The
Battle of
Borodino: Order of Battle of the Russian Army
By Alexander Mikaberidze
(K=killed; W=wounded; MW=mortally
wounded; C=captured)
(unit designation: IR=infantry;
JR=jager; GR=grenadier; HR=hussar; DR=dragoon; CR=cuirassiers; DCR=Don
Cossack; HIMSQI = His Imperial Majesty’s Suite on Quartermaster
Issues;
(ranks: LG=lieutenant general;
MG= major general; QMG=quartermaster general)
Commander-in-Chief
General of Infantry Mikhail Golenishchev-Kutuzov
Main Headquarters
Acting
Chief of Staff: General of Cavalry Leontii Bennigsen
Chief
of Engineers: MG of Engineer Corps Peter Ivashev (Communications Chief
of the 1st Western Army)
Chief
of Artillery: MG of Artillery Alexander Kutaisov (K)[1]
Chief
of Commissary: Senator, Privy Counselor Vasily Lanskoy
Quartermaster
General: MG of HIMSQI Mikhail Vistitsky II (QMG of 2d Western Army)
Assistant
Quartermaster General: Colonel of HIMSQI Karl (Karl Wilhelm) Toll
(QMG of 1st Western Army)
Duty
Officer: Colonel Paisii Kaisarov
Acting
Chief of Military Police: MG Mikhail Levitsky, also serving as the
Commandant of Mozhaisk
General-Wagonmeister:
Colonel of Chevalier Guard Regiment Pavel Cherepanov.
Surgeon
General: Actual State Counselor Jacob Williers
Postmaster
General: Military Counselor Flor Dolivo-Dobrovolsky
MH
Suite: General of Cavalry Prince Alexander of Württemberg, LG
Prince August Holstein-Oldenburg, MG Adam Ozharovsky.
1st Western Army
Total of 82,400 men (excluding Opolchenye)
and 438 guns
Commander-in-Chief
General of Infantry and Minister of War Mikhail Barclay de Tolly
Headquarters
Chief
of Staff: MG Aleksey Yermolov
Chief
of Engineers: LG Christian Trousson I
Chief
of Artillery: MG of Artillery Alexander Kutaisov (also commanding
the artillery of combined armies) (K)
Intendant
General:
Acting
State Counselor Yegor Kankrin (at Mozhaisk)
Acting
Quartermaster General: Colonel of HIMSQI Yakov Gaverdovsky. (K)
Duty
General: Flügel Adjutant Colonel Peter Kikin.(W)
Headquarter
Commandant: Colonel of HIMSQI Semen Stavrakov.
Field
Proviantmeister General: State Counselor Alexander Gove
Field
Kriegs-Commissar-general: MG Mikhail Petrovsky
Field
Auditor General: Court Counselor Semen Kazakov.
Hewaldiger
General: Major Petersen of the Polotsk IR
Chief
Military Commissar: Major Vasily Rudanovsky
Head
of Military Police: Military Counselor Yakov de Sanglen
Attached
to the Suite: General Mikhail Miloradovich[2] and
MG Peter Passek.
2nd Infantry Corps
LG Karl Gustav Baggovut
Total: 24 battalions (11,450
men, excluding two battalions of the
Moscow opolchenye) and 72 guns
4th Division: MG
Prince Eugene von Wurttemberg
Staff
Division
Quartermaster: Lieutenant of HIMSQI Andrey Brun
Hewaldiger:
Lieutenant Yefim Glindich of the
Minsk IR
1st Brigade: MG
Ignatii Rossi (W)[3]
Tobolsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Peter Schroeder[4]
Volhynia
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): MG Ignatii Rossi (W)[5]
2nd Brigade: Colonel
Dmitry Pyshnitsky
Kremenchug
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Dmitry Pyshnitsky
Minsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Aleksey Krasavin
(W).[6]
3rd Brigade: Colonel
Yegor Pillar
34th
Jaeger Regiment (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Yegor
Pillar
4th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Major Karl Heideken.[7]
4th Artillery
Brigade: Colonel Aleksey Voyeikov (MW).[8]
4th
Battery Company (12 guns): Colonel Aleksey Voyeikov (MW).[9]
7th
Light Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Evstigney Talyzin
8th
Light Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Matvey Frish.[10]
17th Division: LG
Zakhar Olsufiev III
1st Brigade: MG
Peter Ivelich IV (W)[11]
Ryazan
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Aleksey Oreus I (K).[12]
Brest
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): MG Peter Ivelich IV (W).[13]
2nd Brigade: MG
Yakov Vadkovsky (W)[14]
Belozersk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Yermolay Kern.[15]
Willmandstrand
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Fedor Sokorev I (W).[16]
3rd Brigade: Colonel
Yakov Potemkin
30th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Kiril Zabelin
48th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Major Alexander Kharitonov (commanding
officer).
17th Artillery
Brigade: Colonel Ivan Ditterix II (W)
17th
Battery Company (12 guns): Colonel Ivan Ditterix II
32nd
Light Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Yakov Volevach
33rd
Light Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Flegont Bashmakov
3rd Infantry Corps
LG Nikolay Tuchkov I (MW)[17]
Total of 24.5 battalions (10,800
men) and 18 guns.
1st Grenadier
Division: MG Pavel Stroganov [18]
1st Brigade: Colonel
Peter Zheltukhin II
Leib
Grenadier Regiment (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Semen
Demchenkov of the Pavlovsk GR.[19]
Count
Arakcheyev GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Boris
Knyazhnin II of the Life Guard Semeyonovsk Regiment.
2nd Brigade: MG
Alexander Tsvilenev
Pavlovsk
GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Yegor Richter (W).[20]
Yekaterinoslav
GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Yegor Krishtafovich.
(W)[21]
3rd Brigade:
MG Boris Foch I
St. Petersburg GR (1st and 3rd Battalions): Major
Nikolay Dallen.[22]
Tavrida
GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Nikolay Sulima.
3rd Division:
LG Peter Konovnitsyn (W)[23]
1st Brigade:
MG Alexander Tuchkov IV (K)[24]
Murom
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Fedor (Friedrich
Wilhelm) Drizen II (W)[25]
Reval
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Yakov Zhelvinsky.
