Battle nations new units
With this string of defeats, the French armies were in retreat on all fronts across Europe. To make matters even worse for Napoleon, in June 1813, the combined armies of Portugal, Spain, and the United Kingdom, under the command of the Duke of Wellington, had decisively routed the French at the Battle of Vitoria in the Peninsular War, and were now advancing towards the Pyrenees and into France itself. The campaign ended in complete disaster as Napoleon and his remaining forces retreated during the bitter Russian winter, with sickness, starvation, and the constant harrying of Russian Cossacks and partisans leaving the Grande Armée virtually destroyed by the time it returned from Russia. However, Alexander refused to surrender even as the French occupied the city, which was set on fire by the time of its occupation. The French Emperor Napoleon I attempted to force Emperor Alexander I of Russia into rejoining his unpopular Continental System by invading Russia on 24 June 1812 with around 685,000 troops, and eventually entered Moscow in late 1812, following the bloody, yet indecisive Battle of Borodino. 5.3.9 The Grande Armée begins to retreat.5.3.8 Pro-Napoleonic Germans defect to the Coalition.5.3.5 Actions at Paunsdorf and Schönefeld.
5.3.3 Actions at Wachau, Lössnig (Lößnig), and Dölitz.5.3.2 Coalition armies encircle Napoleon.5.3.1 Napoleon's attempt to sue for an armistice.Napoleon was forced to abdicate and was exiled to Elba in May 1814. The battle was the culmination of the German Campaign of 1813 and involved 560,000 soldiers, 2,200 artillery pieces, the expenditure of 400,000 rounds of artillery ammunition, and 133,000 casualties, making it the largest battle in Europe prior to World War I.ĭecisively defeated again, Napoleon was compelled to return to France while the Sixth Coalition kept up its momentum, dissolving the Confederation of the Rhine and invading France early the next year. Napoleon's army also contained Polish and Italian troops, as well as Germans from the Confederation of the Rhine (mainly Saxony and Württemberg). The Coalition armies of Austria, Prussia, Sweden, and Russia, led by Tsar Alexander I and Karl von Schwarzenberg, decisively defeated the Grande Armée of French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. The Battle of Leipzig ( French: Bataille de Leipsick German: Völkerschlacht bei Leipzig ( German: ( listen)) Swedish: Slaget vid Leipzig), also known as the Battle of the Nations ( French: Bataille des Nations Russian: Битва народов, romanized: Bitva narodov), was fought from 16 to 19 October 1813 at Leipzig, Saxony.