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war: which no man could behold without raising his voice in thanksgiving to the

Author of all good) that the home of his childhood had been preservedfrom such
fearful visitations ...
Captain Sir John Kincaid

DEDICATION
To my Parents

ILLUSTRATIONS
Drawings devised by John Mollo and drawn by Peter Sarson and Tony
Bryan. Other illustrations from the Author's Collection.

Cover illustration: The 74th Highlanders at the Battle of


Assoigne) India) 18(3) by David Rowlands. Reproduced by
courtesy of the artist.

ARMS & ARMOUR


A Cassell imprint
Wellington House, 125 Strand, London W.-C2R OBB

Copyright © Philip J. Haythornthwaite 1979, 1996

First published 1979 by Blandford Press


This revised edition 1996 by Arms & Armour,

First paperback edition 1998


Reprinted 1999

ISBN 1-85409-495-5

British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data


A catalogue record for this book is available from
the British Library.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be repro~uced, or


transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any
information storage and retrieval system, without permission in
writing from the Publisher

Distributed in the USA by Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.,


387 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10016-8810

Printed and bound in Great Britain by


The Bath Press, Bath
CONTENTS

I. Introduction I

2. Infantry Weapons & Tactics 3


3· Cavalry Weapons & Tactics 35
4· Artillery & Engineers 55
5· Staff & Supplies 99
6. Uniforms & Equipment 12 5
7· Living Conditions 145
8. Appendices 162
9· Bibliography 16 7

10. Battles 17 1
I I. Glossary 177
12. Index 18 7
Fig. I. The Emperor Napoleon. Print after Meissonier.
INTRODUCTION

~apons and Equipment of the Napoleonic wars als, his name originating from the Greek 'Lion
was published originally in 1979.This new edi- of the Forest' and from 'Buona Parte', 'origi-
tion reproduces the main text without altera- nally a sort of cant term applied to the "good
tion, but the opportunity has been taken to [i.e. the bravest, or most patriotic] part" of the
provide an extended bibliography, and a French army, collectively'. 1 There may have
number of new illustrations. been some validity in arguing that, for most
Any 'general' work on the Napoleonic Wars people, there was no proof that he ever existed
must, from the volume of material to be con- in the sense of personal knowledge of the fact,
sidered, include some generalizations and but the comment by Chambers' Edinburgh Jour-
broad assertions which, though representing nal (17 July 1847) that it was a 'curious' publi-
the basic facts, were not universally true. Simi- cation which took a 'strange line of argument'
larly, some areas - particularly regarding the was surely valid. While su·ch fanciful theories
tactics and capabilities of individual com- may be dismissed immediately (indeed, even
manders - are still in dispute; even such ap- this work never seriously intended to suggest
parently technical details as ranges and capa- that Napoleon was actually a fiction), the
bilities of fieldpieces, for example, depend reader will find many other discrepancies be-
upon contemporary statistics which are some- tween contemporary works, for, in the words
times at variance. It should be remembered of the Duke ofWellington, 'As soon as an ac-
that some 'period' sources include 'eyewitness' cident happens, every man who can write, and
accounts written in some cases more than who has a friend who can read, sits down to
thirty years after the event from memories write his account of what he does not know,
conceivably clouded by the lapse in time, and his comments on what he does not under-
works produced in haste after the events de- stand.'2
scribed and thus lacking in a balanced view, Although this book is concerned primarily
and others which exhibit bias, either inten- with the weaponry and equipment of the Na-
tional or otherwise. poleonic Wars, as the subjects of tactics, strat-
The question of the amount of reliability egy and weapons-performance were inter-re-
which can be placed upon 'contemporary' lated some attention is paid to the first, but
material is illustrated, albeit in its most extreme primarily only in relation to the performance
case, by a work published in 1819 and fre- and utilization of weapons and equipment. For
quently reprinted. In Historic Doubts Relative more exhaustive treatment of the methods and
to Napoleon Bonaparte by Richard Whately, concepts of the strategy and tactics of the era,
Archbishop of Dublin, the theory was argtied reference should be made to volumes listed
that Napoleon never existed, but was rather a in the bibliography.
composite image of the deeds of many gener- In the following pages, considerab~e me~-

I
tion is made of 'weapon effectiveness', i.e. kill- even more impersonal statistics regarding the
ing-power. Although this consideration is a victims of those tactics, it should never be for-
historical necessity, and at the time was a vital gotten that each statistic represents a human
factor in the military trade, it is an irony of tragedy, a fact which apparently escaped some
mankind that the weapons considered 'best' ofthe generals ofthe period. How apt wasWel-
should be those with the greatest facility for lington's comment that, next to a battle lost,
carrying away mankind itself. In considering the greatest sorrow was a battle won.
impersonal descriptions of tactical ploys, and