1st Combined
Grenadier Battalion (3 companies): Major Yegor Kanyshev of the 20th JR
(W)
2nd Brigade: Colonel
Demid Mesheryakov (W)[26]
Chernigov
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Ivan Ushakov
(W).[27]
Selenginsk
IR (1st battalion)[28]: Major
Ivan Grening I.[29]
2nd Combined
Grenadier Battalion (3 companies): Major Otto Vrangel III of the Revel
IR (W)
3rd Brigade:
MG Prince Ivan Shakhovsky
20th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Major Alexander Gorikhvostov[30]
21st JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Pavel Plattsov.[31]
3rd Artillery
Brigade
Half
company of the 1st Battery Company (6 guns): Colonel Vasily Glukhov
of the Shostkinsk Artillery Garrison.(W)
6th Light
Company (12 guns): LG Andrey Ditterix VI.
4th Infantry Corps
LG Alexander Osterman-Tolstoy
(W)
Total of 23 battalions (up
to 12,000 men) and 42 guns.
11th Division: MG
Nikolay Bakhmetyev I (W)[32].
1st Brigade:
MG Pavel Choglokov
Kexholm
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Nikolay Emelyanov.[33]
Pernau
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Alexander Lachinov
(W).[34]
2nd Brigade:
MG Vasily Laptev (W).[35]
Polotsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Grigory Peshansky.[36]
Yeletsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Ivan Mordvinov of
the Life Guard Izmailovsk Regiment (W).[37]
3rd Brigade:
Colonel Adam Bistrom II
1st JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Moisei Karpenkov
33rd JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Major Khristofor Brevern II
11th Artillery
Brigade: Lt.Col. Alexander Maleyev I.[38]
2nd
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Alexander Maleyev I
3rd Light
Company (12 guns): Staff Captain Alexander Figner
Half
company of the 4th Light Company (6 guns):[39] Lt.Col.
Pavel Timofeyev.
23rd
Division: MG Aleksey Bakhmetyev III (W)[40]
1st Brigade:
MG Prince Ivan Gurielov (Gurieli).[41]
Ekaterinburg
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Zinovii Sleptsov.[42]
Rylsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Pavel Ushakov of
the Life Guard Izmailovsk Regiment.[43]
2nd Brigade:
MG Fedor Aleksopol (W).[44]
Kopor
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Vladimir Patkul of
the Life Guard Semeyonovsk Regiment (W).[45]
18th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): MG Fedor Aleksopol.
23rd Artillery
Brigade
44th Light
Company (12 guns): Captain Berg (K).[46]
2nd Combined
Grenadier Brigade: Colonel Sergey Ostrovsky of the Life
Guard Preobrazhensk Regiment.[47]
1st Combined
Grenadier Battalion (6 companies from the 1st and 2nd Combined
Grenadier Battalions of the 17th Division)
2nd Combined
Grenadier Battalion (7 companies from the combined grenadier battalions
of the 11th and 23rd Divisions.)
5th Infantry Corps
LG Nikolay Lavrov[48]
Total of 17,250 men (21 battalion
of infantry, 20 squadrons of cavalry) and 66 guns
Guard
Infantry Division: LG Nikolay Lavrov[49].
1st
Brigade: MG Baron Grigory Rosen I
Life
Guard Preobrazhensk Regiment (1st, 2nd and 3rd battalions): Colonel
Boris Poluektov[50]
Life
Guard Semeyonovsk Regiment (1st, 2nd and 3rd battalions): Colonel
Fedor Posnikov.[51]
2nd
Brigade: Colonel Matvey Khrapovitsky (W)[52]
Life
Guard Izmailovsk Regiment (1st, 2nd and 3rd battalions): Colonel Ivan
Kozlyaninov (W).[53]
Life
Guard Lithuanian Regiment (1st, 2nd and 3rd battalions): Colonel and
Flügel Adjutant Ivan Udom I (W).[54]
3rd
Brigade: Colonel Karl Bistrom I.
Life
Guard Jager Regiment (1st, 2nd and 3rd battalions): Colonel Karl Bistrom
I.
Life
Guard Finland Regiment (1st, 2nd and 3rd battalions): Colonel Maxim
Kryzhanovski.
Life
Guard Artillery Brigade: Colonel Alexander Eyler[55]
His
Majesty Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich’s 1st
Battery Company (12 guns): Staff Captain Alexander Bazilevich (W)
Count
Arakcheyev’s 2nd
Battery Company (12 guns): Colonel Baron Roman Taube (MW).[56]
MG
Kaspersky’s 1st Light Company (12 guns): Captain Aleksey Velyaminov
(W).[57]
Captain
Gogel’s 2nd Light Company (12 guns): Captain Alexander Gogel
(W)[58]
Guard
Equipazh’s Artillery (2 guns assigned to the 1st
Light Company): Lieutenant Adam List (W)
1st
Combined Grenadier Brigade:[59] Colonel Prince
Grigory Kantakuzen (K)[60].
1st
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 1st Division: Lt.Col. Karl Albrecht
of the Leib-Grenadier Regiment (K)
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 1st Division: Major Otto fon der
Pahlen I of the St. Petersburg GR. (W)
1st
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 4th Division: Major Roman Rosen
II of the Tobolsk IR (W).[61]
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 4th Division: Major Dobrovolsky
of the Volhynia IR
1st
Cuirassier Division: MG Nikolay Borozdin II[62].
1st
Brigade: MG Ivan Shevich.
Chevalier
Guard Regiment (4 squadrons): Colonel Karl Levenwolde (K). [63]
Life
Guard Horse Regiment (4 squadrons): Colonel Mikhail Arsenyev (W).[64]
2nd
Brigade: MG Nikolay Borozdin II
His
Imperial Majesty's Leib-Cuirassier Regiment (4 squadrons): Colonel
Karl Ludwig Budberg (W).[65]
Her
Imperial Majesty's Leib-Cuirassier Regiment (4 squadrons): Colonel
Baron Alexander Rosen II
Astrakhan CR: Colonel Vasily Karatayev (W).
Life
Guard Horse Artillery Brigade: Colonel Peter Kozen.
1st
Horse Battery (8 guns): Captain Rostislav Zakharov (MW).[66]
2nd
Horse
Battery (8guns): Captain Alexander Rall II (MW).[67]
6th Infantry Corps
General of Infantry Dmitry
Dokhturov[68]
Total of 24 battalions (12,500
men) and 72 guns.
7th Division: LG
of Artillery Peter Kaptsevich.
1st
Brigade: Colonel Dmitry Lyapunov IV
Moscow
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Ivan Kostromitinov (W).[69]
Pskov
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Dmitry Lyapunov IV.
2nd
Brigade: Colonel Aleksey Aigustov.[70]
Libau
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Aleksey Aigustov.
