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Army of the Rhine and Moselle

The Army of the Rhine and Moselle (French: Armée de Rhin-et-Moselle) was one of the field units of the French Revolutionary Army. It was formed on 20 April 1795 by the merger of elements of the Army of the Rhine and the Army of the Moselle.

Army of the Rhine and Moselle
Fusilier of a French Revolutionary Army
Active20 April 1795 – 29 September 1797
Disbanded29 September 1797 and units merged into Army of Germany
Country
AllegianceFirst Republic
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Jean-Charles Pichegru
Jean Victor Marie Moreau
Louis Desaix
Laurent de Gouvion Saint-Cyr

The Army of the Rhine and Moselle participated in two principal campaigns in the War of the First Coalition. Military planners in Paris formed armies based on specific strategic tasks, and the task of this Army was to secure the French frontier at the Rhine and to penetrate the German states, potentially threatening Vienna. The unsuccessful 1795 campaign concluded with the removal of General Jean-Charles Pichegru from command. In 1796, under the command of General Jean Victor Marie Moreau, the Army was more successful. After crushing the Reichsarmee's elements at Kehl, the Army advanced into southwestern Germany.

Its success depended on the cooperation with France's Army of the Sambre and Meuse, commanded by Jean-Baptiste Jourdan. In 1796, the jealousies between Jourdan and Moreau, and among the subcommanders, complicated the efficient operations of both armies. After a summer of maneuver in which the Coalition force enticed the French deeper and deeper into German territory, the Habsburg commander Archduke Charles, Duke of Teschen drubbed the French at Wurzburg and at second Wetzlar, and then defeated Jourdan's army at the Limburg-Altenkirchen. These battles destroyed any chance that Jourdan's force and Moreau's Army of the Rhine and Moselle could merge. Once Jourdan withdrew to the west bank of the Rhine, Charles could focus his attention on Moreau. By October they were fighting on the western slope of the Black Forest, and by December Charles had the French forces under siege at the principal river crossings of Kehl and Hüningen. By early 1797 the French had relinquished control of the bridgeheads over the Rhine. After an abbreviated German campaign in 1797, the French and Austrians agreed to the Treaty of Campo Formio and, on 29 September 1797, the Army of the Rhine and Moselle merged with the Army of the Sambre and Meuse to form the Army of Germany.

The Army of the Rhine and Moselle campaigns provided experience for a cadre of young officers. In his five-volume analysis of the Revolutionary Armies, Ramsey Weston Phipps called the Army of the Rhine and Moselle a "school for marshals", to emphasize the importance of experience under these conditions in training the future leadership of Napoleon's army.

Background edit

 
The broad Rhine River and its many tributaries prevented easy escape into France. The colors represent the different sections of the Rhine: Mountain Rhine (Alpenrhein), High Rhine (Hochrhein), Upper Rhine (Oberrhein), Middle Rhine (Mittelrhein), Low Rhine (Niederrhein).

The rulers of Europe viewed the 1789 revolution in France as an internal matter between the French king and his subjects. In 1790, Leopold succeeded his brother Joseph as emperor of the Holy Roman Empire; by 1791, the danger to his sister, Marie Antoinette and her children, alarmed him. In August 1791, in consultation with French émigré nobles and Frederick William II of Prussia, Leopold's Declaration of Pillnitz articulated that the interests of the monarchs of Europe were as one with the interests of Louis and his family. He and his fellow monarchs threatened unspecified consequences if anything should happen to the royal family. French émigrés continued to agitate for support of a counter-revolution, and on 20 April 1792 the French National Convention declared war on Austria. In this War of the First Coalition (1792–1798), France ranged itself against most of the European states sharing its land or water borders, plus Portugal and the Ottoman Empire.[1]

Elements of the armies that were later formed into the Army of the Rhine and Moselle participated in the conquest of the Netherlands and the siege of Luxembourg. The various elements of the army won a victory at the Battle of Fleurus on 16 June 1794. Shortly after Fleurus, the position of the First Coalition in Flanders collapsed and the French armies overran the Austrian Netherlands and the Dutch Republic in the winter of 1794–1795. French and Coalition military strategy subsequently focused on the Rhine river as the principle line of defense: for each side, control of the opposite bank or, at least, the river's principal crossings, was the basis of defensive strategy.[1]

Purpose and formation edit

Military challenges edit

By 1792 the armies of the French Republic were in a state of disruption; experienced soldiers of the Ancien Régime fought side by side with volunteers. Recruits, urged on by revolutionary fervor from the special representatives—agents of the legislature sent to ensure cooperation among the military—lacked the discipline and training to function efficiently; frequently insubordinate, they often refused orders and undermined unit cohesion. After a defeat, they were capable of mutiny, as Théobald Dillon learned when his troops lynched him in 1792.[2]

Military cohesion became more acute following the 1793 introduction of mass conscription, the levée en masse. The basic unit of the army, the demi-brigade, mixed the men of the old army with the recruits from the levée en masse. Ideally, it was designed to include the regular infantry inherited from the old Royal regiments, who were relatively well-trained and equipped, dressed in white uniforms and wearing tarleton helmets, with the national guard units, who were less well-trained or equipped, with blue uniforms, and the fédéré volunteer battalions, who were poorly trained and equipped, with no uniform other than a red phrygian cap and a cockade of France.[3][2]

Disruption reached the upper echelons of the army. French commanders walked a fine line between the security of the frontier and the Parisian clamor for victory. Commanders were constantly under suspicion from the representatives of the new regime and sometimes from their own soldiers. Failure to achieve unrealistic expectations implied disloyalty and the price of disloyalty was an appointment with Madame guillotine: several of the highest ranking generals, including the aged Nicolas Luckner, Jean Nicolas Houchard, Adam Philippe Custine, Arthur Dillon and Antoine Nicolas Collier, were killed. Francisco de Miranda's failure to take Maastricht landed him in La Force Prison for several years. Many of the old officer class had emigrated, forming émigré armies; the cavalry in particular suffered from their departure and the Hussards du Saxe and the 15éme Cavalerie (Royal Allemande) regiments defected en masse to the Austrians. The artillery arm, considered by the old nobility to be an inferior assignment, was less affected by emigration and survived intact.[3][2]

By 1794-95, military planners in Paris considered the upper Rhine Valley, the south-western German territories and Danube river basin of strategic importance for the defense of the Republic. The Rhine offered a formidable barrier to what the French perceived as Austrian aggression and the state that controlled its crossings controlled the river and access into the territories on either side. Ready access across the Rhine and along the Rhine bank between the German states and Switzerland or through the Black Forest, gave access to the upper Danube river valley. For the French, control of the Upper Danube or any point in between, was of immense strategic value and would give the French a reliable approach to Vienna.[4] The planners also understood the importance of moving the French army out of France and into the territories of other polities. Theirs was an army entirely dependent for support upon the countryside it occupied. Parisian revolutionaries and military commanders alike believed an assault into the German states was essential, not only in terms of war aims, but also in practical terms: the French Directory believed that war should pay for itself and did not budget for the payment or feeding of its troops.[5] Although this solved some of the problems of feeding and paying the army, it did not solve them all. Until April 1796, soldiers were paid in an increasingly worthless paper currency called the Assignat; after April, pay was made in metallic value, but pay was still in arrears. Throughout the spring and early summer, the soldiers were in almost constant mutiny: in May 1796, in the border town of Zweibrücken, a demi-brigade revolted. In June, pay for two demi-brigades were in arrears and two companies rebelled.[2]

Formation edit

 
The two principal French Armies of 1794 were formed from four smaller units, each contributing a portion of its troops to either the Sambre and Meuse or the Army of the Rhine and Moselle. The right flank of Army of the North remained in the Netherlands.

In late 1794, military planners in Paris reorganized the army into task forces. The right flank of the Armies of the Center, later called the Army of the Moselle, the entire Army of the North and the Army of the Ardennes were combined to form the Army of the Sabre and Meuse, which was stationed on the west bank of the Rhine north of the junction of the Main and the Rhine rivers.

The remaining units of the former Army of the Center and the Army of the Rhine were united, initially on 29 November 1794, and formally on 20 April 1795, under command of Jean-Charles Pichegru. These troops were stationed further south, in a line that stretched on the west bank of the Rhine from Basel to the Main River.[6]

At Basel, where the river makes a wide, northerly turn at the Rhine knee, it enters what the locals call the Rhine Ditch (Rheingraben). This forms part of a rift valley some 31 km (19 mi) wide bordered by the mountainous Black Forest on the east (German side) and the Vosges mountains on the west (French side). At the far edges of the eastern flood plain, tributaries cut deep defiles into the western slope of the mountains.[7] Further to the north, the river became deeper and faster, until it widened into a delta where it emptied into the North Sea.[8]

Campaign of 1795 edit

The Rhine Campaign of 1795 (April 1795 to January 1796) opened both French armies attempted to cross the Rhine and capture the Fortress of Mainz. The French Army of the Sambre and Meuse, commanded by Jean-Baptiste Jourdan, confronted Count Clerfayt's Army of the Lower Rhine in the north, while the French Army of Rhine and Moselle under Pichegru lay opposite Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser's army in the south. From April until August, both sides engaged in a waiting game until, in August, Jourdan crossed and quickly seized Düsseldorf. The Army of the Sambre and Meuse advanced south to the Main River, completely isolating Mainz. Pichegru's Army of the Rhine and Moselle surprised the Bavarian garrison of Mannheim; by mid-month, both French armies held significant footholds on the east bank of the Rhine. The French fumbled away the promising start to their offensive. Pichegru bungled at least one opportunity to seize Clerfayt's supply base in the Battle of Handschuhsheim, with resultant significant losses. With Pichegru unexpectedly inactive, Clerfayt massed against Jourdan, beat him at Höchst in October, and forced most of the Army of the Sambre and Meuse to retreat to the west bank of the Rhine.[9]

These maneuvers left the Army of the Rhine and Moselle isolated. When Wurmser sealed off the French bridgehead at Mannheim, the Army of the Rhine and Moselle was trapped on the east bank. The Austrians defeated the left wing of the Army of Rhine and Moselle at the Battle of Mainz and moved down the west bank. In November, Clerfayt defeated Pichegru at Pfeddersheim and successfully wrapped up the siege of Mannheim. In January 1796, Clerfayt concluded an armistice with the French, sending the Army of the Rhine and Moselle back to France, and retaining a large portions of the west bank.[9]

Campaign in 1796 edit

 
French soldiers overwhelmed the Swabian militia.

