Hanover Expedition

Hanover Expedition
Part of War of the Third Coalition
Date19 November 1805 – 15 February 1806
Location
Result

French victory

  • British evacuate Hanover
Belligerents
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland United Kingdom
Russian Empire Russian Empire
Sweden Sweden
First French Empire France
Kingdom of Prussia Prussia
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Sir George Don
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Lord Cathcart
Russian Empire Pyotr Aleksandrovich Tolstoy
Sweden Gustav IV Adolf
Napoleon I
Kingdom of Prussia Friedrich Adolf, Count von Kalckreuth
Units involved
Allied armies Local garrisons
Strength
Britain: 25,000
Russia: 20,000
Sweden: 10,000
France: 4,000
Prussia: 50,000
Casualties and losses
1,000+ (British shipwrecks) Unknown, minor

The Hanover Expedition, also known as the Weser Expedition,[1] was a British invasion of the Electorate of Hanover during the Napoleonic Wars. Coordinated as part of an attack on France by the nations of the Third Coalition against Napoleon by William Pitt the Younger and Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh, planning began for an invasion of French territories in July 1805. Hanover, previously a British possession, was chosen as the goal of the expedition, with Swedish and Russian forces under Gustav IV Adolf and Count Pyotr Aleksandrovich Tolstoy brought in to support the endeavour. Key to the success of the invasion was the support of Prussia, a nation poised to threaten France but not as yet openly hostile to the country. Sir George Don commanded the British expedition and he arrived with an army of around 14,000 men at Cuxhaven in November. To bolster the expedition and to strengthen the resolve of Prussia, Don's army was reinforced by 12,000, with Lord Cathcart taking over command.

Coordination between the British, Swedes, and Russians in Hanover was so poor that by December very little past the occupation of Hanover had been achieved. Cathcart grouped his force around the Weser, and soon after learned of the Austro-Russian defeat at the Battle of Austerlitz, which forced the Austrians to surrender and the Russians to retreat into Poland. With no large armies now protecting Cathcart's force from French attack, the situation was exacerbated when Prussia signed the Treaty of Schönbrunn with France, which created an alliance between the two nations and agreed that Prussia should control Hanover. With French and Prussian forces moving against Hanover, Cathcart's army was recalled in January 1806. The evacuation was completed on 15 February, and Hanover was left to the occupation of a Prussian army. The expedition, while a total failure, had little effect on the British position because of the lack of combat. Its method of quick amphibious transportation and landings of troops on a foreign shore would go on to be imitated in the Walcheren Expedition in 1809.

  1. ^ Atkinson (1952), p. 23.

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