Sofia
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Peter Eding [71]
3rd
Brigade: Lt.Col. Nikanor Kashirinov.[72]
11th
JR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Mikhail Starov.
36th
JR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Pavel Alekseyev.[73]
7th
Artillery Brigade: Lt.Col. Danil Devel
7th
Position Battery (12 guns): Lt.Col. Khristian Ditterix III (W).[74]
12th
Light Battery (12 guns): Lt.Col. Ivan Pustoshkin (W).[75]
13th
Light Battery (12 guns): Lt.Col. Danil Devel
24th
Division: MG Peter Likhachev I (C)[76].
1st
Brigade: MG Ivan Tsybulsky (W).[77]
Ufa
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Flegont Demidov
Shirvan
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Nikolay Teplov III (W).[78]
2nd
Brigade: Colonel Peter Denisyev
Butyrsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Ivan Kamenshikov I
Tomsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Ivan Popov of the Life
Guard Lithuanian Regiment (W).[79]
3rd
Brigade: Colonel Nikolay Vuich.[80]
19th
JR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Grigory Potemkin of the Life
Guard Preobrazhensk Regiment (K).[81]
40th
JR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Fedor Sazonov II (W).
24th
Artillery Brigade: Lt.Col. Ivan Yefremov (W).[82]
24th
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Peter Veselitsky II (K).[83]
45th
Light Battery (12 guns): Captain Mikhail Bulashevich.
46th
Light Battery (12 guns): Lt.Col. Ivan Yefremov (W).[84]
1st Reserve Cavalry Corps
LG Fedor Uvarov.[85]
Total of 27 squadrons and
1 sotnya and 12 guns.[86]
1st
Brigade: MG Anton Chalikov
Life
Guard Dragoon Regiment (4 squadrons): Colonel Peter Chicherin II
Life
Guard Uhlan Regiment (3 squadrons): Colonel Mikhail Mezentsev II.
2nd
Brigade: MG Vasily Orlov-Denisov
Life
Guard Hussar Regiment (4 squadrons): Colonel Nikolay Mandryka.
Life
Guard Cossack Regiment (4 squadrons): MG Vasily Orlov-Denisov
Black Sea Guard Cossack Sotnya:[87] Cossack
Host Colonel Afanasii Bursak II.
3rd
Brigade: MG Aleksey Vsevolozhsky I
Elisavetgrad
HR (8 squadrons): Colonel Gerasim Shostakov
Nezhinsk DR (4 squadrons): Colonel Peter Zagryazhsky.
Artillery
·2nd Horse Artillery Company of the 1st Reserve
Artillery Brigade (12 guns): Lt.Col. Peter Göring.
2nd Reserve Cavalry Corps
MG Fedor (Friedrich Nicholas Georg) Korf[88]
Total of 24 squadrons and
12 guns.
1st
Brigade: Colonel Nikolay Davydov
Moscow DR (4 squadrons): Colonel Nikolay Davydov.[89]
Pskov DR (4 squadrons): Colonel Andrey (Gideon Henrich) Zass
I.
2d
Brigade:[90] MG
Semen Panchulidzev II.[91]
Izumsk
HR (8 squadrons): Lt.Col. Osip (Gabriel Joseph) Dolon (W).[92]
Polish
Uhlan (Lancer) Regiment (8 squadrons): Colonel Aleksey Guriev.
Artillery
6th
Horse Artillery Company of the 2nd Reserve Artillery Brigade (12 guns): Lt.Col.
Yakov Zakharzhevsky (W).
3rd Reserve Cavalry Corps[93]
MG Fedor Korf[94]
Total of 32 squadrons and 12 guns
1st
Brigade: MG Stepan Dyatkov
Courland DR (4 squadrons): Colonel Sergey Ushakov
Orenburg DR (4 squadrons): Lt.Col. Fedor Zonnenbach.
2nd
Brigade: Colonel Baron Cyprian Creitz (W).[95]
Irkutsk DR (4 squadrons): Lt.Col. Anton Yuzhakov.
Siberia DR (4 squadrons): Colonel Cyprian Creitz (W).[96]
3rd
Brigade: MG Ivan Dorokhov[97]
Mariupol
HR (8 squadrons): Colonel Prince Ivan Vadbolsky
Sumsk
HR (8 squadrons): Colonel David Delyanov.[98]
Artillery
7th
Horse Artillery Company of the 3rd Reserve Artillery Brigade (12 guns):
Colonel Aleksey Nikitin (W).
Irregular Forces
General of Cavalry Matvei Platov
Total of 72 sotnyas (5,600
men) and 12 guns
Separate
Units
Ataman DCR (7 sotnyas): Colonel Stepan Balabin II
1st Bug Cossack Regiment (5 sotnyas): Esaul Stepan Zhekul.
1st Bashkir Cossack Regiment (5 sotnyas): Major Moses Lachin
of the
Narva DR.
1st Teptyarsk Cossack regiment (5 sotnyas): Major Nikolay Timirov
I
1st
Brigade: Lt.Col. Maxim Vlasov III
Adrianov II’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Lt.Col. Ivan Andrianov
II
Chernozubov VIII’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Host starshina Mikhail
Chernozubov VIII
Vlasov III’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Esaul Stepan Andronov III.[99]
Perekop Horse Tatar Regiment (5 sotnyas): Lt.Col. Prince Ahmed-bey
Khunkalov I.
2nd
Brigade: MG Nikolay Ilovaisky V.
3rd
Brigade: MG Vasily Denisov VII
5th
Brigade:[103] MG
Dmitri Kuteinikov II.
Artillery
Reserve Artillery
Total of 10 artillery companies
with 120 guns.
1st
Artillery Brigade of the 1st Grenadier Division
1st
Light Company (12 guns): Captain Nikolay Shishkin II
2nd
Light Company (12 guns): Captain Peter Kopyev (K).[104]
3rd
Artillery Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division
5th
Light Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Baron Fedor Tornov (fon Tornau) (W).
2nd
Reserve Artillery Brigade
4th
Horse Company (12 guns): Colonel Pavel Merlin (W).
5th
Horse Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Daniil Kandyba (W).[105]
29th
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Alexander Ditterix VI
30th
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Bogdan Nilus II.
3rd
Reserve Artillery Brigade
9th
Horse Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Osip Parkinson
10th
Horse Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Mikhail Semange
4th
Pontooner Company
4th
Replacement Artillery Brigade
22nd
Horse Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Yegor Khoven.