The opening of the Rhine Campaign of 1796 began with Jean-Baptiste Kléber's attack south of his bridgehead at Düsseldorf. After Kléber won sufficient maneuver room on the east bank of the Rhine River, Jean Baptiste Jourdan was supposed to join him with the remainder of the Army of the Sambre and Meuse. At the first battles of Altenkirchen (4 June 1796) and Wetzlar, two Republican French divisions commanded by Kléber attacked a wing of the Habsburg army led by Duke Ferdinand Frederick Augustus of Württemberg. A frontal attack combined with a flanking maneuver forced the Austrians to retreat. Three future Marshals of France played significant roles in the engagement at Altenkirchen: François Joseph Lefebvre as a division commander, Jean-de-Dieu Soult, as a brigadier and Michel Ney, as leader of a flanking column. Altenkirchen is located in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate about 50 km (31 mi) east of Bonn. Wetzlar was located in the Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel, 66 kilometers (41 mi) north of Frankfurt.[10] Altenkirchen was only a distraction to entice the Austrian commander to move troops from the south to strengthen his force in the middle Rhine; Moreau lent credence to this distraction by seeming to move part of the Army of the Rhine and Moselle north from Strasburg. When Archduke Charles moved troops north to oppose what looked to be a crossing in force, Moreau reversed to Kehl and crossed the river. Kléber carried out his part of the scheme to perfection.[11]

The opposition armies of the First Coalition included imperial (Reichsarmee) contingents and the infantry and cavalry of the various states, amounting to about 125,000 (including the three autonomous corps), a sizeable force by eighteenth century standards but a moderate force by the standards of the later Revolutionary wars. In total, though, Imperial and Habsburg troops stretched in a line from Switzerland to the North Sea and Wurmser's troops stretched from the Swiss-Italian border to the Adriatic; furthermore, a portion of the troops in Fürstenberg's corps were pulled in July to support Wurmser's activities in Italy. Habsburg troops comprised the bulk of the army, but the thin white line of Habsburg infantry could not cover the territory from Basel to Frankfurt with sufficient depth to resist the pressure of the opposition. In spring 1796, drafts from the free imperial cities, and other imperial estates, augmented the Habsburg force with perhaps 20,000 men at the most. It was largely guesswork where they would be placed, and Archduke Charles, commander of the Reichsarmee and the Habsburg forces, did not like to use the militias, which were poorly trained and unseasoned. Compared to French coverage, Charles had only half the number of troops extended over a 211-mile front, stretching from Basel to Bingen. Furthermore, Charles had concentrated the bulk of his force, commanded by Count Baillet Latour, between Karlsruhe and Darmstadt, where the confluence of the Rhine and the Main river made an attack most likely, as it offered a gateway into eastern German states and ultimately to Vienna, with sturdy bridges crossing the relatively well-defined river bank. To the north, Wilhelm von Wartensleben’s autonomous corps stretched in a thin line between Mainz and Giessen.[12]

On 22 June, the Army of the Rhine and Moselle executed simultaneous crossings at Kehl and Hüningen.[13] At Kehl, Moreau's advance guard, 10,000 men, preceded the main force of 27,000 infantry and 3,000 cavalry directed at a mere several hundred Swabian pickets on the bridge. The Swabians were hopelessly outnumbered and could not be reinforced. Most of the Imperial Army of the Rhine was stationed further north, by Mannheim, where the river was easier to cross. Neither Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé's Army of Condé in Freiburg nor Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg's force in Rastatt could reach Kehl in time to relieve the Swabian troops.[14][15] Consequently, within a day, Moreau had four divisions across the river. Unceremoniously thrust out of Kehl, the Swabian contingent reformed at Rastatt by 5 July, which they held until reinforcements arrived.[16] Furthermore, at Hüningen, near Basel, Ferino executed a full crossing, and advanced east along the German shore of the Rhine with the 16th and 50th Demi-brigades, the 68th, 50th and 68th line infantry, and six squadrons of cavalry that included the 3rd and 7th Hussars and the 10th Dragoons. The Habsburg and Imperial armies were in danger of encirclement.[17]

With Ferino's quick movements to encircle him, Charles executed an orderly withdrawal in four columns through the Black Forest, across the Upper Danube valley, and toward Bavaria. By mid-July, the French forces maintained persistent pressure on Charles' force. Two imperial columns encamped near Stuttgart were surrounded and surrendered, leading to a general armistice with the Swabian Circle. The third column, which included the Condé's Corps, retreated through Waldsee to Stockach, and eventually Ravensburg. The fourth Austrian column, the smallest (three battalions and four squadrons), under General Wolff, marched the length of the Bodensee's northern shore, via Überlingen, Meersburg, Buchhorn, and the Austrian city of Bregenz.[16]

 
 
Ettlingen
 
Neresheim
 
Friedberg
 
Schliengen
 
Wetzlar
 
Würzburg
 
Amberg
 
Limburg
 
Altenkirchen
 
Emmendingen
 
Kehl
 
Mainz
 
Mannheim
class=notpageimage|
Location map shows the battles and sieges of the 1796 Rhine Campaign. Borders reflect boundaries of present-day Germany.

Given the size of the attacking force, Charles had to withdraw far enough into Bavaria to align his northern flank with Wartensleben's autonomous corps. As he withdrew, his own line compressed, making his army stronger; his opposition's flanks extended, making their line weaker.[18] In the course of this withdrawal, most of the Swabian Circle was abandoned to the Army of the Rhine and Moselle, which enforced an armistice and extracted sizeable reparations; in addition, the French occupied several principal towns in southwestern Germany, including Stockach, Meersburg, Constance, Überlingen am Bodensee, Ulm, and Augsburg.[19] As Charles withdrew further east, the neutral zone expanded, eventually encompassing most of southern German states and the Ernestine duchies.[20]

Summer of 1796 edit

By mid-summer, the strategic goals of the Army of the Rhine and Moselle appeared to have succeeded; Jourdan or Moreau seemed on the brink of flanking Charles and Wartensleben, forcing a wedge between the two; inexplicably, Wartensleben continued to withdraw to the east-north-east, despite Charles' orders to unite with him. At the Battle of Neresheim on 11 August, Moreau crushed Charles' force and at last, however, Wartensleben recognized the danger; he changed direction, moving his corps to join at Charles' northern flank. At the Battle of Amberg on 24 August, Charles inflicted another defeat on the French, but that same day, his commanders lost a battle to the French at Friedberg, when the French army, which was advancing eastward on the south side of the Danube, isolated an Austrian infantry unit, Schröder Infantry Regiment Nr. 7, and the French Army of Condé. In the ensuing clash, the Austrians and Royalists were cut to pieces.[21]

The tide now turned in the Coalition's favor. Both French Armies had overstretched their lines, moving far into the German states, and were separated too far from each other for one to offer the other aid or security. The Coalition's concentration of troops forced a wider wedge between the two armies of Jourdan and Moreau, what the French had tried to do to Charles and Wartensleben. Despite Charles' instructions to withdraw northward toward Ingolstadt, Maximilian Anton Karl, Count Baillet de Latour retreated eastward to protect the borders of Austria. Moreau did not seize the opportunity to place his army between the two Austrian forces (Wartensleben's and Charles').[21] As the French withdrew toward the Rhine, Charles and Wartensleben pressed forward. On 3 September at Würzburg, Jourdan attempted unsuccessfully to halt the retreat; at the Battle of Limburg, Charles pushed him back to the Rhine.[22]

Once Moreau received word of Jourdan's defeat, he initiated his withdrawal from southern Germany. Retreating through the Black Forest, with Ferino supervising the rear guard, he claimed one more victory: an Austrian corps commanded by Latour drew too close to Moreau at Biberach and lost 4,000 prisoners, some standards and artillery; Latour followed at a more sensible distance. Both sides were hampered by heavy rains; the ground was soft and slippery, and the Rhine and Elz rivers had flooded. This increased the hazards of mounted attack, because the horses could not get a good footing. Archduke's force pursued the French, although carefully. The French attempted to slow their pursuers by destroying bridges, but the Austrians repaired them and crossed the swollen rivers despite the high waters. Upon reaching a few miles east of Emmendingen, the Archduke split his force into four columns. Friedrich Joseph, Count of Nauendorf's column, in the upper Elz, had eight battalions and 14 squadrons, advancing southwest to Waldkirch; Wartensleben had 12 battalions and 23 squadrons advancing south to capture the Elz bridge at Emmendingen. Latour, with 6,000 men, was to cross the foothills via Heimbach and Malterdingen, and capture the bridge of Köndringen, between Riegel and Emmendingen, and Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg's column held Kinzingen, about 3.2 kilometers (2 mi) north of Riegel. Frölich and Condé (part of Nauendorf's column) were to pin down Ferino and the French right wing in the Stieg valley. Nauendorf's men were able to ambush St.-Cyr's advance; Latour's columns attacked Beaupuy at Matterdingen, killing the general and throwing his column into confusion. Wartensleben, in the center, was held up by French riflemen until his third (reserve) detachment arrived to outflank them; the French retreated across the rivers, destroying all the bridges.[8][23]

After the shambles at Emmendingen, the French withdrew to the south and west, and formed for battle by Schliengen. There, Moreau established his army along a ridge of hills, in a 11-kilometer (7 mi) semi-circle on heights that commanded the terrain below. Given the severe condition of the roads at the end of October, Archduke Charles could not flank the right French wing. The French left wing lay too close to the Rhine, and the French center was unassailable. Instead, he attacked the French flanks directly, and in force, which increased casualties for both sides. The Duc d'Enghien led a spirited (but unauthorized) attack on the French left, cutting their access to a withdrawal through Kehl.[24] Nauendorf's column marched all night and half of the day, and attacked the French right, pushing them further back. In the night, while Charles planned his next day's attack, Moreau began the withdrawal of his troops toward Hüningen.[25] Although the French and the Austrians both claimed victory at the time, military historians generally agree that the Austrians achieved a strategic advantage. However, the French withdrew from the battlefield in good order and several days later crossed the Rhine River at Hüningen.[26][27]

After Schliengen, both the French and the Coalition sought to control the Rhine river crossings at Kehl and Hüningen. At Kehl, 20,000[28] French defenders under Louis Desaix and the overall commander of the French force, Jean Victor Marie Moreau, almost upset the siege when they executed a sortie that nearly captured the Austrian artillery park; the French managed to capture 1,000 Austrian troops in the melee. On 9 January the French general Desaix proposed the evacuation to General Latour and they agreed that the Austrians would enter Kehl the next day, on 10 January at 16:00. The French immediately repaired the bridge, rendered passable by 14:00, which gave them 24 hours to evacuate everything of value and to raze everything else. By the time Latour took possession of the fortress, nothing remained of any use: all palisades, ammunition, even the carriages of the bombs and howitzers, had been evacuated. The French insured that nothing remained behind that could be used by the Austrian/Imperial army; even the fortress itself was but earth and ruins. The siege concluded 115 days after its investment, following 50 days of open trenches, the point at which active fighting began.[29]

