Description: Please refer to the section BELOW (and NOT ABOVE) this line for the product details - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Title:Napoleon Bonaparte's Most Decisive Land Battles: The History Of Austerlitz, The French Invasion Of Russia, Leipzig, And WaterlooISBN13:9781979656290ISBN10:1979656290Author:Charles River Editors (Author)Description:*Includes Pictures *Includes Accounts Of The Battles *Includes Online Resources And A Bibliography For Further Reading For Those Questioning Why Generals Continued Using Tactics From The Napoleonic Era Even As Technology Changed The Battlefield, The Battle Of Austerlitz May Provide The Best Answer Napoleon Is Regarded As One Of History's Greatest Generals, And Austerlitz Was His Greatest Victory In 1805, Britain, Austria, And Russia Allied Together To Form The Third Coalition Against The French, And The Third Coalition's Forces Consisted Of Armies From Austria And Russia, With Britain Providing Naval Support As Well As Its Financial Powers The Battle Of Austerlitz Was A Tactical Masterpiece That Saw Napoleon Actually Invite An Attack On His Army By The Bigger Coalition Army, And Over The Course Of About 9 Hours, The French Successfully Defended Their Right Flank While Counterattacking In The Center And Splitting The Russo-Austrian Army In Two, Allowing The French To Hit The Flank Of The Advancing Left Wing Of The Enemy The Result Was A Decisive Victory That Virtually Annihilated The Third Coalition's Army And Made Napoleon The Master Of The European Continent By 1812, He Had Succeeded In Subduing Most Of His Enemies - Though In Spain, The British Continued To Be A Perpetual Thorn In His Flank That Drained The Empire Of Money And Troops - But His Relationship With Russia, Never More Than One Of Mutual Suspicion At Best, Had Now Grown Downright Hostile On July 23Rd, 1812, He Launched His Army Across The Border, Despite The Protestations Of Many Of His Marshals The Russian Campaign Had Begun, And It Would Turn Out To Be Napoleon's Biggest Blunder Russia's Great Strategic Depth Already Had A Habit Of Swallowing Armies, A Fact Many Would-Be Conquerors Learned The Hard Way Napoleon, Exceptional Though He Was In So Many Regards, Proved That Even Military Genius Can Do Little In The Face Of The Russian Winter And The Resilience Of Its People By The Time The Grande Armee Had Reached The Berezina, It Had Been Decimated: Of The Over 450,000 Fighting Men That Had Invaded Russia That Autumn, Less Than 40,000 Remained These Factors Set The Stage For The Second Setback, Which Essentially Sealed The Fate Of Napoleon's Empire The Four-Day Battle Of Leipzig In October 1813, Romantically But Accurately Dubbed The Battle Of The Nations, Proved The Decisive Encounter Of The War Of The Sixth Coalition And Essentially Determined The Course The Napoleonic Wars Took From That Moment Forward The Resultant Collision Was The Single Largest Field Action Of The Napoleonic Wars, Dwarfing Waterloo In Size, Complexity, And Overall Importance The Battle Of Leipzig Was Probably The Combat Which Involved The Highest Concentration Of Men On A Single Extended Battlefield On The Planet Up To That Point In History, And Would Not Be Exceeded Until The Vast Struggles Of The First World War Almost Precisely A Century Later Waterloo Is The Most Famous Battle In Modern History If Not All Of History, And Appropriately So Gathering An Army Of 100,000 Men, Napoleon Marched Into What Is Now Belgium, Intent On Driving His Force Between The Advancing British Army Under The Duke Of Wellington And The Prussian Forces Under Marshal Blucher It Was The Kind Of Daring Strategy That Only Napoleon Could Pull Off, As He Had At Places Like Jena And Austerlitz At Waterloo, However, It Would End Disastrously, As Napoleon's Armies Were Unable To Dislodge Wellington And Unable To Keep The Prussians From Linking Up With The British The Battle Would End With The French Suffering Nearly 60% Casualties, The End Of Napoleon's Reign, And The Restructuring Of The European Map Simply Put, The Next 200 Years Of European History Can Be Traced Back To The Result Of The Battle That Day In 1815 Binding:Paperback, PaperbackPublisher:CREATESPACEPublication Date:2017-11-14Weight:1.43 lbsDimensions:0.58'' H x 11.02'' L x 8.5'' WNumber of Pages:278Language:English
Price: 17.95 USD
Location: USA
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Book Title: Napoleon Bonaparte's Most Decisive Land Battles: the History of Austerlitz, the French Invasion of Russia, Leipzig, and Waterloo
Item Length: 11in.
Item Height: 0.6in.
Item Width: 8.5in.
Author: Charles RIVER Charles RIVER Editors
Format: Trade Paperback
Language: English
Features: Large Type
Topic: Military / Napoleonic Wars
Publisher: CreateSpace
Publication Year: 2017
Genre: History
Item Weight: 28.4 Oz
Number of Pages: 278 Pages