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Battle of Valmy

The Battle of Valmy, also known as the Cannonade of Valmy, was the first major victory by the army of France during the Revolutionary Wars that followed the French Revolution. The battle took place on 20 September 1792 as Prussian troops commanded by the Duke of Brunswick attempted to march on Paris. Generals François Kellermann and Charles Dumouriez stopped the advance near the northern village of Valmy in Champagne-Ardenne.

Battle of Valmy
Part of the War of the First Coalition

Painting of the Battle of Valmy by Horace Vernet from 1826. The white-uniformed infantry to the right are regulars while the blue-coated ranks to the left represent the citizen volunteers of 1791. The Moulin de Valmy was burnt on the orders of Kellermann on the day of the battle.
Date20 September 1792
Location49°04′49″N 04°46′02″E / 49.08028°N 4.76722°E / 49.08028; 4.76722
Result

French victory

Belligerents
Kingdom of France  Kingdom of Prussia
 Holy Roman Empire
Army of Condé
Commanders and leaders
Charles François Dumouriez
François Christophe Kellermann
Duke of Brunswick
Prince of Hohenlohe
Count of Clerfayt
Strength
36,000 34,000
Casualties and losses
~300 ~200
class=notpageimage|
Location within Europe

In this early part of the Revolutionary Wars—known as the War of the First Coalition—the new French government was in almost every way unproven, and thus the small, localized victory at Valmy became a huge psychological victory for the Revolution at large. The outcome was thoroughly unexpected by contemporary observers—a vindication for the French revolutionaries and a stunning defeat for the vaunted Prussian army. The victory emboldened the newly assembled National Convention to formally declare the end of monarchy in France and to establish the French Republic. Valmy permitted the development of the Revolution and all its resultant ripple effects, and for that it is regarded by historians as one of the most significant battles in history.

Background edit

As the French Revolution continued, the monarchies of Europe became concerned that revolutionary fervor would spread to their countries. The War of the First Coalition was an effort to stop the revolution, or at least contain it to France. King Frederick William II of Prussia had the support of Great Britain and the Austrian Empire to send the Duke of Brunswick towards Paris with a large army.[1] In the war's early encounters of mid-1792, French troops did not distinguish themselves,[2] and enemy forces advanced dangerously deep into France intending to pacify the country, restore the traditional monarchy, and end the Revolution. The French commander Charles Dumouriez, meanwhile, had been marching his army northeast to attack the Austrian Netherlands, but this plan was abandoned because of the more immediate threat to Paris.[3] A second army under General François Kellermann was ordered to link up with him in a mutual defense.[4]

Just over half of the French infantry were regulars of the old Royal Army, as were nearly all of the cavalry and, most importantly, the artillery,[3][5] which were widely regarded as the best in Europe at the time.[6][7] These veterans provided a professional core to steady the enthusiastic volunteer battalions.[8] Combined, Dumouriez' Army of the North and Kellermann's Army of the Centre totalled approximately 54,000 troops.[9] Heading towards them was Brunswick's coalition army of about 84,000, drilled Prussian and Austrian troops augmented by large complements of Hessians and emigres of the French royalist Army of Condé.[9]

Battle edit

The invading army handily captured Longwy on 23 August and Verdun on 2 September, then moved on toward Paris through the defiles of the Forest of Argonne.[6] In response, Dumouriez halted his advance to the Netherlands and reversed course, approaching the enemy army from its rear.[3] From Metz, Kellermann moved to his assistance, joining him at the village of Sainte-Menehould on 19 September.[6] The French forces were now east of the Prussians, behind their lines. Theoretically the Prussians could have marched straight towards Paris unopposed, but this course was never seriously considered: the threat to their lines of supply and communication was too great to be ignored. The unfavorable situation was compounded by bad weather and an alarming increase in sickness among the troops. With few other options available, Brunswick turned back and prepared to do battle.[3]