1. Historic Doubts, pp. 50-5 I.


2. Wellington to Robert Craufurd, 23 July 1810; Wellington's
Dispatches VI, p. 287.

2
INFANTRY
WEAPONS & TACTICS

THEINFANTRY
The composition of infantry units in all Battalion-establishments varied greatly
armies was basically similar. The principal between armies and dates, but some examples
tactical formation was the battalion, of which are given below. Active service usually ren-
a 'regiment' might contain one or several, dered official establishments correct only on
each battalion being a separate entity. The paper.
battalion comprised a number of companies, Prior to the Revolution, French infantry
each containing perhaps a hundred men with was organized in two-battalion regiments,
officers, N.C.O.s and musicians attached. each battalion of four fusilier and one flank
Each battalion usually consisted of a number company, grenadiers in one battalion and
of 'centre' companies and two 'flank' com- light infantry in the other. An entire re-
panies, the terms indicating the position organization was needed during the Revolu-
occupied by the company when the battalion tionary Wars to leaven the many untrained
was formed in line. In theory the 'flank' volunteer units with veterans, so the 'amal-
companies, guarding the most vulnerable part game' was devised, put into effect from
of the line, were the battalion elite, the senior January 1794, which established 'demi-
flank company usually styled 'grenadiers', brigades' of three battalions each, one regular
supposedly the bravest and tallest of the and two volunteer, the 2nd or 'centre'
regiment, their title a survival of the battalion being composed of regulars. Each
privileged position of those who threw hand- demi-brigade battalion initially comprised
grenades. The junior flank company consisted three companies of 330 men each, later
of light infantry, small, agile sharpshooters increased to nine of between 150 and 200 men
adept at skirmishing and scouting; in French each, one company being styled grenadiers;
and satellite armies they were termed 'volti- on service it was rare for a demi-brigade to
geurs' (literally, 'vaulters'). The 'centre' have above about 2,500 men.
companies had a variety of names, 'fusilier' In September 1803 the demi-brigades were
being most common (i.e. one who carried a re-titled 'regiments' (the term demi-brigade
fusil or musket); in Britain the term 'battalion thereafter indicating provisional groupings of
company' was used. These terms were battalions), and from 1805-08 a further re-
common throughout Europe: for example, organization caused each regiment to com-
'fucilieri', 'granatieri' and 'volteggiatori' in prise four battalions of six companies each,
Italy, 'fusileros', 'granaderos' and 'cazadores' four fusilier, one grenadier and one voltigeur,
in Spain, the latter, like the Portuguese the latter a new addition. In addition to the
'ca~adore', equating with 'chasseur', for four 'combat battalions' ('bataillons de
which see below. guerre'), of which the fourth was often

3
detached to form composite provisional regi- Eleven had less than 400; the average was no
ments, there was a depot battalion to provide more than-sso. The strongest (1/43rd) had
drafts and train recruits. 1,005 and the weakest (2/38th) but 263.4
A Decree of February 1808 regulated or- Some German armies used the term 'mus-
ganization, each regiment having the following keteer' for the centre companies and 'fusilier'
staff: colonel, major, four 'chefs de bataillon', for light infantry; thus in 1807 a Prussian
five adjutants, quartermaster, paymaster, regiment comprised two musketeer battalions,
surgeon-major, four assistant-surgeons, five a light battalion, and two grenadier com-
assistant-adjutants, ten sergeant-majors, panies. By December 1808 each battalion
drum-major, corporal-drummer, band- comprised four companies, each of five
master, seven musicians, four master- officers, thirty-two N.C.O.s, I IS privates,
craftsmen, eagle-bearer (a subaltern of ten three musicians and a medical orderly, the
years' service) and two eagle-escorts (N.C.O.s 'paper' strength (632) increased in war-time
whose illiteracy prevented further advance- by about fifty men per company. The three
ment). Company establishment was: captain, regimental battalions usually operated to-
lieutenant, sub-lieutenant, sergeant-major, gether, with the grenadiers detached and
four sergeants, quartermaster-corporal, eight formed into composite grenadier battalions.
corporals, two drummers (hornists for volti- Austrian regiments in 1805 comprised four
geurs) and 121 privates. Regimental strength fusilier and one grenadier battalion, each of
was therefore 3,970 (108 officers), with four four companies, with 800 men per fusilier
pioneers per battalion (grenadiers) and a battalion and 600 per grenadier. Russian
pioneer-corporal per regiment. infantry underwent several changes of organ-
In line; the grenadiers occupied the right ization; in 1805 all line regiments had an
flank and the voltigeurs the left; 'when the establishment of 2,256 men, both 'musketeer'
six companies are present with the battalion and elite 'grenadier' regiments, the former
it will always march and act by divisions. consisting of three battalions, including one
When the grenadiers and the light infantry are of grenadiers. By 1812, each musketeer
absent ... it will always manoeuvre and march battalion comprised four companies, includ-
by platoon. Two companies will form a ing one of grenadiers, divided into two
division; each company will form a platoon; platoons: grenadiers proper who held the
each half company a section.' This illustrates right flank, and 'lagers' on the left.
how the terms 'division', 'platoon', etc. Organization of other armies often followed
referred to tactical formations, not sub-units that of one of the major powers; exceptions
of the battalion. 3 included Spain which in 1807 had three-
British battalions comprised ten companies battalion regiments of four companies per
(one grenadier, one light), with a theoretical battalion, each company unwieldy with 188
establishment of thirty-five officers and 1,000 men an,d only three officers, and Portugal,
rank and file, though this strength was hardly which in 18 9 had two-battalion regiments,
ever seen in the field. A regiment's '1st each battalion of 770 men in seven companies
Battalion' on campaign would initially have (actual strength fluctuated greatly; instead of
a greater strength than the 2nd Battalion, 1,550 per regiment the September 1809
having filled its ranks with fit men drawn returns vary from the 11th Regiment's 1,498
from the 2nd, which had to leave behind not men to the 21st's 193!).
only its own ineffective personnel but those Light infantry regiments acted like the light
of the 1st Battalion as well. Statistics for companies of the line, adept at skirmishing,
Wellington's infantry in 181 I show how (as though in practice many differed little from
in all armies) 'actual' strength often bore no their line colleagues except in the prestige
relation to 'establishment'. Of forty-six bat- accorded to light infantry. French light regi-
talions, only nine had more than 700 men ments were organized like the line, the
(two of which were Guards with a higher original 'demi-brigades legere' formed
initial establishment); sixteen had between around regular 'chasseur' battalions. (The
500 and 700, and ten from 400 to 500. latter term - meaning 'hunter' - was com-

