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IMPORTANT
WARS
Napoleonic Wars,
series of wars fought between France and a number of
European nations from 1799 to 1815. In 1799 France came under the domination of
Napoleon
Bonaparte, who later became Napoleon I, emperor of France,
in 1804. The Napoleonic
Wars were a continuation of the wars of the French Revolution (1789-1799), in
which the Habsburgs and other dynastic rulers of Europe combined in an
effort
to overthrow the revolutionary government of France
and restore the rule of the
French monarchy.
First
Coalition
In the War of the
First Coalition (1793-1797), France
fought against an alliance consisting of Austria, Prussia, Great
Britain, Spain, the Netherlands, and the Kingdom of Sardinia. In 1796 Napoleon
was entrusted by the government
of France, the Directory, with
conducting military operations against Austrian forces in northern Italy. In less than a
year, Napoleon had led his troops
to victory over the larger Austrian army. In 1798, he was made the
leader of an
expedition to conquer Egypt as a base for
future attack against the British possession of India.
The invasion was ultimately
unsuccessful, and Napoleon returned to France. Although the two
campaigns
took place before Napoleon's government, the Consulate, was established,
they are
generally regarded as the opening phases of the Napoleonic Wars. The
campaigns
were the first in which Napoleon displayed on a large scale his genius
as a
commander; early battles of the War of the Second Coalition are also
included
in this category.
Second
Coalition
Napoleon's success
against Austria
in his northern Italian campaign had put an end to the First Coalition.
During
his absence in Egypt,
however, a new alliance known as the Second Coalition was formed on
December
24, 1798. The alliance was composed of Russia, Great Britain, Austria, the kingdom
of Naples (see
Sicily: History), Portugal, and the Ottoman
Empire. The principal fighting of the War of the Second
Coalition, which broke
out at the end of 1798, took place during the following year in
northern Italy and
in Switzerland.
The Austrians and
Russians, under the leadership chiefly of the noted Russian general
Count Aleksandr
Suvorov,
were uniformly successful against the French in northern Italy.
They
defeated the French in the battles of Magnano (April 5, 1799), Cassano
(April
27), the Trebbia (June 17-19), and Novi
(August 15). The coalition also captured Milan;
put an end to the Cisalpine Republic, which had
been formed under French auspices in 1797; occupied Turin;
and in general deprived the French of their previous victories in Italy.
In Switzerland,
matters went better for the French. After a defeat at Zьrich (June 4-7)
by Charles
Louis John, archduke of Austria, French forces under General Andrй
Massйna defeated
a Russian army under General Alexander Korsakov on September 26. The
victorious
Suvorov led his forces from northern Italy
across the Alps to join those of Korsakov in Switzerland.
He found Korsakov's
forces already defeated and scattered; Suvorov was forced by the French
to take
refuge in the mountains of the canton of Grisons, where, during the
early fall,
his army was practically destroyed by cold and starvation. On October
22,
alleging lack of cooperation by the Austrians, the Russians withdrew
from the
Second Coalition.
After Napoleon
returned to France
from Egypt
in
October 1799, he became leader of the Consulate and offered to make
peace with
the allies. The Coalition refused, and Napoleon planned a series of
moves
against Austria,
and various
German states in alliance with Austria,
for the spring of 1800. Napoleon crossed the Alps into northern Italy
with a
newly raised army of 40,000 men and on June 14 defeated the Austrians
in the Battle of Marengo. In the meantime
French forces under General Jean Victor Moreau had
crossed the Rhine into southern Germany
and taken Munich.
Moreau had also defeated the Austrians under Archduke John of Austria in the Battle of Hohenlinden in
Bavaria on December 3, and had
advanced to the city of Linz, Austria.
These and other French successes caused Austria to capitulate. On
February
9, 1801, by the Treaty of Lunйville, Austria and its German allies
ceded the
left bank of the Rhine River to France, recognized the Batavian,
Helvetian,
Cisalpine, and Ligurian republics, and made other concessions. The
Treaty of
Lunйville also marked the breakup of the Second Coalition. The only
allied
nation that continued fighting was Great Britain. British
troops had
unsuccessfully engaged the French on Dutch soil in 1799, but had made
some
territorial gains at the expense of France
in Asia and elsewhere. On March 27,
1802, Great Britain
made peace with France
through
the Treaty
of Amiens.