At Hüningen Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg's force initiated the siege within days of the Austrian victory at the Battle of Schliengen. Most of the siege ran concurrently with the siege at Kehl, which concluded on 9 January 1797. Troops engaged at Kehl marched to Hüningen in preparation for a major assault, but the French defenders capitulated on 1 February 1797. The French commander, Jean Charles Abbatucci, was killed in the early days of the fighting, and replaced by Georges Joseph Dufour. The trenches, opened originally in November, had refilled with winter rain and snow in the intervening weeks. Fürstenberg ordered them opened again, and the water drained out on 25 January. The Coalition force secured the earthworks surrounding the trenches. On 31 January the French failed to push the Austrians out.[30] Archduke Charles arrived that day and met with Fürstenberg at nearby Lörrach. The night of 31 January to 1 February was relatively tranquil, marred only by ordinary artillery fire and shelling.[31] At mid-day 1 February 1797, as the Austrians prepared to storm the bridgehead, General of Division Dufour pre-empted what would have been a costly attack for both sides, offering to surrender the position. On 5 February, Fürstenberg finally took possession of the bridgehead.[32]

Following the losses in 1796 and early 1797, the French regrouped their forces on the west side of the Rhine. An abbreviated campaign in late spring of 1797 led to Austrians and the French to agree to the Treaty of Campo Formio, ending the War of the First Coalition. The subsequent armistice at Leoben led to long term negotiations for peace between Revolutionary France and Austria. On 29 September 1797, the Army of the Rhine and Moselle merged with the Army of the Sambre and Meuse to form the Army of Germany.[33]

Organizational and command problems edit

Excruciating command challenges plagued the Army of the Rhine and Moselle in its early operations. The campaign of 1795 had been entirely a French failure and the difficulties the Army of the Rhine and Moselle faced, especially in 1795, had much to do with Pichegru's own situation: his competition with both Moreau and Jourdan and his disaffection with the direction in which the revolution was headed.[34] Originally a dedicated Jacobin, by 1794, his own intrigues had placed him in command after he had undermined Lazare Hoche the previous year, insuring his own appointment as commander of this army. As the revolution waxed and waned in its ardency, however, so did Pichegru to its principles: by late 1794, he was leaning heavily toward the royalist cause.[35] The Directory replaced him with Desaix, and later Moreau.[3] Undeniably a capable, possibly brilliant, and popular commander, Pichegru began his second campaign by crossing the Meuse on 18 October. After taking Nijmegen, he drove the Austrians across the Rhine. Then, instead of going into winter quarters, he prepared his army for a winter campaign, always a difficult proposition in the eighteenth century. Several brilliant actions in the winter established Pichegru's position.[36] Pichegru's actions sometimes seemed inexplicable: although an associate, even a friend, of the recently executed Saint-Just, Pichegru offered his services to the Thermidorian Reaction; after having received the title of Sauveur de la Patrie ("Saviour of the Fatherland") from the National Convention, he subdued the sans-culottes of Paris during the bread riots of 1 April 1795.[37] As a hero of the Revolution captured Mannheim but inexplicably he allowed his colleague Jourdan to be defeated; throughout 1796, his machinations in Paris complicated the conduct of operations in Germany by undermining the senior command confidence.[38]

In the field in 1796, competition between generals, not ideology, caused command problems. Jealousies between Jourdan and Moreau further complicated the success of the Army of the Rhine and Moselle by refusing to unite their fronts. Moreau moved rapidly into Bavarian and toward Vienna, as if he commanded the only French army in the German states. Frustration created rivalries between and among subcommanders. Ferino continued his seemingly random maneuvers along the border with Switzerland, and through the Swabian Circle, as if he too were operating autonomously. These problems were not limited to Moreau's army; in the Army of the Sambre and Meuse, Jourdan had a spat with his wing commander Kléber and that officer suddenly resigned. Two generals from Kléber's clique, Bernadotte and Colaud, also made excuses to leave immediately. Faced with this mutiny, Jourdan replaced Bernadotte with General Henri Simon and divided Colaud's rebellious units among the other divisions.[39]

School for marshals edit

The campaigns in which the Army of the Rhine and Moselle participated also provided exceptional experience for a cadre of extraordinary young officers. In his five-volume analysis of the Revolutionary Armies, Ramsey Weston Phipps emphasized the importance of experience under these trying conditions of manpower shortage, poor training, equipment and supply shortage, and tactical and strategic confusion and interference. Phipps's objective was to show how the training received in the early years of the war varied not only with the theater in which they served but also with the character of the army to which they belonged.[40] The experience of young officers under the tutelage of such experienced men as Pichegru, Moreau, Lazar Hoche, Lefebvre, and Jourdan provided young officers with valuable experience.[35]

Phipps' analysis is not singular, although his lengthy volumes address in detail the value of this "school for marshals." In 1895, Richard Phillipson Dunn-Pattison also singled out the French Revolutionary army as "the finest school the world has yet seen for an apprenticeship in the trade of arms.[41] The resurrection of the Ancien Régime civil dignity of the marchalate allowed Emperor Napoleon I to strengthen his newly-created power. He could reward the most valuable of his generals or soldiers who had held significant commands during the French Revolutionary Wars.[42] The Army of the Rhine and Moselle (and its subsequent incarnations) included five future Marshals of France: Jean-Baptiste Jourdan, its commander-in-chief, Jean-Baptiste Drouet, Laurent de Gouvion Saint-Cyr, and Édouard Adolphe Casimir Joseph Mortier.[43] François Joseph Lefebvre, by 1804 an old man, was named an honorary marshal, but not awarded a field position. Michel Ney, in the 1795–1799 campaigns an intrepid cavalry commander, came into his own command under the tutelage of Moreau and Massena in the south German and Swiss campaigns. Jean de Dieu Soult had served under Moreau and Massena, becoming the latter's right-hand man during the Swiss campaign of 1799–1800. Jean Baptiste Bessieres, like Ney, had been a competent and sometimes inspired regimental commander in 1796. MacDonald, Oudinot and Saint-Cyr, participants in the 1796 campaign, all received honors in the third, fourth and fifth promotions (1809, 1811, 1812).[42]

Commanders edit

Image Name Dates
  Jean-Charles Pichegru 20 April 1795 – 4 March 1796[44]
  Louis Desaix 5 March  – 20 April 1796[44] Temporary command
  Jean Victor Marie Moreau 21 April 1796 – 30 January 1797[45]

also had overall command of the Army of the Sambre and Meuse

Louis Desaix 31 January  – 9 March 1797[45]

temporary command/armistice in effect

Jean Victor Marie Moreau 10 March – 27 March 1797[45]

temporary command/armistice in effect

Louis Desaix 27 March – 19 April 1797[45]

temporary command/armistice in effect

  Laurent de Gouvion Saint-Cyr 20  April – 9 Sept 1797[45]

subordinate to Lazare Hoche

Order of Battle in 1796 edit

The Army included 66 battalions and 79 squadrons, totaling 65,103 men, including 56,756 infantry, 6,536 cavalry and 1,811 artillery on 1 June 1796:[6]

Commander in Chief (1796) Jean Victor Marie Moreau

Chief of Staff: Jean Louis Ebénézer Reynier
Commander of Artillery : Jean-Baptiste Eblé
Commander of Engineers: Dominique-André de Chambarlhac
1796 Order of Battle [46]
Left Center and Reserve Right
Commander of the Left Wing Louis Desaix Commander of the Center Gouvion Saint Cyr
Commander of the Reserve François Antoine Louis Bourcier
Commander of the Right Wing Pierre Marie Barthélemy Ferino
Division Commander Antoine Guillaume Delmas
  • 97th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three balloons)
  • 10th Dragoon Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 17th Dragoon Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 10th Light Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 10th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 4th Chasseurs à cheval Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 8th Chasseurs à cheval Regiment (four squadrons)
  • Brigade: Dominique Joba
  • 62nd Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 103rd Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 6th Dragoon Regiment (four squadrons)
  • Artillery – 556 men
  • 89th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 36th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 18th Cavalry Regiment (four squadrons, unknown type)
  • unknown Line Infantry demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 1st Carabinier Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 2nd Carabinier Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 17th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 100th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 20th Chasseurs à cheval Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 11th Hussar Regiment (one squadron)
  • 21st Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 31st Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 9th Hussar Regiment (one squadron)
  • 84th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 106th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 2nd Chasseurs à cheval Regiment (four squadrons)
  • Artillery (unknown count)


Reserve Commander François Antoine Louis Bourcier

  • 109th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 2nd Cavalry Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 15th Cavalry Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 3rd Cavalry Regiment (four squadrons)
  • Brigade: Nicolas Louis Jordy
  • 3rd Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 38th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 21st Cavalry Regiment (1 squadron)
  • 3rd Light Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 79th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 12th Cavalry Regiment (4 squadrons)
  • 74th Line Infantry Demi-brigade (three battalions)
  • 4th Dragoon Regiment (four squadrons)
  • 7th Hussar Regiment (four squadrons)
  • Artillery (artillery unit of 822 men)

