by Mugdha Godbole
Napoleon leading his troops |
After the French Revolution of 1789, the country of France
was in a traumatised time. And the one man that brought all of France together
was Napoleon. He was seen by the French people as the saviour of France.
The young officer quickly turned to a dictator and then
announced himself to be Emperor of France.
His wife soon gave birth to their first son, Napoleon Francis
Joseph Charles. Napoleon seemed determined on starting a Napoleonic dynasty and
as he was the first generation of it, unlike many other royal families of the
time, he was very sensitive towards humiliation- both to either himself or his
country.
Napoleon wanted to isolate Britain from the rest of Europe so
he conquered many countries of Europe and enforced a continental blockade of
Britain which was nearly impossible to impose.
Soon, Napoleon became aware of the alliance between Britain
and Portugal. He saw Portugal as an “open door” for Britain. Napoleon now went
on the offensive and decided to invade Portugal through Spain.
However, Spain proved to be a costlier battle than anyone had
expected; regarding both economic and human cost. War in Spain was brutal. Men
were skinned alive and buried alive. Even Napoleon himself said “All the circumstances
of my disasters are bound up in that fatal knot. The campaign was a resounding failure- a humiliation.
In times like those, it would be very foolhardy to trust
someone- even if they were your closest ally. Napoleon, unfortunately, made that
fatal error. He somehow convinced himself that he and the Tsar of Russia had a
special bond- over Britain. In late 1811, Napoleon was thoroughly shocked when Russia
made an agreement with Britain which meant trade was open between both of them. In Napoleon’s eyes, this was a complete betrayal and needed
to be harshly answered. Napoleon assembled the largest military operation to
date. His army consisted of 600 000 men and his carriage was sewn with diamonds
in case of hurried flight. All in all, he was well prepared. Napoleon was
fighting a life or death struggle for his empire.
In June 1812, Napoleon’s forces invaded Russia, but, much to
their surprise, the Russian army fell back. In July 1812, they had a small battle
with the Russians but Napoleon kept getting sucked further into the country.
But by that time, 80,000 soldiers were dead; thousands were too weak or ill to
continue; and Napoleon had lost a one-third of his central strike force. Napoleon had misjudged the length of the supply lines needed
and the Grand Armee had been forced to ‘live off the land’. However, as the
Russians had retreated, they had burned crops and scorched the land. The army
was soon decimated by hunger, exhaustion and disease.
Battle of Borodino, 1812 |
Soon, the big decisive battle that Napoleon had wanted for so
long was soon the arrive at Borodino. The Russians took up a strong defensive
position. Napoleon, then, made his big tactical error. He was cautious and soon
his caution would prove to be self- destructive. Napoleon opted for a frontal
attack. The battleground soon became a bloodbath. The French won but Napoleon
had greatly underestimated the enemy- a trait that was to be his bane in
the future. The winter of 1812 in Russia was especially harsh. The whole
campaign had been a massive humiliation for Napoleon. 95% of his army had been
captured or were dead and two-thirds had died because of other causes that
military. The campaign was a catalogue of mistakes made by Napoleon. 1812
looked to be the beginning of the end for Napoleon.
The rest of all the powers of Europe had all allied
themselves against Napoleon. Napoleon won some military victories in 1813 but
his opposition came up with an effective tactic that saw them achieve more victories.
They only attacked when Napoleon’s marshals were present but fell back when Napoleon
came.
The weight of numbers finally crushed Napoleon as France had
never fully recovered from the disaster of 1812. In 1814, the Russians captured
Paris and the Tsar entered the city. Napoleon had finally paid the price for
the failure in Russia. By that time, France was exhausted. Napoleon still
wanted to fight but the population was against him. The entire senate had
turned against Napoleon. Finally, he agreed to abdicate and was exiled to
the small island of Elba. On 26 February 1815, Napoleon left Elba for France. He was
greeted as a national hero and was seen as a revolutionary patriot.
On 20th March, 1815, he arrived in Paris. In
reality, Napoleon was prepared to forget what happened but the Seventh
Coalition were set on vengeance at the audacity of Napoleon’s escape and the
threat he might possess to the peace of Europe. Napoleon then attacked Blücher’s Prussian army but they
managed to reorganise themselves. Wellington offered battle to Napoleon
after learning of the Prussian army’s reorganisation and that they would be
able to march to support.
Battle of Waterloo, June 18, 1815 |
At the start of the Battle of Waterloo, Wellington managed to
withstand several French attacks. Napoleon was engaged in battle when he saw
movement far out to the east. It was the Prussians. Blücher’s army had come and
smashed the right flank of the French army. The French and the Prussians were
soon locked in battle. The French were under immense pressure from both sides
so they had to split their resources.
Napoleon’s tactic in most battles was to try and outflank the
enemy. However at Waterloo, the topography and Wellington’s position made that
impossible. Instead, the enemy was outflanking him. The Battle of Waterloo was
a staggering defeat and he was at the state of no return. One month after
Waterloo- Napoleon surrendered. He was exiled to St. Helena where he spent the
rest of his days- humiliated but at least not dead.
Napoleon sent into exile for the final time, 1815 |
The downfall of Napoleon was a chain of events. It began when
he waged an economic war against Britain. Portugal and Spain weakened him
further. He woefully trusted the Tsar Alexander. The invasion of Russia was a
catastrophic disaster and one that spelled the end for him. Waterloo was the
final push that sent the Napoleonic Empire crashing into a dark abyss, never to
return.
The world according to Napoleon was changing and Napoleon
just did not adapt to it.
Warfare is a fascinating subject. Despite the dubious morality of using violence to achieve personal or political aims. It remains that conflict has been used to do just that throughout recorded history.
ReplyDeleteYour article is very well done, a good read.