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Charles Minard's graph showing the strength of the Grande Armée as it marches to Moscow and back, with temperature (in Réaumur) plotted on the lower graph for the return journey. -30° Réaumur = -37.5° Celsius
In June 1812, Napoleon began the invasion with his Grande Armée of 610,000 men, the largest army ever assembled at that point in history. He crossed the river Neman heading towards Moscow. The initially 240,000-strong Russian army sought to avoid open battle, and turned to attrition warfare: scorched earth policy, burning crops and villages before retreating so that the enemy could not use them. The Russians also harassed the French flanks with attacks from small battalions of Russian troops and local Cossacks. The Russian army suffered defeats on the approaches to Moscow in the battles of Smolensk (4-6 August) and in the Battle of Borodino ( 26 August 1812), but was not decisively destroyed, and the French suffered almost as may casualties as the Russians did. By the end of August, Napoleon had lost two-thirds of his army but kept marching on towards Moscow. On 1 September, Marshal Kutuzov, in command of the Russian Army since early August, ordered to abandon the city.
Napoleon moved into an empty city that was stripped of all supplies. Relying on classical rules of warfare aiming at capturing the enemy's capital, he expected the Russian TsarTsar ( Bulgarian Russian often spelt Czar or Tzar in English), was the title used for the rulers of the First and Second Bulgarian Empires from 913 and in Russia from 1547 to 1917. It is derived from the Latin title Caesar. History of usage The title tsar AlexanderAleksandr Pavlovich Romanov or Tsar Alexander I (The Blessed ( I ) ( December 23, 1777 December 1, 1825), Emperor of Russia (reigned March 23, 1801 December 1, 1825), son of the Grand Duke Paul Petrovich, afterwards Paul I of Russia, and Maria Fedorovna , to offer his capitulation. Russian command did not surrender, however. Instead, fires broke out in Moscow, and raged in the city from 2 to 6 September. Moscow, constructed mainly of wooden buildings, burnt down almost completely. It is assumed that the fires were due to Russian sabotage, in line with scorched earth tactics. It effectively deprived the French of shelter in the city.
An example of victory diseaseVictory disease happens when a nation / army / commander has military victories and falls for some combination of: arrogance complacency, established patterns of fighting, stereotypes of opponents, and / or ignorance of alternatives or refusal to recogniz: Napoleon's retreat from Moscow, painted by Adolph Northern in the 19th century
Sitting in the ashes of a ruined city without having received the Russian capitulation, and facing a Russian manoeuvre forcing him out of Moscow, Napoleon started his long retreat back home. As Kutuzov blocked the southern flank, the French had to use the very same scorched Smolensk road on which they had earlier moved East. Supply of the army grew increasingly difficult, the desertion rate increased. In addition, Kutuzov, still avoiding open battle, again deployed partisanPartisan may refer to: A member of a lightly-equipped irregular military force formed to oppose control of an area by a foreign power or by an army of occupation. In this context, the term very often refers to the resistance movements that opposed Nazi do tactics to constantly strike at the French trail where it was weakest. Light Russian cavalry, including mounted Cossacks, assaulted and shattered isolated French units. Starting in November 1812, the Russian winter caused additional hardship to the French army, as soldiers and horses started to die from hunger, frostbite and exhaustion on the march. The crossing of the river Berezina brought about another major defeat, as Kutuzov, deciding that the time was right for an open battle, attacked and crushed the part of the French army that had not yet made it across the bridge. In the following weeks, the remnants of the Grand Army were further diminished, and on 14 December 1812 they were expelled from Russian territory. Only about 10,000 of Napoleon's men survived the Russian campaign. Russian casualties in the few open battles are comparable to the French losses, but civilian losses along the devastated war path were much higher than the military casualties.