4
monly adopted by light infantry and cavalry had much chance of success. Though the
to symbolize their fast-moving role); instead French drill-book 'Reglement d'Infanterie'
offusiliers and grenadiers the terms 'chasseur' (1791) clung to the line (though providing for
and "carabinier' were used in French regi- a rapid advance in column), the armies of the
ments. British light infantry units were classed Revolution, including large numbers of un-
as part of the line, with identical establish- trained conscripts, lacked the discipline and
ments. In 1807 Spanish light infantry were cohesion to manoeuvre in a conventional
single-battalion corps of 1,200 men each; manner. So a new tactic was devised: the
Portuguese 'ca9adore' battalions consisted of attack in column. First masking the entire
770 men in five companies, including one of French line with hordes of skirmishers to
'atiradores' (sharpshooters). occupy and absorb the fire of the enemy,
German light infantry were usually styled densely-packed columns of troops were
'Jager' (the equivalent of 'chasseur'), often launched at specific points on the enemy line.
known in English as 'rifles' due to the pre- Expensive though such column-attacks were,
dominance of rifled muskets. These units they enabled the French to use their levies to
were often small; from 1808 Prussian 'Jager' bludgeon a hole in the opposing line. Thus
and 'Schiitzen' (sharpshooter) battalions had the untrained masses of the Revolution were
a complement of officers and N.e.O.s like the able to overthrow the most professional
line but only eighty-eight men and two armies in Europe by sheer weight of numbers.
buglers per company, a total battalion The organization of the demi-brigade also
strength of 429. Volunteer Jager companies allowed the centre (regular) battalion to
were often attached to line regiments on operate in line, and the two flank (conscript)
campaign. Austria possessed similar Jager battalions in column, a compromise which
corps, plus 'Grenz' (frontier) battalions of employed both conventional firepower and
Croatian light infantry. Russian Jager bat~ the 'horde' tactic of the untrained.
talions in 1812 consisted of four companies, This manoeuvre was taken a stage further.
one of which, styled 'Jager-grenadiers', com- The column's main disadvantage was that,
prised a platoon of grenadiers and one of excepting the first two or three ranks, no
'carabiniers', an imitation of the flank- muskets could be fired. Realizing the need for
company system of the line. The two British maximum firepower, Napoleon instituted the
'rifle' corps were the 60th and 95th, both 'ordre mixte' as earlier recommended by
multi-battalion regiments and an experienced General Guibert; like the demi-brigade
elite. formation noted above, columns (from bat-
--Flank companies were sometimes detacned talion to divisionallevelj were 1m
to form composite elite battalions; most placed in line, thus increasing the overall
armies at some time used this method of firepower whilst maintaining the impetus of
providing a veteran reserve or provisional the column.
light corps by drawing pers0nnel from a
number of line battalions. Fig. 2. Overleaf: Infantry formations. A. A
Infantry tactics were governed by weapon- British battalion in close order;,· B. A French
performance and the tactical developments of regiment in column of divisions;, three battalions
the eighteenth century. Only by manoeuvr- to a regiment;,· C and D. Alternativeformations
ing in tightly-packed masses could discipline for single battalionformations after the 1809 re-
be maintained, volley-fire be effective, and organization;,· E. 'L'Ordre Mixte'. showing a
infantry reasonably safe against cavalry. The three battalion regiment deployed partly in line
tenets of infantry tactics utilized two basic and partly in column;,· F. A Prussian four com-
formations: line and column. pany battalion (18 I 2) moving from columns into
Relying upon disciplined firepower rather line;,· G. A Prussian brigade of two regiments
than the impetus of charge, the line had deployed for attack (18 I 2);,· H. A seven com-
emerged in the eighteenth century as the pre- pany battalion moving from column into line;,·
dominant formation; without the disciplined J. An eight company battalion forming square
fire of a three or four-deep line no manoeuvre from line.

5
A
~ ~ ~
0 . .0 . .0 . .0 . .0 . .0606 . .0 . .0 . .0 . .0 . .0
0 . .0 . .0 . .0 . .0 . .0000. .0 . .0 . .0 . .0 . .0
o 00 00 00 00 [ZJ 00 [2]0 00 00 00
~~~ ~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~~(!J~ (!J~(!J
~ ~~~~~
Grenadiers
~ Light Company
~~~~~
Major ~
o Officer Colour-bearer 6
o Sergeant
[1i][M][i]~oo~~~oo~
Drummer ~
~
~
Bandsman
Adjutant Pioneer ~
C8JC8J~rgj
~ Lieutenant-Colonel Colonel ~
~ Staff One company from each Bn Staff _
B deployed as Skirmishers
------------------.-