2nd Western Army
Total of 41,000 men (excluding Opolchenye)
and 186 guns
Commander-in-Chief
General of Infantry Peter Bagration (MW)[106]
Headquarters
Chief
of Staff: MG Emmanuel Saint Priest
Chief
of Engineers: MG of Engineers Yegor Foerster
Chief
of Artillery: MG of Artillery Karl Lowernstern
Advance
Guard Corps Commander: LG Andrey Gorchakov II.[107]
Intendant
General: Privy Counselor Dmitri Lanskoy.
Acting
Quartermaster General: Lt.Col. of HIMSQI Mikhail Khomentovsky II
Headquarter
Commandant: Major Frol Orzhensky I of the Ladoga IR.
Field
Proviantmeister General: College Counselor Dmitry Dembrovski
Field
Kriegs-Commissar-general: Military Counselor Peter Bibikov
Field
Auditor General: Court Counselor Sergey Mayevsky
Hewaldiger
General: Lt.Col. Ivan Orlov of the 2nd Pioneer Regiment
Chief
Medic: Court Counselor Ivan Ganhardt.
7th Infantry Corps
LG Nikolay Rayevsky
Total of 24 battalions (12,500
men) and 24 guns
12th
Division: MG Illarion Vasilchikov I (W).[108]
1st
Brigade: Lt.Col. Andrey Bogdanovsky (W)
Narva
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Andrey Bogdanovsky
Smolensk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Astafii Rennenkampf
of the 33 JR.
2nd
Brigade: Colonel Karl Friedrich Pantzerbiter (W)
New
Ingermanland IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Ivan
Zhukov I
Aleksopol
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Peter Petrygin (W).[109]
3rd Brigade:
Colonel Andrey Glebov (W)
6th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Major Petrovsky II (K)[110]
41st JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Peter Shein I (W).[111]
26th
Division: MG Ivan Paskevich[112]
1st
Brigade: Lt.Col. Nikolay Kadyshev (K).[113]
Nizhni
Novgorod IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col.
Nikolay Kadyshev (K)[114]
Orel IR (1st and 3rd battalions):
Major Pavel Bernikov I.
2nd
Brigade: Colonel Yeremei (Geronimo) Savoini (W).[115]
Ladoga
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Savoini (W).[116]
Poltava
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Nikita Boboyedov
I (W).[117]
3rd Brigade:
Colonel Fedor Gogel I.
5th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Major Mikhail Kovrigin
42nd JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Yegor Sinenkov (W).[118]
26th
Artillery Brigade: Lt.Col. Gustav Shulman II
26th
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Gustav Shulman II
47th
Light Company (12 guns): Captain Ivan Zhurakovsky.
8th Infantry Corps
LG Mikhail Borozdin I
Total of 32 battalions (17,000
men) and 70 guns
2nd Grenadier
Division: MG Karl von Mecklenburg-Schwerin (W)
1st Brigade:
Colonel Ivan Shatilov (W).[119]
Kiev
GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Dmitri Chashnikov
(MW).[120]
Moscow
Grenadier regiment (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Ivan
Shatilov (W).[121]
2nd Brigade:
Colonel Ivan Buxhöwden (K).[122]
Astrakhan
Grenadier regiment (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Ivan
Buxhöwden (K)[123]
Fanagoria
GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Yegeny Golovin II
(W).
3rd Brigade:
Colonel Dmitry Levin[124]
Siberia
GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Major Ivan Potulov (W).[125]
Malorossia
GR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Yegor Agte I (W).[126]
2nd Artillery
Brigade: Colonel Alexander Boguslavsky
11th
Battery Company (12 guns): Colonel Boguslavsky
Division
of the 21st Light Company (4 guns): Lieutenant Fedor Maslov.
27th
Division: MG Dmitry Neverovsky (W)
1st Brigade:
Colonel Maxim Stavitsky II (W)
Odessa
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Lt.Col. Vasily Alekseyev
(W).[127]
Tarnopol
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Adam Titov (W)[128]
2nd Brigade:
Colonel Alexander Knyazhnin I (W).[129]
Vilna
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Alexander Guberti
I (MW).[130]
Simbirsk
IR (1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Pavel Lashkarev
(W).[131]
3rd Brigade:
Colonel Alexey Voyeikov of the Life Guard Preobrazhensk Regiment
49th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Alexey Kologrivov
50th JR
(1st and 3rd battalions): Colonel Nikolay Nazimov.
Artillery
32nd
Battery Company (12 guns of the 3rd Reserve Artillery Brigade):
Lt.Col. Fedor Bellinshausen of the Dunamund Artillery Garrison.
2nd
Combined Grenadier Division: MG Mikhail Vorontsov (W)[132]
1st Brigade
1st
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 7th Division: Major Andrey Diedrich
of the
Pskov IR (W).
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 7th Division: Major Ulyan Probst
of the
Moscow IR (W).
1st
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 24th Division: Major Pavel Prigara
II of the 19th JR (MW).[133]
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 24th Division: Major Anton Gebel
of the 40th JR.
2nd Brigade
1st
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 2nd Grenadier Division:
Major Friberg of the
Astrakhan GR (W).
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 2nd Grenadier Division:
Major Isidor Manyukin II of the Fanagoria GR (K).[134]
1st
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 12th Division: Major Migai I of
the 6th JR (K).
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 12th Division: Major Stepan Vrangel
of the New Ingermanland IR (W).
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 26th Division: Major Ignatius
Trubcheninov IV of the 42nd JR (W).
1st
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 27th Division: Major Mikhail Karpov
of the
Odessa IR (W).
2nd
Combined Grenadier Battalion of the 27th Division: Major Grigori Fedorov
I of the Vilna IR.
Artillery
1st Don
Horse Company (12 guns): Host starshina Peter Tatsyn IV.
Artillery
Attached to the 8th Corps
1st Brigade:
Lt.Col. Karl Taube of the Life Guard Artillery Brigade[135]
3rd
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Karl Taube of the Life Guard Artillery
Brigade
3rd Brigade
Half
company of the 1st Battery Company (6 guns): Staff Captain Ivan
Bogdanovich
3rd Reserve
Artillery Brigade
31st
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Peter Apushkin.
Cavalry fo the 2nd Western
Army
LG Dmitri Golitsyn V[136]
2nd
Cuirassier Division: MG Ilya Duka II
1st
Brigade: MG Nikolay Kretov (W).