The troops trudged laboriously through a heavy downpour—"rain as of the days of Noah", in the words of Thomas Carlyle.[10] Brunswick headed through the northern woods believing he could cut off Dumouriez. At the moment when the Prussian manœuvre was nearly completed, Kellermann advanced his left wing and took up a position on the slopes between Sainte-Menehould and Valmy.[6] He centered his command around an old windmill, which he quickly razed to prevent enemy artillery spotters from using it as a sighting location.[11] His veteran artillerists were well-placed upon its accommodating ridge to begin the so-called "Cannonade of Valmy".[12] Brunswick moved toward them with about 34,000 of his troops.[9] As they emerged from the woods, a long-range gunnery duel ensued and the French batteries proved superior. The Prussian infantry made a cautious, and fruitless, effort to advance under fire across the open ground.[3]

 
Valmy obelisk with statue of Kellermann

As the Prussians wavered, a pivotal moment was reached when Kellermann raised his hat and made his famous cry of "Vive la Nation". The cry was repeated again and again by all the French army, and had a crushing effect upon Prussian morale. The French troops sang "La Marseillaise" and "Ça Ira", and a cheer went up from the French line.[13] To the surprise of nearly everyone, Brunswick broke off the action and retired from the field. The Prussians rounded the French positions at a great distance and commenced a rapid retreat eastward. The two engaged forces had been essentially equal in size, Kellermann with approximately 36,000 troops and 40 cannon, and Brunswick with 34,000 and 54 cannon. Yet by the time Brunswick retreated, casualties had risen no higher than three hundred French and two hundred Prussians.[14]

Prussian retreat edit

The precipitous end to the action provoked elation among the French.[3] The question of exactly why the Prussians withdrew has never been definitively answered. Most historians ascribe the retreat to some combination of the following factors: the highly defensible French position[3] together with the rapidly growing numbers of reinforcements and citizen volunteers[15] with their discouraging and thoroughly unexpected élan[16] which persuaded the cautious Brunswick to spare himself a dangerous loss of manpower,[17] particularly when the Russian invasion of Poland had already raised concerns for Prussia's defensibility in the east.[15] Others have put forward more shadowy motives for the decision, including a secret plea by Louis XVI to avoid an action which might cost him his life, and even bribery of the Prussians, allegedly paid for with the Bourbon crown jewels.[18]

An analysis by Dr Munro Price, reader in history at the University of Bradford and a modern specialist in this period, concludes that there is no convincing proof of bribery turning back the Prussians.[19] The more likely explanation remains that, having initially adopted an aggressive strategy, Brunswick lacked the will to carry it through when confronted by an unexpectedly determined and disciplined opposition.[20] Brunswick had actually been offered command of the French armies prior to the outbreak of war and émigré factions subsequently used this as a basis to allege treachery on his part. In any case, the battle ended decisively, the French pursuit was not seriously pressed,[21] and Brunswick's troops managed a safe if inglorious eastward retreat.[22]

Aftermath edit

This engagement was the turning point of the Prussians' campaign. Beset with food shortages and dysentery, their retreat continued well past the Rhine River.[22] French troops soon struck forward into Germany, taking Mainz in October. Dumouriez once again moved against the Austrian Netherlands and Kellermann ably secured the front at Metz.[22]

Dumouriez would bear a harsh change of fortune: after one more influential success in November 1792 at Jemappes, he was by the following year a broken man. His army had suffered such catastrophic losses that he defected to the royalist side for the rest of his life.[23] Kellermann, however, continued in a long and distinguished military career. In 1808 he was ennobled by Napoleon and became Duke of Valmy.[24]

Legacy edit

 
A modern replica of the windmill at Valmy stands amid a memorial site.