-- --
.~----------------

-_
• 50 yds • 41( 50 yds _ ... 50 yds ~

--
--
-- 1st Bn
i2- -
c=J ~I

--
- -

2nd Bn
c=J c=J CJ
... 150yds
--
---
-- 3rd Bn

c=Jc=Jc=J
Skirmishers not deployed
Voltigeur deployed
41( 75 yds •
4-.--as Sl~irmisher--"'~
Voltigeur Grenadier

One company from each Bn


E ••~~~~~~~~-~~~deployed as Sk~m~hers~-----------~~

1 Bn in Line

5 4
II
II

II

II

INFANTRY FORMATIONS

6
G
Skirmishers from Fusilier Battalions
......------------ deployed-----·---------~~

Fusilier Bn 2nd Regt Fusilier Bn 1st Regt

Musketeer Musketeer
r
Musketeer
Bn Bn Bn
1st Regt 1st Regt 2nd Regt

Musketeer
Bn Combined
1st Regt Grenadier
Bn

~
~
~
~
j
j >.
>. 0
0 U
U <......
<...... c;
c;
:r: :r:
~
r/')
c:
N

\.

~
\.
\.

••
\.
\.
- - - +\. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
.. ,--I ----'

\.
\.
, .(
\.

• .. (
" " \. .. I

•.,
\.

I
, I'", j
I
~I 1'1'

7
The subject of Napoleonic tactics is too judicious placement of troops on the reverse
complex to be covered in any depth, but basic slope of a hill, Wellington not only protected
facts are noted below. The skirmish-cloud them from enemy fire but rendered the
which preceded an advance would be drawn French commanders incapable of knowing
from the voltigeur companies of the bat- when to deploy into line, their target being
talions participating, or even entire regiments concealed from view. Against armies not
deployed in open order. Behind them, a employing the 'reverse slope' tactic, however,
battalion would normally advance in 'column the French column-attack was potentially
of divisions', a two-company frontage, four invincible; indeed the sight of an advance was
companies deep (for a nine-company regi- enough to dishearten most troops; as Welling-
ment). Every company was deployed in three ton said, 'I suspect all the continental armies
ranks with about a yard between; so that a are half-beaten before the battle begins;'5 but
'battalion column' had a 50-yard front and a against a line of uncowed troops, willing even
depth of about 21 yards (twelve ranks). With to throw forward its wings to envelop the
the later six-company French establishment, column, the French system could hardly have
a battalion column consisted of three 'divi- been expected to succeed against concen-
sions', with a 75-yard front and Is-yard depth trated musketry.
(nine ranks). When the voltigeurs were The line was commonly formed of three
deployed a 'column of companies' was often ranks, the troops packed together but not so
used, one company behind the other. If tightly as to affect loading: the British
morale was good the grenadiers would lead instructions specified that:
the advance; if not they would be placed at 'Each soldier ... mus~ just feel with his
the rear to encourage the others. elbow the touch of the neighbour to whom
Large attacks were mounted by a series of he dresses; nor in any situation of movement
battalion columns in line or echelon, with at in front must he ever relinquish such touch
least ISO yards between to enable each ... each man will then occupy a space of 22
battalion to deploy into line and the skirmish- inches ... There are two distances of ranks,
screen to retire just before the attack engaged open and close; when they are open they are
the enemy. Battalion columns could be drawn three paces asunder; when they are close they
into checkerboard lines to allow cavalry and are one pace; and when the body is halted and
artillery to manoeuvre between, the latter ready to fire they are still closer locked up ...
ideally accompanying the advance to bom- Open order is only an occasional exception
bard the 'target' section of the enemy line. made in situations of parade.... '6
The system was so flexible as to allow its The depth of line caused a great con-
variation according to terrain. The 'ordre troversy, most nations favouring three-deep;
mixte' was equally flexible, the column allow- despite the successful use of the two-deep line
ing both rapid movement and easy change of in America, Dundas' 'Rules and Regulations'
formation without the time-consuming inter- (1792) defended the three-deep system,
vals needed to re-align linear formations. claiming 'In no service is the fire and con-
Huge divisional columns, employed when the sistency of the third rank given up ... ,'7 but
quality of the infantry began to deteriorate, in fact the third was not as effective as the
were often less effective. other two; so the two-deep line was used
With trained infantry, the column-attack increasingly, given tacit official approval
was intended to deploy into line immediately 'even at reviews' in 1801. 8 Compared to a
before contact. Whether the frequent failure column or even a three-deep line its power
to do so was by design or not is uncertain; was crushing. For example, a French division
some generals may have believed that the old of 5,000 men advancing on a two-company
'sledgehammer' tactic, having worked with front could only bring 340 muskets to bear;
the conscripts of the Revolution, might work but 500 men in a two-deep line could fire
again. However, it appears that many column- between six and ten shots per yard per minute
attacks did attempt to deploy, but too late which, directed at a small, dense target like
before actual contact with the enemy. By his the head of a column, was lethal. Against an
8
Fig. 3. British squares resist French cavalry at waterloo. Print by R. Reeve after William Heath.

