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Battle of Fère-Champenoise

The Battle of Fère-Champenoise (25 March 1814) was fought between two Imperial French corps led by Marshals Auguste de Marmont and Édouard Mortier, duc de Trévise and a larger Coalition force composed of cavalry from the Austrian Empire, Kingdom of Prussia, Kingdom of Württemberg, and Russian Empire. Caught by surprise by Field Marshal Karl Philipp, Prince of Schwarzenberg's main Coalition army, the forces under Marmont and Mortier were steadily driven back and finally completely routed by aggressive Allied horsemen and gunners, suffering heavy casualties and the loss of most of their artillery. Two divisions of French National Guards under Michel-Marie Pacthod escorting a nearby convoy were also attacked and wiped out in the Battle of Bannes. The battleground was near the town Fère-Champenoise located 40 kilometres (25 mi) southwest of Châlons-en-Champagne.

Battle of Fère-Champenoise
Part of the Campaign of France of the Sixth Coalition

The Battle of Fère-Champenoise
Date25 March 1814[1]
Location48°45′00″N 4°05′54″E / 48.75°N 4.0983°E / 48.75; 4.0983
Result Coalition victory
Belligerents
Austria
Prussia
Russia
Württemberg
France
Commanders and leaders
Alexander I
Karl von Schwarzenberg
Grand Duke Constantine
Frederick William III
Johann von Nostitz
Illarion Vasilchikov
Crown Prince William
Barclay de Tolly
Auguste de Marmont
Édouard Mortier
Michel Pacthod 
Strength
26,400–28,000[1][2]
128 guns
180,000 reinforcements
16,600[2]–21,000[1]
84 guns
Casualties and losses
2,000[1]–4,000 10,000–13,000[1]
60–80 guns lost
225–250 wagons captured
class=notpageimage|
Location within France
200km
125miles
Paris
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
Bar-sur-Aube
1
  current battle
  Napoleon in command
  Napoleon not in command

After being defeated at the Battle of Arcis-sur-Aube on 20–21 March 1814, Emperor Napoleon moved to the east. He hoped to draw the Coalition armies away from Paris by cutting their supply lines, but Schwarzenberg's army instead began moving west toward Paris. Meanwhile, Marmont and Mortier were marching to join Napoleon, pursued by Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher's Allied army. As the two marshals moved east near Fère-Champenoise they unexpectedly came into collision with Schwarzenberg heading west and Blücher moving south. Belatedly realizing they were marching into a trap, the French began a withdrawal to the west. After six hours of orderly retreat, a sudden violent rainstorm made it difficult for the French foot soldiers to fire their muskets and the Allies' enormous superiority in cavalry proved decisive. With the corps of Marmont and Mortier crippled, the Allied capture of Paris was practically inevitable and the Battle of Paris followed on 30 March

Background edit

Napoleon's operations edit

On 9–10 March 1814, Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher's 100,000-man Coalition army defeated Napoleon's 39,000-strong army in the Battle of Laon.[3] After drubbing the French on 9 March, Blücher became incapacitated by fever and an eye ailment, so command devolved upon his chief of staff August Neidhardt von Gneisenau. Though Gneisenau was a brilliant strategist, he was not capable of leading an army. The acting commander allowed his beaten foes to continue the fight the next day and then slip away that night without being pursued.[4] On 13 March, Napoleon fell on Emmanuel de Saint-Priest's Russian VIII Corps and a Prussian brigade in the Battle of Reims.[5] The Allied force was scattered with losses of 3,000 men and 23 guns, including Saint-Priest who was fatally wounded.[6]

After three days of reorganization, Napoleon left Auguste de Marmont and Édouard Mortier, duc de Trévise with 21,000 troops to watch Blücher while he tried to outflank Karl Philipp, Prince of Schwarzenberg's main army by moving against Arcis-sur-Aube. Marshal Michel Ney marched southeast from Reims to recapture Châlons-sur-Marne.[7] At this time, Schwarzenberg's army threatened to cross the river Seine and press back Marshal Jacques MacDonald's wing of the French army. News of Saint-Priest's rout reached Coalition headquarters on 16 March. This prompted the Austrian field marshal to make the intelligent decision to fall back and reassemble his army between Troyes and Arcis-sur-Aube.[8]

 
Campaign map shows Fère-Champenoise southwest of Châlons-sur-Marne at map center.

Believing that it was only necessary to deliver a sharp blow to send the cautious Schwarzenberg into retreat, Napoleon occupied Arcis at mid-day on 20 March. Soon after, a large body of Coalition horsemen threw back the French cavalry, but the situation was stabilized that evening after a tough struggle. The next day, Napoleon ordered an attack only to find his 28,000 soldiers facing 80,000 Allies. Thanks to Schwarzenberg's hesitation, the French emperor quickly pulled his army to the north bank of the Aube covered by stout rearguard fighting,[9] but the Battle of Arcis-sur-Aube on 20–21 March was a Coalition victory.[10]

After this setback, Napoleon determined to operate against the Allied supply line stretching back to the river Rhine while adding the fortress garrisons to his army. Accordingly, he moved northeast toward Vitry-le-François with the intention of continuing east along the river Marne to Saint-Dizier.[11] By this maneuver, the French emperor hoped to lure the Allies after him and away from Paris.[12]

MacDonald's wing was in great peril as it moved east on the north bank of the Aube. Though Marshal Nicolas Oudinot's corps held the northern suburb of Arcis-sur-Aube, MacDonald's own corps only reached the vicinity of Arcis at 9:00 pm on 21 March. Étienne Maurice Gérard's corps was farther west at Plancy-l'Abbaye while François Pierre Joseph Amey's division brought up the rear at Anglure. Jean François Leval's rearguard successfully destroyed the bridges and the Allies did not attempt to force their way across the Aube that evening.[13] Because of Allied inertia, MacDonald successfully held the north bank of the Aube on 22 March. Finding Vitry-le-François solidly held by 5,000 Russians, Napoleon with Ney's corps, the Imperial Guard and his cavalry crossed the Marne south of the town and continued toward Saint-Dizier. On the way, the French light cavalry seized a Coalition convoy and dispersed its two-battalion escort.[14]

On the night of 22 March, MacDonald's troops silently left their blocking position opposite Arcis-sur-Aube and marched through Dosnon and Sommesous toward Vitry-le-François. Amey was supposed to guard the artillery park, but by a misunderstanding, that general marched his division northwest to Sézanne. Consequently, the Russian Guard Light Cavalry Division attacked the unguarded wagon train, carrying off 15 artillery pieces and 300 prisoners while destroying the gunpowder and spiking 12 cannons. Coming on the scene, Gérard's corps rescued what was left of MacDonald's artillery park. Despite constant skirmishing with Karl Philipp von Wrede's Allied corps during the day, MacDonald got his troops safely across the Marne late on 23 March. At that hour, Napoleon was in Saint-Dizier with his Guard while Ney was between there and Vitry.[15]

Marmont's operations edit

 
Prince Schwarzenberg

Blücher's army finally lurched into motion on 18 March, with its commander wearing a lady's green silk hat in order to protect his inflamed eyes from the sun. On this day, Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg's corps compelled Étienne Pierre Sylvestre Ricard's division to abandon Berry-au-Bac though the French managed to destroy the bridge over the river Aisne. Marmont had overall command of the forces facing Blücher and his orders were to cover Paris and stop his foes from crossing the Aisne. Mortier was at Reims while Henri François Marie Charpentier's division held Soissons.[16] Since Blücher had 109,000 troops while the French only mustered 13,000 infantry and 3,600 cavalry, it was plain that the Allies could not be stopped for long.[17] In order to block the road to Paris and to rendezvous with Charpentier, Marmont fell back southwest toward Fismes and called in Mortier from Reims. He believed that Blücher wished to bring him to battle, but in fact the Prussian field marshal was heading for Reims and Châlons-sur-Marne to link up with Schwarzenberg.[18]

