• 4 months ago
For educational purposes

The Battle of Borodino, fought on September 7, 1812, was the largest and bloodiest single-day action of the French invasion of Russia.

Involving more than 250,000 troops and resulting in at least 70,000 casualties.

It was a pivotal point in the campaign, as it was the last offensive action fought by Napoleon in Russia.

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00:00The Battle of Borodino was a day of unparalleled carnage, the bloodiest single day's fighting of
00:10the entire Napoleonic era. Ostensibly it was another victory for Napoleon, but today it is
00:18one of the most celebrated chapters in Russian military history. Borodino is the focus of Tolstoy's
00:24epic novel War and Peace. Tchaikovsky's famous 1812 Overture was written in tribute and the
00:32battleground itself is a National Museum. Borodino is the conclusive proof of the old
00:39military adage that you can win the battle but still lose the war.
01:25With the 1805 Treaty of Tilsit, which followed his brilliant victory at Austerlitz,
01:35Napoleon had placed strict economic controls against trade with Britain under the continental
01:41system. The continental system goes like this, nobody trades with Britain, that's the continental
01:48system, nobody trades with Britain. Having failed to defeat the Royal Navy, what Napoleon was going
01:54to do was actually destroy the British economy from within. After Tilsit in 1807, the Russians of
02:02course joined the continental system, and for a short time it does seem that Europe is going to
02:07be united, or most of Europe will be united under Napoleon in this continental system. But very soon
02:13the Russians discover that it's not altogether to their advantage, because the Russians were reliant
02:18upon Britain as a market for their hemp, for their flax, and in particular for wood, which the Royal
02:24Navy relied upon in order to build its ships. And without that export market, the Russians couldn't
02:30afford to import goods, and this obviously had a damaging effect upon their economy, and alienated
02:35them progressively from the French. Under pressure from the hard-pressed Russian merchants, the Tsar
02:41had begun to back out of this system. If Napoleon were ever to defeat the British, then the continental
02:49system must be enforced to the letter. The threat of war between France and Russia was escalated by
02:55a number of smaller tensions in the form of French intrigues with Turkey and Poland. The new Russian
03:03alliance with Sweden also heightened tensions. At this difficult juncture, the marriage of Napoleon
03:10to a Habsburg princess in preference to a Russian princess finally tipped the scales to all-out war.
03:17Napoleon had to force Tsar Alexander into a peace treaty and return superiority to France.
03:24Napoleon knows that he has a lot of enemies. He knew that if he didn't take good care to prepare
03:34in advance, the Russians would get the Austrians and the Prussians to join in against him. Napoleon
03:42went to the Prussians and said, Prussians, if you don't get on side for my attack on Russia,
03:48I will occupy Berlin, and I will put my own king in there, and I'll ensure that you are on side.
03:56The Austrians, he goes to the Austrians, and he says, Austrians, I beat you a few years ago,
04:00and I took away your Adriatic provinces. Well, I will give them back to you if you join me in
04:07my war against Russia. Oh, and by the way, I have an army of 200,000 men on your border,
04:13and I'll invade you if you say no. So he has a little bit of the carrot, a little bit of the
04:17stick, and the Austrians see where the wind is blowing, and they come on side. Napoleon's initial
04:25strategy in 1812 was simple. In his own words, it was to concentrate 400,000 men at a single point.