This peace,
however, turned out to be a mere truce. In 1803 a dispute
arose between
the two nations because of the treaty provision that Great Britain return the island of Malta
to its original possessors, the Knights of Saint
John of Jerusalem. The people of Malta
preferred the British crown, and the
British did not surrender the island, so war again broke out between Great Britain and France.
An important consequence of
this war was Napoleon's abandonment, because of the need to concentrate
his
resources in Europe, of his plan to establish a great French colonial
empire in
the region known as Louisiana in North America. Instead, he sold Louisiana
to the United States.
In 1805 Great Britain
was
joined in its new war by Austria,
Russia, and Sweden, and Spain
allied itself to France.
The ensuing war is known as the War of the Third Coalition.
Third
Coalition
Napoleon quickly moved against the new alliance.
Since 1798 he had exerted pressure on Great
Britain by keeping an army concentrated at Boulogne on the English Channel, ostensibly
preparing to
invade England.
During the dissensions leading to the outbreak of war in 1803, Napoleon
had greatly
increased the French forces at Boulogne.
After the formation of the Third Coalition against France,
he moved his troops from Boulogne to
meet the
Austrians, who, under Ferdinand III, grand duke of Tuscany,
and General Karl Mack von Leiberich, had invaded Bavaria. A number of German states,
including Bavaria, Wьrttemberg, and
Baden,
allied themselves with France.
Napoleon defeated the Austrians at Ulm, taking 23,000 prisoners, and then marched his
troops along the Danube River and captured Vienna. Russian armies under General Mikhail Illarionovich
Kutuzov and Alexander I, emperor of Russia,
reinforced the Austrians, but Napoleon
crushed the combined Austro-Russian forces in the Battle
of Austerlitz, sometimes known as the Battle of the Three Emperors. Austria
again
capitulated, signing the Treaty of Pressburg on December 26, 1805.
Among the
terms of this treaty
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was the concession
by Austria to France of territory in northern Italy and to Bavaria
of territory in Austria
itself; in addition, Austria
recognized the duchies of Wьrttemberg and Baden
as kingdoms.
Confederation
of the Rhine
In Italy, where French forces under
Massйna had
defeated the Austrians under Charles Louis John, Napoleon made his
elder
brother, Joseph Bonaparte, king of Naples
in 1806. Elsewhere in Europe, he made his third brother, Louis Bonaparte, king of Holland
(the former Batavian Republic); and on July 12 he
established the Confederation of the Rhine, which eventually
consisted of all the states of
Germany except Austria, Prussia, Brunswick, and Hessen. The formation
of the
Confederation put an end to the Holy Roman Empire and brought most
of Germany
under Napoleon's control.
His continental successes, however, were largely offset by the victory
on
October 21, 1805, off Cape Trafalgar, of the British under Admiral Horatio Nelson over the combined
fleets of France
and Spain.
This victory gave Great
Britain mastery of the sea throughout
the
remainder of the Napoleonic era. In 1806 economic warfare between Great Britain and France
was initiated. Napoleon
formulated his so-called Continental
System,
issuing decrees, in 1806 and later,
forbidding British trade with all European nations. Great Britain
retaliated with the
Orders of Council, which in effect prohibited neutrals from trading
between the
ports of any nations obeying Napoleon's decrees. British mastery of the
sea
made it difficult for Napoleon to enforce the Continental System and
resulted
eventually in the failure of his economic policy for Europe.
Fourth
Coalition
Before the effect
of British sea power could be manifest, however, Napoleon increased his
power
over the Continent. In 1806 Prussia,
aroused by Napoleon's growing strength in Germany,
joined in a Fourth Coalition with Great
Britain,
Russia, and Sweden.
