encounter that would destroy the Russian army in one day. The initial French attack was successful if costly; the King of Naples, Joachim Murat, directed a joint cavalry and infantry attack that by early afternoon had broken through the Russian line and seized the Rayevski Redoubt, lost it and retaken it. But the Russians committed their reserves and the battle ground down into a bloody attritional mess. A Russian counter-attack was broken by artillery; as night fell, both sides broke away and the Russian forces retreated, at first only a few miles, but later that night they began to withdraw all the way past Moscow.
Statistical discussion
Casualty estimates vary dramatically. The French are said to have suffered 28,000 dead and wounded including 48 generals, according to historian Adam Zamoyski. Others put the figure as high as 50,000 (Stephen Pope). The Russians lost between 38,500 - 58,000 (45,000 is the generally accepted number). Some believe that combined casualties were as high as 125,000, but this is unlikely. Even the lowest casualty estimates (28,000 French and 38,500 Russians) together give a combined total of 66,500.
Around 8,500 casualties were sustained each hour of the conflict— the equivalent of a full-strength company wiped out every minute. In some divisions casualties exceeded 80% of the strength prior to the battle.
If between 1/5 to 1/3 of casualties were killed, it seems likely that between 12,000 and 25,000 soldiers died at Borodino. The battle was likely the bloodiest single day of the Napoleonic Wars and one of the bloodiest in modern times, perhaps not exceeded by the First Day on the Somme in 1916 or any of the three days of the Third Battle of Nanking in 1864.
Adam Zamoyski, in his in depth account of the Russian campaign, estimates that 1,400,000 rounds were discharged by the French infantry and a further 60,000 to 91,000 by the artillery. This averages as 2,300 rounds of musketry per minute from the French.
The cavalry assault on the Russian redoubt was not made by the French army, but led by Major Freidrich Wilhelm Carl Luffleholtz Von Colberg, in command of the Saxonian Heavy Cavalry, and by Oberstleutnant Christian Gnther von Selmitz, leading the Zastrow Cuirassiers.
Aftermath
The Russian retreat opened the way for the French to seize Moscow on September 14 1812, but the capture would do the French very little good.
The battle was famously described by Leo Tolstoy in his novel War and Peace as "a continuous slaughter which could be of no avail either to the French or the Russians". A huge panorama representing the battle was painted by Franz Roubaud for the centenary of Borodino and installed on the Poklonnaya Hill to mark the 150th anniversary of the event.
External links
- A very detailed description of the battle
- BORODINO: Eight Attacks on Bagration Fleches
- The Virtual Battle of Borodinobg:Бородинская битка
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