Notes, citations and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The French Army designated two kinds of infantry: principally the line infantry (French: infanterie de ligne), which fought in tight formations, and the light infantry (French: infanterie légère) to provide skirmishing cover for the troops that followed. Smith, p. 15.
  2. ^ These brigades probably included the 16th and 50th Demi-brigades, the 68th, 50th and 68th Regiments de ligne, and six squadrons of cavalry that included the 3rd and 7th Hussars and the 10th Dragoons. See Graham, pp. 18–22.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Timothy Blanning. The French Revolutionary Wars. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996, pp. 41–59.
  2. ^ a b c d Relation de l'assassinat de M. Théobald Dillon, Maréchal-de-Camp, Commis à Lille, le 29 avril 1792. Imprimerie de Mignaret (4 May 1792). Jean Paul Bertaud, R.R. Palmer (trans). The Army of the French Revolution: From Citizen-Soldiers to Instrument of Power, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988, chapter 1.
  3. ^ a b c (in French) Charles Clerget, Tableaux des armées françaises: pendant les guerres de la Révolution, R. Chapelot, 1905, pp. 55, 62.
  4. ^ Gunther E. Rothenberg, Napoleon’s Great Adversaries: Archduke Charles and the Austrian Army, 1792–1914, Stroud, (Gloucester): Spellmount, 2007, pp. 70–74.
  5. ^ Bertaud, pp. 283–290.
  6. ^ a b Smith, p. 111.
  7. ^ Knepper, pp. 19–20.
  8. ^ a b (in German) Johann Samuel Ersch, Allgemeine encyclopädie der wissenschaften und künste in alphabetischer folge von genannten schrifts bearbeitet und herausgegeben. Leipzig, J. F. Gleditsch, 1889, pp. 64–66.
  9. ^ a b Ramsay Weston Phipps, The Armies of the First French Republic: Volume II The Armées du Moselle, du Rhin, de Sambre-et-Meuse, de Rhin-et-Moselle, US, Pickle Partners Publishing, 2011 (1923–1933), p. 212.
  10. ^ J. Rickard First Battle of Altenkirchen, 4 June 1796, historyofwar.org, 2009 version. Accessed 4 May 2014.
  11. ^ J. Rickard, Siegburg, 1 June 1796, historyofwar.org, 2009 version. Accessed 4 May 2014. and Smith, p. 115.
  12. ^ Gunther E. Rothenberg, "The Habsburg Army in the Napoleonic Wars (1792–1815)". Military Affairs, 37:1 (Feb 1973), 1–5, 1–2 cited.
  13. ^ Smith, p. 115.
  14. ^ (in German) Charles, Archduke of Austria. Ausgewählte Schriften weiland seiner Kaiserlichen Hoheit des Erzherzogs Carl von Österreich, Vienna: Braumüller, 1893–94, v. 2, pp. 72, 153–154.
  15. ^ (in German) Jens-Florian Ebert, "Feldmarschall-Leutnant Fürst zu Fürstenberg," Die Österreichischen Generäle 1792–1815. Napoleon Online: Portal zu Epoch 8 April 2000 at the Wayback Machine. Markus Stein, editor. Mannheim, Germany. 14 February 2010 version. Accessed 28 February 2010.
  16. ^ a b Charles, pp. 153–154 and Thomas Graham, 1st Baron Lynedoch. The History of the Campaign of 1796 in Germany and Italy. London, (np) 1797, 18–22.
  17. ^ Graham, pp. 18–22.
  18. ^ Charles, pp. 153–154.
  19. ^ Peter Hamish Wilson, German Armies: War and German Politics 1648–1806. London: UCL Press, 1997, 324. Charles, pp. 153–54.
  20. ^ Graham, pp. 84–88.
  21. ^ a b Smith, p. 121.
  22. ^ Phipps, v II, p. 278.
  23. ^ Smith, p. 125.
  24. ^ The Annual Register, p. 208.
  25. ^ Graham, pp. 124–25.
  26. ^ Phillip Cuccia, Napoleon in Italy: the Sieges of Mantua, 1796–1799, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 2014, pp. 87–93. Smith, pp. 125, 131–133.
  27. ^ Smith, pp. 111–125.
  28. ^ John Philippart, Memoires etc. of General Moreau, London, A.J. Valpy, 1814, p. 279.
  29. ^ Philippart, p. 127; Smith, p. 131.
  30. ^ Sir Archibald Alison, 1st Baronet. History of Europe from the Commencement of the French Revolution to the Restoration of the Bourbons, Volume 3. Edinburgh, W. Blackwood, 1847, p. 88.
  31. ^ (in French) Christian von Mechel, Tableaux historiques et topographiques ou relation exacte.... Basel, 1798, pp. 64–72.
  32. ^ Philippart, p. 127. and Alison, pp. 88–89. Smith, p. 132.
  33. ^ Smith, p. 132.
  34. ^ (in German) Pichegru. Brockhaus Bilder-Conversations-Lexikon, Band 3. Leipzig 1839., pp. 495–496.
  35. ^ a b Frank McLynn, Napoleon: A Biography. nl, Skyhorse Publishing In, 2011, Chapter VIII.
  36. ^ Simon Schama, Patriots and Liberators. Revolution in the Netherlands 1780–1813, New York, Vintage Books, 1998, pp. 175–192.
  37. ^ Will and Ariel Durant, The Age of Napoleon, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1975, p. 83.
  38. ^ Charles Angélique François Huchet La Bédoyère (comte de), Memoirs of the public and private life of Napoleon Bonaparte. nl, G. Virtue, 1828, pp. 59–60.
  39. ^ Phipps, pp. 348–349.
  40. ^ Phipps, vol. 2, p. iii.
  41. ^ Richard Phillipson Dunn-Pattison, Napoleon's marshals., Wakefield, EP Pub., 1977 (reprint of 1895 edition), pp. viii–xix, xvii quoted.
  42. ^ a b Dunn-Pattison, pp. xviii–xix.
  43. ^ Phipps, pp. 90–94.
  44. ^ a b Clerget, p. 55.
  45. ^ a b c d e Clerget, p.62.
  46. ^ All information from Smith, p. 111, unless otherwise noted.

References edit

  • Alison, Archibald. History of Europe from the Commencement of the French Revolution to the Restoration of the Bourbons, Volume 3. Edinburgh, W. Blackwood, 1847. OCLC 6051293
  • The Annual Register: World Events 1796.. London, FC and J Rivington. 1813. Accessed 4 November 2014. OCLC 264471215
  • Blanning, Timothy. The French Revolutionary Wars. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0340569115
  • Beevor, Antony. Berlin: The Downfall 1945. New York, Viking-Penguin Books, 2002. ISBN 0-670-88695-5
  • Bertaud, Jean Paul and R.R. Palmer (trans). The Army of the French Revolution: From Citizen-Soldiers to Instrument of Power. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988. OCLC 17954374
  • Bodart, Gaston. Losses of Life in Modern Wars, Austria-Hungary. London, Clarendon Press, 1916. OCLC 1458451
  • (in German) Charles, Archduke of Austria (unattributed). Geschichte des Feldzuges von 1796 in Deutschland. France, 1796. OCLC 693115692
  • (in German) Charles, Archduke of Austria, Grundsätze der Strategie: Erläutert durch die Darstellung des Feldzugs von 1796 in Deutschland, [Vienna], Strauss, 1819. OCLC 444880753
  • (in French) Clerget, Charles. Tableaux des armées françaises: pendant les guerres de la Révolution. R. Chapelot, 1905. OCLC 13730761
  • Cuccia, Phillip. Napoleon in Italy: The Sieges of Mantua, 1796–1799, Tulsa, University of Oklahoma Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0806144450
  • Dodge, Theodore Ayrault. Warfare in the Age of Napoleon: The Revolutionary Wars Against the First Coalition in Northern Europe and the Italian Campaign, 1789–1797. USA: Leonaur Ltd., 2011 ISBN 978-0-85706-598-8.
  • Dunn-Pattison, Richard Phillipson. Napoleon's Marshals, Wakefield, EP Pub., 1977 (reprint of 1895 edition). OCLC 3438894
  • Durant, Will and Ariel Durant, The Age of Napoleon. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1975. OCLC 1256901
  • (in German) Ebert, Jens-Florian "Feldmarschall-Leutnant Fürst zu Fürstenberg," Die Österreichischen Generäle 1792–1815. . Markus Stein, editor. Mannheim, Germany. 14 February 2010 version. Accessed 28 February 2010.
  • (in German) Ersch, Johann Samuel. Allgemeine encyclopädie der wissenschaften und künste in alphabetischer folge von genannten schrifts bearbeitet und herausgegeben. Leipzig, J. F. Gleditsch, 1889. OCLC 978611925
  • Graham, Thomas, 1st Baron Lynedoch. The History of the Campaign of 1796 in Germany and Italy. London, (np) 1797. OCLC 44868000
  • Knepper, Thomas P. The Rhine. Handbook for Environmental Chemistry Series, Part L. New York: Springer, 2006. ISBN 978-3540293934.
  • La Bédoyère, Charles Angélique François Huchet, Memoirs of the Public and Private Life of Napoleon Bonaparte. nl, G. Virtue, 1828. OCLC 5207764
  • (in French) Lievyns, A., Jean Maurice Verdot, Pierre Bégat, Fastes de la Légion-d'honneur: biographie de tous les décorés accompagnée de l'histoire législative et réglementaire de l'ordre, Bureau de l'administration, 1844. OCLC 3903245
  • (in German) Lühe, Hans Eggert Willibald von der. Militär-Conversations-Lexikon:Kehl (Uberfall 1796) & (Belagerung des Bruckenkopfes von 1796–1797), Volume 4. C. Brüggemann, 1834. OCLC 63336793
  • Malte-Brun, Conrad. Universal Geography, Or, a Description of All the Parts of the World, on a New Plan: Spain, Portugal, France, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Belgium, and Holland.. A. Black, 1831. OCLC 1171138
  • McLynn, Frank. Napoleon: A Biography. New York, Arcade Pub., 2002. OCLC 49351026
  • (in French) Mechel, Christian von, Tableaux historiques et topographiques ou relation exacte.... Basel, 1798. OCLC 715971198
  • Millar, Stephen. Austrian infantry organization. Napoleon Series.org, April 2005. Accessed 21 Jan 2015.
  • (in German) "Pichegru." Brockhaus Bilder-Conversations-Lexikon, Band 3. Leipzig, 1839, pp. 495–496. ISBN 9783898535465
  • Philippart, John. Memoires etc. of General Moreau. London, A. J. Valpy, 1814. OCLC 8721194
  • Phipps, Ramsey Weston, The Armies of the First French Republic: Volume II The Armées du Moselle, du Rhin, de Sambre-et-Meuse, de Rhin-et-Moselle. Pickle Partners Publishing, 2011 reprint (original publication 1923–1933) ISBN 9781908692252
  • (in French) Relation de l'assassinat de M. Théobald Dillon, Maréchal-de-Camp, Commis à Lille, le 29 avril 1792. Imprimerie de Mignaret (4 May 1792). OCLC 560845873
  • Rickard, J., Battle of Emmendingen; Ettlingen; Siege of Huningue, 26 October 1796 – 19 February 1797; Ettlingen. History of war.org. Accessed 18 November 2014.
  • Rogers, Clifford, et al. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2010. ISBN 978-0195334036.
  • Rothenberg, Gunther E. (2007). Napoleon’s Great Adversaries: Archduke Charles and the Austrian Army, 1792–1914. Stroud, (Gloucester): Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-908692-25-2
  • Rothenberg, Gunther E. "The Habsburg Army in the Napoleonic Wars (1792–1815)". Military Affairs, 37:1 (Feb 1973), 1–5. ISSN 0026-3931
  • Rotteck, Carl von. General History of the World, np: C. F. Stollmeyer, 1842. OCLC 653511
  • Schama, Simon. Patriots and Liberators. Revolution in the Netherlands 1780–1813. New York, Vintage books, 1998. OCLC 2331328
  • Sellman, R. R. Castles and Fortresses. York (UK), Methuen, 1954. OCLC 12261230
  • Smith, Digby. Napoleonic Wars Data Book, NY: Greenhill Press, 1996. ISBN 9781853672767
  • Vann, James Allen. The Swabian Kreis: Institutional Growth in the Holy Roman Empire 1648–1715. Vol. LII, Studies Presented to International Commission for the History of Representative and Parliamentary Institutions. Bruxelles, Les Éditions de la Librairie Encyclopédique, 1975. OCLC 2276157
  • (in German) Volk, Helmut. Waldschutzgebiete Baden-Württemberg, Band 10, pp. 159–167. OCLC 939802377
  • Walker, Mack. German Home Towns: Community, State, and General Estate, 1648–1871. Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1998. ISBN 0801406706
  • Wilson, Peter Hamish. German Armies: War and German Politics 1648–1806. London: UCL Press, 1997. OCLC 52081917