04:34It would be the largest armed force ever gathered together, the most ambitious operation devised in
04:41the annals of warfare. In total, some 800,000 men were actually mobilized. Napoleon hoped that the
04:50mere presence of this huge army would intimidate Russia into suing for peace without having to
04:55fight at all. Failing this, plan B was to smash the Russian forces with a single battle close to
05:03the frontier, forcing peace and the renewal of French supremacy in Europe. Napoleon wanted to
05:11kick the Russians into line. In order to do this, Napoleon wanted to go to Russia, not go far into
05:19Russia, just go to Russia, make the Russians come out to fight him, give the Russians a good
05:25kicking, and then the Russians fall into line. He doesn't want to invade Russia, he doesn't want to
05:30occupy Russia, he doesn't want to spend a lot of time in Russia, he just wants to give the Russian
05:35army a good kicking and have the Tsar fall into line. We're talking about a united Europe marching
05:43into Russia. The largest non-French national components going along with Napoleon were the
05:49Prussians, they had around about 40,000 men, the Austrians with about 40,000. The rest were an
05:54agglomeration of Poles, of which there were many, Italians, many other Germans, Spaniards, Portuguese,
06:01even a regiment of Egyptian Mameluke cavalry. So a rather diverse and polyglot formation, shall we
06:09say. In addition, it's worth bearing in mind that Napoleon's army was not made up of the best of the
06:15French forces. Many of the best French troops are actually in the Iberian Peninsula, where they've
06:19been tied down really ever since 1808 by a prolonged war of attrition against the Spanish
06:25people, the Portuguese backed up by the British. So there were relatively few veteran campaigners
06:30on the campaign of 1812. Napoleon had been campaigning for years, he'd been using people up,
06:35and he was relying on looking to younger and younger conscripts with less and less training
06:42to fill out the army. So Napoleon's army was big, it was really, really big, but it wasn't cohesive
06:50and it didn't have a lot of hardened veterans in it. The first Russian armies to oppose the Grand
06:59Army were under the command of Barclay de Tolly, who was of Prussian extraction, and was seen very
07:05much as one of the Russian Prussians, who were actually out of favor in the court at
07:11St. Petersburg at the time. And the other army was under the command of Prince Peter Bagration,
07:17and Bagration was ill-educated, ill-read. Barclay de Tolly is an intellectual soldier,
07:23he studied the works of von Bülow, he understands about lines of operation. Peter Bagration is the
07:29is the man of passion, the Georgian. He represents something of the spirit of Russia from the
07:36Caucasus. Napoleon hoped to use his mammoth army in a series of lightning maneuvers. Napoleon felt
07:45he would be able to force a decisive battle early in the campaign. He was certainly not prepared for
07:52a winter campaign, and definitely not one which stretched all the way to Moscow. It's very difficult
07:59to know whether Napoleon's campaign plan for 1812 was a good or a bad one, if only because we don't
08:04have any real documentary evidence that provides us with firm evidence of what he really intended to
08:10achieve. However, on the balance of probability, it appears that Napoleon did seek to engage and to
08:16destroy the bulk of the Russian field armies within about 200 to 300 miles of the frontier,
08:21and within two to three weeks of campaigning. However, his problem was that the Russians
08:26decided that rather than fight a pitch battle in that area and in that time, they would withdraw
08:31towards the east, using the great space and the resources of Russia, time in particular,
08:36in order to generate the capability to fight Napoleon under terms of their choosing rather
08:40than his. For every step back the Russians take, Napoleon takes a step further away from where he's
08:49strong. Every step Napoleon takes, his troops get hungrier, he's further from his supply nodes,
08:56he's further from France. Every step back the Russians take, they're winning.
09:07Had Napoleon's grand strategy gone to plan, the likelihood was that the Russian armies would have
09:13been destroyed and the French objectives swiftly achieved. However, Napoleon's designs were thwarted
09:20by the very size of his armies and by the ineffectual leadership of his relations. Prince
09:27Jerome was an abysmal example of military leadership, and together with Eugene, he managed
09:33to translate what should have been a lightning manoeuvre into a torpidly slow plod. What really
09:40made the campaign develop as it did was that Napoleon time and time again came close to
09:45engaging the Russians on at least three separate occasions. Napoleon almost grasped at the Russian
09:52armies only to find that he'd only caught their rearguard or that they'd managed to disengage
09:56during the night, and so he's continually reaching out for the Russians, trying to grasp them,
10:00sometimes grasping the rearguard and engaging that and thinking that's the real army, and then
10:05being drawn further and further by this failure. They just slip through his fingers time and time again.
10:10At 44 years of age, Napoleon no longer possessed the energy of his earlier campaigns. Indeed,
10:19nearly seven years before at the Battle of Austerlitz, he'd said, we are granted only a
10:25limited time for making war. I give myself another six years after which even I ought to stop. This
10:34was reflected in his actions at Vitebsk, where by allowing his troops one day's rest, he missed a
10:40prime opportunity to engage his foe in an action and allowed them to slip away to Smolensk. When
10:47Napoleon came to Borodino, he expected to have been burned out a year before. He knew how hard
10:55he worked. He knew how much he demanded of his body and of his mind, and he knew that he was
11:03burning out rapidly. And by the time he got to Borodino, Napoleon was a burnout case. Mentally,
11:11he was showing signs of megalomania, even paranoia. He was also rather lethargic and hesitant,
11:17especially at decisive moments, not least at Borodino. Physically, of course, it's also worth
11:22bearing in mind that Napoleon was not a particularly well-mannered 1812. He had a
11:25rather nasty bladder infection, he had cystitis. In addition, he had colds during 1812, hardly
11:31surprising perhaps when you're operating in a place like Russia. But nonetheless, when these
11:35things combined, his sort of mental lethargy or lassitude and his sort of physical debilitation,
11:42the outcome would hardly be positive for the French cause. Despite the tragedy that beset him,
11:48at Smolensk, Napoleon was finally able to bring the Russians to battle. At Smolensk,
11:53Napoleon threw his troops into a bloody frontal assault on the city. The Russians
11:59were able to mount a successful defence and then undertake a further retreat to safety.
