Battle of Maloyaroslavets

The Battle of Maloyaroslavets took place on 24 October 1812, between the Russians, under Marshal Mikhail Illarionovich Kutuzov, and part of the corps of Eugène de Beauharnais, Napoleon's stepson, under General Alexis Joseph Delzons which numbered about 20,000 strong.

Battle of Maloyaroslavets
Part of the French invasion of Russia (1812)

Battle of Maloyaroslavets, by Peter von Hess
Date24 October 1812
Location
Result

Franco-Italian tactical victory[1]

  • French abandon march toward Kaluga despite victory[1]
Belligerents
French Empire
Kingdom of Italy
Russian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Eugène de Beauharnais
Louis-Nicolas Davout
Domenico Pino
Dmitry Dokhturov under supervision of Mikhail Kutuzov
Strength
24,000[2] 12,000 infantry
3,000 cavalry
84 guns
10,000 reinforcements later on
Casualties and losses
6,000[2]

7,165


4,412 killed and wounded
2,753 missing[2]

Prelude

On 19 October, Napoleon evacuated Moscow and marched south-west to Kaluga, Eugene de Beauharnais leading the advance. Unaware of this, and believing the force sighted at Fominskoye, 40 miles (64 km) south-west of Moscow, was a foraging party, Kutuzov sent General Dokhturov with 12,000 infantry, 3,000 cavalry and 84 guns to surprise it. While on the road, Dokhturov learned this force was the Grande Armée and decided to hold out until reinforcements came at the road junction and town of Maloyaroslavets, on the Luzha River.

The battle

Dokhturov entered the town from the south and found the French spearhead had seized a bridgehead. Fierce fighting began. General Raevski arrived with 10,000 more Russians; once more they took the town, though not the bridgehead. De Beauharnais threw in his 15th (Italian) division, under Domenico Pino (Minister of War of the Kingdom of Italy), and by evening they had again expelled the Russians. During the course of the engagament the town changed hands no fewer than eight times and it was quoted that the French and in particular the Italian Royal Guard under Eugène de Beauharnais 'fought like lions'. In fact, this battle is remembered as the "Battle of the Italians".[3] Marshal Kutuzov arrived and decided against a pitched battle with the Grand Army the next day, and to retire instead to the prepared line of defense at Kaluga. The mainly French and Italian forces won a victory on the day, only to realize that "unless with a new Borodino" the way through Kaluga was closed. This allowed Kutuzov to fulfill his strategic plans to force Napoleon on the way of retreat in the north, through Mozhaisk and Smolensk, the route of his advance that he had wished to avoid. French casualties were about 6,000[2] including Delzons killed, while the Russians lost 4,412 men killed and wounded, 2,753 were missed in action.[2] More than half of Russian infantry units who fought in the city were inexperienced recruits and militiamen, which accounted for the high casualty rate among them.[4]

Aftermath

After the withdrawal of Kutuzov it became clear to Napoleon that he would be unable to force the Russian army into a decisive battle. Though a victory, Napoleon did not feel it was on a large enough scale to counter the news of Murat's earlier defeat at Vinkovo.[5] Following the battle Napoleon turned the Grande Armée west to Borovsk where the greater part of the artillery and wagons were located. This would be the first step in a retreat away from the Russians, with hoped-for winter quarters for the army potentially at Smolensk.

Notes

  1. Chandler, p. 1041.
  2. Clodfelter, M. Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492-2015, 4th ed. McFarland. 2017. P. 164
  3. Commission française d'histoire militaire (1991) L'influence de la Révolution française sur les armées en France, en Europe, et dans le monde: actes. Fondation pour les études de défense nationale, p. 64
  4. "Васильев А. А. Сражение при Малоярославце 12.10.1812 // Малоярославец (очерки по истории города): К 180-летию Отечественной войны 1812 года. Малоярославец, 1992. С. 16-87, 143-148" (PDF).
  5. Caulaincourt 1935, p. 177.
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Sources

  • Chandler, David (1966). The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York: Macmillan.

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