 
Auguste de Marmont

Blücher assigned only the corps of Yorck and Friedrich Graf Kleist von Nollendorf to follow Marmont.[18] By 19 March, Blucher had established two bridges over the Aisne and sent Ferdinand von Wintzingerode's corps south to capture Reims.[19] Wintzingerode occupied Reims at daybreak on 20 March after it was evacuated by Augustin Daniel Belliard who led Mortier's cavalry. At this hour, Louis Alexandre Andrault de Langeron's Russian corps was at Berry-au-Bac while Fabian Gottlieb von Osten-Sacken's Russian corps was nearby at Pontavert. Blücher ordered Wintzingerode to hold Reims with his infantry and send his cavalry to Épernay and Vitry-le-François. Charpentier left a 2,800-man garrison in Soissons before pulling out to join Marmont and Mortier. On 21 March, there was a cavalry scuffle at Oulchy-le-Château between Yorck and Kleist's cavalry and the French, but the Prussians did not pursue.[20] Having picked up Charpentier's division, Marmont and Mortier crossed the Marne at Château-Thierry and destroyed the bridge. Also on the 21st, Marmont received a dispatch from Napoleon rebuking him for not retreating from Reims toward Châlons-sur-Marne and ordering him to move back in that direction. On 22 March, the two marshals headed east toward Étoges. That day Friedrich Wilhelm Freiherr von Bülow's Prussian corps appeared before Soissons and began bombarding the place.[18]

 
Battle of Fère-Champenoise showing the strategic situation on 25 March 1814.

By nightfall on 23 March, Marmont's troops were in Vertus while Mortier's corps reached Étoges.[21] That evening near Bergères-lès-Vertus, Christophe Antoine Merlin's French advance guard drove off some Allied cavalry, capturing 100 troopers and 16 wagon loads of plunder. A French staff officer found some enemy dispatches in Vertus that indicated the armies of Schwarzenberg and Blücher might link up and march toward Paris. The two marshals believed they were planted to trick the French so the information was disregarded.[22][note 1] By the evening of 23 March, Oudinot and MacDonald's corps arrived at Saint-Dizier, Ney's troops were to the south at Wassy and Napoleon and the Imperial Guard were yet farther south at Doulevant-le-Château. Well in advance of the rest, Napoleon's cavalry reached Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises near Bar-sur-Aube.[21] On 23 March, the divisions of Michel-Marie Pacthod with 4,000 men and Amey with 1,800 men reached Sézanne. They found an 80-wagon food and equipment convoy in the village with its escort of 800 foot soldiers and one squadron of the 13th Hussar Regiment. Finding that Marmont and Mortier were nearby, they set out with the convoy toward Étoges. Soon after they left Sézanne, Jean Dominique Compans arrived in the village to set up a communications base, followed by two cavalry march regiments.[23]

 
Édouard Mortier

On 23 March, Wintzingerode with 8,000 cavalry and 40 guns arrived near Vitry-le-François while Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov with Wintzingerode's infantry plus Langeron and Sacken were coming up behind. Yorck and Kleist reached Château-Thierry. After a captured French message indicated that Napoleon was at Saint-Dizier,[24] the Allies decided to merge their two armies and go after Napoleon with 200,000 troops. With the French emperor already blocking their supply line to Germany, the Allies determined to establish a new line from the Netherlands to Laon. At Bar-sur-Aube, Emperor Francis I of Austria was warned to leave for Dijon.[25] Francis fled to safety with the Austrian Army of the South a few hours ahead of the French cavalry.[16] On the evening of 23 March, a message from Napoleon's Chief of Police Anne Jean Marie René Savary was intercepted by Friedrich Karl von Tettenborn's Cossacks. It stated that there was nothing in the arsenals and treasury at Paris and that the city's increasingly restive population was demanding peace. More information arrived from Napoleon's enemies in Paris.[26]

After looking at the captured messages, Czar Alexander I of Russia at his headquarters at Sompuis concluded that the Allied armies should advance on Paris. He asked Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly, Hans Karl von Diebitsch and Karl Wilhelm von Toll for their advice. Barclay wished to follow Napoleon[26] but Toll wanted to move on Paris while sending 10,000 cavalry to hide the maneuver from Napoleon. After Diebitsch came around to Toll and Alexander's point of view, they convinced first King Frederick William III of Prussia and then Schwarzenberg of their plan.[27] On 24 March, Schwarzenberg's army moved north toward Vitry-le-François,[26] but new orders were issued for the following day. Wintzingerode was instructed to chase after Napoleon with his cavalry force. The VI Corps supported by the IV Corps were ordered to march west toward Fère-Champenoise with their combined cavalry in front. The Guards and Reserves were directed on the same place from Sompuis[27] while the III Corps was to move north from Mailly-le-Camp. Vorontsov, Langeron and Sacken of Blücher's army were instructed to move west from Châlons-sur-Marne toward Étoges. By the evening of 24 March, Schwarzenberg's host was near Vitry,[28] on the east bank of the river Coole (Côle).[29]

Battle edit

Fighting withdrawal edit

 
Peter Pahlen

After a lively debate between Belliard and the two marshals over what was the best route to approach the Marne, on 24 March the French marched through Fère-Champenoise and Vatry. Henri Catherine Balthazard Vincent moved toward Montmirail[22] with 300 men watch for Yorck and Kleist.[23] During the day, Mortier's cavalry scouted in the direction of Châlons and Saint-Quentin-sur-Coole, finding only a few hundred enemy cavalry in Châlons and no Allied troops near Nuisement-sur-Coole. Marmont scouted toward Maisons-en-Champagne and found no enemies. Based on these reports, the two marshals decided that Schwarzenberg was south of Saint-Dizier, maneuvering against Napoleon. Bolstered in their opinions by the day's reconnaissances, Marmont and Mortier failed to reconsider even when large numbers of campfires were observed that night beyond the Coole. Marmont's troops camped between Vatry and Soudé while Mortier's bivouacked farther north.[29]

 
Battle of Fère-Champenoise

On 25 March at 3:30 am Peter Petrovich Pahlen began to send out patrols at the request of Crown Prince Frederick William of Württemberg. The Allied advance was conducted in two columns. The first column on the main highway west from Vitry-le-François consisted of the Crown Prince (IV Corps) and Nikolay Raevsky (VI Corps), followed by Wrede (V Corps). The second column on more a southerly route through Montépreux was composed of the Guard and Reserves while Ignaz Gyulai (III Corps) was directed to march toward Semoine. From Coole[29] Pahlen's 3,600 cavalry led the advance of the first column until his horsemen appeared before Soudé between 6:00 and 8:00 am. Meanwhile, Mortier's corps was on the march at 6:00 from Vatry toward Soudé with Nicolas-François Roussel d'Hurbal's dragoons leading the column.[29]

Startled when Pahlen's guns began bombarding his positions, Marmont deployed his own infantry and artillery on a rise to the west of Soudé and sent a note for Mortier to quickly join him. Sensing Marmont's alarm, Pahlen and Prince Adam of Württemberg chose to attack at once. Pahlen sent Dechterev's brigade around Marmont's left flank, Delivanov's brigade against the French center and Lissanovich's brigade and Illowaisky's 1,000 Cossacks north to Dommartin-Lettrée. Prince Adam and the Württemberger cavalry operated on Marmont's right flank while Nikolay Vasilyevich Kretov's Cuirassier Division and 12 guns[30] of Markov's 23rd Horse Artillery Battery supported the center attack. Very soon the Allies had 10,000 cavalry on the field to oppose 4,934 French cavalry. This included 2,305 troopers from Johann Nepomuk von Nostitz-Rieneck's Austrian Cuirassier Division. With both his flanks turned Marmont ordered a retreat. When his cavalry under Étienne Tardif de Pommeroux de Bordesoulle moved forward it was beaten back with heavy losses. Two French light companies in Soudé were swallowed up by the Allied cavalry.[31]