12:05Napoleon had reached the critical point of his campaign. It was late August. His strategy of
12:18swift victory was in tatters and winter was closing in. His army, originally totalling
12:24over 400,000 men, had diminished to a mere 185,000. Casualties from battle had reduced
12:32the numbers, but desertion, starvation and sickness had also reaped a terrible toll on
12:38this once grand armée. Napoleon's lines of supply and communication were hugely overstretched,
12:46and each of these miles required protection, and thereby the loss of yet more soldiers from the
12:52Central Force. Rotting corpses of both soldiers and horses lined the roads travelled by the French,
12:59and the results of Russian scorched-earth tactics offered little succour. The French
13:06logistics system depended to a very large extent on requisition. We would call it plunder,
13:11and in many areas of Europe this had worked very well, in the Po Valley and the Rhine Valley,
13:17in those areas which were agriculturally very rich, but of course the further east you got
13:21in Europe, the more sparse were the supplies. And so what the Russians did was to simply burn the
13:28crops, burn the fields, kill the animals or dry the animals off, in front of the French army's
13:34advance. You burn your own country, you destroy the agricultural base of your own society,
13:41but at the same time you increase the difficulties of Napoleon and his army immeasurably.
13:46Napoleon was faced with two choices. He could either press on against a disorganised enemy
13:55and conquer Moscow, risking severe wintering in Russia, in the hope that Alexander would be forced
14:00to his knees, or retreat with the whole knowledge that he had been defeated strategically. Napoleon
14:08also received news of the attempted coup of General Mallet in Paris, as well as of bread
14:13riots and even outbreaks of Luddism in France. Thus, on the horns of a particularly unpleasant
14:19dilemma, and with his recurring cystitis infection playing up, Napoleon chose to grab
14:25the bull by those same horns and to journey further into the Russian interior and force their hand.
14:31One factor which appeared to operate in Napoleon's favour were the tensions which
14:39were becoming apparent in the Russian forces. The Russian commander, Barclay de Tolly,
14:45was of Scots extraction, who came from the part of Russia which had a large German population,
14:51although he was entirely Russian. There was a growing feeling amongst the Russian nobility
14:57and the Russian population that the Tsar should be separated from the German officers who were
15:02advising him. Unfortunately, Barclay was Minister of War. Barclay de Tolly is a man of mind, a man
15:11of intellect, and doesn't have the emotional appeal to the average Russian soldier. He was
15:18of Scots extraction, he'd been born in Germany, and to many Russians, especially in 1812 when
15:23they were retreating, his retreating policy looked more like being a traitor than actually being a
15:28patriotic Russian. The Tsar was now coming under pressure from the Russian nobility to appoint a
15:34full Russian general. He therefore looked to Kutuzov, who was the epitome of the Russian ideal.
15:40Mikhail Kutuzov was nearly 70 years old and the veteran of countless campaigns. He had been the
15:50Russian commander at Austerlitz, but was so overruled there by the impetuous Tsar that
15:55his reputation had survived intact. Of less importance than his appetite for champagne,
16:01rich food, ladies of easy virtue, and bad French literature, was his reputation for fighting,
16:07the very opposite of the embarrassing retreat so far seen in the conflict. As well as a brilliant
16:13motivator, Kutuzov was also closely associated with the great General Suvorov and his beloved
16:19cult of the bayonet. In short, he had all the characteristics of a Russian national hero.
16:25Kutuzov was coming out of retirement to lead the Russian army, and the Russian army was
16:32delighted. Because here was a great Russian, a real Russian, coming out of the pages of history
16:39to lead them on to victory. Kutuzov was a real Russian. He wasn't like Barclay, a Scottish
16:44surname and a German general. He wasn't like any of these guys with German surnames or Finnish
16:50surnames or Swedish surnames. He was a real Russian coming to lead the Russian army to
16:56victory, and that was just what the Russian army wanted to see. Kutuzov is like an icon.
17:02He's the Russian version of Nelson. He's been wounded so many times. He's been shot through
17:08his head, and he survives. And the Russians actually see him almost as an embodiment of
17:13the spirit of Russia. Kutuzov immediately decided to pitch a defensive battle in order
17:20to save Moscow. Public opinion and the Tsar demanded little else. It's counterintuitive to
17:28suggest to an 18th or early 19th century Russian nobleman that allowing the French invader to tread
17:36on the holy soil of Mother Russia is the way to win. Chivalric ethics, chivalric zeal are saying
17:46to the Russians, you must fight. You must conduct a battle. Don't retreat. Don't walk away. Don't
17:51just let Napoleon defeat himself. You must go out and conduct a battle and use a lot of sabers and
17:57steel and artillery. Bang, bang. That's what the Russians want to do so that they'll feel like
18:02they're attacking Napoleon. So the Russians abandoned the wise policy of just letting
18:09Napoleon come, and they have to fight a battle. It was Kutuzov's chief of staff, General Bennigsen,
18:16who actually surveyed the route from Moscow running forward in the general direction of
18:21Smolensk. And he saw near the village of Borodino an excellent choke point where there were no
18:26flanks, where streams and rivers actually constricted movement. And he advised Kutuzov
18:32that this would be the place to stand and fight. In addition, it's worth remarking that Bagration's
18:38chief of staff actually knew the battlefield from his youth. So it was an area with which
18:44one of the commanders, our most important subordinates, was actually personally familiar,
18:48although whether this was actually significant on the day is rather more open to question.
