Napoleon's long and costly invasion of Russia was one of the deadliest military operations in history
When Russia resumed trading with England, Napoleon prepared to invade Russia.
Napoleon amassed an army of 600,000, the largest army Europe had ever seen.
After a failed invasion of Moscow, the French army retreated for 200 miles.
After a coup d'etat of the French government in 1799, Napoleon Bonaparte began his conquest of Europe. By 1804, Bonaparte had made himself the emperor of France and was quickly amassing power.
By 1812, Bonaparte controlled territory from Iberia to the banks of the Nemen River in Russia. Because he could not take control of Great Britain, he initiated the continental system, a blockade that prevented the British from trading with the rest of Europe.
The blockade negatively impacted Russia, which then resumed trading with Britain, leading Bonaparte to worry about possible allyship between the two countries.
In June 1812, Bonaparte invaded Russia, aiming to deal a decisive blow and force Alexander I into peace talks.
Through a series of strategic retreats and slash-and-burn techniques by the Russian army, in addition to the harsh Russian winter, the largest army Europe had ever seen found themselves retreating from Moscow.
The French Grand Army faced severe losses, and the campaign into Moscow severely weakened Bonaparte's grasp on power and is widely attributed as the beginning of the end of his rule.
Napoleon Bonaparte was a French military leader who rose through the ranks during the French Revolution.
He graduated from a French military academy in 1785 and became a second lieutenant in an artillery regiment of the French army.
In 1795, Bonaparte helped suppress a royalist insurrection and was promoted to Major General.
In 1799, Bonaparte led a coup and successfully overthrew the French Directory.
In 1802, Bonaparte made an amendment to the constitution, making him the first Consul for Life and granting him dictatorial powers over France.
In 1804, Bonaparte crowned himself the Emperor of France, a little under 10 years after the French had beheaded their last king.
After he was crowned Emperor, Bonaparte began his conquest of Europe.
Bonaparte took control of Belgium, Holland, and large swaths of present-day Italy, Croatia, and Germany. Spain was mostly under his control, while Russia, Austria, and Prussia were begrudging allies.
In 1812, the French empire had reached its maximum size, stretching from Iberia to the banks of the Nemen River in Russia.
The only place that resisted Bonaparte's advances was Great Britain.
The invasion of Russia began with Bonaparte's Continental System.
During his reign of most of Europe in the early 1800s, Napoleon enacted the Continental System designed to punish his British enemies, a large-scale embargo against the British Empire.
Because he was unable to invade and control Britain, the next best thing would be to prevent them from doing trade with the rest of Europe.
The system successfully prevented the British from trade, but also proved to be economically harmful for the Russians.
To help out their economy, Russia defied the Continental System and resumed trading with Britain.
Upon learning of Russia's trading, Bonaparte began preparing for invasion.
Napoleon gathered an army of 600,000 men to invade Russia and work their way toward Moscow.
Napoleon's army was the largest that Europe had ever seen. Of the 600,000 men, only half of them were French.
The other half was made up of men from Germany and Poland, countries under French control in 1812.
The invasion of Russia began in June 1812 and lasted six months.
The French army started to invade Russia at several different points. The army that gathered with Napoleon was a force of roughly 227,000 soldiers.
The rest of the army was split across the Russian border, with a French reserve of 225,000 waiting behind the lines.
The Russians proved to be elusive and incrementally led the French further into Russian territory.
Napoleon was after a quick victory that would bring Alexander I, the ruler of Russia, to the negotiation table.
But the constant retreats by the Russian army prevented a decisive victory for the French.
Instead of fighting the French head-on, the Russians employed a strategic retreat.
The Russians were outmatched by 200,000 to 600,000 and knew a head-on fight wouldn't be productive.
During each encounter with the French army, the Russians would retreat. On their way out, they would burn bridges, food supplies, and shelter, leaving behind nothing but ashes.
The French were allowed small victories and gains of territory, but each advance came with a steep cost.
As the French continued their advance, food for horses and humans began to run low.
The first major battle of the invasion of Russia wouldn't take place until a month into the operation.
The Battle of Smolensk, a town 230 miles west of Moscow, was the first major battle between the Russians and the French. Smolensk was a city of major significance to the Russians, and they wouldn't let it go as easily as the other territories.
Nevertheless, the Russians retreated further into Russia to avoid major losses to their army, burning bridges and ammunition stores on their way out of the city.
By the end of the battle, all that was left for Napoleon were the ashes of a city and thousands of dead soldiers.
Napoleon and his army finally arrived in Moscow on September 14, 1812.
By the time they arrived, Moscow was a ghost town. Most of the city had evacuated, and the Russian army had burned most of it down.
Napoleon sent a letter from Moscow to Alexander I inviting him to make peace, but no response was ever received.
After five weeks in Moscow, Napoleon's army began their withdrawal, fearing a cold winter.
On their way out, the army comprising an estimated 100,000 survivors was attacked by the Russians.
The Battle at Maloyaroslavets resulted in a short-term victory for the French, with the Russians ultimately retreating.
The long-term victory, however, went to the Russians. After the battle of Maloyaroslavets, Napoleon decided to change routes.
Instead of continuing south on a path with warmer weather and more supplies, he took his army back the way they came. The path was 260 miles through ransacked and scorched villages, which offered no food or shelter during the cold winter.
The weather, lack of food, and repeated attacks by the Russian army further weakened Napoleon's army.
The retreat was punctuated by an early winter with high winds, below-zero temperatures, and a lot of snow. With little to no shelter, there were nights when thousands of soldiers and horses died from exposure to cold.
What was left of the Grand Army eventually made it out of Russia and returned back to France.
By December 1812, Napoleon left his dwindling army and retreated to Paris.
After the invasion, Napoleon's power was significantly weakened.
In the six months it took to invade and retreat from Russia, it's estimated that of the 600,000 soldiers that entered Russia, only 112,000 returned.
Among the casualties, 100,000 are believed to have died in action, 200,000 died from other causes, 50,000 were left sick in hospitals, 50,000 deserted, and an estimated 100,000 are believed to have been taken as prisoners of war.
By comparison, Russia's casualties numbered 200,000 killed, 50,000 dispersed or deserted, and 150,000 wounded.
Identifying the weakness in France's military, Russia, Austria, Prussia, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Portugal, Spain, and several German states formed the Sixth Coalition and defeated the First French Empire.
After these significant losses, Napoleon was exiled to the island of Elba.
In 1815, Napoleon escaped exile and tried to regain control during the Battle of Waterloo.
But despite his best efforts, Napoleon never rose to power again.
After his loss at Waterloo, Napoleon was again exiled to the Island of St. Helena, where he lived out his life and died at the age of 52.
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