Other useful sources edit

  • Blanning, Timothy. The French Revolution in Germany. New York, Oxford University Press, 1983. ISBN 978-0198225645
  • Dyke, Thomas, Jr. Traveling Memoirs during a Tour through Belgium, Rhenish Prussia, Germany. Volume 1. London: Longman, 1834.
  • History of the Wars of the French Revolution: Including Sketches of the Civil History of Great Britain and France, from the Revolutionary Movements, 1788, to the Restoration of a General Peace. 1815, Kuhl, France, 1820.
  • Jomini, Antoine-Henri (Baron). The Art of War,Wilder Publications, 2008, p. 173. Originally published in English in 1862. ISBN 9781934255582
  • Sloane, W.M. Life of Napoleon. France, 1896 (reprint, 1910).

army, rhine, moselle, french, armée, rhin, moselle, field, units, french, revolutionary, army, formed, april, 1795, merger, elements, army, rhine, army, moselle, fusilier, french, revolutionary, armyactive20, april, 1795, september, 1797disbanded29, september,. The Army of the Rhine and Moselle French Armee de Rhin et Moselle was one of the field units of the French Revolutionary Army It was formed on 20 April 1795 by the merger of elements of the Army of the Rhine and the Army of the Moselle Army of the Rhine and MoselleFusilier of a French Revolutionary ArmyActive20 April 1795 29 September 1797Disbanded29 September 1797 and units merged into Army of GermanyCountryAllegianceFirst RepublicCommandersNotablecommandersJean Charles PichegruJean Victor Marie MoreauLouis Desaix Laurent de Gouvion Saint Cyr The Army of the Rhine and Moselle participated in two principal campaigns in the War of the First Coalition Military planners in Paris formed armies based on specific strategic tasks and the task of this Army was to secure the French frontier at the Rhine and to penetrate the German states potentially threatening Vienna The unsuccessful 1795 campaign concluded with the removal of General Jean Charles Pichegru from command In 1796 under the command of General Jean Victor Marie Moreau the Army was more successful After crushing the Reichsarmee s elements at Kehl the Army advanced into southwestern Germany Its success depended on the cooperation with France s Army of the Sambre and Meuse commanded by Jean Baptiste Jourdan In 1796 the jealousies between Jourdan and Moreau and among the subcommanders complicated the efficient operations of both armies After a summer of maneuver in which the Coalition force enticed the French deeper and deeper into German territory the Habsburg commander Archduke Charles Duke of Teschen drubbed the French at Wurzburg and at second Wetzlar and then defeated Jourdan s army at the Limburg Altenkirchen These battles destroyed any chance that Jourdan s force and Moreau s Army of the Rhine and Moselle could merge Once Jourdan withdrew to the west bank of the Rhine Charles could focus his attention on Moreau By October they were fighting on the western slope of the Black Forest and by December Charles had the French forces under siege at the principal river crossings of Kehl and Huningen By early 1797 the French had relinquished control of the bridgeheads over the Rhine After an abbreviated German campaign in 1797 the French and Austrians agreed to the Treaty of Campo Formio and on 29 September 1797 the Army of the Rhine and Moselle merged with the Army of the Sambre and Meuse to form the Army of Germany The Army of the Rhine and Moselle campaigns provided experience for a cadre of young officers In his five volume analysis of the Revolutionary Armies Ramsey Weston Phipps called the Army of the Rhine and Moselle a school for marshals to emphasize the importance of experience under these conditions in training the future leadership of Napoleon s army Contents 1 Background 2 Purpose and formation 2 1 Military challenges 2 2 Formation 3 Campaign of 1795 4 Campaign in 1796 4 1 Summer of 1796 5 Organizational and command problems 5 1 School for marshals 6 Commanders 7 Order of Battle in 1796 8 Notes citations and references 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 References 8 4 Other useful sourcesBackground editSee also French Revolutionary Wars nbsp The broad Rhine River and its many tributaries prevented easy escape into France The colors represent the different sections of the Rhine Mountain Rhine Alpenrhein High Rhine Hochrhein Upper Rhine Oberrhein Middle Rhine Mittelrhein Low Rhine Niederrhein The rulers of Europe viewed the 1789 revolution in France as an internal matter between the French king and his subjects In 1790 Leopold succeeded his brother Joseph as emperor of the Holy Roman Empire by 1791 the danger to his sister Marie Antoinette and her children alarmed him In August 1791 in consultation with French emigre nobles and Frederick William II of Prussia Leopold s Declaration of Pillnitz articulated that the interests of the monarchs of Europe were as one with the interests of Louis and his family He and his fellow monarchs threatened unspecified consequences if anything should happen to the royal family French emigres continued to agitate for support of a counter revolution and on 20 April 1792 the French National Convention declared war on Austria In this War of the First Coalition 1792 1798 France ranged itself against most of the European states sharing its land or water borders plus Portugal and the Ottoman Empire 1 Elements of the armies that were later formed into the Army of the Rhine and Moselle participated in the conquest of the Netherlands and the siege of Luxembourg The various elements of the army won a victory at the Battle of Fleurus on 16 June 1794 Shortly after Fleurus the position of the First Coalition in Flanders collapsed and the French armies overran the Austrian Netherlands and the Dutch Republic in the winter of 1794 1795 French and Coalition military strategy subsequently focused on the Rhine river as the principle line of defense for each side control of the opposite bank or at least the river s principal crossings was the basis of defensive strategy 1 Purpose and formation editSee also French Revolutionary Army Military challenges edit By 1792 the armies of the French Republic were in a state of disruption experienced soldiers of the Ancien Regime fought side by side with volunteers Recruits urged on by revolutionary fervor from the special representatives agents of the legislature sent to ensure cooperation among the military lacked the discipline and training to function efficiently frequently insubordinate they often refused orders and undermined unit cohesion After a defeat they were capable of mutiny as Theobald Dillon learned when his troops lynched him in 1792 2 Military cohesion became more acute following the 1793 introduction of mass conscription the levee en masse The basic unit of the army the demi brigade mixed the men of the old army with the recruits from the levee en masse Ideally it was designed to include the regular infantry inherited from the old Royal regiments who were relatively well trained and equipped dressed in white uniforms and wearing tarleton helmets with the national guard units who were less well trained or equipped with blue uniforms and the federe volunteer battalions who were poorly trained and equipped with no uniform other than a red phrygian cap and a cockade of France 3 2 Disruption reached the upper echelons of the army French commanders walked a fine line between the security of the frontier and the Parisian clamor for victory Commanders were constantly under suspicion from the representatives of the new regime and sometimes from their own soldiers Failure to achieve unrealistic expectations implied disloyalty and the price of disloyalty was an appointment with Madame guillotine several of the highest ranking generals including the aged Nicolas Luckner Jean Nicolas Houchard Adam Philippe Custine Arthur Dillon and Antoine Nicolas Collier were killed Francisco de Miranda s failure to take Maastricht landed him in La Force Prison for several years Many of the old officer class had emigrated forming emigre armies the cavalry in particular suffered from their departure and the Hussards du Saxe and the 15eme Cavalerie Royal Allemande regiments defected en masse to the Austrians The artillery arm considered by the old nobility to be an inferior assignment was less affected by emigration and survived intact 3 2 By 1794 95 military planners in Paris considered the upper Rhine Valley the south western German territories and Danube river basin of strategic importance for the defense of the Republic The Rhine offered a formidable barrier to what the French perceived as Austrian aggression and the state that controlled its crossings controlled the river and access into the territories on either side Ready access across the Rhine and along the Rhine bank between the German states and Switzerland or through the Black Forest gave access to the upper Danube river valley For the French control of the Upper Danube or any point in between was of immense strategic value and would give the French a reliable approach to Vienna 4 The planners also understood the importance of moving the French army out of France and into the territories of other polities Theirs was an army entirely dependent for support upon the countryside it occupied Parisian revolutionaries and military commanders alike believed an assault into the German states was essential not only in terms of war aims but also in practical terms the French Directory believed that war should pay for itself and did not budget for the payment or feeding of its troops 5 Although this solved some of the problems of feeding and paying the army it did not solve them all Until April 1796 soldiers were paid in an increasingly worthless paper currency called the Assignat after April pay was made in metallic value but pay was still in arrears Throughout the spring and early summer the soldiers were in almost constant mutiny in May 1796 in the border town of Zweibrucken a demi brigade revolted In June pay for two demi brigades were in arrears and two companies rebelled 2 Formation edit nbsp The two principal French Armies of 1794 were formed from four smaller units each contributing a portion of its troops to either the Sambre and Meuse or the Army of the Rhine and Moselle The right flank of Army of the North remained in the Netherlands In late 1794 military planners in Paris reorganized the army into task forces The right flank of the Armies of the Center later called the Army of the Moselle the entire Army of the North and the Army of the Ardennes were combined to form the Army of the Sabre and Meuse which was stationed on the west bank of the Rhine north of the junction of the Main and the Rhine rivers The remaining units of the former Army of the Center and the Army of the Rhine were united initially on 29 November 1794 and formally on 20 April 1795 under command of Jean Charles Pichegru These troops were stationed further south in a line that stretched on the west bank of the Rhine from Basel to the Main River 6 At Basel where the river makes a wide northerly turn at the Rhine knee it enters what the locals call the Rhine Ditch Rheingraben This forms part of a rift valley some 31 km 19 mi wide bordered by the mountainous Black Forest on the east German side and the Vosges mountains on the west French side At the far edges of the eastern flood plain tributaries cut deep defiles into the western slope of the mountains 7 Further to the north the river became deeper and faster until it widened into a delta where it emptied into the North Sea 8 Campaign of 1795 editSee also Rhine Campaign of 1795 The Rhine Campaign of 1795 April 1795 to January 1796 opened both French armies attempted to cross the Rhine and capture the Fortress of Mainz The French Army of the Sambre and Meuse commanded by Jean Baptiste Jourdan confronted Count