1812

Napoleon's Russian Campaign

Hardcover, 525 pages

English language

Published Aug. 5, 1990 by McGraw-Hill.

ISBN:
978-0-471-54302-2
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A masterful and mildly revisionist assessment of Napoleon's disastrous attempt to make Russia a part of his empire. Drawing on archival sources newly translated from the French and German as well as standard references (including Clausewitz), military historian Riehn offers a richly detailed account of a great captain's comeuppance. Setting the stage with background on the martial arts in Europe during the early 19th century, as well as with big-picture perspectives on the continent's geopolitical alignments, he provides a coherent explanation of the objectives that induced Napoleon to invade Russia in mid-1812. At no small cost, the emperor marched his Grand Army across trackless wastes to Moscow, the motherland's spiritual hub, only to find it evacuated and ablaze. With his flanks vulnerable and forces depleted, Napoleon belatedly turned for home. He made it back to Paris, but most of his multinational legions perished on The Steppes. Napoleon himself attributed his …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, 1769-1821 -- Military leadership.
  • France. Armée -- History -- Napoleonic Wars, 1800-1815.
  • Napoleonic Wars, 1800-1815 -- Campaigns -- Russia.
  • Russia -- History, Military -- 1801-1917.

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