In terms of military history the battle introduced features that reshaped modern warfare. It exemplified key components of "total war" in terms of political propaganda, psychological warfare, and eager participation of large numbers of politicized civilians.[25]

After a while the battle came to be celebrated as the first great victory of the armies of the French Revolution.[26] In the varied historiography of the French Revolution, it is typically portrayed as the first victory of a citizen army, inspired by liberty and nationalism. Many thousands of volunteers did indeed swell the ranks, but at least half of the French forces were professional soldiers, particularly among Kellermann's critical artillery units.[3] The French artillery also held a tactical advantage in its modern Gribeauval gun system which proved highly successful on the battlefield.[7] But in popular conception, Valmy was a victory of citizen-soldiers: the battle was emblemized by Kellermann's cry, augmented by the troops' singing of "La Marseillaise" and the "Ça Ira" while under fire.[22]

On the day of the battle, the Legislative Assembly had duly transferred its power to the National Convention.[21] Over the next two days, flush with the news from Valmy, the new Convention deputies abolished the monarchy and proclaimed the French Republic.[27] The victory was a much-needed source of pride for the revolutionary French state, and provided enduring inspiration for the years that followed.[16] It was considered by many contemporaries to be a miraculous event for France, and a "decisive defeat" for one of the most effective armies in Europe.[28] Scholars continue to count it among the most significant clashes in military history.[14][29]

The Prussians themselves recognized the importance of the battle, not merely as a setback in the war but as a crucial advancement for the Revolution as a whole.[30] The German writer and poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who was present at the battle with the Prussian army, later wrote that he was approached by some of his comrades in a state of dejection. He had previously cheered them up with memorable and clever quotes but his only consolation this time was, "Here and today, a new epoch in the history of the world has begun, and you can boast you were present at its birth."[27]

References edit

  1. ^ Creasy, p. 334.
  2. ^ Creasy, p. 330.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Schama, p. 640.
  4. ^ Fuller, p. 352.
  5. ^ Price, p. 311.
  6. ^ a b c d Britannica 1910, p. 171.
  7. ^ a b Fuller, p. 350.
  8. ^ Crowdy, pp. 8, 24.
  9. ^ a b c Tucker, p. 260.
  10. ^ Carlyle, p. 39.
  11. ^ Azema pp. 84–85.
  12. ^ E. H. Wainwright, "The cannonade of Valmy." Kleio 5.2 (1973): 62–76.
  13. ^ Soboul, p. 589.
  14. ^ a b Lanning, p. 145.
  15. ^ a b Doyle, p. 198.
  16. ^ a b Soboul, p. 269.
  17. ^ Esdaile, p. 161.
  18. ^ Webster, pp. 348–52.
  19. ^ Price, p. 312.
  20. ^ Price, pp. 311–12.
  21. ^ a b Soboul, p. 270.
  22. ^ a b c d Schama, p. 641.
  23. ^ Thiers, pp. 298ff.
  24. ^ Dunn-Pattinson, p. 321.
  25. ^ E. H. Wainwright, "The cannonade of Valmy." Kleio 5.2 (1973): 62–76.
  26. ^ Élise Meyer, "Valmy: The victory and its reputation." Annales historiques de la Revolution francaise. No. 4. 2020.
  27. ^ a b Doyle, p. 193.
  28. ^ Horne, p. 197.
  29. ^ Creasy, pp. 328ff.
  30. ^ Blanning, pp. 78–79.

