Ulm campaign | |||||||
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Part of the War of the Third Coalition | |||||||
The Capitulation of Ulm, a romanticised painting by Charles Thévenin | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
France Bavaria | Austria | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Napoleon Pierre Augereau Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte Jean-Baptiste Bessières Louis-Nicolas Davout Jean Lannes Auguste de Marmont Édouard Mortier Joachim Murat Michel Ney Jean-de-Dieu Soult Bernhard Deroy |
Karl Mack von Leiberich Franjo Jelačić Michael Kienmayer Johann Riesch Karl von Schwarzenberg Franz Werneck | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
165,200[1]–235,000[2] | 74,000[3] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
6,000[1] |
10,000 killed or wounded[1] 60,000 captured[1][3][4] |
The Ulm campaign was a series of French and Bavarian military maneuvers and battles to outflank and capture an Austrian army in 1805 during the War of the Third Coalition. It took place in the vicinity of and inside the Swabian city of Ulm. The French Grande Armée, led by Emperor Napoleon, had 210,000 troops organized into seven corps and hoped to knock out the Austrian army in the Danube before Russian reinforcements could arrive.[5] Rapid marching let Napoleon conduct a large wheeling maneuver, which captured an Austrian army of 60,000 under Feldmarschall-Leutnant (FML) Karl Freiherr Mack von Leiberich on 20 October at Ulm. The campaign is by some military historians regarded as a strategic masterpiece and was influential in the development of the Schlieffen Plan in the late 19th century.[6][7] Napoleon himself wrote:[8]
The victory at Ulm did not end the war since a large Russian army under Mikhail Kutuzov was near Vienna to defend the city against the French. The Russians withdrew to the northeast to await reinforcements and to link up with Austrian army units. The French moved aggressively forward and captured Vienna on 12 November.[9] On 2 December, the massive Battle of Austerlitz, causing 24,000 to 36,000 casualties, removed Austria from the war. The resulting Treaty of Pressburg in late December brought the Third Coalition to an end and established Napoleonic France as the major power in Central Europe, which led to the War of the Fourth Coalition against the Kingdom of Prussia and Russia the following year.[10][11]
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