When Mortier's corps reached Dommartin-Lettrée, Belliard's cavalry shoved Pahlen's cavalry out of the way. However, Illowaisky's Cossacks managed to cut off Charpentier's division at the rear of the column, forcing it to head for Sommesous. Marmont finally united the two corps at Sommesous and placed his cavalry in the first line and his infantry in the second line. He deployed Mortier on the left with his flank covered by Charles Étienne de Ghigny's horsemen. The French put 60 guns in action which dominated the Allies' 36 available guns in a two-hour artillery duel. Menaced by Illowaisky's Cossacks, the French pulled their left flank back behind the stream flowing northwest from Sommesous. On the opposite side of the stream were the Cossacks and Dechterev's brigade near Lenharrée. About noon, François Joseph Desfour's Austrian cuirassier brigade charged together with the Archduke Ferdinand Hussar Nr. 3 and 4th Württemberg Mounted Jäger Regiments. In the face of this attack, Marmont began to draw back into a position where both his flanks were protected by streams.[32]

Marmont's defeat edit

 
Nikolay Depreradovich

Prince Adam's charge pressed back the right flank French cavalry, but when the Liechtenstein Cuirassier Regiment tried to exploit the success, it was blasted by canister shot and hit in the flank by French lancers. Prince Adam paused to reorganize his horsemen.[33] At the same time, Nostitz and Pahlen charged the French left and became embroiled in a melee with the cavalry divisions of Roussel d'Hurbal and Merlin. The Allies were more successful and managed to capture five French field pieces near Lenharrée. At Connantray-Vaurefroy the retreating French began to cross a small stream lined with trees running through a depression. At the moment they were negotiating this obstacle, a powerful storm from the east blew first dust and then rain and hail into the faces of the French. Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich of Russia leading Nikolay Ivanovich Depreradovich's crack 1st Russian Cuirassier Division and the Russian Guard Dragoons and Guard Uhlans charged the French right flank as Pahlen attacked the French left.[34]

The massed Allied cavalry charge routed Bordesoulle's cavalry which was disorganized by crossing the stream. After the French horsemen galloped to the rear, the Coalition cavalry broke two regiments of Young Guard that failed to form square in time. Many French soldiers were cut down, eight cannons were seized and brigade commander Jean Baptiste Jamin de Bermuy became a prisoner. In the rainstorm, the French infantrymen could no longer fire their wet muskets. Jacques Le Capitaine's 1,000-man brigade repelled three cavalry charges while in square, but a fourth charge smashed the formation, inflicting heavy losses. During this time a Russian Guard artillery battery took the French under accurate fire. Fortunately for the French, the divisions Ricard and Charles-Joseph Christiani, at the ends of the line held firm, allowing a brief rally. A French Young Guard brigade supported by eight 12-pound cannons repelled two charges by the Archduke Ferdinand Hussars. At this point, Alexander Nikitich Seslavin's Cossacks appeared on the field, prompting the survivors of Jamin's mauled brigade to run away.[35]

The panic spread and Marmont's entire force streamed to the rear. The French were saved when the 400-strong 9 March Regiment, made up of heavy cavalry, arrived from Sézanne and drove off the pursuing Allied horsemen. In the breathing space, Marmont and Mortier reorganized their battered corps in two lines near Fère-Champenoise. Hearing the sounds of approaching gunfire, the French soldiers quickly rallied and cheered "Long live the emperor!" believing that Napoleon was coming to their rescue.[36] Actually, the sounds were from the Coalition attacks on Pacthod's force. The Allied generals swiftly called off most of their cavalry to concentrate on Pacthod's destruction. Nevertheless, Marmont's troops were soon hustled off the field by Seslavin's Cossacks and reached Allemant at 9:00 pm.[37]

Pacthod's disaster edit

 
Fyodor Karlovich Korff

Pacthod's force departed from Vatry at dawn, having marched most of the night with the convoy. By 10:00 am Pacthod was in Villeseneux where he decided to rest his weary soldiers. At this time, the force came under attack from 1,200 dragoons and horse chasseurs supported by 12 guns under Fyodor Karlovich Korf. Pacthod anchored his right flank on Villeseneux while Amey's entire division in square formed his left flank and 16 French guns covered the front.[37] Korff's cavalry corps belonged to Langeron's army corps.[38] For 90 minutes, the French moved southwest deployed in six masses while easily fending off Korf's horsemen. At Clamanges Pacthod made the decision to abandon the convoy, taking the teams of horses to help haul his artillery pieces. More Russian cavalry arrived until Korf's force comprised 2,000 line cavalry and 1,000 Cossacks. Two horse chasseur regiments circled around to the west, blocking the French retreat toward Fère-Champenoise. One of Pacthod's brigades under Marie Joseph Raymond Delort formed attack columns and drove off the chasseurs.[39] Between 2:00 and 3:00 pm the French reached Écury-le-Repos when more Allied cavalry came on the scene.[38]

 
Michel Pacthod

The sounds of Delort's action drew the cavalry of Sacken's army corps in the form of the 2nd Hussar Division under Ilarion Vasilievich Vasilshikov. To help Korf's tiring horsemen, Vasilshikov's hussars charged the French from the north and forced them to form square. Simultaneously, Schwarzenberg, Czar Alexander and King Frederick William III arrived on the battlefield and set up their headquarters in Fère-Champenoise. Kretov sent a note to the czar that Pacthod's French troops were headed his way. At first Kretov's report was not credited but soon the Allied sovereigns could see for themselves that a French force was approaching. Czar Alexander ordered the Prussian Guard Cavalry and the Russian Guard Hussars and Guard Cossacks into the fight and instructed the 23rd Horse Battery to open fire on Pacthod's men. Because the French were in low ground, the Russian round shot and canister sailed over them and began striking Vasilshikov's horsemen. Returning fire, Vasilshikov's gunners nearly hit the czar's entourage with friendly fire when four round shots landed nearby. After sorting out the confusion, the czar ordered Korff and Vasilshikov not to charge in order to let the Allied artillery batter Pacthod's squares.[40] Pahlen's cavalry were recalled from the fight against Marmont and sent to block Pacthod on the southwest while 30 Russian guns blasted the French from the south.[38]

As Pacthod's situation became increasingly dire, he ordered his force to march toward the Marshes of Saint-Gond. Despite being ringed by enemy cavalry, his National Guardsmen held firm in their square formations.[40] Vasilshikov led the Guard Cavalry plus two dragoon and one horse chasseur regiments in a sweeping charge but the horsemen were driven off by intense musketry. By this time 78 Russian guns were pummeling Pacthod's squares with canister, causing casualties and increasing disorder. Louis Marie Joseph Thévenet's brigade of Amey's division fought its way as far west as Bannes before being blocked by the elite Russian Chevalier Guard Regiment. Three Russian officers and a trumpeter came forward under a flag of truce to demand Pacthod's surrender. The French general refused to negotiate as long as the enemy artillery were firing and made one of the officers a prisoner; another was shot dead by a foot soldier. In a climactic charge, the massed Russian cavalry broke the square on the French right flank and then overran the other squares, one after the other. In the subsequent melee, the French soldiers were cut down or surrendered and generals Pacthod, Amey, Delort, Thévenet and Marie Louis Joseph Bonté became Allied prisoners.[41] The raw National Guardsmen made a gallant defense but barely 500 men escaped the slaughter.[42]

Forces edit

 
Nikolay Kretov

According to historian George Nafziger, the Allies employed 26,400 cavalry and 128 artillery pieces. Crown Prince Frederick William commanded 2,000 Württembergers and 12 guns, 3,500 Russians and 12 guns in Palen's Cavalry Corps and 1,600 Russians and 12 guns in Kretov's 2nd Cuirassier Division. Nostitz led 3,700 Austrians and 24 guns in his own Cuirassier Division and two regiments of chevau-légers. Grand Duke Konstantin directed 1,600 Russians and 12 guns from the Guard Cuirassier Division and 2,400 Russians and 12 guns from the Guard Light Cavalry Brigade. In addition, there were 800 Prussian Guards and eight guns, 5,400 Russians and 22 guns in Korf's Cavalry Corps, 3,900 Russians and 12 guns in Vasilshikov's 2nd Hussar Division and Seslavin's 1,500 Don Cossacks and two guns.[43]