Sources edit

  • Atkinson, Charles Francis; Hannay, David McDowall (1910). "French Revolutionary Wars" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 171–205, see page 171. Valmy
  • Azema, Jean-Pierre Henri (1995). Les Moulins de France (in French). Rennes: Fédération Française des Amis des Moulins. ISBN 2-7373-1673-1.
  • Blanning, T. C. W. (1996). The French Revolutionary Wars 1787–1802. London: Arnold. ISBN 0-340-64533-4.
  • Carlyle, Thomas (1800s) [1837]. The French Revolution: A History. Vol. 3. London: George Routledge and Sons, Ltd. OCLC 461166553.
  • Creasy, Edward Shepherd (1851). The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World, from Marathon to Waterloo. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 328. OCLC 5026550. Retrieved 29 January 2013. fifteen decisive battles.
  • Crowdy, Terry (15 January 2003). French Revolutionary Infantryman, 1791–1802. Warrior series. Vol. 63. Oxford: Osprey. pp. 8, 24. ISBN 1-84176-552-X.
  • Doyle, William (2002). The Oxford History of the French Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-925298-5.
  • Dunn-Pattinson, Richard P. (2010) [1909]. Napoleon's Marshals. Bremen, Germany: Europaeischer Hochschulverlag GmbH & Co. ISBN 978-3-86741-429-6. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  • Esdaile, Charles (2009). Napoleon's Wars: An International History, 1803–1815. New York: Penguin. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-14-311628-8.
  • Fuller, J. F. C. (1987) [1954]. A Military History of the Western World. Vol. II. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80305-4.
  • Horne, Alistair (2004). La Belle France. New York: Vintage. ISBN 978-1-4000-3487-1.
  • Lanning, Michael Lee (2005). The Battle 100: The Stories Behind History's Most Influential Battles. Chicago: Sourcebooks, Inc. ISBN 1-4022-0263-6.

Further reading edit

  • Forrest, Alan. The Legacy of the French Revolutionary Wars: The Nation-in-Arms in French Republican Memory (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
  • Lynn, John A. "Valmy" MHQ: Quarterly Journal of Military History (Fall 1992), 5#1 pp 88–97.
  • Scott, Samuel F. From Yorktown to Valmy: the transformation of the French Army in an age of revolution (University Press of Colorado, 1998)
  • Thoral, Marie-Cécile. From Valmy to Waterloo: France at War, 1792–1815 (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011)

External links edit

Preceded by
Siege of Thionville (1792)
French Revolution: Revolutionary campaigns
Battle of Valmy
Succeeded by
Column of the Goddess

