字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 An Epic History TV / HistoryMarche collaboration, supported by our sponsor Skillshare – home of more than 22,000 online classes. Find out about our exclusive special offer at the end of the video. One week before Christmas, 1806, French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte arrived in the Polish city of Warsaw, then part of Prussia. A year had passed since his great victory over the Austrians and Russians at Austerlitz, and two months since he’d hammered the Prussians at Jena. But Russia still had powerful forces in the field, the most important of which was the Russian First Army, commanded by General Bennigsen. Napoleon would not be master of Europe until it was defeated, and Russia and Prussia forced to make peace. But that winter, Napoleon’s first attempt to trap Bennigsen near Pułtusk got bogged down in thick Polish mud. The Russians withdrew to Białystok. The French army, half-starved and frozen, was ordered into winter quarters. … while in Warsaw, Napoleon began a famous affair with a young Polish noblewoman, Marie Walewska. In the late 18th century, the once mighty Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth had been swallowed up by its neighbours – Russia, Austria, and Prussia - in a series of annexations known as ‘partitions’… until in 1795, a third and final partition wiped Poland off the map. Now Polish patriots looked to Napoleon as their saviour – praying that his victories against their occupiers would lead to the rebirth of a Polish state. Marie Walewska became Napoleon’s mistress in order to further this cause. Ordinary French soldiers, however, had little love for Poland – it was impoverished, freezing, and they missed home. Desertion rates soared. There were even a hundred cases of suicide. Marshal Ney, commanding Sixth Corps, sent patrols towards Heilsberg, looking for better quarters. What they found were Russian and Prussian soldiers on the move – they’d stumbled into a surprise winter attack by Bennigsen. Napoleon quickly laid a trap for the Russian army, ordering Ney and Bernadotte to retreat, and lure Bennigsen west, while he led the rest of the army north, to fall on his flank and rear. But the Russians captured a French courier carrying the emperor’s orders to Marshal Bernadotte. Bennigsen, now warned of the trap, ordered a retreat, fighting a series of rearguard skirmishes against the pursuing French. But he refused to give up the city of Königsberg without a fight, and turned to give battle, at Eylau. The Battle of Eylau, fought over two days, was one of the most brutal of the Napoleonic Wars, fought in freezing conditions, with neither side backing down. Marshal Augereau’s Seventh Corps, advancing into the face of a snowstorm, lost its way, and was cut to pieces by Russian cannon fire. Five French eagles were lost. Napoleon’s army was only saved by a devastating, massed cavalry charge by 10,000 horsemen, led by the fearless Marshal Murat, and remembered as one of the great cavalry charges in history. At Eylau, for the first time as Emperor, Napoleon failed to win a clear victory on the battlefield. He and the Russians covered up the true scale of their losses, but both sides are estimated to have lost a third of their armies in the carnage. After the horrors of Eylau, both armies sought time to rest and recover. Meanwhile, the newly-formed French Tenth Corps under Marshal Lefebvre besieged Danzig, held by 13,000 Prussians under General Kalkreuth. The city came under heavy French bombardment, and infantry assault. After 8 weeks, with no prospect of reinforcement, the Prussian garrison surrendered on 27th May. Napoleon’s northern, sea flank was now secure against any possible Russian landing. The French emperor now commanded an army 190,000 strong, against just 115,000 Russian and Prussian troops. But it was Bennigsen who moved first, launching a surprise attack against Ney’s Sixth Corps on 5th June. Ney conducted a brilliant fighting withdrawal, and escaped. Bennigsen, having lost the element of surprise, and with Napoleon advancing, retreated once more. Four days later at Heilsberg, the French lost 10,000 men in a botched assault against Russian defences. But the Russians continued their retreat the next day. Napoleon thought Bennigsen would head north to Königsberg, but instead he retreated northeast, keeping to the east bank of the Alle River. So when Napoleon’s army marched north, it was Marshal Lannes’ Reserve Corps, on his right flank, that next encountered the Russian army… near the small town of Friedland. In the late afternoon of the 13th June, Russian cavalry scouts informed General Bennigsen that they’d found a single French corps at Friedland. Bennigsen decided he had time to cross the Alle River and smash this isolated corps, before the rest of the French army could arrive to save it, and he ordered his army to begin crossing the river. Marshal Lannes, commanding 16,000 men and facing 46,000 Russians, sent an urgent message to Napoleon that he was under attack from the main Russian army. Then he fought a skilful delaying action, hiding the weakness of his force behind a large screen of skirmishers, while gradually yielding ground to the enemy. Lannes was still holding off the Russians as darkness fell. That night, Russian engineers built three pontoon bridges at Friedland, to speed the movement of troops over the river. But Bennigsen was taking a huge risk. If this turned into a major battle, his army would have to fight with its back to the river, and the steep banks of the Mill Stream dividing its left wing from its right. Bennigsen had also badly underestimated the speed at which Napoleon’s Grande Armée would react. The first French reinforcements arrived that night. The Emperor himself wasn’t far behind. By dawn on the 14th June, about 40,000 Russians had crossed to the west bank of the Alle River. Bennigsen ordered an attack on the village of Heinrichsdorf, to turn the French left flank. But French cavalry reinforcements led by General Grouchy intercepted the Russians… In more than an hour of charge, and counter-charge, the French horsemen finally drove the Russians back. Marshal Mortier’s Eighth Corps now arrived to reinforce the French centre. In Sortlack Wood, General Oudinot’s elite Grenadier Division fought stubbornly against Prince Bagration’s Left Wing… but was outnumbered by the Russians, and gradually pushed back. Around noon, on a sweltering day, Napoleon himself arrived. He was soon followed by First Corps, commanded by General Victor – standing in for the wounded Marshal Bernadotte, as well as Ney’s Sixth Corps, and the