Nafziger stated that the French used 18,100 foot soldiers, 4,350 horsemen and 84 guns.[44] Mortier's command included 7,400 Imperial Guard infantry and 30 guns in three divisions led by Christiani, Philibert Jean-Baptiste Curial and Charpentier. Mortier also had 2,050 line cavalry under Roussel d'Hurbal and Ghigny. Marmont's corps consisted of 4,900 line infantry and 38 guns in the divisions of Ricard, Joseph Lagrange and Jean-Toussaint Arrighi de Casanova.[43] Marmont's 2,300 line cavalry were led by Bordesoulle and Merlin. Pacthod directed 5,800 French National Guards and 16 guns in his own and Amey's divisions.[44] On 15 March unit strengths were somewhat larger. In Mortier's corps, Christiani had 2,100 men, Curial 2,800, Charpentier 2,800, Roussel d'Hurbal 1,750 and François Grouvel 350 horsemen. In Marmont's corps, Ricard had 1,000 soldiers, Lagrange 2,100, Arrighi 2,100, Merlin 1,150 and Bordesoulle 1,250.[45]

Francis Loraine Petre estimated the strength of Marmont and Mortier as 19,000 troops and of Pacthod as 4,300 men.[38] Digby Smith asserted that the French marshals had 17,000 infantry, 4,000 cavalry and 84 guns, while the Allies had 28,000 troops, mostly cavalry, and 80 guns.[46] Smith credited Pacthod with a total of 3,700 infantry, 100 cavalry and 16 guns. Two of Pacthod's and one of Amey's battalions were line infantry, the rest of the foot soldiers were National Guards.[47] David G. Chandler stated that Pacthod had 4,000 soldiers without giving Marmont and Mortier's strength.[42] Spencer C. Tucker gave French strength as 5,000.[48]

Results edit

 
Jean Compans

Petre reckoned French losses as 10,000 men and over 60 guns and Allied losses as 2,000. Marmont and Mortier lost 2,000 killed and wounded with 4,000 soldiers, 45 guns and 100 ammunition wagons captured. Pacthod lost almost his entire force of 4,300 men, 16 guns and the convoy, with only a handful escaping into the Saint-Gond Marshes.[49] Nafziger gauged losses as 9,000–11,000 French soldiers, including 5,000 killed and wounded, and 4,000 Allied casualties. The Allies claimed to have taken 80 cannons and 250 ammunition wagons.[41] Smith stated that Pacthod lost 1,500 killed and wounded plus 1,900 soldiers, 100 ammunition wagons and 125 bread wagons captured. His National Guards fought like veterans.[47] For Marmont's force, Smith quoted one source that estimated 5,000 killed and wounded plus 8,000 men, 46 guns and 20 ammunition wagons captured. A second source gave 1,500–3,000 killed and wounded, 3,000 captured and 2,000 deserted.[46]

Marmont and Mortier spent the night after the battle at Allemant, to the northeast of Sézanne. Hearing that Yorck sent a force under Hans Ernst Karl, Graf von Zieten toward Sézanne, Compans abandoned the town at midnight and marched to join the two marshals at Allemant. Two hours later Marmont and Mortier began moving toward Sézanne.[43] The next morning they found Zieten in possession of the town, but their superior numbers persuaded the Prussian to withdraw after a skirmish that cost the French 200 casualties and their opponents 107.[44] Leading the Coalition pursuit, the Crown Prince of Württemberg entered Sézanne three hours after the French left. On 26 March, Compans with 1,000 men marched west through La Ferté-Gaucher and reached Coulommiers after some clashes with a Prussian brigade led by Heinrich Wilhelm von Horn. At Coulommiers where he spent the night, Compans was joined by Vincent's observation force and fugitives from the battle, raising his force to 2,200 infantry and 250 cavalry.[50]

When Marmont and Mortier arrived at La Ferté-Gaucher, they found Prince Wilhelm of Prussia's brigade blocking them.[50] Prince Wilhelm was gradually reinforced by elements of Kleist's corps and the Prussian artillery soon dominated the numerically weaker French guns. After unsuccessfully trying to push the Prussians out of the way and learning that Pahlen's cavalry corps was approaching from the east, the French marshals decided they could only escape the trap by marching south to Provins.[51] Far to the east, Napoleon scored a pointless victory over Wintzingerode in the Battle of Saint-Dizier on 26 March. The next day, the French emperor finally realized that the Allies had called his bluff and were advancing on Paris. He ordered his troops to march toward the capital, but it was too late.[52]

Marmont and Mortier reached Provins on 27 March and turned toward Paris.[53] That day Compans was in Meaux, reinforced to a strength of 3,800 foot soldiers and 850 horsemen. This was far too few men and by 28 March, the combined Allied armies bridged the Marne and captured Meaux.[54] Compans was driven back along the direct road to Paris, where he arrived on 29 March and was joined Marmont and Mortier who came by the roundabout route through Provins. On 30 March, the French with 42,000 men, including only 23,000 veterans, faced Schwarzenberg and Blücher with 107,000 troops. After the Battle of Paris and the subsequent surrender of the capital, Napoleon's empire came to an end.[55]

See also edit

  • Fershampenuaz, a village in Russia named in memory of the battle.

Notes edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ On pages 332–335, Nafziger's text substitutes Oudinot for Marmont. On other pages Nafziger correctly names the two marshals as Marmont and Mortier. Oudinot was with Napoleon's army during this time.
Citations
  1. ^ a b c d e Bodart 1908, p. 479.
  2. ^ a b Clodfelter 2008, p. 180.
  3. ^ Smith 1998, p. 510.
  4. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 144–147.
  5. ^ Smith 1998, p. 511.
  6. ^ Petre 1994, p. 150.
  7. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 155–156.
  8. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 159–160.
  9. ^ Chandler 1966, pp. 996–998.
  10. ^ Smith 1998, p. 512.
  11. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 177–178.
  12. ^ Petre 1994, p. 175.
  13. ^ Petre 1994, p. 176.
  14. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 179–180.
  15. ^ Petre 1994, p. 181.
  16. ^ a b Petre 1994, p. 184.
  17. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 328.
  18. ^ a b c Petre 1994, p. 185.
  19. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 329.
  20. ^ Nafziger 2015, pp. 330–331.
  21. ^ a b Petre 1994, p. 186.
  22. ^ a b Nafziger 2015, p. 334.
  23. ^ a b Nafziger 2015, p. 335.
  24. ^ Petre 1994, p. 182.
  25. ^ Petre 1994, p. 183.
  26. ^ a b c Petre 1994, p. 187.
  27. ^ a b Petre 1994, p. 188.
  28. ^ Petre 1994, p. 189.
  29. ^ a b c d Nafziger 2015, p. 401.
  30. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 402.
  31. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 404.
  32. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 405.
  33. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 406.
  34. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 407.
  35. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 408.
  36. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 409.
  37. ^ a b Nafziger 2015, p. 410.
  38. ^ a b c d Petre 1994, p. 191.
  39. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 411.
  40. ^ a b Nafziger 2015, p. 412.
  41. ^ a b Nafziger 2015, p. 413.
  42. ^ a b Chandler 1966, p. 1000.
  43. ^ a b c Nafziger 2015, p. 415.
  44. ^ a b c Nafziger 2015, p. 416.
  45. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 307.
  46. ^ a b Smith 1998, p. 514.
  47. ^ a b Smith 1998, p. 515.
  48. ^ Tucker 2009, p. 1113.
  49. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 191–192.
  50. ^ a b Nafziger 2015, p. 417.
  51. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 418.
  52. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 193–196.
  53. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 420.
  54. ^ Nafziger 2015, p. 419.
  55. ^ Petre 1994, pp. 198–200.