battle, valmy, also, known, cannonade, valmy, first, major, victory, army, france, during, revolutionary, wars, that, followed, french, revolution, battle, took, place, september, 1792, prussian, troops, commanded, duke, brunswick, attempted, march, paris, gen. The Battle of Valmy also known as the Cannonade of Valmy was the first major victory by the army of France during the Revolutionary Wars that followed the French Revolution The battle took place on 20 September 1792 as Prussian troops commanded by the Duke of Brunswick attempted to march on Paris Generals Francois Kellermann and Charles Dumouriez stopped the advance near the northern village of Valmy in Champagne Ardenne Battle of ValmyPart of the War of the First CoalitionPainting of the Battle of Valmy by Horace Vernet from 1826 The white uniformed infantry to the right are regulars while the blue coated ranks to the left represent the citizen volunteers of 1791 The Moulin de Valmy was burnt on the orders of Kellermann on the day of the battle Date20 September 1792LocationBetween Sainte Menehould and Valmy49 04 49 N 04 46 02 E 49 08028 N 4 76722 E 49 08028 4 76722ResultFrench victory Republic proclaimed one day laterBelligerentsKingdom of France Kingdom of Prussia Holy Roman Empire Army of CondeCommanders and leadersCharles Francois Dumouriez Francois Christophe KellermannDuke of Brunswick Prince of Hohenlohe Count of ClerfaytStrength36 00034 000Casualties and losses 300 200class notpageimage Location within Europe In this early part of the Revolutionary Wars known as the War of the First Coalition the new French government was in almost every way unproven and thus the small localized victory at Valmy became a huge psychological victory for the Revolution at large The outcome was thoroughly unexpected by contemporary observers a vindication for the French revolutionaries and a stunning defeat for the vaunted Prussian army The victory emboldened the newly assembled National Convention to formally declare the end of monarchy in France and to establish the French Republic Valmy permitted the development of the Revolution and all its resultant ripple effects and for that it is regarded by historians as one of the most significant battles in history Contents 1 Background 2 Battle 2 1 Prussian retreat 3 Aftermath 4 Legacy 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editAs the French Revolution continued the monarchies of Europe became concerned that revolutionary fervor would spread to their countries The War of the First Coalition was an effort to stop the revolution or at least contain it to France King Frederick William II of Prussia had the support of Great Britain and the Austrian Empire to send the Duke of Brunswick towards Paris with a large army 1 In the war s early encounters of mid 1792 French troops did not distinguish themselves 2 and enemy forces advanced dangerously deep into France intending to pacify the country restore the traditional monarchy and end the Revolution The French commander Charles Dumouriez meanwhile had been marching his army northeast to attack the Austrian Netherlands but this plan was abandoned because of the more immediate threat to Paris 3 A second army under General Francois Kellermann was ordered to link up with him in a mutual defense 4 Just over half of the French infantry were regulars of the old Royal Army as were nearly all of the cavalry and most importantly the artillery 3 5 which were widely regarded as the best in Europe at the time 6 7 These veterans provided a professional core to steady the enthusiastic volunteer battalions 8 Combined Dumouriez Army of the North and Kellermann s Army of the Centre totalled approximately 54 000 troops 9 Heading towards them was Brunswick s coalition army of about 84 000 drilled Prussian and Austrian troops augmented by large complements of Hessians and emigres of the French royalist Army of Conde 9 Battle editThe invading army handily captured Longwy on 23 August and Verdun on 2 September then moved on toward Paris through the defiles of the Forest of Argonne 6 In response Dumouriez halted his advance to the Netherlands and reversed course approaching the enemy army from its rear 3 From Metz Kellermann moved to his assistance joining him at the village of Sainte Menehould on 19 September 6 The French forces were now east of the Prussians behind their lines Theoretically the Prussians could have marched straight towards Paris unopposed but this course was never seriously considered the threat to their lines of supply and communication was too great to be ignored The unfavorable situation was compounded by bad weather and an alarming increase in sickness among the troops With few other options available Brunswick turned back and prepared to do battle 3 The troops trudged laboriously through a heavy downpour rain as of the days of Noah in the words of Thomas Carlyle 10 Brunswick headed through the northern woods believing he could cut off Dumouriez At the moment when the Prussian manœuvre was nearly completed Kellermann advanced his left wing and took up a position on the slopes between Sainte Menehould and Valmy 6 He