equally-strong three-deep line it overlapped; be massacred, as happened at Albuera. Their


in one of the few combats between two- and only protection was the square, a bristling
three-deep lines, at Maida, the outnumbered hedge of bayonets impenetrable in all but
two-rank British inflicted 2,000 casualties on extreme cases as the cavalry (unless armed
the three-rank French, suffering only 320 with lances) could not reach the infantry over
casualties in the process. A major disadvan- their bayonets and their horses would not
tage of the two-deep line, however, was the charge the fearsome sight. When squares were
'shrinkage' caused by the movement of men broken by cavalry, as at Garcia Hernandez,
towards the centre to fill gaps made by the infantry were either tired, disheartened or
casualties, there being no third rank to keep inexperienced, or the side of the square was
the line intact. Its effectiveness also depended crushed by a falling horse. But if horse
upon: a) that it should not be exposed to the artillery accompanied the cavalry, the square
enemy until the last moment (i.e. use of could be annihilated by canister.
reverse slope); b) it should be screened The square, almost invariably hollow with
by light infantry to keep the French skir- sides four-deep (two-deep when guarding
mishers back; and c) its flanks should be baggage), needed several hundred men to
covered by cavalry or the terrain to protect make it practicable: at Salamanca the British
against flank-attacks. Against a rear-attack the 53rd, 245 strong, were forced to retire in line
second rank could 'about-face' and fight back- before cavalry, 'the ranks too much thinn'd
to-back, as did the British 28th at Alexandria. to attempt a square.'9 Normally of battalion-
Despite the obvious advantages of the two- size, a square could be formed by two, or even
deep line and use of reverse slope, its a brigade; 'battalion guns', usually tw:o field-
benefits seem to have escaped all commanders pieces, would be sited at opposite corners of
except Wellington. the square. To form square quickly demanded
Under normal circumstances, infantry in some precision, any fault in timing revealing
line were helpless against cavalry and could a gap into which cavalry could rush (this

9
Fig. 4. The raising of the siege of Thionville J 16 October 1792. French infantry in foreground
routing Hungarian infantry. After Hippolyte Lecomte.

happened with the British 42nd at Quatre Packenham deployed the British 3rd Division
Bras; they closed the square and killed the at Salamanca on the move, officers dressing
French cavalry trapped inside). Squares ranks as they marched, it was manoeuvre not
could be formed from line upon any company included in the drill-books!
or from column; with a ten-company battalion Other nations did not profit from the
the 'square' was often oblong, three com- example of British success over French
panies on two opposite sides and two on the column; the Prussian 'Manoeuvre Regula-
others. When a unit was completely scattered, tions' of 1812 were apparently inspired by the
any officer or N.C.O. could cry 'Form Rally- 1791 French drill and the 'Napoleonic'
ing Square', whereupon any men nearby Westphalian system. Each Prussian com-
would run to him, the first two joining his pany comprised two 'Ziigen' (platoons),
right and left, the next three in front and a numbered one to eight within the battalion.
further three behind, all facing outwards. By Each 'Ziig' had a place in the firing-line and
the time about eighty had run up a solid, was formed three-deep; for column a 'Ziig-
tightly-packed mass would have been formed, kolonne' of one-Ziig frontage was used, or a
incapable of offence but impervious to double-Ziig column with double-Ziig front-
cavalry. age, four Ziigen deep. For larger formations,
Deploying was usually carried out beyond a common version consisted of three battalion-
enemy musket-range and at the halt; when columns with fusiliers· deployed as skir-
10
mishers, with one musketeer and the spread as an extra rank at the rear of the
combined grenadier battalion in reserve. battalion, where their supposed specialist
Other defeated nations similarly copied the skills were useless (in effect, the smallest men
French system; for example, Austria's revised were automatically posted to the Jagers, until
drill-book provided for skirmishers, but Barclay de Tolly improved training and made
limited in number and not as enthusiastic as 'elite' status a matter of reward). A few
the French whom they were intended to British colonels trained perhaps fifteen to
emulate. twenty men per company to act as 'flankers'
The Russian 'Military Code' (1796) recom- to support the light company, but the practice
mended the three-rank line, with the was short-lived and Oman found only one
platoon column (four platoons per company) reference to its use in action, at Maida. 13
the basis of all evolutions. Firing was by Ideally, a detachment of light infantry
'rolling volley', the four platoons of each should have been attached to every larger
company firing in succession. Suvorov dis- formation; French divisions and even brigades
missed the 1796 Code as a 'rat-eaten parch- often contained at least one light infantry
ment found in the corner of an old castle,'lO battalion in addition to regimental light com-
and emphasized instead the mass-attack with panies. Though the British light infantry in
the bayonet. This obsession with the bayonet the Peninsula were collected into one brigade
reached a peak in 18 12, when virtually all (later Division), each division had light
infantry at Borodino was arrayed in French- infantry units attached, either British rifle
style battalion columns. Russian manoeuvres companies or Portuguese ca9adore regiments.
were criticized in the earlier years by Skirmishing, in which the light infantry-
observers from other armies: 'They are man operated as an individual, required a
absolutely useless for anything that has to do degree of intelligence above that of the auto-
with manoeuvre, and in this respect an matic drill of the line. In skirmish order the
ordinary French soldier is worth more than men were rarely widely-spaced (in British
all the officers of the Russian army put service 'open order' signified two feet between
together ... their gallantry goes for nothing files, 'extended order' two paces), though in
because they do not know how to direct it ... combat frequently adopted a much more
they charge with the bayonet ... but they are 'individual' role. Light troops generally
so clumsy that they never manage to catch worked in pairs, so that one would always have
anyone. '11 Even the battalion columns at a loaded musket, and all movements executed
Borodino were not a success, presenting a in 'quick time', 'each firing as quick as he can,
superb target for the French artillery and consistent with loading properly.... '14 Two
resulting in heavy casualties. Later in the basic methods of movement were practised:
1812 campaign the Russians arrayed their either formed in two lines, the rear rank
infantry in longer, thinner lines and less advancing directly through the gaps in the
densely-packed, thus negating much of the front rank; or, when 'covering' each other,
French artillery fire. ' ... as soon as the front rank man has fired,
Effective light infantry tactics demanded he is to slip to the left of the rear man, who
specialist training and a high esprit de corps; will make a short pace forward, and put
for this reason it was preferable to have light himself in the other's place, whom he is to
troops gathered in companies, instead of a protect while loading. When the first man
number of men in every company trained as returns his ramrod, he will give his comrade
skirmishers, 'otherwise you may lose ... the the word ready, after which, and not before,
services of both; because the active may be of he may fire, and immediately change places
no use, being kept back by their sluggish com- as before. '15
panions; and unless they are previously When advancing the same drill was used,
divided into separate bodies, you cannot save that the rear man would move around
distinguish and separate them when his comrade and six paces in fr:ont; when
wanted. '12 Nevertheless, Russia continued retiring the front man would do likewise but
this practice until 1810, the Jager platoon withdraw twelve paces. Naturally, terrain-
II
Fig. 5. The combination of British musketry and controlled bayonet-charges repel a French attack at Busaco.
Print after Major T. S. St. Clair.

