NAPOLEON'S MILITARY POLICY UNTIL 1807 Flashcards
briefly describe the battle at Marengo
- napoleon decides to launch a surprise attack against the austrians in north italy due to the weakness of the second coalition after russia withdraws from the coalition in sept 1799
- he leads 50,000 troops through the alps and meet the austrians at marengo
- the austrians are defeated at marengo, despite thinking they are winning, which boosts morale among the army and nap’s confidence
date of the battle of Marengo
14th June 1800
- french defeat austrians
bullet point / list the factors that made napoleon’s military conquests successful (4)
(this can also be an essay plan)
- the role of napoleon himself
- the level of expertise and skill of his generals
- the weakness of french enemies
- the strength of napoleon’s inherited military
list examples of napoleon’s key generals who were influential in battles (7)
- lannes - legion of honour
- desaix (dies at marengo**)
- davout
- massena - legion of honour
- soult
- rapp
- bernadotte
describe how the following factors led to a french success at marengo in june 1800:
1. enemy weaknesses (2)
2. napoleon himself (5)
3. his generals (2)
- enemy weaknesses
- the austrian general (melas) left to announce victory early
- lack of intelligence - napoleon himself
- napoleon had to spontaneously reorganise his troops (military expertise) and launches a controlled retreat and almost double their cavalry
- only when napoleon arrived did french victories start occuring (he symbolised military success and had an image of invincibility)
- napoleon managed to defend Tortona road and had access to only 6 guns
- napoleon managed to increase the number of infantry from 6000 to 11000
- even when desaix is killed, napoleon focuses on the wider good of forwarding french success (displays his focus and dedication to the nation) - his generals
- desaix would ride ahead of his men in Villa Gholina to create a level of inspiration and loyalty
- the level of expertise of his army allowed him to challenge the integrity of the army in Rivoli and Boudet
- lannes and desaix reorganise the army when under pressure
give the key economic stat of the battle at marengo
the government bond increased from 11 francs in jan 1800 to 35 francs after marengo
what political event was marengo crucial in influencing / why was marengo so important
1800 - directly after the coup of brumaire (needs to consolidate his support base)
- military victories would legitimise brumaire and display a capability to lead france
- displayed himself as being one of the people and not complex
- invincibility - immediately bring prosperity to france
outcome / impact of the battle at marengo
- economic boost (look at flashcard)
- territorial gains inc Piedmont, Genoa, Lombardy
- artillery gains of 1500 guns and increase infantry from 6000 to 11,000
- french advances into northern italy
- other military advances - recover his image after egypt
- develop napoleon’s image to be that of invincibility, skill and heroism
- increase political legitimacy
briefly describe the austrian defeat at hohenlinden and the outcomes of this battle
- napoleon sends a second army to go against the austrians in vienna, meeting them at hohenlinden
outcome: austria is forced to sign the treaty of Luneville
when is the battle at hohenlinden
december 1800
describe the treaty of luneville and its terms
- consolidated french military gains from marengo and hohenlinden and strengthen napoleon’s political position
- also displays quick successes and a shift in french success and path
terms:
- austria is forced to recognise french control in belgium, left bank of the rhine and northern italy
- austria would therefore lose control in northern italy aside from Venetia
- austrian influence in germany is challenged
- french gain tuscany
date of the treaty of luneville
9th feb 1801
when was the peace of amiens and what did it declare
25th march 1802
declaration:
- napoleon must withdraw from naples, United provinces and other papal states
- these end the french revolutionary wars from 1792 (war of the second coalition)
- napoleon would ensure the independence of portugal and ionian islands
- overseas territories taken by the british in the last 9 years was to be returned to the french, aside from sri-lanka and trinidad
- egypt returned to turkey
- the british monarchy drop the ‘king of france title’
why was the peace of amiens necessary for napoleon
- because it would halt all foreign explorations and actions, giving him the opportunity to focus on france and its domestic problems
- justification that he was making foreign progress and advancing the french cause
when do britain declare war on france again and explain the motives behind doing this
16th may 1803
- neither side stuck to the terms of the peace of amiens (ie the British stayed in Malta and the French stayed in the United Provinces)
- napoleon had just entered germany - distort peace agreements and dynamic in europe
- worried that france was rivaling the power of Britain
- napoleon was recently in 1803 declared president of the italian republic, which britain disliked
- idea that they both have foreign conquests which they would rather prioritise over peace
what was napoleon’s reaction to britain declaring war on france
- napoleon assembles troops at Boulogne to invade Britain in 1803 (193,000 men and 2000 boats)
(note: napoleon holds off on invading Britain on the basis that Austria was threatening his territory in 1805)
describe the battle at trafalgar, the date and its importance
date: 21st October 1805
- french generals had lured Nelson away from the channel (for Britain to invade)
- Admiral Nelson trapped British troops off the coast of Trafalgar and on the 21st of October, 27 British ships defeated 33 french and spanish ships
(humilating for the french bc they were numerically strong)
- french and spanish troops lost 20 ships, and the british lose none
importance:
- napoleon abandons his plans to invade Britain – cannot achieve a KEY longterm goal
- displays that the french would never be able to defeat the British
- french reputation was compromised and displays a lack of organisation and effective skill
when was the third coalition formed and how was it formed?