18:52Touring the site on the 3rd of September, accompanied by a huge eagle wheeling above,
18:59Kutuzov chose to make a stand on the east bank of the Kalachka River, just to the south of Borodino.
19:07The battlefield lay in picturesque rolling countryside. It occupied an area roughly two
19:14miles square between both the Moscow-bound old and new Smolensk roads. The Kalachka River bisected
19:22the ground with the shallow, marshy Semenovka stream running off in a southward direction,
19:27between the two halves of a low ridge. Borodino village itself lay on the new Smolensk road. Over
19:36on the western bank of the Kalachka and was a relatively weak defensive position. Presuming
19:43the French would advance on his right flank, Kutuzov immediately put his troops to work,
19:47fortifying the northern section of this low ridge. With the gentle glacis and commanding a field of
19:55fire both marvellous and deadly, this was to hold a battery of 18 cannon and became known as the
20:01famous Rayevsky Redoubt. The southern ridge was also strengthened by the construction of three
20:08V-shaped Bagration fletches. To help strengthen the position, General Bennigsen ordered the
20:15construction of a defensible observation post, the Shevardino Redoubt. A short way back on the
20:21new Smolensk road, the main Russian artillery battery was placed by the village of Gorky.
20:27The 1st Army of the West was given responsibility for the Russian right flank,
20:34and General Barclay positioned his troops. The lifeguard Jaegers were in Borodino village.
20:41Bagavut, Tolstoy and Dokturov's 2nd, 4th and 6th Corps held the line down to the Rayevsky Redoubt.
20:49The Redoubt itself was defended by a section of 7th Corps under General Rayevsky,
20:56who were also stretched down as far as Semenyovskaya village. The entire flank was
21:02supported by the mobile reserves of the 1st Cavalry Corps and Platov's much feared Cossacks.
21:09A more sedentary reserve, consisting of 2nd and 3rd Cavalry Corps,
21:14was placed immediately behind the infantry. Bagration's 2nd Army then took responsibility
21:22for the left flank. The area of the Bagration fleshes was seen by Lieutenant General Borodzin,
21:28who placed the 7th Combined Grenadier Division inside the defences,
21:32with the 27th Infantry Division of Nevorovsky behind. Initially, both 5th and 3rd Corps were
21:41placed in the centre as a strong reserve for the left, along with the 26 batteries
21:46of the artillery reserve and the local militia, the Moscow Opolcheny. The latter, barely armed,
21:54untrained but eager civilians, were assigned the role of carrying off the wounded and
21:59intercepting any deserters. However, Kutuzov then realised that Napoleon was also perfectly
22:07able to advance on the southern, old Smolensk Road, and was forced to deploy Tuchkov's 3rd
22:13Corps from the reserve, along with 1,500 Cossacks and 7,000 of the Opolcheny. Four further Jäger
22:22regiments were sent to cover the area between Bagration and Tuchkov, whose force was cunningly
22:28concealed in a dense wood. Unfortunately, this giant ambush was foiled by the ever-helpful
22:36General Bennigsen, who, in order to allay Jäger fears and without consulting Kutuzov,
22:42ordered 3rd Corps to reveal their whereabouts and close up behind them.
22:46Expecting an attack along the new Smolensk Road and against the advice of Barclay,
22:52Kutuzov had built up an overly strong right wing and an extended, weaker left wing. He did,
23:00however, feel confident enough to inform the Tsar that the position I have taken up at Borodino
23:06is one of the best you could find. I am confident we shall win. Napoleon, riding out on the 5th of
23:15September to survey his opponents, was of an entirely different opinion. The Russians assumed
23:23that Napoleon would be stupid. The Russians assumed that they could put General Barclay
23:30out there and that Napoleon would go for General Barclay the way a bull goes for a red cape in a
23:37bullfight, and that just when Napoleon was about to hit Barclay, then Bagration would come and hit
23:44him in the flank. The Russians did not take into account that Napoleon wasn't singing from their
23:49song sheet. Napoleon sees Barclay, Napoleon sees Bagration, and Napoleon says, I'm going right
23:57between the two. He's going to commit himself to a long, slow infantry assault across open ground.