features used as cover usually threw these corn fields, amongst gardens and ditches,
drill-book manoeuvres completely out of almost without being perceived ... Light
time. infantry ought to be perfectly aware that they
The essence of light infantry tactics is given have little to apprehend in any situation from
in the British Volunteer Manual (1803): artillery, and that in close country they are
'Vigilance, activity, and intelligence, are greatly an over-match for cavalry. They may
particularly requisite ... The first is to guard pick off the men employed at the guns, and
against surprise ... Rapidity of movement ... likewise gall the dragoons by their fire, with-
establishes their own security, at the same out risk to themselves ... Against regular
time that it renders them the terror of the infantry formed ... in close order ... they
enemy ... Being unincumbered [sic] they can must hover continually in every quarter. If
change their situation without difficulty ... the regulars advance rapidly upon them, the
and they can appear suddenly upon points light troops must recede; and when the enemy
where they are least expected, and the most is exhausted ... they must again line the
to be dreaded. The intelligence chiefly hedges and ditches round him ... light
required in a light infantry man is, that he infantry can be opposed no otherwise than by
should know how to take advantage of every men acting in the same manner with them-
circumstance of ground which can enable him selves. These they must endeavour to outwit;
to harass and annoy an enemy, without to lead them into an ambuscade; and to bring,
exposing himself . .. In some situations they by a pretended retreat, into places where they
must conceal themselves by stooping, in can be acted against by cavalry, or cut off
others they must kneel, or lie flat upon the ... and overpowered ...
ground ... Light Infantry must know how to ' ... light troops should all be expert marks-
gain upon an enemy along hedges, through men. To fire seldom and always with effect
12
Fig. 6. An infantry firing-Nne: French grenadiers in Spain. Engraving after H. Bellange.

should be their chief study ... Noise and believed it to be the main line! Accurate
smoke is not sufficient to stop the advance of skirmish-fire, even though it did not kill,
soldiers accustomed to war: they are to be inevitably damaged morale:
checked only by seeing their comrades '. .. though the enemy fired at be not
fall. ... '16 wounded, yet the ball passes so close to him
Amongst the traditionalists, these facts as to intimidate, and prove to him how skilful
were not always evident; thus, despite experi- [sic] an opponent he is engaged with ...
ence during the American War of Indepen- when a corps of ... good marksmen engage
dence, British light infantry skill had fallen an enemy ... and never pull a trigger without
into such disrepair that German mercenaries deliberate and positive good aim, provided
had to be used until Sir John Moore re- that they are not fortunate enough to kill, they
established and perfected light infantry train- are sure to intimidate.... '17
ing at Shorncliffe. Despite the widespread
use of French 'tirailleur' (sharpshooter)
screens, they rarely used more than regi-
THE MUSKET
mental voltigeur companies in this role in the
Peninsular War: 1,000 or 1,200 men per The very basis of Napoleonic warfare was its
division employed as skirmishers. Con- simplest factor - the private soldier and his
versely, an Anglo-Portuguese division would musket.
send out both regimental light companies The musket of the Napoleonic Wars was
and attached ca9adore or rifle detachments, a 'smoothbore' (i.e. lacking 'rifling' to impart
about 1,200 to 1,500 per 5,000 or 5.,500 men, a spin on the projectile) and operated on the
so that the resulting skirmish-line was so flintlock system. The 'lock' consisted of three
substantial that on occasion the French main parts. The hammer (or cock) comprised
13
/ / /
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I
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/
/
I I
,
I /
I
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\I
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I \
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I II "I I 1
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,, ,
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1/ , I I
\1 II If
l II 'I~
1\
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, 1\
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,\

,, 1\
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,
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,
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I I

Fig. 7. British Light Infantry Exercise. Left: Four files firing advancing in extended order,
covering each other. Right: A rank of six men advancing firing in ordinary extended order.