Ekaterinoslav
CR (4 squadrons): Colonel Mikhail Volkov (W)[137]
Military
Order CR (4 squadrons): Colonel Andrey Gudovich (W)[138]
2nd Brigade:
Colonel Mikhail Tolbuzin I (MW)[139]
Glukhov
CR (4 squadrons): Colonel Sergey Tolbuzin II (W)[140]
Malorossiisk
CR (4 squadrons): Major Timofei Shatalov II
Novgorod
CR (4 squadrons): Colonel Boris Sokovnin I (W, C)[141]
4th Reserve Cavalry
Corps
MG Karl Sievers I (W)
Total of 32 squadrons (4,300 men) and 12 guns
1st
Brigade: MG Ivan Panchulidzev I
Kharkov DR (4 squadrons): Colonel Dmitry Yuzefovich
Chernigov DR (4 squadrons): Major Sergey. Musin-Pushkin[142]
2nd
Brigade: Colonel Yegor Emmanuel (W).[143]
Kiev DR (4 squadrons): Colonel Emanuel (W)[144]
Novorossiisk DR (4 squadrons): Major Alexey Terenin
3rd
Brigade: Colonel Dmitry Vasilchikov II[145]
Akhtyrsk
HR (8 squadrons): Colonel Dmitry Vasilchikov II
Lithuanian
Uhlan Regiment (8 squadrons): Lt.Col. Otto Shtakelberg of the
Novorossiisk DR.[146]
Artillery
8th Horse
Company (12 guns of the 3d Reserve Artillery Brigade): Lt.Col. Zakhar
Shusherin
Irregular Troops of the
2nd Western Army
MG Akim Karpov II
Total of 40 sotnyas (3,000
men)
Cossack
Forces
Bykhalov
I’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Colonel Andrey Bykhalov I
Grekov
XXI’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Host starshina Ivan Grekov XXI
Ilovaisky
X’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Colonel Osip Ilovaisky X
Ilovaisky
XI’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Colonel Timofei Ilovaisky XI
Karpov
II’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Host starshina Peter Kalinin
Komissarov
I’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Host starshina Dmitri Komissarov
I
Melnikov
IV’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Lt.Col. Grigori Melnikov IV
Sysoyev
III’s DCR (5 sotnyas): Esaul Terentii Rykovskov[147]
Artillery Reserve of the
2nd Western Army
(80 guns)
12th Artillery
Brigade (of the 12th Division): Lt.Col. Yakov Sablin
(W).
12th
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Robert Winsper of the 19th Artillery
Brigade
22nd Light
Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Karl Girsch (K).[148]
23rd Light
Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Yakov Sablin.
2nd Artillery
Brigade (of the 2nd Grenadier Division)
20th Light
Company (12 guns): Captain Ivan Belich (W).
21st Light
Company (8 guns): Lt.Col. Roman Budberg (W).
23rd Artillery
Brigade (of the 23rd Division): Lt.Col. Lavr Gulevich
23rd
Battery Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Lavr Gulevich
26th Artillery
Brigade (of the 26th Division)
48th Light
Company (12 guns): Lt.Col. Peter Eriks
3rd Reserve
Artillery Brigade
4th Pontoon
Company: Lt.Col. Matvei Shishkin I
Engineer
Troops
Zotov’s
Pioneer Company of the 2nd Pioneer Regiment.
Opolchenye Forces
Moscow Opolchenye[149]
Total of 21,694 men (excluding
officers)
LG Irakly Morkov
1st Division
1st JR
(4 battalions, armed with muskets): Privy Counselor Nikolay Demidov
(chef); Colonel Alexander Argamakov I (commander)[150]
4th Dismounted
Cossack Regiment (4 battalions, armed with pikes): MG Nikolay Obreskov
(chef); Colonel Grigori Kozlov-Ugrenin (commander)[151]
6th Dismounted
Cossack Regiment (4 battalions, armed with pikes): MG Peter Lopukhin
(chef); Colonel Chelishev of the 8th Dismounted Cossack Regiment
(commander)
2nd Division
7th Dismounted
Cossack Regiment (4 battalions, armed with pikes): MG Nikolay Arsenyev
(chef); Colonel Vasily Savelov (commander)
3rd Division:
MG Fedor Talyzin I[152]
2nd JR
(4 battalions, armed with muskets): MG Alexander Talyzin II (chef);
Lt.Col. Gryazev (commander)
3rd JR
(4 battalions, armed with muskets): MG Fedor Talyzin I (chef); Colonel
Beketov (commander).[153]
1st Dismounted
Cossack Regiment (4 battalions, armed with muskets): Kamer-junker
Nikolay Gagarin (chef); Lt.Col. Alexander Svechin II (commander)
3rd Dismounted
Cossack Regiment (4 battalions, armed with pikes): MG Mikhail Svechin
I (chef); Lt.Col. Vashkov (commander).[154]
Militia
Troops
of Vereya and Volokolamsk uezds (946 men)
Smolensk Opolchenye
Total of 12,530
men (up to 2,000 men left near Mozhaisk)
LG Nikolay Lebedev
(W)
Opolchenye of
the Belsk uezd (1,341 men): Lt.Col. Pavel Rachinsky
Opolchenye of
the Vyazma uezd (1143 men): Lt.Col. Vyazemsky
Opolchenye of
the Gzhatsk uezd (993 men): Sub Lieutenant Gleb Mikulin
Opolchenye of
the Dorogobouzh uezd (1084 men): Colonel Yegor Sivai
Opolchenye of
the Dukhovo uezd (1190 men): Colonel Alexey Lebedev
Opolchenye of
the Yelna uezd (1282 men): Major Dmitri Glinka
Opolchenye of
the Krasnyi uezd (212 men): Lieutenant Gramotin
Opolchenye of
the Roslavl uezd (1293 men): Staff Captain Bogdan Azanchevsky
Opolchenye of
the
Smolensk uezd (1203 men): Lt.Col. Mikhail Vonlyarlyarsky
Opolchenye of
the Sychev uezd (1336 men): Captain of 2nd rank Alexey
Melnikov
Opolchenye of
the Yukhnov uezd (1453 men): Lt.Col. Peter Lagunov I.
Notes:
[1]Replaced
by MG Vasily Kostenetsky.
[2] Miloradovich initially commanded
the corps de battaille of the right flank which consisted of
the 2nd and 4th Corps.
[3] Replaced by Colonel Peter
Schroeder, chef of the Tobolsk IR, who was also wounded and replaced
by Major Ivan Ludinhausen-Wolfe of the same regiment.