References edit

  • Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618-1905). Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  • Chandler, David G. (1966). The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York, N.Y.: Macmillan.
  • Clodfelter, M. (2008). Warfare and armed conflicts : a statistical encyclopedia of casualty and other figures, 1494-2007. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN 978-0786433193.
  • Nafziger, George (2015). The End of Empire: Napoleon's 1814 Campaign. Solihull, UK: Helion & Company. ISBN 978-1-909982-96-3.
  • Petre, F. Loraine (1994) [1914]. Napoleon at Bay: 1814. London: Lionel Leventhal Ltd. ISBN 1-85367-163-0.
  • Smith, Digby (1998). The Napoleonic Wars Data Book. London: Greenhill. ISBN 1-85367-276-9.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (2009). A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East [6 volumes]: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. ABC-CLIO. p. 1113. ISBN 978-1851096725.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Battle of Fere-Champenoise at Wikimedia Commons
Preceded by
Battle of Arcis-sur-Aube
Napoleonic Wars
Battle of Fère-Champenoise
Succeeded by
Battle of Saint-Dizier

battle, fère, champenoise, march, 1814, fought, between, imperial, french, corps, marshals, auguste, marmont, Édouard, mortier, trévise, larger, coalition, force, composed, cavalry, from, austrian, empire, kingdom, prussia, kingdom, württemberg, russian, empir. The Battle of Fere Champenoise 25 March 1814 was fought between two Imperial French corps led by Marshals Auguste de Marmont and Edouard Mortier duc de Trevise and a larger Coalition force composed of cavalry from the Austrian Empire Kingdom of Prussia Kingdom of Wurttemberg and Russian Empire Caught by surprise by Field Marshal Karl Philipp Prince of Schwarzenberg s main Coalition army the forces under Marmont and Mortier were steadily driven back and finally completely routed by aggressive Allied horsemen and gunners suffering heavy casualties and the loss of most of their artillery Two divisions of French National Guards under Michel Marie Pacthod escorting a nearby convoy were also attacked and wiped out in the Battle of Bannes The battleground was near the town Fere Champenoise located 40 kilometres 25 mi southwest of Chalons en Champagne Battle of Fere ChampenoisePart of the Campaign of France of the Sixth CoalitionThe Battle of Fere ChampenoiseDate25 March 1814 1 Locationnear Fere Champenoise France48 45 00 N 4 05 54 E 48 75 N 4 0983 E 48 75 4 0983ResultCoalition victoryBelligerentsAustria Prussia Russia WurttembergFranceCommanders and leadersAlexander I Karl von Schwarzenberg Grand Duke Constantine Frederick William III Johann von Nostitz Illarion Vasilchikov Crown Prince William Barclay de TollyAuguste de Marmont Edouard Mortier Michel Pacthod Strength26 400 28 000 1 2 128 guns180 000 reinforcements16 600 2 21 000 1 84 gunsCasualties and losses2 000 1 4 00010 000 13 000 1 60 80 guns lost225 250 wagons capturedclass notpageimage Location within France War of the Sixth Coalition Campaign in north east France200km125milesParis222120191817161514131211109876543 2 Bar sur Aube1 current battle Napoleon in command Napoleon not in command After being defeated at the Battle of Arcis sur Aube on 20 21 March 1814 Emperor Napoleon moved to the east He hoped to draw the Coalition armies away from Paris by cutting their supply lines but Schwarzenberg s army instead began moving west toward Paris Meanwhile Marmont and Mortier were marching to join Napoleon pursued by Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blucher s Allied army As the two marshals moved east near Fere Champenoise they unexpectedly came into collision with Schwarzenberg heading west and Blucher moving south Belatedly realizing they were marching into a trap the French began a withdrawal to the west After six hours of orderly retreat a sudden violent rainstorm made it difficult for the French foot soldiers to fire their muskets and the Allies enormous superiority in cavalry proved decisive With the corps of Marmont and Mortier crippled the Allied capture of Paris was practically inevitable and the Battle of Paris followed on 30 March Contents 1 Background 1 1 Napoleon s operations 1 2 Marmont s operations 2 Battle 2 1 Fighting withdrawal 2 2 Marmont s defeat 2 3 Pacthod s disaster 3 Forces 4 Results 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editNapoleon s operations edit On 9 10 March 1814 Gebhard Leberecht von Blucher s 100 000 man Coalition army defeated Napoleon s 39 000 strong army in the Battle of Laon 3 After drubbing the French on 9 March Blucher became incapacitated by fever and an eye ailment so command devolved upon his chief of staff August Neidhardt von Gneisenau Though Gneisenau was a brilliant strategist he was not capable of leading an army The acting commander allowed his beaten foes to continue the fight the next day and then slip away that night without being pursued 4 On 13 March Napoleon fell on Emmanuel de Saint Priest s Russian VIII Corps and a Prussian brigade in the Battle of Reims 5 The Allied force was scattered with losses of 3 000 men and 23 guns including Saint Priest who was fatally wounded 6 After three days of reorganization Napoleon left Auguste de Marmont and Edouard Mortier duc de Trevise with 21 000 troops to watch Blucher while he tried to outflank Karl Philipp Prince of Schwarzenberg s main army by moving against Arcis sur Aube Marshal Michel Ney marched southeast from Reims to recapture Chalons sur Marne 7 At this time Schwarzenberg s army threatened to cross the river Seine and press back Marshal Jacques MacDonald s wing of the French army News of Saint Priest s rout reached Coalition headquarters on 16 March This prompted the Austrian field marshal to make the intelligent decision to fall back and reassemble his army between Troyes and Arcis sur Aube 8 nbsp Campaign map shows Fere Champenoise southwest of Chalons sur Marne at map center Believing that it was only necessary to deliver a sharp blow to send the cautious Schwarzenberg into retreat Napoleon occupied Arcis at mid day on 20 March Soon after a large body of Coalition horsemen threw back the French cavalry but the situation was stabilized that evening after a tough struggle The next day Napoleon ordered an attack only to find his 28 000 soldiers facing 80 000 Allies Thanks to Schwarzenberg s hesitation the French emperor quickly pulled his army to the north bank of the Aube covered by stout rearguard fighting 9 but the Battle of Arcis sur Aube on 20 21 March was a Coalition victory 10 After this setback Napoleon determined to operate against the Allied supply line stretching back to the river Rhine while adding the fortress garrisons to his army Accordingly he moved northeast toward Vitry le Francois with the intention of continuing east along the river Marne to Saint Dizier 11 By this maneuver the French emperor hoped to lure the Allies after him and away from Paris 12 MacDonald s wing was in great peril as it moved east on the north bank of the Aube Though Marshal Nicolas Oudinot s corps held the northern suburb of Arcis sur Aube MacDonald s own corps only reached the vicinity of Arcis at 9 00 pm on 21 March Etienne Maurice Gerard s corps was farther west at Plancy l Abbaye while Francois Pierre Joseph Amey s division brought up the rear at Anglure Jean Francois Leval s rearguard successfully destroyed the bridges and the Allies did not attempt to force their way across the Aube that evening 13 Because of Allied inertia MacDonald successfully held the north bank of the Aube on 22 March Finding Vitry le Francois solidly held by 5 000 Russians Napoleon with Ney s corps the Imperial Guard and his cavalry crossed the Marne south of the town and continued toward Saint Dizier On the way the French light cavalry seized a Coalition convoy and dispersed its two battalion escort 14 On the night of 22 March MacDonald s troops silently left their blocking position opposite Arcis sur Aube and marched through Dosnon and Sommesous toward Vitry le Francois Amey was supposed to guard the artillery park but by a misunderstanding that general marched his division northwest to Sezanne Consequently the Russian Guard Light Cavalry Division attacked the unguarded wagon train carrying off 15 artillery pieces and 300 prisoners while destroying the gunpowder and spiking 12 cannons Coming on the scene Gerard s corps rescued what was left of MacDonald s artillery park Despite constant skirmishing with Karl Philipp von Wrede s Allied corps during the day