24:04Napoleon figures he's going to lose 20,000 men doing it, but Napoleon figures he can afford to
24:12lose 20,000 men at the Battle of Borodino if it will get him a decisive defeat of the Russians.
24:19So Napoleon looks at the ground and says we're going to go straight up the middle across an
24:25open field with no cover and let the might of French arms win. Napoleon's plan for the Battle
24:34of Borodino is, I think, unimaginative and risk-averse, certainly. He could have done
24:39things that would have been bold, maneuverist, and would have avoided the rather bloody,
24:43attritional battle that followed, but I think what dominates Napoleon's considerations at
24:47Borodino is the fear that once again the Russians are going to slip through his fingers,
24:52as they had done three times before during the campaign of 1812. His initial move, in fact,
24:58came late in the afternoon of the 5th, and saw the 35,000 troops of I and V Corps set
25:05out against the Shevardino Redoubt, an hors d'oeuvre before the real fight. General commands,
25:12I Corps, was to move directly on the Redoubt, and Poniatowski's Polish V Corps undertook a
25:19flanking maneuver around to the south. The roar of the artillery preceded the actual encounter,
25:26which took place as the sun faded over the horizon, darkness only adding to the confusion.
25:33As chance would have it, Nevorovsky's 27th Division had drifted over to the Redoubt
25:39during the day, boosting Russian numbers to 18,000, and once again they put up a truly
25:46dogged defense. A murderous musketry duel developed between the two forces, only brought
25:54to a close when compounds dragged up four cannon pieces open-fly at close range, shattering the
26:01ranks of the Russian infantry and bringing the Redoubt under French control. Further troops
26:08were fed into what was fast becoming a general action involving the southern wings of both
26:13armies. The 2nd Grenadier Division recaptured the Redoubt for the Tsar, and the 2nd Curassiers
26:20slaughtered an entire French infantry regiment. However, as midnight approached, it became clear
26:28that the Russian position was no longer tenable. Prince Poniatowski was making steady progress
26:34from the south, and the divisions of Friant and Morant were closing in from the west.
26:40The order to fall back to the regular line of the Second Army was given,
26:46and battle drew to a close. The French at last held strong over the Redoubt.
26:51In total contrast to the heated act of September 5th, barely a shot was heard on the 6th. Both
27:01forces, it seemed, were preparing themselves for the storm ahead. Napoleon surveyed the Russian
27:08lines astride his horse, L'Embellie, and refined his strategy accordingly. He further concentrated
27:16his troops on the Russian left, placing two-thirds of his army there, totalling 85,000 men. Davout's
27:251st Corps, supported by Murat's cavalry, were to deliver the initial blow. 2nd and 8th Corps,
27:32and the forces under Morant, were placed above, up as far as the Kalochka. The Imperial Guard
27:39was held in reserve. North of the Kalochka, the responsibilities fell to Eugene's 4th Corps,
27:48who were to take the village of Borodino, and then make the first assault upon the Rayevski Redoubt.
27:54Rayevski's Redoubt enabled Bagration to put a large battery of guns right in the middle of his
28:08line, providing artillery cover to his infantry. Now, Redoubts were usually built to allow the
28:16gunners to actually pull their guns out at the last minute. And Rayevski ordered that a real
28:21wall be constructed on the Redoubt, because he had no intention of abandoning this position at
28:25all. The Russians were there, and they were going to stay there, and they were going to
28:28die fighting by their guns. It was the linchpin of the entire Russian position at Borodino.
28:33On the Russian side, the 6th saw Kutuzov untroubled by further doubts. His battle
28:42plan was set in stone. Instead, he organised the strengthening of the Rayevski Redoubt,
28:48and then toured his army, giving speeches to individual regiments,
28:52exhorting them to defend our native soil, and serve loyally and honourably to the last drop
28:59of your blood. Russian Orthodox clergy with holy banners had also travelled with the Russian
29:05soldiers, giving the army a sanctified aura as they blessed soldiers and regimental colours
29:11alike with holy water, raising religious fervour to fever pitch as they paraded the famous icon
29:18of the Black Virgin of Smolensk as night drew in before the real day of reckoning.
29:23The calm was broken at 6am on September 7th when the French gunners thundered into action. Their
29:32Russian counterparts were not long to reply in kind, and battle once again commenced.
29:38Napoleon's leading divisions duly rolled into action, their drums beating the pas de charge.
