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 31st campaign phase of
the 1813 Campaign and the seventh phase in North Germany.
All Germany
All
eighteen previous campaign phases in Germany are shown.
Blue
star - French victory
Grey
star - Prussian victory
Green
star - Russian victory
Yellow
star - Austrian 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
Northern Germany
All
21 previous battles fought are shown.
Blue
star – French victory
Grey
star – Prussian victory
Green
star – Russian victory
Yellow
star – Austrian victory
White
star – Draw
Each
square on this map covers the same area as one 2x2 foot scenic square on our
wargames table.
Summary of the campaign
in Northern Germany
Campaign History
At
the start of February1813 Napoleon considered the Prussians to be allies, and
they had agreed to hold the Russian Army east of Berlin at the river Oder,
whilst he reorganized the French Army behind the river Rhine. He was unaware of the secret allied treaty
which agreed that the Prussia, Russia, Austria, England and Spain would all
declare war on France. He was also
unaware that the Russians had crossed the river Oder on 20 January 1813.
On
10 February 1813 Generalfeldmarschall Blucher took command of the Prussian
Army, which was concentrated to the west of Berlin. He issued orders for them to move west,
cross the river Elbe and secure Magdeburg.
They entered Magdeburg on 20 February 1813.
Napoleon
had ordered the First French Army to be formed at Hannover. On 26 February 1813 he arrived there and
took command. He was determined to
teach the Prussians a lesson for their betrayal.
1 March 1813 –
Brunswick campaign. The Prussian army attacked the French and
won the battles of Girhorn, Brunswick and Wolfenbuttel. The French lost the campaign and were forced
to retreat west.
17 March 1813 –
Hannover campaign. The Prussians again advanced and again won
the first and second battles of Hannover.
The result was another victory for Blucher. Once more Napoleon was forced to retreat
west.
27 March 1813 -
Magdeburg campaign. The Prussians won the battle of Stendel, but
lost first and second battles of Magdeburg.
Napoleon had won the campaign.
5 April 1813 –
Armistice. After a month of non stop marching and
fighting both armies were in a poor shape.
Both needed time to regroup, resupply and reinforce. Napoleon offered a seven day truce and
Blucher eagerly accepted. The terms of
the truce was that the Prussian Army would retreat to Brunswick and the French
Army would hold Hannover
12 April 1813 –
Brunswick Campaign. Napoleon dominated this campaign and
defeated the Prussians at Celle and Hildesheim. The Prussian army was in such a state that
Blucher retreated rather than fight a third battle at Brunswick
21 April 1813 –
Magdeburg Campaign. Blucher defeated the French attack at
Helmstedt. He then attacked and won the
battle of Eilseben. Running short of
supplies Napoleon ordered a general retreat.
18 June 1813 –
Wolfsburg Campaign. Napoleon dominated this phase. He won the first four battles, lost the first
battle of Gardelengen but won the second and had a decisive victory at the
last, and largest battle at Walbeck.
Blucher had no choice but to retreat east.
Introduction to the
Salzwedel Campaign
Having
won four of the six previous campaign phases, Napoleon is determined to drive
the Prussian army back over the river Elbe.
He has directed his army to move north towards Salzdorf to avoid the
strong defensive position of Magdeburg.
Blucher
has deployed his army south of Salzwedel along the line
Dahre-Kuhfelde-Kleinau.
Salzwedel Campaign Map
This
map shows the area covered by the Salzwedel campaign. Each square is 7 miles. It shows all terrain features. Green areas are high ground. Yellow connect main towns and broken are
local tracks. It also shows the location
of French and Prussian troops at the start of the campaign, plus supply depots.
This
map is used for all campaign movement and on the campaign diary blog.
Salzwedel Campaign
Objective
The
French objective is to defeat the Prussian army and take Salzwedel
The
Prussian objective is to hold Salzwedel
Salzwedel 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.
First French Army
Emperor
Napoleon
1st
Old Guard corps
13th Polish corps
4th French (Reserve) corps
Each
corps has four infantry brigades, one cavalry brigade and corps artillery
64000
infantry, 4000 cavalry, 120 guns
Prussian Army
General
Blucher
1st
Prussian corps
2nd
Prussian corps
3rd
Prussian corps
4th
Prussian corps
Each
corps has four infantry brigades, one cavalry brigade and corps artillery
64000
infantry, 4000 cavalry, 120 guns
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
10
- Introduction to the campaign in Northern Germany
11
– 1st French Army order of battle
12
- Prussian Army order of battle
13
- Daily diary for the campaign in Northern Germany
14
- Battle reports of all battles fought in Northern Germany
15
- Summary of campaign in Northern Germany