MacDonald got his troops safely across the Marne late on 23 March At that hour Napoleon was in Saint Dizier with his Guard while Ney was between there and Vitry 15 Marmont s operations edit nbsp Prince SchwarzenbergBlucher s army finally lurched into motion on 18 March with its commander wearing a lady s green silk hat in order to protect his inflamed eyes from the sun On this day Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg s corps compelled Etienne Pierre Sylvestre Ricard s division to abandon Berry au Bac though the French managed to destroy the bridge over the river Aisne Marmont had overall command of the forces facing Blucher and his orders were to cover Paris and stop his foes from crossing the Aisne Mortier was at Reims while Henri Francois Marie Charpentier s division held Soissons 16 Since Blucher had 109 000 troops while the French only mustered 13 000 infantry and 3 600 cavalry it was plain that the Allies could not be stopped for long 17 In order to block the road to Paris and to rendezvous with Charpentier Marmont fell back southwest toward Fismes and called in Mortier from Reims He believed that Blucher wished to bring him to battle but in fact the Prussian field marshal was heading for Reims and Chalons sur Marne to link up with Schwarzenberg 18 nbsp Auguste de MarmontBlucher assigned only the corps of Yorck and Friedrich Graf Kleist von Nollendorf to follow Marmont 18 By 19 March Blucher had established two bridges over the Aisne and sent Ferdinand von Wintzingerode s corps south to capture Reims 19 Wintzingerode occupied Reims at daybreak on 20 March after it was evacuated by Augustin Daniel Belliard who led Mortier s cavalry At this hour Louis Alexandre Andrault de Langeron s Russian corps was at Berry au Bac while Fabian Gottlieb von Osten Sacken s Russian corps was nearby at Pontavert Blucher ordered Wintzingerode to hold Reims with his infantry and send his cavalry to Epernay and Vitry le Francois Charpentier left a 2 800 man garrison in Soissons before pulling out to join Marmont and Mortier On 21 March there was a cavalry scuffle at Oulchy le Chateau between Yorck and Kleist s cavalry and the French but the Prussians did not pursue 20 Having picked up Charpentier s division Marmont and Mortier crossed the Marne at Chateau Thierry and destroyed the bridge Also on the 21st Marmont received a dispatch from Napoleon rebuking him for not retreating from Reims toward Chalons sur Marne and ordering him to move back in that direction On 22 March the two marshals headed east toward Etoges That day Friedrich Wilhelm Freiherr von Bulow s Prussian corps appeared before Soissons and began bombarding the place 18 nbsp Battle of Fere Champenoise showing the strategic situation on 25 March 1814 By nightfall on 23 March Marmont s troops were in Vertus while Mortier s corps reached Etoges 21 That evening near Bergeres les Vertus Christophe Antoine Merlin s French advance guard drove off some Allied cavalry capturing 100 troopers and 16 wagon loads of plunder A French staff officer found some enemy dispatches in Vertus that indicated the armies of Schwarzenberg and Blucher might link up and march toward Paris The two marshals believed they were planted to trick the French so the information was disregarded 22 note 1 By the evening of 23 March Oudinot and MacDonald s corps arrived at Saint Dizier Ney s troops were to the south at Wassy and Napoleon and the Imperial Guard were yet farther south at Doulevant le Chateau Well in advance of the rest Napoleon s cavalry reached Colombey les Deux Eglises near Bar sur Aube 21 On 23 March the divisions of Michel Marie Pacthod with 4 000 men and Amey with 1 800 men reached Sezanne They found an 80 wagon food and equipment convoy in the village with its escort of 800 foot soldiers and one squadron of the 13th Hussar Regiment Finding that Marmont and Mortier were nearby they set out with the convoy toward Etoges Soon after they left Sezanne Jean Dominique Compans arrived in the village to set up a communications base followed by two cavalry march regiments 23 nbsp Edouard MortierOn 23 March Wintzingerode with 8 000 cavalry and 40 guns arrived near Vitry le Francois while Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov with Wintzingerode s infantry plus Langeron and Sacken were coming up behind Yorck and Kleist reached Chateau Thierry After a captured French message indicated that Napoleon was at Saint Dizier 24 the Allies decided to merge their two armies and go after Napoleon with 200 000 troops With the French emperor already blocking their supply line to Germany the Allies determined to establish a new line from the Netherlands to Laon At Bar sur Aube Emperor Francis I of Austria was warned to leave for Dijon 25 Francis fled to safety with the Austrian Army of the South a few hours ahead of the French cavalry 16 On the evening of 23 March a message from Napoleon s Chief of Police Anne Jean Marie Rene Savary was intercepted by Friedrich Karl von Tettenborn s Cossacks It stated that there was nothing in the arsenals and treasury at Paris and that the city s increasingly restive population was demanding peace More information arrived from Napoleon s enemies in Paris 26 After looking at the captured messages Czar Alexander I of Russia at his headquarters at Sompuis concluded that the Allied armies should advance on Paris He asked Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly Hans Karl von Diebitsch and Karl Wilhelm von Toll for their advice Barclay wished to follow Napoleon 26 but Toll wanted to move on Paris while sending 10 000 cavalry to hide the maneuver from Napoleon After Diebitsch came around to Toll and Alexander s point of view they convinced first King Frederick William III of Prussia and then Schwarzenberg of their plan 27 On 24 March Schwarzenberg s army moved north toward Vitry le Francois 26 but new orders were issued for the following day Wintzingerode was instructed to chase after Napoleon with his cavalry force The VI Corps supported by the IV Corps were ordered to march west toward Fere Champenoise with their combined cavalry in front The Guards and Reserves were directed on the same place from Sompuis 27 while the III Corps was to move north from Mailly le Camp Vorontsov Langeron and Sacken of Blucher s army were instructed to move west from Chalons sur Marne toward Etoges By the evening of 24 March Schwarzenberg s host was near Vitry 28 on the east bank of the river Coole Cole 29 Battle editFighting withdrawal edit nbsp Peter PahlenAfter a lively debate between Belliard and the two marshals over what was the best route to approach the Marne on 24 March the French marched through Fere Champenoise and Vatry Henri Catherine Balthazard Vincent moved toward Montmirail 22 with 300 men watch for Yorck and Kleist 23 During the day Mortier s cavalry scouted in the direction of Chalons and Saint Quentin sur Coole finding only a few hundred enemy cavalry in Chalons and no Allied troops near Nuisement sur Coole Marmont scouted toward Maisons en Champagne and found no enemies Based on these reports the two marshals decided that Schwarzenberg was south of Saint Dizier maneuvering against Napoleon Bolstered in their opinions by the day s reconnaissances Marmont and Mortier failed to reconsider even when large numbers of campfires were observed that night beyond the Coole Marmont s troops camped between Vatry and Soude while Mortier s bivouacked farther north 29 nbsp Battle of Fere ChampenoiseOn 25 March at 3 30 am Peter Petrovich Pahlen began to send out patrols at the request of Crown Prince Frederick William of Wurttemberg The Allied advance was conducted in two columns The first column on the main highway west from Vitry le Francois consisted of the Crown Prince IV Corps and Nikolay Raevsky VI Corps followed by Wrede V Corps The second column on more a southerly route through Montepreux was composed of the Guard and Reserves while Ignaz Gyulai III Corps was directed to march toward Semoine From Coole 29 Pahlen s 3 600 cavalry led the advance of the first column until his horsemen appeared before Soude between 6 00 and 8 00 am Meanwhile Mortier s corps was on the march at 6 00 from Vatry toward Soude with Nicolas Francois Roussel d Hurbal s dragoons leading the column 29 Startled when Pahlen s guns began bombarding his positions Marmont deployed his own infantry and artillery on a rise to the west of Soude and sent a note for Mortier to quickly join him Sensing Marmont s alarm Pahlen and Prince Adam of Wurttemberg chose to attack at once Pahlen sent Dechterev s brigade around Marmont s left flank