29:45The first action came when Prince Eugene's 4th Corps stormed into Borodino village,
29:52catching the lifeguard Jaegers stationed there completely unawares and routing them in a few
29:59short minutes. As they scrambled across the bridge to safety on the east bank of the Kolochka,
30:05the French muskets took their terrible toll, and the regiment lost some 30 officers and over half
30:12its men, a disordered start for the Tsar. Meanwhile, 1st Corps had advanced on the
30:19Bagration fletches, and Poniatowski's outflanking manoeuvre seemed to be going well, as he had
30:25already expelled the Russians from the village of Utitsa. The advance guard of 1 Corps under
30:32General Kompans marched through the storm of fire and descended upon the fletches. Casualties were
30:39already piling up, and Kompans himself was carried from the battlefield after only 90 minutes,
30:46just as the southernmost fletch fell to his men. General Ermolov commented that it was only the
30:53superiority of the bayonet in the hands of the Russian soldiers that enabled them to maintain
30:58this resistance for so long. Just when it seemed victory was a foregone conclusion,
31:05the tide of the battle changed. Poniatowski's advance was checked by Tuchkov's artillery
31:11batteries, and the hail of musket fire from the Russian Jaegers. Barclay freed the 2nd
31:18Corps of General Bagovut from inactivity, and sent them down to support Tuchkov on the left.
31:24As his soldiers streamed down the line, eager to get some action, Bagovut dropped off two regiments
31:31and various artillery pieces to his hard-pressed colleagues on the way. The French 1st Corps were
31:39now expelled from the fletches following a ferocious counter-attack by the 7th Combined
31:44Grenadier Division, supported by a mixture of Dragoons, Lancers and Hussars. Around this time,
31:51Prince Eugene also made the first assault on the Rayevsky Redoubt, and was repulsed with little
31:58difficulty. The Rayevsky Redoubt, the Grand Redoubt, had 20 guns and a whole lot of muskets
32:05in it. The muskets were there to defend the guns, and it meant that 20 reasonably large artillery
32:14pieces fired on the French as they tried to engage the Russian infantry. It meant that the Russian
32:23guns were not encumbered by being behind the Russian infantry. They were right up in front.
32:28There was nothing at all to come between the Russian guns in the Redoubt and the attacking
32:34Frenchmen. No cover for the attacking Frenchmen. The Rayevsky Redoubt came to represent one of the
32:40focal points of the Battle of Borodino. It had the effect of sucking men and materiel into the centre
32:47of the battlefield away from the flanks, which remained by Borodino standards at least relatively
32:52quiet throughout the day. So what you've got is this maelstrom in the centre of the Russian line,
32:58with attack after attack coming from French infantry and then later from French cavalry,
33:03surging up the slope, being blasted to pieces. Indeed, for one part of the battle, the French
33:09actually found that they had to, because they'd run out of infantry essentially in this area,
33:12keep thousands of horsemen of cavalry standing directly in front of the Rayevsky Redoubt in
33:19order to hold a gap in the centre of their own line. And for about three hours, these French
33:24cavalry simply sat there, being smashed to pieces by the artillery in the Rayevsky Redoubt and the
33:28artillery pieces that supported it, at enormous cost, obviously, both in men and horses. Thousands
33:34of men and thousands of horses fell without a single attack actually being launched during
33:38this period. As the decision loomed, the battle increased in intensity, particularly for the
33:45Bagration Fletches. Napoleon sent in the cavalry of Montbrun for support, and before long,
33:52Junot's 7th Corps were to join them. Part of the Young Guard was also sent to stabilise the
33:58Polish positions at Utitsa, so Napoleon had already committed the majority of his reserves
34:04well before midday. General Rape, a French haidicon, also received his 22nd battle wound at this time.
34:14Ten o'clock came, and the French drew their forces together for a tremendous push against
34:20the Russian left centre. Three infantry corps, supported by two cavalry corps and the massed
34:26fire of 250 artillery pieces, were to make a determined assault upon the area surrounding
34:33the Fletches. The French guns created havoc amongst the Russians, but paled when compared
34:40to the carnage wreaked by Bagration's 300 guns on the French troops as they rushed up the slope
34:46towards the fortifications. Marshal Ney alone was wounded four times in this episode, but of
34:54great significance to the Russians was that General Bagration had to be carried from the
34:59field wounded. This event so demoralised the men of Generals Borodzin and Bagovut that they
35:06temporarily gave up their positions. Sensing victory was in their grasp, the French cavalries
35:13swept in under the flamboyant command of Joachim Murat, the King of Naples, hoping to develop a
35:19Russian retreat into a rout. Murat cut a remarkable figure, bedecked in oversized riding boots and
35:27great golden spurs, a fantastically embroidered light blue jacket, dark ringlets flowing under
35:34a fancy Jacobean hat, and topped with a long white feather. More importantly, he was also a
35:41great horseman and soldier. Drawing back in fine order however, the Russians countered this new
35:48threat by forming orderly squares, which repeated cavalry charges had little prospect of disrupting.
