1813 Campaign Areas
There are five campaign areas in the 1813 Campaign, three
in Germany and two in Spain. The
campaign is divided into campaign phases, each lasting about ten campaign days. This is the twenty eighth campaign phase of
the 1813 Campaign and the sixth phase in Central Germany
All Germany
All
seventeen previous campaign phases are shown.
A
blue star indicates a French victory and grey, green or yellow an Allied
victory
There
are three campaign areas in Germany.
Northern
Germany – 1st French army v Prussian army
Central
Germany – 2nd French army v Russian army
Southern
Germany – 3rd French army v Austrian army
Each
square on the map is 7 miles, it is also one square on the wargames table
A
corps can march 21 miles in one day, which is also the area of a wargames
table.
Central Germany
All
24 previous battles fought are shown.
A blue star indicates a French victory, a red star a British victory and
one white start is a drawn battle. Each
square on this map covers the same area as one 2x2 foot scenic square on our
wargames table.
Summary of the campaign
in Central Germany
At
the start of February1813 Napoleon believed that the Russian Army was held on
the eastern bank of the river Oder by his allies the Prussians. He was unaware of the secret treaty signed
by the allies on 1 January 1813 which agreed that Prussia, Russia, Austria,
England and Spain would all declare war on France. Or that the Russians had crossed the river
Oder on 20 January 1813
On
15 February he received reports that the Russians had not only crossed the
river Oder, but had entered Dresden a week earlier.
He
immediately ordered Marshal Davout to form Second French Army at Dusseldorf and
prepare to march east to confront the Russians. On 28 February Davout confirmed that his
Army was operational and ready to advance.
5 March 1813 – Kassel
Campaign. The Russians advanced west and defeated the
French at the battles of Kassel and Warburg.
The French recovered and beat the Russians at Second Kassel, but lost
four days later again at Kassel. The
Russians again won at Friedland.
However the French fought back and won at the third battle of
Kassel. The Russians were forced to
retreat east.
19 March 1813 – Gotha
Campaign. The Russians again attacked and beat the
French at Suhl. However the French
quickly recovered and won at both Gotha and Suhl. Once more the Russians retreated east.
5 April 1813 –
Armistice. The Russians accepted the seven day truce
offered by Napoleon. Second French Army
would concentrate at Kassel. The Russian
Army would retreat to Gotha.
12 April 1813 – Second
Gotha Campaign. The French opened the campaign and won at
First Meiningen. However the Russians
recovered and defeated them at Second Meiningen and again at Barchfeld. The French retreated to Kassel.
24 May 1813 – Eisenbach
Campaign. Davout lost the first battle at Kassel. He defeated the Russians at Meiningen, but
lost again at Friedland. He won at
Gotha and again at Dolstadt. The final
battle of Meiningen was a draw. The
battered Russian Army retreated to Erfurt and the French won the campaign.
16 July 1813 – Erfurt
Campaign. Davout won the first battle at Amstadt,
forcing the Russians to retreat and abandon Erfurt. He was surprised and defeated as he tried to
cross the river Saale, but when the Russians tried the same tactic again they
were defeated at Weissensee. The final
battle was fought at Rudolstadt. The
Russians still held the town at the end of the battle and claimed a
victory. However with two of their four
corps in rout they had to retreat during the night leaving the French winners
of the campaign.
Introduction to the
Bayreuth Campaign
Having
won four of the five previous campaign phases, Davout is confident that he can
continue his advance on Dresden.
The
Russian army has concentrated around Bayreuth, and Wittgenstein is determined
to hold his ground and defeat the French.
Bayreuth Campaign Map
This
map shows the area covered by the Bayreuth campaign. Each square is 7 miles. It shows all terrain features. Green areas are high ground. Red roads are main supply, yellow connect
main towns and broken are local tracks.
It also shows the location of French and Russian corps at the start of
the campaign, plus the four supply depots per side.
This
map is used for all campaign movement and on the campaign diary blog.
Bayreuth Campaign
Objective
At
the start of the campaign the two armies are deployed as shown on the map
above.
Bayreuth Wargames Map
This
map covers the same area as the campaign map, but actual size of hills are
shown. Each square is the same as one
2x2 foot square used on the wargames table, and shows the exact terrain
feature. The number shown in the top
right of each square is the number of the scenic terrain square to be used on
the table. When a battle is declared
this map is used to prepare the wargames table.
Second French Army
Marshal
Davout
2nd
Young Guard corps
5th
French corps
6th
French corps
14th
Westphalian corps
Reserve
corps
Each
corps has four infantry brigades, one cavalry brigade and corps artillery
The
reserve corps has four infantry brigades and will provide depot garrisons
80000
infantry, 4000 cavalry, 120 artillery
Russian Army
General
Wittgenstein
1st
Russian corps
2nd
Russian corps
3rd
Russian corps
4th
Russian corps
Reserve
corps
Each
corps has four infantry brigades, one cavalry brigade and corps artillery
The
reserve corps has four infantry brigades and will provide depot garrisons
80000
infantry, 4000 cavalry, 120 artillery
Reference
The
campaign diary contains comprehensive details of the whole campaign. The labels on the right are an index to
various parts of the campaign.
01
- Introduction to the1813 campaign
02
- Five campaign areas
20
- Introduction to the campaign in Central Germany
21
– 2nd French Army order of battle
22
- Russian Army order of battle
23
- Daily diary for the campaign in Central Germany
24
- Battle reports of all battles fought in Central Germany
25
- Summary of campaign in Central Germany
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