Delivanov s brigade against the French center and Lissanovich s brigade and Illowaisky s 1 000 Cossacks north to Dommartin Lettree Prince Adam and the Wurttemberger cavalry operated on Marmont s right flank while Nikolay Vasilyevich Kretov s Cuirassier Division and 12 guns 30 of Markov s 23rd Horse Artillery Battery supported the center attack Very soon the Allies had 10 000 cavalry on the field to oppose 4 934 French cavalry This included 2 305 troopers from Johann Nepomuk von Nostitz Rieneck s Austrian Cuirassier Division With both his flanks turned Marmont ordered a retreat When his cavalry under Etienne Tardif de Pommeroux de Bordesoulle moved forward it was beaten back with heavy losses Two French light companies in Soude were swallowed up by the Allied cavalry 31 When Mortier s corps reached Dommartin Lettree Belliard s cavalry shoved Pahlen s cavalry out of the way However Illowaisky s Cossacks managed to cut off Charpentier s division at the rear of the column forcing it to head for Sommesous Marmont finally united the two corps at Sommesous and placed his cavalry in the first line and his infantry in the second line He deployed Mortier on the left with his flank covered by Charles Etienne de Ghigny s horsemen The French put 60 guns in action which dominated the Allies 36 available guns in a two hour artillery duel Menaced by Illowaisky s Cossacks the French pulled their left flank back behind the stream flowing northwest from Sommesous On the opposite side of the stream were the Cossacks and Dechterev s brigade near Lenharree About noon Francois Joseph Desfour s Austrian cuirassier brigade charged together with the Archduke Ferdinand Hussar Nr 3 and 4th Wurttemberg Mounted Jager Regiments In the face of this attack Marmont began to draw back into a position where both his flanks were protected by streams 32 Marmont s defeat edit nbsp Nikolay DepreradovichPrince Adam s charge pressed back the right flank French cavalry but when the Liechtenstein Cuirassier Regiment tried to exploit the success it was blasted by canister shot and hit in the flank by French lancers Prince Adam paused to reorganize his horsemen 33 At the same time Nostitz and Pahlen charged the French left and became embroiled in a melee with the cavalry divisions of Roussel d Hurbal and Merlin The Allies were more successful and managed to capture five French field pieces near Lenharree At Connantray Vaurefroy the retreating French began to cross a small stream lined with trees running through a depression At the moment they were negotiating this obstacle a powerful storm from the east blew first dust and then rain and hail into the faces of the French Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich of Russia leading Nikolay Ivanovich Depreradovich s crack 1st Russian Cuirassier Division and the Russian Guard Dragoons and Guard Uhlans charged the French right flank as Pahlen attacked the French left 34 The massed Allied cavalry charge routed Bordesoulle s cavalry which was disorganized by crossing the stream After the French horsemen galloped to the rear the Coalition cavalry broke two regiments of Young Guard that failed to form square in time Many French soldiers were cut down eight cannons were seized and brigade commander Jean Baptiste Jamin de Bermuy became a prisoner In the rainstorm the French infantrymen could no longer fire their wet muskets Jacques Le Capitaine s 1 000 man brigade repelled three cavalry charges while in square but a fourth charge smashed the formation inflicting heavy losses During this time a Russian Guard artillery battery took the French under accurate fire Fortunately for the French the divisions Ricard and Charles Joseph Christiani at the ends of the line held firm allowing a brief rally A French Young Guard brigade supported by eight 12 pound cannons repelled two charges by the Archduke Ferdinand Hussars At this point Alexander Nikitich Seslavin s Cossacks appeared on the field prompting the survivors of Jamin s mauled brigade to run away 35 The panic spread and Marmont s entire force streamed to the rear The French were saved when the 400 strong 9 March Regiment made up of heavy cavalry arrived from Sezanne and drove off the pursuing Allied horsemen In the breathing space Marmont and Mortier reorganized their battered corps in two lines near Fere Champenoise Hearing the sounds of approaching gunfire the French soldiers quickly rallied and cheered Long live the emperor believing that Napoleon was coming to their rescue 36 Actually the sounds were from the Coalition attacks on Pacthod s force The Allied generals swiftly called off most of their cavalry to concentrate on Pacthod s destruction Nevertheless Marmont s troops were soon hustled off the field by Seslavin s Cossacks and reached Allemant at 9 00 pm 37 Pacthod s disaster edit nbsp Fyodor Karlovich KorffPacthod s force departed from Vatry at dawn having marched most of the night with the convoy By 10 00 am Pacthod was in Villeseneux where he decided to rest his weary soldiers At this time the force came under attack from 1 200 dragoons and horse chasseurs supported by 12 guns under Fyodor Karlovich Korf Pacthod anchored his right flank on Villeseneux while Amey s entire division in square formed his left flank and 16 French guns covered the front 37 Korff s cavalry corps belonged to Langeron s army corps 38 For 90 minutes the French moved southwest deployed in six masses while easily fending off Korf s horsemen At Clamanges Pacthod made the decision to abandon the convoy taking the teams of horses to help haul his artillery pieces More Russian cavalry arrived until Korf s force comprised 2 000 line cavalry and 1 000 Cossacks Two horse chasseur regiments circled around to the west blocking the French retreat toward Fere Champenoise One of Pacthod s brigades under Marie Joseph Raymond Delort formed attack columns and drove off the chasseurs 39 Between 2 00 and 3 00 pm the French reached Ecury le Repos when more Allied cavalry came on the scene 38 nbsp Michel PacthodThe sounds of Delort s action drew the cavalry of Sacken s army corps in the form of the 2nd Hussar Division under Ilarion Vasilievich Vasilshikov To help Korf s tiring horsemen Vasilshikov s hussars charged the French from the north and forced them to form square Simultaneously Schwarzenberg Czar Alexander and King Frederick William III arrived on the battlefield and set up their headquarters in Fere Champenoise Kretov sent a note to the czar that Pacthod s French troops were headed his way At first Kretov s report was not credited but soon the Allied sovereigns could see for themselves that a French force was approaching Czar Alexander ordered the Prussian Guard Cavalry and the Russian Guard Hussars and Guard Cossacks into the fight and instructed the 23rd Horse Battery to open fire on Pacthod s men Because the French were in low ground the Russian round shot and canister sailed over them and began striking Vasilshikov s horsemen Returning fire Vasilshikov s gunners nearly hit the czar s entourage with friendly fire when four round shots landed nearby After sorting out the confusion the czar ordered Korff and Vasilshikov not to charge in order to let the Allied artillery batter Pacthod s squares 40 Pahlen s cavalry were recalled from the fight against Marmont and sent to block Pacthod on the southwest while 30 Russian guns blasted the French from the south 38 As Pacthod s situation became increasingly dire he ordered his force to march toward the Marshes of Saint Gond Despite being ringed by enemy cavalry his National Guardsmen held firm in their square formations 40 Vasilshikov led the Guard Cavalry plus two dragoon and one horse chasseur regiments in a sweeping charge but the horsemen were driven off by intense musketry By this time 78 Russian guns were pummeling Pacthod s squares with canister causing casualties and increasing disorder Louis Marie Joseph Thevenet s brigade of Amey s division fought its way as far west as Bannes before being blocked by the elite Russian Chevalier Guard Regiment Three Russian officers and a trumpeter came forward under a flag of truce to demand Pacthod s surrender The French general refused to negotiate as long as the enemy artillery were firing and made one of the officers a prisoner another was shot dead by a foot soldier In a climactic charge the massed Russian cavalry broke the square on the French right flank and then overran the other squares one after the other In the subsequent melee the French soldiers were cut down or surrendered and generals Pacthod Amey Delort Thevenet and Marie Louis Joseph