35:56At this stage a stalemate seemed to be developing, and the French commanders made repeated requests
36:03that Napoleon should send in the old guard to finish off the Russians for good. The French
36:10Emperor, seemingly apathetic and devoid of his usual mental energy, refused. He would need to
36:17leave this hostile land sooner or later, and they were his only wholly intact force, his devoted
36:24corps d'élite at that. To throw them into battle would severely compromise his chances of a successful
36:31retreat. Throwing the Imperial Guard into the battle might have made a real difference. If it
36:36put it into the battle early in the day, in particular when there was a moment to do so,
36:40the Russians might very well have been smashed on the battlefield. Napoleon has a strategic reserve,
36:47a strong strategic reserve. The question is, should he have used it for the tactical purpose
36:54of affecting the course of the Battle of Borodino? The answer for Napoleon is no. If I use up the
37:02guard today at Borodino, I won't have them tomorrow when I need them again. While the guard exists,
37:08Napoleon exists. And if he makes a mistake, if he attacks with that guard, and the guard is destroyed,
37:13then so too is Napoleon. It's precisely what happens at Waterloo, his guard is destroyed.
37:20Napoleon is a long, long way from home. He's in the middle of a hostile country. What is he to do?
37:25Is he to commit the guard and run the risk of losing everything? And he hesitates. The stalemate
37:33caused by Napoleon's refusal to commit the guard gave both commanders a chance to lick their wounds.
37:39Kutuzov used the approach to reinforce his weakened centre with Tolstoy's Fourth Corps,
37:45and sending Uvarov's cavalry forces on a diversion into the village of Borodino.
37:51Uvarov temporarily routed General Delzon's cavalry, and in doing so caused another appeal
37:59to Napoleon for reinforcements, just as he was about to order a fresh attack. This not only gave
38:06the Russians more breathing space, as it took the French more than an hour to recover their
38:10composure after this irritation, it also cemented Napoleon's decision to reserve the
38:17Imperial Guard for later action. 2pm approached, and the Grand Armée diligently readied itself
38:25for a further sledgehammer blow on the Russian centre, and the Rievsky Redoubt in particular.
38:31Three of Prince Eugene's infantry divisions were to provide the frontal assault,
38:36with a concentration of 400 artillery pieces providing a devastating bombardment as cover.
38:43Unable to locate his cuirasser reserves, Barclay could not strengthen his forces within and around
38:51the Redoubt. They would be without cavalry support for the time being at least.
38:56And the only way for the French to be able to attack the Russians without being massacred by
39:04the guns of Rievsky's Redoubt was to go into the Redoubt and kill everybody inside. So Prince
39:12Eugene, the French cavalry commander, is given the task of attacking the Redoubt, and the only side
39:19where there are not a lot of muskets, a lot of guns pointing at you, is the back. And Prince
39:25Eugene goes around the back of the Redoubt, comes in from the direction where the guns are not
39:32pointing, and he kills all the gunners. Eugene's infantry soon arrived to consolidate the success,
39:38and were met by a scene of untrammeled horror. The dead and mutilated, both men and horses,
39:45lay six or eight deep within, and completely filled the ditches and entrances. The Redoubt
39:55was firmly in French control, and a sizeable breach had therefore been opened in the Russian
40:00lines. Was this to be the decisive event Napoleon so needed? Just as Eugene was about to throw all
40:08the available French cavalry into the fray and exploit the opportunity, the Russian General
40:14Barclay somehow managed to muster two cavalry corps and foil his opponent. The Russian infantry
40:21formed squares once more, and one of the most stubborn cavalry battles of history duly began.
40:27It was only thanks to the superior strength of the Russian horses that the defence was a success,
40:34and the infantry were able to withdraw safely to a new line. By now both sides were battle-weary,
40:41and the tempo of battle slowed. This most malevolent of days still had more surprises
40:49to spring. Aware of ebbing French energy, Kutuzov ordered the forces of V Corps to
40:56mount a counter-offensive. The ever-vigilant French I Corps became alert to this, and was
41:03able to stop the Russians with the assistance of a further 80 guns from the artillery reserve.