Clerfayt s Army of the Lower Rhine in the north while the French Army of Rhine and Moselle under Pichegru lay opposite Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser s army in the south From April until August both sides engaged in a waiting game until in August Jourdan crossed and quickly seized Dusseldorf The Army of the Sambre and Meuse advanced south to the Main River completely isolating Mainz Pichegru s Army of the Rhine and Moselle surprised the Bavarian garrison of Mannheim by mid month both French armies held significant footholds on the east bank of the Rhine The French fumbled away the promising start to their offensive Pichegru bungled at least one opportunity to seize Clerfayt s supply base in the Battle of Handschuhsheim with resultant significant losses With Pichegru unexpectedly inactive Clerfayt massed against Jourdan beat him at Hochst in October and forced most of the Army of the Sambre and Meuse to retreat to the west bank of the Rhine 9 These maneuvers left the Army of the Rhine and Moselle isolated When Wurmser sealed off the French bridgehead at Mannheim the Army of the Rhine and Moselle was trapped on the east bank The Austrians defeated the left wing of the Army of Rhine and Moselle at the Battle of Mainz and moved down the west bank In November Clerfayt defeated Pichegru at Pfeddersheim and successfully wrapped up the siege of Mannheim In January 1796 Clerfayt concluded an armistice with the French sending the Army of the Rhine and Moselle back to France and retaining a large portions of the west bank 9 Campaign in 1796 editSee also Rhine Campaign of 1796 nbsp French soldiers overwhelmed the Swabian militia The opening of the Rhine Campaign of 1796 began with Jean Baptiste Kleber s attack south of his bridgehead at Dusseldorf After Kleber won sufficient maneuver room on the east bank of the Rhine River Jean Baptiste Jourdan was supposed to join him with the remainder of the Army of the Sambre and Meuse At the first battles of Altenkirchen 4 June 1796 and Wetzlar two Republican French divisions commanded by Kleber attacked a wing of the Habsburg army led by Duke Ferdinand Frederick Augustus of Wurttemberg A frontal attack combined with a flanking maneuver forced the Austrians to retreat Three future Marshals of France played significant roles in the engagement at Altenkirchen Francois Joseph Lefebvre as a division commander Jean de Dieu Soult as a brigadier and Michel Ney as leader of a flanking column Altenkirchen is located in the state of Rhineland Palatinate about 50 km 31 mi east of Bonn Wetzlar was located in the Landgraviate of Hesse Kassel 66 kilometers 41 mi north of Frankfurt 10 Altenkirchen was only a distraction to entice the Austrian commander to move troops from the south to strengthen his force in the middle Rhine Moreau lent credence to this distraction by seeming to move part of the Army of the Rhine and Moselle north from Strasburg When Archduke Charles moved troops north to oppose what looked to be a crossing in force Moreau reversed to Kehl and crossed the river Kleber carried out his part of the scheme to perfection 11 The opposition armies of the First Coalition included imperial Reichsarmee contingents and the infantry and cavalry of the various states amounting to about 125 000 including the three autonomous corps a sizeable force by eighteenth century standards but a moderate force by the standards of the later Revolutionary wars In total though Imperial and Habsburg troops stretched in a line from Switzerland to the North Sea and Wurmser s troops stretched from the Swiss Italian border to the Adriatic furthermore a portion of the troops in Furstenberg s corps were pulled in July to support Wurmser s activities in Italy Habsburg troops comprised the bulk of the army but the thin white line of Habsburg infantry could not cover the territory from Basel to Frankfurt with sufficient depth to resist the pressure of the opposition In spring 1796 drafts from the free imperial cities and other imperial estates augmented the Habsburg force with perhaps 20 000 men at the most It was largely guesswork where they would be placed and Archduke Charles commander of the Reichsarmee and the Habsburg forces did not like to use the militias which were poorly trained and unseasoned Compared to French coverage Charles had only half the number of troops extended over a 211 mile front stretching from Basel to Bingen Furthermore Charles had concentrated the bulk of his force commanded by Count Baillet Latour between Karlsruhe and Darmstadt where the confluence of the Rhine and the Main river made an attack most likely as it offered a gateway into eastern German states and ultimately to Vienna with sturdy bridges crossing the relatively well defined river bank To the north Wilhelm von Wartensleben s autonomous corps stretched in a thin line between Mainz and Giessen 12 On 22 June the Army of the Rhine and Moselle executed simultaneous crossings at Kehl and Huningen 13 At Kehl Moreau s advance guard 10 000 men preceded the main force of 27 000 infantry and 3 000 cavalry directed at a mere several hundred Swabian pickets on the bridge The Swabians were hopelessly outnumbered and could not be reinforced Most of the Imperial Army of the Rhine was stationed further north by Mannheim where the river was easier to cross Neither Louis Joseph Prince of Conde s Army of Conde in Freiburg nor Karl Aloys zu Furstenberg s force in Rastatt could reach Kehl in time to relieve the Swabian troops 14 15 Consequently within a day Moreau had four divisions across the river Unceremoniously thrust out of Kehl the Swabian contingent reformed at Rastatt by 5 July which they held until reinforcements arrived 16 Furthermore at Huningen near Basel Ferino executed a full crossing and advanced east along the German shore of the Rhine with the 16th and 50th Demi brigades the 68th 50th and 68th line infantry and six squadrons of cavalry that included the 3rd and 7th Hussars and the 10th Dragoons The Habsburg and Imperial armies were in danger of encirclement 17 With Ferino s quick movements to encircle him Charles executed an orderly withdrawal in four columns through the Black Forest across the Upper Danube valley and toward Bavaria By mid July the French forces maintained persistent pressure on Charles force Two imperial columns encamped near Stuttgart were surrounded and surrendered leading to a general armistice with the Swabian Circle The third column which included the Conde s Corps retreated through Waldsee to Stockach and eventually Ravensburg The fourth Austrian column the smallest three battalions and four squadrons under General Wolff marched the length of the Bodensee s northern shore via Uberlingen Meersburg Buchhorn and the Austrian city of Bregenz 16 nbsp nbsp Ettlingen nbsp Neresheim nbsp Friedberg nbsp Schliengen nbsp Wetzlar nbsp Wurzburg nbsp Amberg nbsp Limburg nbsp Altenkirchen nbsp Emmendingen nbsp Kehl nbsp Mainz nbsp Mannheimclass notpageimage Location map shows the battles and sieges of the 1796 Rhine Campaign Borders reflect boundaries of present day Germany Given the size of the attacking force Charles had to withdraw far enough into Bavaria to align his northern flank with Wartensleben s autonomous corps As he withdrew his own line compressed making his army stronger his opposition s flanks extended making their line weaker 18 In the course of this withdrawal most of the Swabian Circle was abandoned to the Army of the Rhine and Moselle which enforced an armistice and extracted sizeable reparations in addition the French occupied several principal towns in southwestern Germany including Stockach Meersburg Constance Uberlingen am Bodensee Ulm and Augsburg 19 As Charles withdrew further east the neutral zone expanded eventually encompassing most of southern German states and the Ernestine duchies 20 Summer of 1796 edit By mid summer the strategic goals of the Army of the Rhine and Moselle appeared to have succeeded Jourdan or Moreau seemed on the brink of flanking Charles and Wartensleben forcing a wedge between the two inexplicably Wartensleben continued to withdraw to the east north east despite Charles orders to unite with him At the Battle of Neresheim on 11 August Moreau crushed Charles force and at last however Wartensleben recognized the danger he changed direction moving his corps to join at Charles northern flank At the Battle of Amberg on 24 August Charles inflicted another defeat on the French but that same day his commanders lost a battle to the French at Friedberg when the French army which was advancing eastward on the south side of the Danube isolated an Austrian infantry unit Schroder Infantry Regiment Nr 7 and the French Army of Conde In the ensuing clash the Austrians and Royalists were cut to pieces 21 The tide now turned in the Coalition s favor Both French Armies had overstretched their lines moving far into the German states and were separated too far from each other for one to offer the other aid or security The Coalition s concentration of troops forced a wider wedge between the two armies of Jourdan and Moreau what the French had tried to do to Charles and Wartensleben Despite Charles instructions to withdraw northward toward Ingolstadt Maximilian Anton Karl Count Baillet de Latour retreated eastward to protect the borders of Austria Moreau did not seize the opportunity to place his army between the two Austrian forces Wartensleben s and Charles 21 As the French withdrew toward the Rhine Charles and Wartensleben pressed forward On 3 September at Wurzburg Jourdan attempted unsuccessfully to halt the retreat at the Battle of Limburg Charles pushed him back to the Rhine 22 Once Moreau received word of Jourdan s defeat he initiated his withdrawal from southern Germany Retreating through the Black Forest with Ferino supervising the rear guard he claimed one more victory an Austrian corps commanded by Latour drew too close to Moreau at Biberach and lost 4 000 prisoners some standards and artillery Latour followed at a more sensible distance Both sides were hampered by heavy rains the ground was soft and slippery and the Rhine and Elz rivers had flooded This increased the hazards of mounted attack because the horses could not get a good footing Archduke s force pursued the French although carefully The French attempted to slow their pursuers by destroying bridges but the Austrians repaired them and crossed the swollen rivers despite the high waters Upon reaching a few miles east of Emmendingen the Archduke split his force into four columns Friedrich Joseph Count of Nauendorf s column in the upper Elz had eight battalions and 14 squadrons advancing southwest to Waldkirch Wartensleben had 12 battalions and 23 squadrons advancing south to capture the Elz bridge at Emmendingen Latour with 6 000 men was to cross the foothills via Heimbach and Malterdingen and capture the bridge of Kondringen between Riegel and Emmendingen and Karl Aloys zu Furstenberg s column held Kinzingen about 3 2 kilometers 2 mi north of Riegel Frolich and Conde part of Nauendorf s column were to pin down Ferino and the French right wing in the Stieg valley Nauendorf s men were able to ambush St Cyr s advance Latour s columns attacked Beaupuy at Matterdingen killing the general and throwing his column into confusion Wartensleben in the center was held up by French riflemen until his third reserve detachment arrived to outflank them the French retreated across the rivers destroying all the bridges 8 23 After the shambles at Emmendingen the French withdrew to the south and west and formed for battle by Schliengen There Moreau established his army along a ridge of hills in a 11 kilometer 7 mi semi circle on heights that commanded the terrain below Given the severe condition of the roads at the end of October Archduke Charles could not flank