Bonte became Allied prisoners 41 The raw National Guardsmen made a gallant defense but barely 500 men escaped the slaughter 42 Forces edit nbsp Nikolay KretovAccording to historian George Nafziger the Allies employed 26 400 cavalry and 128 artillery pieces Crown Prince Frederick William commanded 2 000 Wurttembergers and 12 guns 3 500 Russians and 12 guns in Palen s Cavalry Corps and 1 600 Russians and 12 guns in Kretov s 2nd Cuirassier Division Nostitz led 3 700 Austrians and 24 guns in his own Cuirassier Division and two regiments of chevau legers Grand Duke Konstantin directed 1 600 Russians and 12 guns from the Guard Cuirassier Division and 2 400 Russians and 12 guns from the Guard Light Cavalry Brigade In addition there were 800 Prussian Guards and eight guns 5 400 Russians and 22 guns in Korf s Cavalry Corps 3 900 Russians and 12 guns in Vasilshikov s 2nd Hussar Division and Seslavin s 1 500 Don Cossacks and two guns 43 Nafziger stated that the French used 18 100 foot soldiers 4 350 horsemen and 84 guns 44 Mortier s command included 7 400 Imperial Guard infantry and 30 guns in three divisions led by Christiani Philibert Jean Baptiste Curial and Charpentier Mortier also had 2 050 line cavalry under Roussel d Hurbal and Ghigny Marmont s corps consisted of 4 900 line infantry and 38 guns in the divisions of Ricard Joseph Lagrange and Jean Toussaint Arrighi de Casanova 43 Marmont s 2 300 line cavalry were led by Bordesoulle and Merlin Pacthod directed 5 800 French National Guards and 16 guns in his own and Amey s divisions 44 On 15 March unit strengths were somewhat larger In Mortier s corps Christiani had 2 100 men Curial 2 800 Charpentier 2 800 Roussel d Hurbal 1 750 and Francois Grouvel 350 horsemen In Marmont s corps Ricard had 1 000 soldiers Lagrange 2 100 Arrighi 2 100 Merlin 1 150 and Bordesoulle 1 250 45 Francis Loraine Petre estimated the strength of Marmont and Mortier as 19 000 troops and of Pacthod as 4 300 men 38 Digby Smith asserted that the French marshals had 17 000 infantry 4 000 cavalry and 84 guns while the Allies had 28 000 troops mostly cavalry and 80 guns 46 Smith credited Pacthod with a total of 3 700 infantry 100 cavalry and 16 guns Two of Pacthod s and one of Amey s battalions were line infantry the rest of the foot soldiers were National Guards 47 David G Chandler stated that Pacthod had 4 000 soldiers without giving Marmont and Mortier s strength 42 Spencer C Tucker gave French strength as 5 000 48 Results edit nbsp Jean CompansPetre reckoned French losses as 10 000 men and over 60 guns and Allied losses as 2 000 Marmont and Mortier lost 2 000 killed and wounded with 4 000 soldiers 45 guns and 100 ammunition wagons captured Pacthod lost almost his entire force of 4 300 men 16 guns and the convoy with only a handful escaping into the Saint Gond Marshes 49 Nafziger gauged losses as 9 000 11 000 French soldiers including 5 000 killed and wounded and 4 000 Allied casualties The Allies claimed to have taken 80 cannons and 250 ammunition wagons 41 Smith stated that Pacthod lost 1 500 killed and wounded plus 1 900 soldiers 100 ammunition wagons and 125 bread wagons captured His National Guards fought like veterans 47 For Marmont s force Smith quoted one source that estimated 5 000 killed and wounded plus 8 000 men 46 guns and 20 ammunition wagons captured A second source gave 1 500 3 000 killed and wounded 3 000 captured and 2 000 deserted 46 Marmont and Mortier spent the night after the battle at Allemant to the northeast of Sezanne Hearing that Yorck sent a force under Hans Ernst Karl Graf von Zieten toward Sezanne Compans abandoned the town at midnight and marched to join the two marshals at Allemant Two hours later Marmont and Mortier began moving toward Sezanne 43 The next morning they found Zieten in possession of the town but their superior numbers persuaded the Prussian to withdraw after a skirmish that cost the French 200 casualties and their opponents 107 44 Leading the Coalition pursuit the Crown Prince of Wurttemberg entered Sezanne three hours after the French left On 26 March Compans with 1 000 men marched west through La Ferte Gaucher and reached Coulommiers after some clashes with a Prussian brigade led by Heinrich Wilhelm von Horn At Coulommiers where he spent the night Compans was joined by Vincent s observation force and fugitives from the battle raising his force to 2 200 infantry and 250 cavalry 50 When Marmont and Mortier arrived at La Ferte Gaucher they found Prince Wilhelm of Prussia s brigade blocking them 50 Prince Wilhelm was gradually reinforced by elements of Kleist s corps and the Prussian artillery soon dominated the numerically weaker French guns After unsuccessfully trying to push the Prussians out of the way and learning that Pahlen s cavalry corps was approaching from the east the French marshals decided they could only escape the trap by marching south to Provins 51 Far to the east Napoleon scored a pointless victory over Wintzingerode in the Battle of Saint Dizier on 26 March The next day the French emperor finally realized that the Allies had called his bluff and were advancing on Paris He ordered his troops to march toward the capital but it was too late 52 Marmont and Mortier reached Provins on 27 March and turned toward Paris 53 That day Compans was in Meaux reinforced to a strength of 3 800 foot soldiers and 850 horsemen This was far too few men and by 28 March the combined Allied armies bridged the Marne and captured Meaux 54 Compans was driven back along the direct road to Paris where he arrived on 29 March and was joined Marmont and Mortier who came by the roundabout route through Provins On 30 March the French with 42 000 men including only 23 000 veterans faced Schwarzenberg and Blucher with 107 000 troops After the Battle of Paris and the subsequent surrender of the capital Napoleon s empire came to an end 55 See also editFershampenuaz a village in Russia named in memory of the battle Notes editFootnotes On pages 332 335 Nafziger s text substitutes Oudinot for Marmont On other pages Nafziger correctly names the two marshals as Marmont and Mortier Oudinot was with Napoleon s army during this time Citations a b c d e Bodart 1908 p 479 a b Clodfelter 2008 p 180 Smith 1998 p 510 Petre 1994 pp 144 147 Smith 1998 p 511 Petre 1994 p 150 Petre 1994 pp 155 156 Petre 1994 pp 159 160 Chandler 1966 pp 996 998 Smith 1998 p 512 Petre 1994 pp 177 178 Petre 1994 p 175 Petre 1994 p 176 Petre 1994 pp 179 180 Petre 1994 p 181 a b Petre 1994 p 184 Nafziger 2015 p 328 a b c Petre 1994 p 185 Nafziger 2015 p 329 Nafziger 2015 pp 330 331 a b Petre 1994 p 186 a b Nafziger 2015 p 334 a b Nafziger 2015 p 335 Petre 1994 p 182 Petre 1994 p 183 a b c Petre 1994 p 187 a b Petre 1994 p 188 Petre 1994 p 189 a b c d Nafziger 2015 p 401 Nafziger 2015 p 402 Nafziger 2015 p 404 Nafziger 2015 p 405 Nafziger 2015 p 406 Nafziger 2015 p 407 Nafziger 2015 p 408 Nafziger 2015 p 409 a b Nafziger 2015 p 410 a b c d Petre 1994 p 191 Nafziger 2015 p 411 a b Nafziger 2015 p 412 a b Nafziger 2015 p 413 a b Chandler 1966 p 1000 a b c Nafziger 2015 p 415 a b c Nafziger 2015 p 416 Nafziger 2015 p 307 a b Smith 1998 p 514 a b Smith 1998 p 515 Tucker 2009 p 1113 Petre 1994 pp 191 192 a b Nafziger 2015 p 417 Nafziger 2015 p 418 Petre 1994 pp 193 196 Nafziger 2015 p 420 Nafziger 2015 p 419 Petre 1994 pp 198 200 References editBodart Gaston 1908 Militar historisches Kriegs Lexikon 1618 1905 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Chandler David G 1966 The Campaigns of Napoleon New York N Y Macmillan Clodfelter M 2008 Warfare and armed conflicts a statistical encyclopedia of casualty and other figures 1494 2007 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland ISBN 978 0786433193 Nafziger George 2015 The End of Empire Napoleon s 1814 Campaign Solihull UK Helion amp Company ISBN 978 1 909982 96 3 Petre F Loraine 1994 1914 Napoleon at Bay 1814 London Lionel Leventhal Ltd ISBN 1 85367 163 0 Smith Digby 1998 The Napoleonic Wars Data Book London Greenhill ISBN 1 85367 276 9 Tucker Spencer C 2009 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East 6 volumes From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO p 1113 ISBN 978 1851096725 External links edit nbsp Media related to Battle of Fere Champenoise at Wikimedia CommonsPreceded byBattle of Arcis sur Aube Napoleonic WarsBattle of Fere Champenoise Succeeded byBattle of Saint Dizier Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Fere Champenoise amp oldid 1216860325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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