41:08Meanwhile, Prince Poniatowski, still skirmishing against the Russian left flank, had received news
41:17that the Redoubt had been taken, and was roused to launch one further assault on the Russians
41:22at Yutitsa, who were by now in a dangerously exposed salient. He made good progress against
41:30the remaining Russian forces, and by 5pm they had withdrawn, falling back to the line now taken by
41:37the rest of the Russian army. The fighting finished almost by mutual consent of the exhausted soldiers,
41:44and, able to fight no longer, the Russians retreated to safety, their numbers depleted,
41:51but essentially intact. I think that the Russians at Borodino did extremely well. To survive that
42:02battle and to be able to withdraw a large part of their army intact was a genuine achievement. The
42:08Russian army at Borodino was smaller than the French army, so under these circumstances,
42:12and not least because the initial Russian deployment was a rather bad one, with the
42:16main weight of its forces on the right wing rather than the left where the French actually
42:20attacked, that the Russians were able to survive this battle is a testimony both of the capabilities
42:26of their commanders, in particular Barclay de Tolly, but even more so perhaps the moral resilience
42:32of the ordinary Russian peasant soldier. These were not useless, unto mention, as Hitler might
42:40have characterized them a century and a bit later, these were capable, determined, resolute troops,
42:47as good, I would say, man for man, as any of the Frenchmen opposite them. In achieving the victory
42:54at Borodino, the French alone had fired over 90,000 rounds of artillery, and the infantry
43:01had spent an estimated 2 million cartridges. The Russians suffered an incredible 44,000 casualties
43:09to the French 30,000, numbers which were not experienced on such a scale again until the
43:16horrors of Flanders during the First World War. More than 50 generals were lost by the two forces,
43:23and the surgeon-in-chief of the Imperial Guards had personally carried out over 200 amputations.
43:30It has been calculated that over 30% of all combatants received a wound of some form. I think
43:38you can explain the appalling casualties for both sides of Borodino in two different ways. One is
43:44by reference to the mechanics of the battle, if you like, the formations which were used, the
43:50weapons which were used, the battle plans, if you like, all the things that actually happened on the
43:55day. But I think there's a much more important and broader explanation for the casualties, which is
44:01that both sides were willing to sustain such casualties. Armies like this do not stand for an
44:07entire day and slug it out at the cost that they did sustain on the 7th of September, unless they
44:14are fighting with enormous passion, belief, even hatred. By the end of the Battle of Borodino, Karl von
44:21Clausewitz, great Prussian philosopher of war as he was to become, actually remarked that less than
44:27one-third of the soldiers who'd started on that battlefield at the beginning of the day was still
44:31standing there. So what you're looking at is two armies standing face-to-face and beating each other
44:38to a pulp. Despite a gain of a half-mile, a slight tipping of the scales in Napoleon's favour, and
44:48the opening of the road to Moscow, this was at the very best a Pyrrhic victory. The only way Napoleon
44:55can get what he came for, the only way he can get the Tsar to give in, to participate in the
45:00continental system, to stop trading with Britain, is to force the Tsar by going to Moscow, knocking
45:07on the Tsar's door and saying, give in. So Napoleon picks up his exhausted, bedraggled army, and he picks
45:16up his own exhausted, pained carcass, and he heads for Moscow. As is notorious, within a few days of
45:23arriving, fires begin in the city, and soon they consume up to 60% of Moscow. So there is Napoleon
45:31in the burning spiritual capital of the Russian Empire, his lines of communication stretching back
45:39to Poland and to Prussia, with intact Russian armies hovering on his flanks, his own strength
45:46diminishing by the day. Effectively, what's happened is that the Russians have proved, both to themselves
45:54and to the French, that they can stand up against the French in battle for a full day and not be
46:00decisively defeated. And to be able to do that, in particular given the disaster of Austerlitz
46:06back in 1806, when the Russian army had been destroyed, was important to the Russian people's
46:11self-respect, and said to the French, we can fight you, we can stop you, you will not defeat us. It was a
46:18statement of intent, it was a statement of moral capability. Furthermore, reinforcements were being
46:26raised across the country, and much buoyed by Borodino, the Tsar stood firmer than ever against any sort of peace.
46:37At the end of the day, Napoleon may have won the Battle of Borodino in some technical sense.
46:44What did it get him? Nothing. Napoleon assembles a huge army, the Grande Armée. He's got half a million
46:51people in this army, he's got another 175,000 people watching his flanks, he's united all of
46:58Europe, all of continental Europe in this effort. He has gone to Borodino, he has won his battle as
47:04far as he's concerned. He carries on to Moscow, and what does he get? Nothing. Indeed, some historians
47:11have argued that if the Battle of Borodino had been lost by the French, as long as they hadn't
47:15been annihilated in the process, they would have been better off, because they would have been
47:19forced to retreat back to Smolensk, which was their base of supply. And from Smolensk they could
47:23have either tried again the following year, or they certainly would have found themselves much
47:27closer to Poland, and a degree of relative safety. Whereas by being drawn further into Russia, into
47:33Moscow, and then forced to retreat all the way back to Poland during the depths of a Russian winter,
47:39essentially they consigned themselves to disaster. This was a pyrrhic victory, with a capital P.
48:19you

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