a pair of steel jaws, closed by a screw, hold- 'half-cock', which allowed a small amount of
ing a shaped piece of flint; its position was powder to be poured into the priming-pan
on the 'lockplate' on the right-hand side of and the frizzen pulled upright, closing the
the musket, level with the trigger which was pan-cover. The hammer was then drawn back
connected internally to the hammer. The an extra notch on to 'full-cock', at which
third element was the 'frizzen', a hinged steel stage pressure on the trigger would send the
plate covering the 'priming-pan', the latter a hammer and flint crashing on to the frizzen
small depression on the lockplate, connected and, in forcing it backwards, striking a shower
to the inside of the barrel by a 'touch-hole'. of sparks which ignited the powder in the pan.
(The frizzen was also known as the 'steel' or As this powder ignited with a flash, the spark
'hammer', when the flint-holder was termed passed into the barrel via the touch-hole and
the 'cock'.) ignited the main charge, which exploded with
To fire the musket, the charge of gun- an even greater cloud of smoke and sent the
powder and the ball it propelled were inserted ball on its uneven course. A 'misfire' occurred
into the barrel via the muzzle (hence 'muzzle- when the spark did not pass through the
loading') and the hammer drawn back on to touch-hole, despite a 'flash in the pan'; thus

14
I
2 4 6

Fig. 8. Left: Flintlock mechanism. I. Lockplate~· 2. Cock; 3. Hammer (or Steel or Frizzen);
4. Pan; 5. Flint held in jaws of the Cock; 6. Spring. Right: Paper musket cartridge showing
the position of the ball and charge of powder.

'hanging fire', the musket had to be unloaded measured charge could be poured into the
carefully or a second ignition attempted. muzzle. This method was regularly used with
Recoil was fierce, the repeated kick so the rifle, often with an additional flask of
bruising the right shoulder that a soldier finely-ground 'priming powder'. Prepared
might be incapacitated after a long action. Idle cartridges were almost universal in combat,
soldiers remedied the recoil by using a a unit's firepower dictated by the amount
reduced charge, thus drastically reducing the which could be carried on the person due to
range of the musket.
Most muskets used a 'prepared' cartridge,
a waxed or greased paper tube containing Fig. 9. Overleaf: British Manual and Platoon
both gunpowder and ball. The ball, a lead Exercise. I. Shoulder Arms; 2. Order Arms;
sphere about an ounce in weight, was a fear- 3· Support Arms~· 4. Fix Bayonets; 5. Port
some weapon despite its many shortcomings. Arms; 6. Charge Bayonets~· 7. Handle Car-
Flattening on impact, it could produce horri- tridge~ first movement; 8. Handle Cartridge~
fic injuries; though a 'spent ball', one second movement; 9. Prime~· 10. Load; I I.
striking the target at extreme range, might Draw Ramrods; 12. Ram Down Cartridge; 13.
produce a bruise at worst. Without a prepared Withdraw Ramrods; 14. Return Ramrods;
charge, the musketeer had to resort to loose 15. Make Ready; 16. Present Fire; 17~ 18.
ball and a powder-flask, from which a Make Ready Present Fire in three ranks.
15
2 3 4