centered his command around an old windmill which he quickly razed to prevent enemy artillery spotters from using it as a sighting location 11 His veteran artillerists were well placed upon its accommodating ridge to begin the so called Cannonade of Valmy 12 Brunswick moved toward them with about 34 000 of his troops 9 As they emerged from the woods a long range gunnery duel ensued and the French batteries proved superior The Prussian infantry made a cautious and fruitless effort to advance under fire across the open ground 3 nbsp Valmy obelisk with statue of KellermannAs the Prussians wavered a pivotal moment was reached when Kellermann raised his hat and made his famous cry of Vive la Nation The cry was repeated again and again by all the French army and had a crushing effect upon Prussian morale The French troops sang La Marseillaise and Ca Ira and a cheer went up from the French line 13 To the surprise of nearly everyone Brunswick broke off the action and retired from the field The Prussians rounded the French positions at a great distance and commenced a rapid retreat eastward The two engaged forces had been essentially equal in size Kellermann with approximately 36 000 troops and 40 cannon and Brunswick with 34 000 and 54 cannon Yet by the time Brunswick retreated casualties had risen no higher than three hundred French and two hundred Prussians 14 Prussian retreat edit The precipitous end to the action provoked elation among the French 3 The question of exactly why the Prussians withdrew has never been definitively answered Most historians ascribe the retreat to some combination of the following factors the highly defensible French position 3 together with the rapidly growing numbers of reinforcements and citizen volunteers 15 with their discouraging and thoroughly unexpected elan 16 which persuaded the cautious Brunswick to spare himself a dangerous loss of manpower 17 particularly when the Russian invasion of Poland had already raised concerns for Prussia s defensibility in the east 15 Others have put forward more shadowy motives for the decision including a secret plea by Louis XVI to avoid an action which might cost him his life and even bribery of the Prussians allegedly paid for with the Bourbon crown jewels 18 An analysis by Dr Munro Price reader in history at the University of Bradford and a modern specialist in this period concludes that there is no convincing proof of bribery turning back the Prussians 19 The more likely explanation remains that having initially adopted an aggressive strategy Brunswick lacked the will to carry it through when confronted by an unexpectedly determined and disciplined opposition 20 Brunswick had actually been offered command of the French armies prior to the outbreak of war and emigre factions subsequently used this as a basis to allege treachery on his part In any case the battle ended decisively the French pursuit was not seriously pressed 21 and Brunswick s troops managed a safe if inglorious eastward retreat 22 Aftermath editThis engagement was the turning point of the Prussians campaign Beset with food shortages and dysentery their retreat continued well past the Rhine River 22 French troops soon struck forward into Germany taking Mainz in October Dumouriez once again moved against the Austrian Netherlands and Kellermann ably secured the front at Metz 22 Dumouriez would bear a harsh change of fortune after one more influential success in November 1792 at Jemappes he was by the following year a broken man His army had suffered such catastrophic losses that he defected to the royalist side for the rest of his life 23 Kellermann however continued in a long and distinguished military career In 1808 he was ennobled by Napoleon and became Duke of Valmy 24 Legacy edit nbsp A modern replica of the windmill at Valmy stands amid a memorial site In terms of military history the battle introduced features that reshaped modern warfare It exemplified key components of total war in terms of political propaganda psychological warfare and eager participation of large numbers of politicized civilians 25 After a while the battle came to be celebrated as the first great victory of the armies of the French Revolution 26 In the varied historiography of the French Revolution it is typically portrayed as the first victory of a citizen army inspired by liberty and nationalism Many thousands of volunteers did indeed swell the ranks but at least half of the French forces were professional soldiers particularly among Kellermann s critical artillery units 3 The French artillery also held a tactical advantage in its modern Gribeauval gun system which proved highly successful on the battlefield 7 But in popular conception Valmy was a victory of citizen soldiers the battle was emblemized by Kellermann s cry augmented by the troops singing of La Marseillaise and the Ca Ira while under fire 22 On the day of the battle the Legislative Assembly had duly transferred its power to the National Convention 21 Over the next two days flush with the news from Valmy the new Convention deputies abolished the monarchy and proclaimed the French Republic 27 The