[4] Lt.Col. Fedor Trefurt, commander
of the Tobolsk Regiment, was seriously ill, recuperating in the regiment’s
mobile hospital.
[5] After Rossi was wounded, regiment
was commanded by Lt.Col. Nikolay Kurnosov, who was also wounded and
replaced by Major Ivan Mamonov of the same regiment.
[6] Regimental commander Lt.Col.
Ivan Stellich was wounded at
Smolensk on 17 August and replaced by Krasavin, who, in turn, wounded
at
Borodino and replaced by Major Peter Godlevsky II, who was also wounded
and replaced by Major Demyan Krasnopersky.
[7] Heideken was commanding officer
since regimental commander Colonel Alexander Fedorov was dispatched
to Moscow.
[8] Replaced by Lt.Col. Matvey
Frish
[9] Replaced by Staff Captain
Sergey Leskov
[10] Assumed command of the entire
4th Brigade after Voyeikov’s death.
[11] Replaced by Major Pavel
Chertov I, commander of the Brest IR.
[12] Oreus was the commander
of the regiment and he was killed at
Borodino; he was replaced by Major Pavel Petrovich Novikov. Regiment’s
chef, MG Ivan Alekseyev was ill at Polotsk.
[13] See note 11.
[14] Vadkovsky assumed command
of this brigade after its previous commander MG Pavel Tuchkov III
was captured in the battle near Valutina Gora on 19 August. At
Borodino, Vadkovsky was wounded and replaced by Lt.Col. Yermolay Kern,
commander of the Belozersk IR.
[15] Regiment’s chef LG
Aleksey Gorchakov I served as an acting head of the Ministry of War
in
St. Petersburg.
[16] Sokorev was commanding officer
and was wounded at
Borodino; he was by replaced by Major Ivan Gremov.
[17] Replaced by MG Pavel Stroganov,
who was in turn replaced by LG Peter Konovnitsyn.
[18] Stroganov also commanded
the Leib-Grenadier Regiment, and, after Tuchkov I’s death, assumed
command of the entire corps.
[19] The regiment was officially
commanded by the brigade commander Colonel Zheltukhin II but was temporarily
led by Major Demchenkov.
[20] Replaced by Major Nikolay
Musin-Pushkin.
[21] Replaced by Major Fedor
Burogo. Regimental chef, MG Andrey Zapolsky, commanded the 35th Division
in the 2nd Reserve (Separate) Corps of LG Fedor Ertel.
[22] Dallen was commanding officer
since the regiment had no commander since July 1812. Its previous
commander, Colonel Aleksey Bykov was transferred to Vladikavkaz while
the subsequent commander Lt.Col. Yegor Akhte I was appointed only
on 9 September.
[23] During the battle, Konovnitsyn
assumed command of the 2nd Western Army after Prince Bagration
was wounded and continued commanding it until the arrival of General
Dmitri Dokhturov. He then led the 3rd Corps and was wounded
in action.
[24] Replaced by Colonel Yakov
Zhelvinsky of the Revel IR.
[25] Drizen was a regimental
chef and was wounded at
Borodino. He was replaced by regimental commander Major Andrey von
Fitinhoff, who was also wounded and replaced by regimental adjutant
Lieutenant Grigory Shkarin II.
[26] Mesheryakov was commanding
officer and was wounded at
Borodino; he was replaced by Major Vasily Bogdanovich of the Ekaterinburg
IR.
[27] Replaced by Major Peter
Shulgin, who was also wounded in action.
[28] The 3rd Battalion
was attached to the headquarters escort of the 1st Western Army.
[29] Replaced by Staff Captain
Ivan Stroynev, who was also wounded and replaced by Lieutenant Ivan
Petrovich Padylin.
[30] Regimental commander Lt.Col.
Ivan Kapustin of the Life Guard Finland Regiment was wounded at
Smolensk.
[31] Regimental commander was
Major Alexander Stepanov, who was wounded at
Borodino.
[32] Bakhmetyev was acting commanded
and was wounded during the battle; he was replaced by MG Pavel Choglokov.
[33] Regimental commander Lt.Col.
Ivan Stessel was wounded.
[34] Replaced by Major Peter
Chumakov.
[35] Laptev was commanding officer
since brigade’s original commander, MG Pavel Filisov was wounded
in a rear guard action at Bredikhino and Laptev assumed command on
6 September, only to be wounded the following day.
[36] Peshansky was commanding
officer since regimental commander Major Gavriil Yakovlev was seriously
ill.
[37] Mordvinov was commanding
officer since regimental chef Alexander Sukin II was in
St. Petersburg and regimental commander Lt.Col. Lev Turgenev seems
to have been with a different regiment during the battle. Mordvinov
was wounded and replaced by Lt.Col. Vasily Tishin, who was also wounded
later in action.
[38] Maleyev commanded in place
of Lt.Col. Alexander Kotlyarov, who was killed at Ostrovno in Jule
1812.
[39] Six other guns were assigned
to the Reserve (Separate) Corps of General Fedor Ertel.
[40] Replaced by MG Prince Ivan
Gurielov (Gurieli)
[41] Gurielov was commanding
officer after brigade’s original commander MG Modest Okulov
died at Ostrovno in July 1812.
[42] Regimental commander Major
Vasily Bogdanovich seems to have been assigned to the 1st battalion
of the Tavrida Grenadier Battalion.
[43] Regimental commander Major
Nikolay Nekrasov I commanded a battalion.
[44] Replaced by Lt.Col. Tikhon
Chistyakov of the 18th Jager Regiment.
[45] Patkull was commanding officer
in place of the regimental chef Colonel Mikhail Ryleyev I, who was
wounded at Saltanovka in July 1812. He was wounded at
Borodino and replaced by Major Ivan Regan, who later sustained injury
as well.
[46]Replaced by Lieutenant Stepan
Sokhnovsky.
[47] Ostrovsky was commanding
officer after he replaced Colonel Andrey Yefivomivh of the Life Guard
Semeyonovsk Regiment, who was wounded at Ostrovno in July.
[48] Grand Duke Constantine left
the army following a conflict with Mikhail Barclay de Tolly.
[49] Officially, division was
commanded by Alexey Yermolov, who also served as the chief of staff
of the 1st Western Army and could not combine both functions. Pavel
Shuvalov served as the commanding officer of the division but became
seriously ill and the command was nominally given to Lavrov, who also
commanded the corps.