Imperial Guard, under Marshal Bessières. The date, 14th June, held special significance for Napoleon: it was the seventh anniversary of his great victory over the Austrians at Marengo – a good omen, he declared. The battle then entered a lull, as Napoleon assessed the situation, saw Bennigsen’s dangerous position, and issued orders for an attack to take advantage of it. Bennigsen, meanwhile, who was tormented by ill health throughout the day, saw that he now faced the full might of Napoleon’s army, and issued orders for a retreat. But before Bennigsen’s retreat could get underway, at 5.30pm, three salvos from the French guns signalled the start of Napoleon’s attack. It was led by Ney’s Sixth Corps on the right wing, who first cleared Bagration’s infantry from Sortlack Wood. But as Ney’s troops left the cover of the trees, they came under heavy fire from Russian cannon across the river. As the French attack faltered, Prince Bagration rallied his men, and launched a cavalry counter attack. Ney’s corps retreated. But now General Victor’s First Corps came up on his left. Its artillery commander, General Sénarmont, advanced with 30 guns, and blasted the Russians at point blank range with case shot. Hundreds of Russians were mown down within minutes. Under this onslaught, Bagration’s men began to waver, and then retreat. Around 7pm the Russian Imperial Guard launched a desperate counterattack to try to halt the French advance on Friedland. But they were outnumbered, and outgunned. As exploding shells began to start fires in Friedland… the French centre and left wing joined the attack. With its only escape route under threat, the entire Russian army began a panicked retreat towards the river. But Friedland’s houses and bridges were now ablaze. The town became a deadly trap for the Russians. Many were drowned trying to cross the river, others killed, or captured. North of Friedland, some units were able to escape across a ford, or along the river bank. But there was no disguising the Russians’ terrible defeat. The Battle of Friedland was one of the most decisive victories of Napoleon’s career. At the cost of 10,000 casualties, he had inflicted twice as many losses on the Russians – about 20,000 men killed, wounded, or taken prisoner – 40% of Bennigsen’s army. The Prussians abandoned Königsberg the next day, which was occupied by Soult’s Fourth Corps, while Bennigsen’s shattered army retreated across the River Niemen, into Russia. Tsar Alexander’s advisors implored him to make peace with Napoleon. He accepted their advice, and a ceasefire was agreed. Alexander and Napoleon met for the first time aboard a raft in the middle of the River Niemen, near Tilsit, and developed an immediate rapport. Tilsit proved to be one of history’s great diplomatic summits, as the two emperors feted each other for days, with banquets, parades and concerts, then discussed affairs late into the night. A friendship of sorts developed… whilst Russia’s former ally, King Frederick William of Prussia, was left out in the cold. And it was Prussia who would lose most in the Treaties of Tilsit, signed two weeks later. One third of Prussian territory was taken away… to create the new Kingdom of Westphalia, to be ruled by Napoleon’s 22 year-old brother Jérôme… And the Duchy of Warsaw, to be ruled by the King of Saxony, which Polish patriots hoped would prove a stepping stone on the road to their own state. Polish troops were recruited into the Grande Armée, with Polish lancers even forming part of Napoleon’s elite Imperial Guard. Russia only had to give up the Ionian Islands, as Alexander accepted an alliance with Napoleon that left the French emperor master of Europe. Alexander even agreed to join the ‘Continental System’ – Napoleon’s economic blockade of Great Britain, which banned British ships and goods from all French-controlled ports. The System had been established the previous winter by Napoleon’s Berlin Decree. Napoleon hoped that by cutting off British trade with Europe, he’d cause financial chaos and political upheaval in Britain – allowing him to make a favourable peace. There was just one problem - the Continental System didn’t work. Not only was it impossible to enforce, and undermined by widespread smuggling, the system damaged French trade just as much as British trade. The decisive weapon in this economic war would prove to be the British Royal Navy, which that summer, ensured its continued naval dominance by launching a pre-emptive strike against the neutral Danish fleet at Copenhagen – capturing their warships before they could fall into Napoleon’s hands. Royal Navy squadrons blockaded all major French ports, seizing any ships trading with France, while ensuring British merchants could continue to trade overseas in relative safety. The navy even seized the tiny Danish island of Heligoland, as a base for smuggling British goods into Europe. But most disastrously for Napoleon, the Continental System would draw him into two conflicts that proved ruinous for his empire… The first would be fought in the Iberian Peninsula, where Napoleon decided to force Britain’s ally Portugal to join the Continental System. In November 1807, French troops, supported by their Spanish ally, invaded the country. The Portuguese royal family fled to their colony of Brazil, as the French occupied Lisbon without a fight. It looked as though Napoleon had won yet another easy victory. But the Peninsular War was just beginning... Thanks to our sponsor Skillshare for supporting this video. Skillshare membership offers instant access to more than 22,000 online classes, and if you’re one of the first 500 to sign up using the link in the video description below, you’ll get your first two months free. Skillshare courses cover a range of skills such as business, tech, design, and creative – in fact Epic History TV’s been on Skillshare taking a few refresher courses on some of the software we use to make these videos. And if you wanted to make your own videos, about history or any other subject, Skillshare would be a great place to start, with beginner classes on industry-standard software such as After Effects, Photoshop, and Premiere, as well as courses on filming, script and screen-writing, and more. Thanks to the YouTube channel HistoryMarche for creating the battle map and animations, and to all our Patreon supporters for making this series possible. Visit the Epic History TV Patreon page to find out how you can support the channel, get early access to videos, and vote on future topics.
B2 中高級 美國腔 拿破崙打敗俄國。弗裡德蘭1807年 (Napoleon Defeats Russia: Friedland 1807) 37 1 蔡文彬 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字