Battle of Wagram
Encyclopedia : B : BA : BAT : Battle of Wagram
The Battle of Wagram, around the isle of Lobau on the Danube and on the plain of the Marchfeld around the town of Deutsch-Wagram, 15 km north-east of Vienna, Austria, took place on July 5 and 6, 1809 and resulted in the decisive victory of French forces under Napoleon Bonaparte over the Austrians under Archduke Charles.
Artillery was a major factor where 300,000 men clashed in the largest battle yet in the Napoleonic Wars. Of those, 80,000 men lay killed or wounded, half of them under the Banner of Napoleon, the other half Austrians.
It brought to an end the war of the Fifth Coalition.
Prelude
After the strategic disaster at the Battle of Aspern-Essling, Napoleon reinforced his main army with a Bavarian division under General Wrede and stocked up on supplies at Lobau Island just north of Vienna. Marmont, Prince Eugene and Józef Antoni Poniatowski were causing problems on all fronts for the Austrian army. However, a major revolt in Tyrol led by Andreas Hofer saw to the fact that Napoleon could not call in any more Bavarian troops. At the same time Britain was preparing to invade northern Europe, meaning extra troops from France would not be forthcoming. However, Napoleon recalled his Army of Italy under Eugene and MacDonald and those troops had joined him by the time of the battle. Napoleon prepared himself and by July, 1809 he was ready to take another shot at Archduke Charles' army.The battle
| War of the Fifth Coalition |
|---|
| Sacile – Teugen-Hausen – Raszyn – Abensberg – Landshut – Eckmühl – Regensburg – Ebersberg – Aspern-Essling – Raab – Wagram |
At dawn of the following day, the Austrians first counterattacked the French right flank. This move was designed as a feint in order to draw French reserves away. The real attack was aimed at the French left around the village of Aderklaa where the Austrians succeeded in throwing back Bernadotte's Saxons. To stem the Austrian attack, Napoleon created a Grand Battery of 112 cannon which poured shot into the advancing Austrian formations. Masséna's Corps was then called upon the stabilize the Saxon front and in cooperation with the cavalry was able to hold the river line. Meanwhile on the French right flank things were going better, with Oudinot and Davout advancing.
The decisive attack of the battle was launched against the Austrian advancing centre by General Macdonald, for which he was granted the Marshal's baton on the field of battle. MacDonald made his troops form a wedge about 8,000 strong and utilizing this formation, after ferocious fighting at bayonet point, he broke through the Austrian center, splitting the army and winning the day for the Emperor.
Charles had also sent for his brother, Archduke John's, help but John only got his troops (13,000) on the road by the next morning, far too late to help Charles. Five days after the battle, Charles had to bow to the inevitable and sued for peace.
After the battle MacDonald, Oudinot and Marmont were given the Marshal's baton and the army had soon a new chant about the three men: La France a nommé MacDonald, L'armée a nommé Oudinot, L'amitié a nommé Marmont (France chose MacDonald, the army chose Oudinot, friendship chose Marmont).
Present day
Avenue de Wagram, one of the avenues leading up to the Arc de Triomphe on the Place de l'Etoile in Paris, France, is named after this battle.External links
References
- David Chandler, Napoleon's Marshals, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, London, 1998, p 247-251.
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