victory was a much needed source of pride for the revolutionary French state and provided enduring inspiration for the years that followed 16 It was considered by many contemporaries to be a miraculous event for France and a decisive defeat for one of the most effective armies in Europe 28 Scholars continue to count it among the most significant clashes in military history 14 29 The Prussians themselves recognized the importance of the battle not merely as a setback in the war but as a crucial advancement for the Revolution as a whole 30 The German writer and poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was present at the battle with the Prussian army later wrote that he was approached by some of his comrades in a state of dejection He had previously cheered them up with memorable and clever quotes but his only consolation this time was Here and today a new epoch in the history of the world has begun and you can boast you were present at its birth 27 References edit Creasy p 334 Creasy p 330 a b c d e f g h Schama p 640 Fuller p 352 Price p 311 a b c d Britannica 1910 p 171 a b Fuller p 350 Crowdy pp 8 24 a b c Tucker p 260 Carlyle p 39 Azema pp 84 85 E H Wainwright The cannonade of Valmy Kleio 5 2 1973 62 76 Soboul p 589 a b Lanning p 145 a b Doyle p 198 a b Soboul p 269 Esdaile p 161 Webster pp 348 52 Price p 312 Price pp 311 12 a b Soboul p 270 a b c d Schama p 641 Thiers pp 298ff Dunn Pattinson p 321 E H Wainwright The cannonade of Valmy Kleio 5 2 1973 62 76 Elise Meyer Valmy The victory and its reputation Annales historiques de la Revolution francaise No 4 2020 a b Doyle p 193 Horne p 197 Creasy pp 328ff Blanning pp 78 79 Sources editAtkinson Charles Francis Hannay David McDowall 1910 French Revolutionary Wars In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 171 205 see page 171 Valmy Azema Jean Pierre Henri 1995 Les Moulins de France in French Rennes Federation Francaise des Amis des Moulins ISBN 2 7373 1673 1 Blanning T C W 1996 The French Revolutionary Wars 1787 1802 London Arnold ISBN 0 340 64533 4 Carlyle Thomas 1800s 1837 The French Revolution A History Vol 3 London George Routledge and Sons Ltd OCLC 461166553 Creasy Edward Shepherd 1851 The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World from Marathon to Waterloo New York Harper amp Brothers p 328 OCLC 5026550 Retrieved 29 January 2013 fifteen decisive battles Crowdy Terry 15 January 2003 French Revolutionary Infantryman 1791 1802 Warrior series Vol 63 Oxford Osprey pp 8 24 ISBN 1 84176 552 X Doyle William 2002 The Oxford History of the French Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 925298 5 Dunn Pattinson Richard P 2010 1909 Napoleon s Marshals Bremen Germany Europaeischer Hochschulverlag GmbH amp Co ISBN 978 3 86741 429 6 Retrieved 29 January 2013 Esdaile Charles 2009 Napoleon s Wars An International History 1803 1815 New York Penguin p 161 ISBN 978 0 14 311628 8 Fuller J F C 1987 1954 A Military History of the Western World Vol II New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80305 4 Horne Alistair 2004 La Belle France New York Vintage ISBN 978 1 4000 3487 1 Lanning Michael Lee 2005 The Battle 100 The Stories Behind History s Most Influential Battles Chicago Sourcebooks Inc ISBN 1 4022 0263 6 Meyer Elise Valmy The victory and its reputation Annales historiques de la Revolution francaise No 4 2020 abstract Price Munro 2002 The Fall of the French Monarchy London Pan Macmillan Ltd ISBN 0 330 48827 9 Schama Simon 1989 Citizens A Chronicle of the French Revolution New York Vintage Books ISBN 0 679 72610 1 Soboul Albert 1975 The French Revolution 1787 1799 New York Vintage ISBN 0 394 71220 X Thiers Adolphe 1838 The History of the French Revolution Vol II London Richard Bentley OCLC 2949605 Tucker Spencer Tucker 2010 Battles That Changed History An Encyclopedia of World Conflict Oxford ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 429 0 Wainwright E H The cannonade of Valmy Kleio 5 2 1973 62 76 Webster Nesta Helen 1919 The French Revolution A Study in Democracy New York E P Dutton amp Co ISBN 0 7661 7996 6 Further reading editForrest Alan The Legacy of the French Revolutionary Wars The Nation in Arms in French Republican Memory Cambridge University Press 2009 Lynn John A Valmy MHQ Quarterly Journal of Military History Fall 1992 5 1 pp 88 97 Scott Samuel F From Yorktown to Valmy the transformation of the French Army in an age of revolution University Press of Colorado 1998 Thoral Marie Cecile From Valmy to Waterloo France at War 1792 1815 Palgrave Macmillan UK 2011 External links editCannon Thunder at Valmy David A Norris Warfare History Network 21 March 2019 HTML version of The Battle of Valmy from Edward Shepherd Creasy s The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World nbsp Media related to Battle of Valmy at Wikimedia CommonsPreceded bySiege of Thionville 1792 French Revolution Revolutionary campaignsBattle of Valmy Succeeded byColumn of the Goddess Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Valmy amp oldid 1206349938, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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