Napoleon badly defeated the Prussians in the Battle of Jena on October 14,
1806, and
captured Berlin. He then
defeated the Russians in the Battle of
Friedland and forced Alexander I to
make peace. By the principal terms of the Treaty of Tilsit, Russia gave up its Polish possessions
and became
an ally of France,
and Prussia
was
reduced to the status of a third-rate power, deprived of almost half
its
territory and crippled by heavy indemnity payments and severe
restrictions on
the size of its standing army. Through military action against Sweden on the part of Russia
and Denmark, Gustav IV Adolph of Sweden
was forced to abdicate in favor of his uncle, Charles XIII, on the condition
that the
latter name as his heir General Jean Baptiste Jules Bernadotte, one of
Napoleon's marshals. Bernadotte became king in 1818, as Charles XIV John, founding the
present royal line.
Anti-Napoleonic
Nationalism
In 1808 Napoleon
was master of all Europe except Russia
and Great Britain,
but from this time on his power began to decline. The chief reasons for
this
decline were the rise of a nationalistic spirit in the various defeated
nations
of Europe and the persistent opposition of Great Britain,
which, safe from
invasion because of its superior navy, never ceased to organize and
subsidize
new coalitions against Napoleon.
In Spain,
Napoleon
first encountered the nationalistic spirit that led to his downfall. In
1808,
after dethroning King Charles IV of Spain,
Napoleon made his brother Joseph Bonaparte king of the country. The
Spanish
revolted and drove Joseph out of Madrid.
A violent struggle known as the Peninsular War (1808-1814) then
took place between the French,
intent on restoring Joseph as king, and the Spaniards, aided by British
forces
under Arthur
Wellesley, 1st duke of Wellington. The French were
eventually defeated, suffering
losses in manpower that severely handicapped Napoleon when he was later
forced
to meet new enemies in the east and north of Europe.
The first of these new enemies was Austria,
which, inflamed by patriotic feeling, entered the Fifth Coalition, with
Great Britain,
in 1809. Napoleon defeated the Austrians at Wagram (July 1809), and
inflicted
on them the Treaty of Vienna, by which Austria lost Salzburg, part of Galicia, and a
large part of its southern European territory. He also divorced his
first wife
and married the daughter of Francis II of Austria
in the vain hope of keeping Austria
out of further coalitions against him.
Defeat
of Napoleon
The turning point
of Napoleon's career came in 1812, when war again broke out between France and Russia
because of Alexander's
refusal to enforce the Continental System. With one large army already
tied
down by the “Spanish ulcer,” Napoleon invaded Russia
with an army of 500,000. He
defeated the Russians at Borodino and took Moscow on September 14, 1812. The
Russians
burned the city, making it impossible for Napoleon's troops to
establish winter
quarters there. The French retreated across Russia
into Germany,
suffering the loss of most of their men through cold, starvation, and
Russian
guerrilla attacks. Russia
then joined the Fifth Coalition, which also included Prussia,
Great Britain, and Sweden.
In 1813, in
a burst of
patriotic fervor caused by the political and economic reforms that had
taken
place since its defeat at Jena,
Prussia
opened
the War of Liberation against Napoleon. He defeated the Prussians at
Lьtzen and
Bautzen
and
achieved his last important victory at the Battle of Dresden, where on August
27, 1813, a
French force of about 100,000 defeated a combined Austrian, Prussian,
and Russian
force of about 150,000. The following October, however, Napoleon was
forced by
the Battle
of Leipzig to retreat across the Rhine, thus freeing Germany.
The following year the
Russians, Austrians, and Prussians invaded France
from the north. In March 1814
they took Paris, whereupon Napoleon
abdicated
and was sent into exile on the island
of Elba in the Mediterranean Sea.
The members of the
Fifth Coalition assembled at the Congress of
Vienna
to restore in Europe
the monarchies Napoleon had overthrown. During their deliberations
Napoleon
escaped from Elba to France,
quickly raised an army, and marched into Belgium
to meet the forces of Great Britain,
Prussia, Russia, and Austria.
He defeated his enemies at
Ligny, but was defeated by them at Quatre-Bras. Napoleon met final
defeat on
June 18, 1815, at the Battle of
Waterloo,
which marked the end of the Napoleonic Wars.
Conclusion
Initially the Napoleonic Wars perpetuated the
ideological conflict between revolutionary France
and monarchical Europe. At some
point,
however, the elusive
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