the right French wing The French left wing lay too close to the Rhine and the French center was unassailable Instead he attacked the French flanks directly and in force which increased casualties for both sides The Duc d Enghien led a spirited but unauthorized attack on the French left cutting their access to a withdrawal through Kehl 24 Nauendorf s column marched all night and half of the day and attacked the French right pushing them further back In the night while Charles planned his next day s attack Moreau began the withdrawal of his troops toward Huningen 25 Although the French and the Austrians both claimed victory at the time military historians generally agree that the Austrians achieved a strategic advantage However the French withdrew from the battlefield in good order and several days later crossed the Rhine River at Huningen 26 27 After Schliengen both the French and the Coalition sought to control the Rhine river crossings at Kehl and Huningen At Kehl 20 000 28 French defenders under Louis Desaix and the overall commander of the French force Jean Victor Marie Moreau almost upset the siege when they executed a sortie that nearly captured the Austrian artillery park the French managed to capture 1 000 Austrian troops in the melee On 9 January the French general Desaix proposed the evacuation to General Latour and they agreed that the Austrians would enter Kehl the next day on 10 January at 16 00 The French immediately repaired the bridge rendered passable by 14 00 which gave them 24 hours to evacuate everything of value and to raze everything else By the time Latour took possession of the fortress nothing remained of any use all palisades ammunition even the carriages of the bombs and howitzers had been evacuated The French insured that nothing remained behind that could be used by the Austrian Imperial army even the fortress itself was but earth and ruins The siege concluded 115 days after its investment following 50 days of open trenches the point at which active fighting began 29 At Huningen Karl Aloys zu Furstenberg s force initiated the siege within days of the Austrian victory at the Battle of Schliengen Most of the siege ran concurrently with the siege at Kehl which concluded on 9 January 1797 Troops engaged at Kehl marched to Huningen in preparation for a major assault but the French defenders capitulated on 1 February 1797 The French commander Jean Charles Abbatucci was killed in the early days of the fighting and replaced by Georges Joseph Dufour The trenches opened originally in November had refilled with winter rain and snow in the intervening weeks Furstenberg ordered them opened again and the water drained out on 25 January The Coalition force secured the earthworks surrounding the trenches On 31 January the French failed to push the Austrians out 30 Archduke Charles arrived that day and met with Furstenberg at nearby Lorrach The night of 31 January to 1 February was relatively tranquil marred only by ordinary artillery fire and shelling 31 At mid day 1 February 1797 as the Austrians prepared to storm the bridgehead General of Division Dufour pre empted what would have been a costly attack for both sides offering to surrender the position On 5 February Furstenberg finally took possession of the bridgehead 32 Following the losses in 1796 and early 1797 the French regrouped their forces on the west side of the Rhine An abbreviated campaign in late spring of 1797 led to Austrians and the French to agree to the Treaty of Campo Formio ending the War of the First Coalition The subsequent armistice at Leoben led to long term negotiations for peace between Revolutionary France and Austria On 29 September 1797 the Army of the Rhine and Moselle merged with the Army of the Sambre and Meuse to form the Army of Germany 33 Organizational and command problems editExcruciating command challenges plagued the Army of the Rhine and Moselle in its early operations The campaign of 1795 had been entirely a French failure and the difficulties the Army of the Rhine and Moselle faced especially in 1795 had much to do with Pichegru s own situation his competition with both Moreau and Jourdan and his disaffection with the direction in which the revolution was headed 34 Originally a dedicated Jacobin by 1794 his own intrigues had placed him in command after he had undermined Lazare Hoche the previous year insuring his own appointment as commander of this army As the revolution waxed and waned in its ardency however so did Pichegru to its principles by late 1794 he was leaning heavily toward the royalist cause 35 The Directory replaced him with Desaix and later Moreau 3 Undeniably a capable possibly brilliant and popular commander Pichegru began his second campaign by crossing the Meuse on 18 October After taking Nijmegen he drove the Austrians across the Rhine Then instead of going into winter quarters he prepared his army for a winter campaign always a difficult proposition in the eighteenth century Several brilliant actions in the winter established Pichegru s position 36 Pichegru s actions sometimes seemed inexplicable although an associate even a friend of the recently executed Saint Just Pichegru offered his services to the Thermidorian Reaction after having received the title of Sauveur de la Patrie Saviour of the Fatherland from the National Convention he subdued the sans culottes of Paris during the bread riots of 1 April 1795 37 As a hero of the Revolution captured Mannheim but inexplicably he allowed his colleague Jourdan to be defeated throughout 1796 his machinations in Paris complicated the conduct of operations in Germany by undermining the senior command confidence 38 In the field in 1796 competition between generals not ideology caused command problems Jealousies between Jourdan and Moreau further complicated the success of the Army of the Rhine and Moselle by refusing to unite their fronts Moreau moved rapidly into Bavarian and toward Vienna as if he commanded the only French army in the German states Frustration created rivalries between and among subcommanders Ferino continued his seemingly random maneuvers along the border with Switzerland and through the Swabian Circle as if he too were operating autonomously These problems were not limited to Moreau s army in the Army of the Sambre and Meuse Jourdan had a spat with his wing commander Kleber and that officer suddenly resigned Two generals from Kleber s clique Bernadotte and Colaud also made excuses to leave immediately Faced with this mutiny Jourdan replaced Bernadotte with General Henri Simon and divided Colaud s rebellious units among the other divisions 39 School for marshals edit The campaigns in which the Army of the Rhine and Moselle participated also provided exceptional experience for a cadre of extraordinary young officers In his five volume analysis of the Revolutionary Armies Ramsey Weston Phipps emphasized the importance of experience under these trying conditions of manpower shortage poor training equipment and supply shortage and tactical and strategic confusion and interference Phipps s objective was to show how the training received in the early years of the war varied not only with the theater in which they served but also with the character of the army to which they belonged 40 The experience of young officers under the tutelage of such experienced men as Pichegru Moreau Lazar Hoche Lefebvre and Jourdan provided young officers with valuable experience 35 Phipps analysis is not singular although his lengthy volumes address in detail the value of this school for marshals In 1895 Richard Phillipson Dunn Pattison also singled out the French Revolutionary army as the finest school the world has yet seen for an apprenticeship in the trade of arms 41 The resurrection of the Ancien Regime civil dignity of the marchalate allowed Emperor Napoleon I to strengthen his newly created power He could reward the most valuable of his generals or soldiers who had held significant commands during the French Revolutionary Wars 42 The Army of the Rhine and Moselle and its subsequent incarnations included five future Marshals of France Jean Baptiste Jourdan its commander in chief Jean Baptiste Drouet Laurent de Gouvion Saint Cyr and Edouard Adolphe Casimir Joseph Mortier 43 Francois Joseph Lefebvre by 1804 an old man was named an honorary marshal but not awarded a field position Michel Ney in the 1795 1799 campaigns an intrepid cavalry commander came into his own command under the tutelage of Moreau and Massena in the south German and Swiss campaigns Jean de Dieu Soult had served under Moreau and Massena becoming the latter s right hand man during the Swiss campaign of 1799 1800 Jean Baptiste Bessieres like Ney had been a competent and sometimes inspired regimental commander in 1796 MacDonald Oudinot and Saint Cyr participants in the 1796 campaign all received honors in the third fourth and fifth promotions 1809 1811 1812 42 Commanders editImage Name Dates nbsp Jean Charles Pichegru 20 April 1795 4 March 1796 44 nbsp Louis Desaix 5 March 20 April 1796 44 Temporary command nbsp Jean Victor Marie Moreau 21 April 1796 30 January 1797 45 also had overall command of the Army of the Sambre and MeuseLouis Desaix 31 January 9 March 1797 45 temporary command armistice in effectJean Victor Marie Moreau 10 March 27 March 1797 45 temporary command armistice in effectLouis Desaix 27 March 19 April 1797 45 temporary command armistice in effect nbsp Laurent de Gouvion Saint Cyr 20 April 9 Sept 1797 45 subordinate to Lazare HocheOrder of Battle in 1796 editThe Army included 66 battalions and 79 squadrons totaling 65 103 men including 56 756 infantry 6 536 cavalry and 1 811 artillery on 1 June 1796 6 Commander in Chief 1796 Jean Victor Marie Moreau Chief of Staff Jean Louis Ebenezer Reynier Commander of Artillery Jean Baptiste Eble Commander of Engineers Dominique Andre de Chambarlhac1796 Order of Battle 46 Left Center and Reserve RightCommander of the Left Wing Louis Desaix Commander of the Center Gouvion Saint CyrCommander of the Reserve Francois Antoine Louis Bourcier Commander of the Right Wing Pierre Marie Barthelemy FerinoDivision Commander Antoine Guillaume Delmas Brigade Maurice Frimont16th Light Infantry Demi brigade three battalions Note 1 50th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 7th Hussar Regiment four squadrons dd Brigade Jean Marie Rodolph Eickemayer97th Line Infantry Demi brigade three balloons 10th Dragoon Regiment four squadrons 17th Dragoon Regiment four squadrons dd Division Michel de BeaupuyBrigade Joseph Martin Bruneteau also known as Sainte Suzanne10th Light Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 10th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 4th Chasseurs a cheval Regiment four squadrons 8th Chasseurs a cheval Regiment four squadrons dd Brigade Dominique Joba62nd Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 103rd Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 6th Dragoon Regiment four squadrons Artillery 556 men dd Brigade Jean Victor Tharreau89th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 36th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 18th Cavalry Regiment four squadrons unknown type dd Division Charles Antoine XaintraillesBrigade Jean Marie Forestunknown Line Infantry demi brigade three battalions 1st Carabinier Regiment four squadrons 2nd Carabinier Regiment four squadrons dd Division Guillaume Philibert Duhesme and Alexandre Camille TaponierBrigade Dominique Vandamme17th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 100th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 20th Chasseurs a cheval Regiment four squadrons 11th Hussar Regiment one squadron dd Brigade Francois Laroche21st Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 31st Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 