Introduction
Stages
Recommended books
Restrictions
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Introduction
On these ever growing pages you will find information
about the battles and treaties of the French Revolutionary
and the Napoleonic Wars.
Much of this information has its origin in the Discussion
Forums of this site. Please help us with more information so
that this list will get bigger and better in the future.
Thanks to all of you and special thanks to Bob Burnham, Max
Sewell, Tony Jaques, Tom Holmberg, Thomas Hemmann, Daniel
Duldig, Tim Schmidt, Pierre Brial, François Lo
Presti, J.M. Toledo, Daniel Caballero, Bernabé Saiz,
Mikhail Makarov, Chris Holden, David McCracken and George F.
Nafziger.
The period covered here is mostly divided into the
following stages:
1792/04/20 - 1797/10/17:
War of the 1st
Coalition, most famous battle(s): Valmy, Jemappes,
Siege of Toulon, Lodi, Castiglione, Arcole, Rivoli
1798/05/19 - 1801/08/30:
Expedition to Egypt and
Syria, most famous battle(s): Pyramids, Naval Battle
in the Bay of Abukir
1799/03/12 - 1802/03/27:
War of the 2nd
Coalition, most famous battle(s): Novi, Zürich,
Hohenlinden, Marengo
1805/09/08 - 1805/12/26:
War of the 3rd
Coalition, most famous battle(s): Ulm, Austerlitz
1806/10/07 - 1807/07/09:
War of the 4th
Coalition, most famous battle(s): Jena,
Auerstädt, Eylau, Friedland
1807/10/18 - 1814/04/30:
Peninsular
War, most famous battle(s): Talavera, Valencia,
Bailén, Saragossa, Albuera, Salamanca, Vittoria
1809/04/10 - 1809/10/14:
War against Austria of
1809, most famous battle(s): Eckmühl,
Aspern/Essling, Wagram
1812/04/?? - 1813/03/06:
War against
Russia, most famous battle(s): Smolensk, Borodino
(Moskova), Berezina
1813/04/30 - 1813/10/31:
Wars of Liberation,
German Part, most famous battle(s): Dresden,
Lützen, Bautzen, Leipzig
1813/12/21 - 1814/03/31:
Wars of Liberation,
French Part, most famous battle(s): Brienne, La
Rothière, Montmirail, Arcis-Sur-Aube
1815/06/11 - 1815/07/04:
The 100 Days,
with the Waterloo Campaign, most famous battle(s): Ligny,
Waterloo
1792 - 1815: Other
actions and Naval Battles, the events that are not
classified in one of the above lists.
Recommended books
Sources of figures and information can be found in this
bibliography. Here you can find the references indicated in
the battle lists as well as many other works. Most of these
sources were recommended in one of the discussion
forums.
So if you search for further informations or if you want to
know where the figures of the battle lists come from then
please have a look into this list.
Restrictions and conventions:
- You will not find here complete abstracts of the
different campaigns
- Napoleon is always referred as Napoleon (and not as
Bonaparte) while Wellington is always referred as
Wellington (and not as Wellesley)
- Names of locations are written in the original
language whenever possible.
- The pure seige of a city resp. the occupation of a
city as for example Vienna in 1805/1809, Berlin in 1806,
Rome in 1808 or Moscow in 1812 are not included as long
as it is not connected with a combat or a siege. Sieges
as Mantua or Danzig are, of course, included.
- The headings of the different wars include a separate
section with the french campaigns of these wars.
- All naval battles are in the "Other actions and Naval
Battles" section. Even if they could be classified as
parts of one of the different wars (-> Battle of
Aboukir Bay/Battle of the Nile is not in the "Expedition
to Egypt and Syria" part)
- There are no strict definition rules concerning the
terms "battle", "action", "engagement", "clash" etc.
- The abbreviations used are: KIA = Killed in action,
WIA = Wounded in action, MIA = Missed in action), <
means "less than...", > means "more than..." ,
<> means "approximately ...", ?? means unknown
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