1805 (at this point consists of britain, austria and russia)
- russia refuses to co-operate with austria - blame each other for defeat at zurich in sept 1799 and the breakdown of the second coalition
- russia refuses to co-operate with britain (because they re-entered malta)
- britain is willing to pay to provide troops to defeat napoleon
when did austria declare war on france in the Danube and join the third coalition
- august 1805
(this is also when britain join the 3rd coalition)
when does prussia join the 3rd coalition against france
sept 1806
- after confederation of rhine
*forms the 4th coalition from this
key words in terms of the importance of marengo
- gives napoleon legitimacy
- shifts france for foreign policy successes
- displays nap’s heroism and capability
- displays military skill of army
- shift in moving france away from humiliation, but toward conquering territory against austrians - counter the wars and humiliations at the war of the second coalition
when was the battle of ulm, and the battle at trafalgar
ulm = 16th-19th october 1805
trafalgar = 21st october 1805
describe (in detail) the battle at ulm and the actions of napoleon and opposition generals
- napoleon holds off invading the British (because he would be fighting the austrians at the same time on 2 fronts, and the austrians had begun mobilising - nap felt it was his duty to fight against those oppressing france)
- napoleon and his armies march to the Danube and surprise the austrians ( austrians declare war)
- Mack (austrian general) crosses the Bavarian border and captures the city of ulm and hopes to be supported by 20,000 men of Russians under Kutuzov
- instead, the russians are delayed
- napoleon then encircles Mack, with 7 corps of the army crossing the Rhine, and creating a 200 mile front from Ulm to Ingolstadt to expose Mack
- Napoleon gains reinforcements from Bavaria to block the retreat of Mack
- in order to prevent Mack from retreating, Napoleon sends ‘deserters’ to Mack (who were intended to be captured), telling him that the French were weak and morale was low, (giving Mack a sense of confidence when surrounded that Naps power was undermined and that the Austrian’s were strong)
- Ney (French general) crosses the Danube and provides reinforcements in military arms, troops and food
- Ney then takes Elchingen (to further complete the encircling of Mack at Ulm)
- Mack then surrenders to napoleon on the 20th october at Michelsburg
describe how the following factors led to a french success at ulm in october 1805
1. enemy weaknesses
2. napoleon himself
3. his generals
- enemy weaknesses
- the enemy was outnumbered - 40,000 troops of austrians to 80,000 french (especially due to a lack of Russian reinforcements)
- Mack is isolated and alone, because he believes that the Russians will come under Kutuzov, but they don’t - due to differences in calendar
- Mack is misinformed about french weaknesses
- the 2nd and 3rd coalition are having difficulties with co-operation due to their previous fall out
- mack advances too far into bavaria, so kutuzov cannot keep up - napoleon himself
- installed a level of high morale in the army, sleeping alongside his troops to display he was connected with the general public, but also displays him to be a resilient and heroic figure
- napoleon promises that troops will obtain titles and a decent pension (which provides them with motivation)
- napoleon creates the corps system, which promotes centralised leadership - his generals
- well co-ordinated with a level of expertise and knowledge (ie Nay taking Elchingen)
- would take a staggered approach to overwhealm the enemy / opposition
- 4000 austrians died, but only 500 french died