9th Hussar Regiment one squadron dd Brigade Claude Lecourbe84th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 106th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 2nd Chasseurs a cheval Regiment four squadrons Artillery unknown count dd Reserve Commander Francois Antoine Louis Bourcier 109th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 2nd Cavalry Regiment four squadrons 15th Cavalry Regiment four squadrons 3rd Cavalry Regiment four squadrons dd Division Henri Francois DelabordeBrigade Nicolas Louis Jordy3rd Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 38th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 21st Cavalry Regiment 1 squadron Brigades Jean Baptiste de Bressoles de Sisce and Jean Baptiste Nouvion Note 2 dd Division Augustin TuncqBrigade Paillard3rd Light Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 79th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 12th Cavalry Regiment 4 squadrons dd Brigade Jean Baptiste Tholme74th Line Infantry Demi brigade three battalions 4th Dragoon Regiment four squadrons 7th Hussar Regiment four squadrons Artillery artillery unit of 822 men dd Notes citations and references editNotes edit The French Army designated two kinds of infantry principally the line infantry French infanterie de ligne which fought in tight formations and the light infantry French infanterie legere to provide skirmishing cover for the troops that followed Smith p 15 These brigades probably included the 16th and 50th Demi brigades the 68th 50th and 68th Regiments de ligne and six squadrons of cavalry that included the 3rd and 7th Hussars and the 10th Dragoons See Graham pp 18 22 Citations edit a b Timothy Blanning The French Revolutionary Wars New York Oxford University Press 1996 pp 41 59 a b c d Relation de l assassinat de M Theobald Dillon Marechal de Camp Commis a Lille le 29 avril 1792 Imprimerie de Mignaret 4 May 1792 Jean Paul Bertaud R R Palmer trans The Army of the French Revolution From Citizen Soldiers to Instrument of Power Princeton Princeton University Press 1988 chapter 1 a b c in French Charles Clerget Tableaux des armees francaises pendant les guerres de la Revolution R Chapelot 1905 pp 55 62 Gunther E Rothenberg Napoleon s Great Adversaries Archduke Charles and the Austrian Army 1792 1914 Stroud Gloucester Spellmount 2007 pp 70 74 Bertaud pp 283 290 a b Smith p 111 Knepper pp 19 20 a b in German Johann Samuel Ersch Allgemeine encyclopadie der wissenschaften und kunste in alphabetischer folge von genannten schrifts bearbeitet und herausgegeben Leipzig J F Gleditsch 1889 pp 64 66 a b Ramsay Weston Phipps The Armies of the First French Republic Volume II The Armees du Moselle du Rhin de Sambre et Meuse de Rhin et Moselle US Pickle Partners Publishing 2011 1923 1933 p 212 J Rickard First Battle of Altenkirchen 4 June 1796 historyofwar org 2009 version Accessed 4 May 2014 J Rickard Siegburg 1 June 1796 historyofwar org 2009 version Accessed 4 May 2014 and Smith p 115 Gunther E Rothenberg The Habsburg Army in the Napoleonic Wars 1792 1815 Military Affairs 37 1 Feb 1973 1 5 1 2 cited Smith p 115 in German Charles Archduke of Austria Ausgewahlte Schriften weiland seiner Kaiserlichen Hoheit des Erzherzogs Carl von Osterreich Vienna Braumuller 1893 94 v 2 pp 72 153 154 in German Jens Florian Ebert Feldmarschall Leutnant Furst zu Furstenberg Die Osterreichischen Generale 1792 1815 Napoleon Online Portal zu Epoch Archived 8 April 2000 at the Wayback Machine Markus Stein editor Mannheim Germany 14 February 2010 version Accessed 28 February 2010 a b Charles pp 153 154 and Thomas Graham 1st Baron Lynedoch The History of the Campaign of 1796 in Germany and Italy London np 1797 18 22 Graham pp 18 22 Charles pp 153 154 Peter Hamish Wilson German Armies War and German Politics 1648 1806 London UCL Press 1997 324 Charles pp 153 54 Graham pp 84 88 a b Smith p 121 Phipps v II p 278 Smith p 125 The Annual Register p 208 Graham pp 124 25 Phillip Cuccia Napoleon in Italy the Sieges of Mantua 1796 1799 Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press 2014 pp 87 93 Smith pp 125 131 133 Smith pp 111 125 John Philippart Memoires etc of General Moreau London A J Valpy 1814 p 279 Philippart p 127 Smith p 131 Sir Archibald Alison 1st Baronet History of Europe from the Commencement of the French Revolution to the Restoration of the Bourbons Volume 3 Edinburgh W Blackwood 1847 p 88 in French Christian von Mechel Tableaux historiques et topographiques ou relation exacte Basel 1798 pp 64 72 Philippart p 127 and Alison pp 88 89 Smith p 132 Smith p 132 in German Pichegru Brockhaus Bilder Conversations Lexikon Band 3 Leipzig 1839 pp 495 496 a b Frank McLynn Napoleon A Biography nl Skyhorse Publishing In 2011 Chapter VIII Simon Schama Patriots and Liberators Revolution in the Netherlands 1780 1813 New York Vintage Books 1998 pp 175 192 Will and Ariel Durant The Age of Napoleon New York Simon and Schuster 1975 p 83 Charles Angelique Francois Huchet La Bedoyere comte de Memoirs of the public and private life of Napoleon Bonaparte nl G Virtue 1828 pp 59 60 Phipps pp 348 349 Phipps vol 2 p iii Richard Phillipson Dunn Pattison Napoleon s marshals Wakefield EP Pub 1977 reprint of 1895 edition pp viii xix xvii quoted a b Dunn Pattison pp xviii xix Phipps pp 90 94 a b Clerget p 55 a b c d e Clerget p 62 All information from Smith p 111 unless otherwise noted References edit Alison Archibald History of Europe from the Commencement of the French Revolution to the Restoration of the Bourbons Volume 3 Edinburgh W Blackwood 1847 OCLC 6051293 The Annual Register World Events 1796 London FC and J Rivington 1813 Accessed 4 November 2014 OCLC 264471215 Blanning Timothy The French Revolutionary Wars New York Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 978 0340569115 Beevor Antony Berlin The Downfall 1945 New York Viking Penguin Books 2002 ISBN 0 670 88695 5 Bertaud Jean Paul and R R Palmer trans The Army of the French Revolution From Citizen Soldiers to Instrument of Power Princeton Princeton University Press 1988 OCLC 17954374 Bodart Gaston Losses of Life in Modern Wars Austria Hungary London Clarendon Press 1916 OCLC 1458451 in German Charles Archduke of Austria unattributed Geschichte des Feldzuges von 1796 in Deutschland France 1796 OCLC 693115692 in German Charles Archduke of Austria Grundsatze der Strategie Erlautert durch die Darstellung des Feldzugs von 1796 in Deutschland Vienna Strauss 1819 OCLC 444880753 in French Clerget Charles Tableaux des armees francaises pendant les guerres de la Revolution R Chapelot 1905 OCLC 13730761 Cuccia Phillip Napoleon in Italy The Sieges of Mantua 1796 1799 Tulsa University of Oklahoma Press 2014 ISBN 978 0806144450 Dodge Theodore Ayrault Warfare in the Age of Napoleon The Revolutionary Wars Against the First Coalition in Northern Europe and the Italian Campaign 1789 1797 USA Leonaur Ltd 2011 ISBN 978 0 85706 598 8 Dunn Pattison Richard Phillipson Napoleon s Marshals Wakefield EP Pub 1977 reprint of 1895 edition OCLC 3438894 Durant Will and Ariel Durant The Age of Napoleon New York Simon and Schuster 1975 OCLC 1256901 in German Ebert Jens Florian Feldmarschall Leutnant Furst zu Furstenberg Die Osterreichischen Generale 1792 1815 Napoleon Online Portal zu Epoch Markus Stein editor Mannheim Germany 14 February 2010 version Accessed 28 February 2010 in German Ersch Johann Samuel Allgemeine encyclopadie der wissenschaften und kunste in alphabetischer folge von genannten schrifts bearbeitet und herausgegeben Leipzig J F Gleditsch 1889 OCLC 978611925 Graham Thomas 1st Baron Lynedoch The History of the Campaign of 1796 in Germany and Italy London np 1797 OCLC 44868000 Knepper Thomas P The Rhine Handbook for Environmental Chemistry Series Part L New York Springer 2006 ISBN 978 3540293934 La Bedoyere Charles Angelique Francois Huchet Memoirs of the Public and Private Life of Napoleon Bonaparte nl G Virtue 1828 OCLC 5207764 in French Lievyns A Jean Maurice Verdot Pierre Begat Fastes de la Legion d honneur biographie de tous les decores accompagnee de l histoire legislative et reglementaire de l ordre Bureau de l administration 1844 OCLC 3903245 in German Luhe Hans Eggert Willibald von der Militar Conversations Lexikon Kehl Uberfall 1796 amp Belagerung des Bruckenkopfes von 1796 1797 Volume 4 C Bruggemann 1834 OCLC 63336793 Malte Brun Conrad Universal Geography Or a Description of All the Parts of the World on a New Plan Spain Portugal France Norway Sweden Denmark Belgium and Holland A Black 1831 OCLC 1171138 McLynn Frank Napoleon A Biography New York Arcade Pub 2002 OCLC 49351026 in French Mechel Christian von Tableaux historiques et topographiques ou relation exacte Basel 1798 OCLC 715971198 Millar Stephen Austrian infantry organization Napoleon Series org April 2005 Accessed 21 Jan 2015 in German Pichegru Brockhaus Bilder Conversations Lexikon Band 3 Leipzig 1839 pp 495 496 ISBN 9783898535465 Philippart John Memoires etc of General Moreau London A J Valpy 1814 OCLC 8721194 Phipps Ramsey Weston The Armies of the First French Republic Volume II The Armees du Moselle du Rhin de Sambre et Meuse de Rhin et Moselle Pickle Partners Publishing 2011 reprint original publication 1923 1933 ISBN 9781908692252 in French Relation de l assassinat de M Theobald Dillon Marechal de Camp Commis a Lille le 29 avril 1792 Imprimerie de Mignaret 4 May 1792 OCLC 560845873 Rickard J Battle of Emmendingen Ettlingen Siege of Huningue 26 October 1796 19 February 1797 Ettlingen History of war org Accessed 18 November 2014 Rogers Clifford et al The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology Oxford Oxford University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0195334036 Rothenberg Gunther E 2007 Napoleon s Great Adversaries Archduke Charles and the Austrian Army 1792 1914 Stroud Gloucester Spellmount ISBN 978 1 908692 25 2 Rothenberg Gunther E The Habsburg Army in the Napoleonic Wars 1792 1815 Military Affairs 37 1 Feb 1973 1 5 ISSN 0026 3931 Rotteck Carl von General History of the World np C F Stollmeyer 1842 OCLC 653511 Schama Simon Patriots and Liberators Revolution in the Netherlands 1780 1813 New York Vintage books 1998 OCLC 2331328 Sellman R R Castles and Fortresses York UK Methuen 1954 OCLC 12261230 Smith Digby Napoleonic Wars Data Book NY Greenhill Press 1996 ISBN 9781853672767 Vann James Allen The Swabian Kreis Institutional Growth in the Holy Roman Empire 1648 1715 Vol LII Studies Presented to International Commission for the History of Representative and Parliamentary Institutions Bruxelles Les Editions de la Librairie Encyclopedique 1975 OCLC 2276157 in German Volk Helmut Landschaftsgeschichte und Naturlichkeit der Baumarten in der Rheinaue Waldschutzgebiete Baden Wurttemberg Band 10 pp 159 167 OCLC 939802377 Walker Mack German Home Towns Community State and General Estate 1648 1871 Ithaca Cornell University Press 1998 ISBN 0801406706 Wilson Peter Hamish German Armies War and German Politics 1648 1806 London UCL Press 1997 OCLC 52081917 Other useful sources edit Blanning Timothy The French Revolution in Germany New York Oxford University Press 1983 ISBN 978 0198225645 Dyke Thomas Jr Traveling Memoirs during a Tour through Belgium Rhenish Prussia Germany Volume 1 London Longman 1834 History of the Wars of the French Revolution Including Sketches of the Civil History of Great Britain and France from the Revolutionary Movements 1788 to the Restoration of a General Peace 1815 Kuhl France 1820 Jomini Antoine Henri Baron The Art of War Wilder Publications 2008 p 173 Originally published in English in 1862 ISBN 9781934255582 Sloane W M Life of Napoleon France 1896 reprint 1910 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Army of the Rhine and Moselle amp oldid 1177517509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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