[50] Regimental commander Colonel
Baron Yegor Drizen I was seriously ill.
[51] Regimental commander Colonel
Karl Kridener was seriously ill.
[52] Replaced by Colonel and
Flügel Adjutant Ivan Udom of the Life Guard Lithuanian Regiment,
who was also wounded and replaced by Colonel Ivan Musin-Pushkin I
of the Life Guard Izmailovsk Regiment; After the latter was wounded
as well, the brigade was led by Colonel Alexander Kutuzov of the Life
Guard Izmailovsk Regiment.
[53] Kozlyaninov was commanding
officer and was wounded during the battle. He was replaced by Colonel
Ivan Musin-Pushkin I, who was also wounded and replaced by Colonel
Alexander Kutuzov. After the latter took over command of the brigade,
the regiment was led by Colonel Kondratii Ivanovich Filatov.
[54] Replaced by Lt.Col. Pavel
Ugriumov, who was also wounded and replaced by Lt.Col. Aleksey Schwartz.
The latter was mortally wounded in action and replaced by Staff Captain
Vladimir Nikolayev I, who also sustained an injury but finished the
battle commanding the regiment.
[55] Eyler was commanding officer.
[56] Replaced by Staff Captain
Nikolay Demidov, who was also wounded and replaced by Lieutenant Grigory
Nikolayevich Korobyin, who sustained injury as well but finished the
battle.
[57] Replaced by Staff Captain
Nikolay Ladygin.
[58] Replaced by Lieutenant Afanasii
Stolypin.
[59] The brigade was attached
to the 2nd Brigade and was commanded by Colonel Matvey Khrapovitsky.
[60] Replaced by Captain Timofei
Petrovich Bukarev of the Count Arakcheyev Grenadier Regiment, who
was also wounded but finished the battle.
[61] Borozdin was commanding
officer replacing MG Nikolay Depreradovich, who was ill at Mozhaisk.
Borozdin was wounded during the battle and replaced by Captain Flor
Balabolkin of the Tobolsk IR.
[62] The division’s original
commander MG Nikolay Depreradovich was at Mozhaisk.
[63] Replaced by Colonel Vasily
Levashov
[64] Replaced by Colonel Ivan
Leontyev
[65] Replaced by regimental commander
Lt.Col. Peter Slepchenkov I, who was also wounded and replaced by
Lt.Col. Nikolay Grigorievich Kostin.
[66] Replaced by Staff Captain
Philip Bistrom.
[67] Replaced by Staff Captain
Dmitry Stolypin.
[68] Dokhturov took over command
of the 2nd Western Army after General Peter Bagration was wounded.
The 6th Corps was then commanded by LG of Artillery Peter Kaptsevich.
[69] Kostromitinov was commanding
officer and was wounded in action; he was replaced by Major Yakov
Nevgadov.
[70] Aigustov was commanding
officer; General Kostenetsky was appointed to command this brigade
on 5 September, but Aigustov continued to lead the unit at
Borodino.
[71] Eding was commanding officer;
the regiment had no commander while its chef was Colonel Vasily Khalyapin.
[72] Kashirinov was commanding
officer after he replaced MG Adam Balla, who was mortally wounded
at
Smolensk on 17 August.
[73] Alekseyev was the regimental
commander but he was not with the regiment during the battle and appears
to have been assigned to a different unit. The 36th Jagers was led
by Lt.Col. Kashirinov.
[74] Replaced by Captain Turchaninov.
[75] Replaced by Staff Captain
Nikolay Tisheninov
[76] Likhachev was captured after
the fall of Rayevsky's Redoubt and replaced by MG Ivan Tsybulsky,
who was wounded and replaced by Colonel Nikolay Vasilievich Vuich
of the 19th Jagers.
[77] Replaced by Major Flegont
Demidov of the
Ufa IR.
[78] Replaced by Major Andrey
Dyachkov.
[79] Replaced by Major Nikolay
Krutykh.
[80] Vuich was a commanding officer.
[81] Potemkin was commanding
officer and was killed in action; he was replaced by Staff Captain
Alexander Andrianovich Popov I.
[82] Replaced by Captain Mikhail
Bulashevich (who also sustained an injury) as a brigade commander.
[83] Replaced by Lieutenant Yakov
Waltz I
[84] Replaced by Staff Captain
Nikolay Kharlamov as a battery commander.
[85] Also commanded the cavalry
of the 1st Western Army.
[86] Returns of 5 September showed
2440 men (excluding artillery company) in the corps.
[87] Attached as the 4th squadron
to the Life Guard Cossack Regiment.
[88] Also commanded the 3rd Reserve
Cavalry Corps
[89] Regimental commander Lt.Col.
Anton Zalessky was ill.
[90] This unit was initially
the 3rd Brigade before the 2nd Brigade (Kargopol and Ingermanland
Dragoons) was assigned to the headquarters of the 1st Western Army.
[91] Panchulidzev initially commanded
the 2nd Brigade of the corps, but after it was assigned to the headquarters,
he was given nominal command of the former 3rd (now 2nd) Brigade.
[92] Replaced by Major Rosenbaum
[93] 1st and 3rd brigades were
temporarily united into a division led by MG Ivan Dorokhov.
[94] The corps’ original
commander LG Peter fon der Pahlen III was ill and replaced by MG Fedor
Korf, who also commanded the 2nd Reserve Cavalry Corps.
[95] Creitz was commanding officer
following the death of MG Anton Sckalon at
Smolensk. He was wounded six times at
Borodino and replaced by Lt.Col. Anton Yuzhakov of the Irkutsk Dragoon
Regiment as a brigade commander. According to Creitz’s memoirs,
he commanded the entire 3rd Cavalry Corps.
[96] Replaced by Captain Philip
Tarnovsky. Regimental commander Lt.Col. Vladimir Sonin was transferred
to the main headquarters after an argument with Brigade commander
and regimental chef Colonel Cyprian Creitz.
[97] During the battle, he commanded
a temporary division of the 1st and 3rd brigades of the 3rd reserve
cavalry Corps.
[98] Delyanov was commanding
officer, replacing Lt.Col. Nikolay Kanchiyalov I, who was wounded
at
Vitebsk in July 1812.
[99] Andronov III was commanding
officer in place of Vlasov III, who commanded the brigade.
[100] Davydov III was commanding
officer in place of Ilovaisky V, who commanded the brigade.
[101] Grekov XXVI was commanding
officer since regiment’s commander Lt.Col. Timofei Grekov XVIII
was ill.
[102] Pobednov was commanding
officer in place of Denisov VII, who commanded the brigade.
[103] The 4th Brigade, led by
MG Ivan Ilovaisky IV was assigned to Ferdinand Winzegorode’s
detachment.
[104] Replaced by Lieutenant
Yegor Kliber.
[105] Replaced by Captain Afanasii
Konshin.
[106] After his injury, Bagration
was initially replaced by Konovnitsyn. Kutuzov later appointed Prince
Alexander of Württemberg to lead the 2nd Western Army but
then replaced him with more experienced General Dimitry Dokhturov.
[107] Gorchakov commanded the "Advance
Guard Corps" of the 2nd Western Army since early August
1812. After the battle of Shevardino, his troops were assigned to
the 8th Corps while he was assigned to the headquarters of the
2nd Western Army.
[108] Vasilchikov was a commanding
officer replacing MG Peter Kolyubyakin, who was sick.
[109] Replaced by Major Peter
Trusov
[110] Replaced by Major Fedor
Tomashevsky of the 41st Jagers, who was wounded.
[111] Replaced by Major Matvei
Redrikov.
[112] Paskevich was a commanding
officer. He officially commanded the 1st Brigade while the division
was led by LG Nikolay Rayevsky, who was also a corps commander.
[113] Replaced by Major Pavel
Bernikov I.
[114] Replaced by Major Trofim
Ivanov, who was also killed and replaced by Staff Captain Fedosei
Dmitrievich Shein I.
[115] Savoini was a commanding
officer, replacing Colonel Anton Ivanovich (Otto Johann Friedrich)
Libhardt who was wounded at Saltanovka in July.
[116] Replaced by Lt.Col. Fedor
Tolstoy of the 8th Dismounted Cossack Regiment of the
Moscow opolchenye, who was wounded and replaced by Major Konstantin
Chabert, who suffered an injury as well.
[117] Boboyedov commanded instead
of Lt.Col. Ivan Konshin, who was sick in
Chernigov. Boboyedov was wounded and replaced by retired Lt.Col. Gerngross,
who was assigned to the regiment. The latter was wounded as well and
replaced by Major Alexander Davidov II.
[118] Replaced by Captain Fedor
Rudnev.
[119] Replaced by Major Andrey
Kononenko of the
Kiev Grenadier Regiment
[120] Replaced by Major Kononenko.
[121] Replaced by Major Iosif
Decoronelli (de Coronelli)
[122] Replaced by Lt.Col. Evgenii
Golovin II of the Fanagoria Grenadier Regiment, who was also wounded.
[123] Replaced by Major Alexander
Moderakh, who was wounded and replaced by Staff Captain Bollen.
[124] Levin was a commanding
officer, in place of Colonel Vladimir Antonovich Hesse.
[125] Replaced by Captain Shilling.
[126] Replaced by Lt.Col. Khristian
Agte II, who was killed and replaced by Major Matvei Miryanski.
[127] Alekseyev was the commander
of the Tarnopol IR and served as the commanding officer of the Odessa
Regiment in place of Colonel Alexander Velyaminov. Regimental chef
Alexander Potulov was killed at
Smolensk. Alekseyev was wounded at
Borodino and replaced by Captain Semen Kindyakov, who was also wounded
and replaced by Lieutenant Glazunov.
[128] Replaced by Major Grigori
Kosmachevsky, who was also wounded and replaced by Captain Martyn
Salovov
[129] Replaced by Lt.Col. Filadelf
Ryndin of the Simbirsk IR, who was also wounded.
[130] Replaced by Major Alexander
Stremoukhov.
[131] Replaced by Lt.Col. Filadelf
Ryndin, who simultaneously commanded the brigade before being wounded
as well; he was replaced as regimental commander by Captain Baikovsky
who sustained injury as well.
[132] Replaced by his senior
adjutant Major Alexander Dunayev of the Vladimir IR
[133] Replaced by Captain Ivan
Babarykov of the Butyrsk IR.
[134] Replaced by Major Mikhail
Pisarenkov of the
Siberia Grenadier Regiment.
[135] Taube was a commanding
officer replacing Colonel Vasily Glukhov who was dismissed for incompetence.
[136] Golitsyn was in retirement
before the war and was brought back to lead that cavalry. He also
commanded the 1st and 2nd Cuirassier Divisions that were
not assigned to any cavalry corps.
[137] Replaced by Lt.Col. Fedor
Uvarov III, who was wounded and replaced by Lieutenant Alexander Khomyakov
II, who was wounded and replaced by Lieutenant Vasily Chulkov III
[138] Replaced by Lt.Col. Yegor
Shtakelberg, who was wounded and replaced by Major Philip Wolf, who
was wounded and replaced by Rotmistr Taras Grigorovsky
[139] Replaced by Major Fedor
Dreer of the
Novgorod Cuirassier Regiment
[140] Replaced by Major Vasily
Krivonos
[141] Replaced by Major Fedor
Dreer (who also commanded a brigade)
[142] Musin-Pushkin was a commanding
officer replacing Lt.Col. Karl Herzberg
[143] He was wounded during
the battle of Shevardino, and replaced by Colonel Fedor Schtakelberg
of the Lithuanian Uhlan Regiment
[144] He was wounded during
the battle of Shevardino, and replaced by Major Ivan von Tolzdorf
[145] Vasilchikov II was a commanding
officer replacing MG Ivan Vasilchikov I, who was given command of
the 12th Division.
[146] Shtakelberg was a commanding
officer serving in place of regimental chef Colonel Dmitri Tutolmin.
Regiment’s commander Lt.Col. Grigori Lopatin commanded the 2nd battalion.
[147] Rykovskov replaced the
regimental commander Vasily Sysoev III, who became ill due to wound
complications.
[148] Replaced by Staff Captain
Ivan Kuzmin.
[149] Opolchenye was commanded
by retired officers.
[150] 1st and 4th battalions,
led Major Mitsky, assigned to the 2nd Infantry Corps
[151] 3rd and 4th battalions,
led by Colonel Prince Obolensky, assigned to 4th Infantry Corps
[152] Talyzin was on active
duty, chef of the 3rd Jager Regiment
[153] 2nd and 3rd battalions,
led by Major Posnikov, assigned to the 6th Infantry Corps
[154] 1st and 3rd battalions
assigned to the 3rd Infantry Corps
Placed on the Napoleon Series: June 2007
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