6 7 8

BRITISH ARMS DRILL

9 10

16
11 12 13 14

BRITISH ARMS DRILL

15 16

17
unreliable supply arrangements; in addition a cartridge, the soldier transferred it to his
to the forty or sixty cartridges in his -mouth, biting off the end of the paper tube
cartridge-box, before action a soldier might (hence the raging thirst, caused by gunpowder
receive an extra ammunition-container or in the mouth, which afflicted soldiers in
'magazine', or a handful of loose cartridges to combat) and, with the hammer on half-cock
put in his pockets. The musket-ball varied and the priming-pan uncovered, a small
between armies; Britain used a standard amount of powder was tipped into the pan and
No. I I bore (0.76 in. calibre) and a ball of the cover closed. The musket-butt was then
No. 14 bore (0.71 in. in diameter); the differ- grounded and the remainder of the cartridge
ence between barrel-bore and ball-diameter - paper, powder and ball - pushed into the
was therefore 1!20th of an inch, this 'windage' muzzle. The ramrod was then drawn from its
facilitating loading. France used a smaller retaining tubes on the underside of the
calibre (0.70 in.) and consequently a lighter musket, reversed so that the 'button'-end
ball (twenty-two to the pound against the pointed downwards, and inserted in the
British fourteen); the difference in efficiency muzzle, ramming the cartridge to the bottom
was negligible, the French ball possibly of the barrel. The ramrod was then replaced,
having longer range and the British volley the musket lifted to the 'shoulder arms'
more 'weight'. Whereas French musket-balls position and the hammer moved on to 'full
could be used by the British (Wellington cock'. The musket was fired by bringing the
noting in 1813 that '1 have been obliged to butt to the right shoulder, the soldier often
use the French ammunition, of a smaller leaning forward and taking his weight on the
calibre than ours ... '),18 the French were left foot, not always deliberately 'aiming' but
unable to use captured British ammunition. simply pointing the gun in the appropriate
Several calibres existed within every army general direction.
(musket-bore, carbine- and pistol-bore, etc.) The procedure for firing could be varied;
- Russia had twenty-eight different calibres with an unobscured target, an entire battalion
in 1812. In an emergency smoothbore fire- could fire a massive initial volley, after which
arms could use a wide range of projectiles - firing was usually by sub-units or (in the early
pebbles, buttons and one recorded instance period) by ranks, rank-fire producing a con-
of a cut-throat razor. Contemporary press tinuous fusillade along the whole frontage of
reports list even more bizarre projectiles: a the unit. The rate of fire depended upon msny
man shot through 'most fatal' with a wooden variables, the proficiency of the individual
ruler,19 and two people wounded, one fatally, being paramount. Firing independently an
by the discharge of a gun 'loaded only with experienced soldier could discharge five shots
powder and a piece of chewed tobacco',2o for a minute, falling to two or three in controlled
example. volley. Even this rate could not be sustained
Musket-drill (or 'Manual Exercise') varied for long, fatigue taking its toll, burnt powder
between armies, but followed the same basic blocking the touch-hole and flint becoming
movements. The long and complicated drill worn. Light rain had little effect providing the
not only turned the soldier into an automaton priming-pan was closed quickly or shielded
but ensured that a trained battalion would from the wet, but heavy rain would render
load and fire like second-nature, despite the musket useless, soaking the cartridge even
whatever carnage was around them. For drill, on the short distance between cartridge-box
a 'fugel-man' could be used, a chosen soldier and muzzle. Hughes (Firepower) estimates
standing some way ahead of the main body, that a battalion of 500 men, formed in two
from whom the others would 'take their time' . ranks at 22 inches per file (a frontage of
The following drill was followed in loading about 150 yards) could fire between 1,000 and
the musket. The musket would be held hori- 1,500 bullets per minute: in effect, six to ten
zontally in the left hand, the soldier reaching shots per yard per minute.
behind him with the right hand to the cart- 'Short-cuts' to increase the rate of fire
ridge-box, slung over the left shoulder and invariably increased the misfire rate as well,
resting on the rear of the right hip. Extracting which in dry weather might be as high as
18
15 per cent. rIsIng to a quarter in wet. Such person who aimed at him. '21
short-cuts included the ramming of the whole In Reflections on the Menaced Invasion,
cartridge down the barrel with sufficient force Hanger passes an opinion on the actual, not
to shake enough powder through the touch- theoretical, performance of the musket.
hole and into the pan, thus removing the Taking a hypothetical case of 1,000 men firing
'prime' stage of the loading-drill; the same sixty rounds at a similar-sized enemy unit, he
except that the butt was banged on the estimated that 300 casualties would be caused,
ground to shake the powder through to the a rate of one hit per 200 shots, not because
pan; the load could be 'running ball' without men firing 'at the word of command' were
the cartridge-paper wadding, so that the ball unable to take aim but because the muskets
would roll out when the muzzle was lowered were either crooked or 'bent in soldering the
(a load often used by sentries); or by sticking loops on'. 22 More significant in actual fact was
the ramrod into the ground, thus eliminating the 'windage', for though the difference in
the frequent drawing and replacing of the diameter of bore and ball facilitated loading
ramrod, a practice not encouraged due to the and thus increased the rate of fire,' it pre-
chance of a rapid change of position which vented any long-range accuracy.
might result in leaving the ramrod behind. British tests in 1841 established the range
The real shortcomings of the smoothbore of the 'Brown Bess' musket at between 100
musket were in range and accuracy, for in and 700 yards (according to elevation), though
aiming at an individual at all but the closest at every elevation there could be between
r~nges it was wildly inaccurate. Before con- 100 and 300 yards variance. At 150 yards a
sidering the mass of contemporary statistics target twice as high and twice as broad as a
which indicate both the theoretical and actual n1an was hit three times out of four; at any
performance of the musket, it must be greater range it was not hit at all. At 250
remembered that in the context of Napoleonic yards ten shots were fired at a target twice
warfare it was not necessary for a musket to as wide again but not one hit was registered.
hit an individual target, tactics demanding Muller, author of Elements of the Science of
that it should simply score a hit anywhere on War gave the following results of trials against
a mass of men many times larger than the a target representing a line of cavalry,
proverbial barn door. Ironically, it was the including a variation between 'well trained
very inaccuracy of the musket which helped men' and 'ordinary soldiers':23
formulate those tactics, but it is uncertain how
hits by
quickly tactics would have changed even if a
Range 'trained' men and'ordinary'
more accurate firearm had been developed
100 yards 53 % 40 %
during the period in question.
Col. George Hanger, an expert marksman 200 " 300;0 180;0
and noted advocate of the light infantry tactic, 300 " 230;0 150;0
made frequent reference to the poor perform- Picard, in La Campagne de 1800 en
ance of the musket. His To All Sportsmen Allemagne,24 indicates the error of a French
(1814) claimed that: musket fired from a rest at 150 metres (164
'A soldier's musket, if not exceedingly ill- yards) to be 75 em. in height and 60 em.
bored (as many are), will strike the figure of laterally, and gives the following for trained
a man at 80 yards; it may even at a soldiers firing at a target 1.75 metres by
hundred; but a soldier must be very unfor- 3 metres:
tunate indeed who shall be wounded by a
Range % of hits
common musket at 150 yards, provided his
75 metres ( 82 yards) 60
antagonist aims at him; and as to firing at a
15° ( 16 4 ) 4°
man at 200 yards with a common musket, you
225 " (246
"
) 25
may as well fire at the moon and have the same " " )
300 (3 28 20
hope of hitting your object. I do maintain " "
and will prove ... that no man was ever killed Prussian tests with the 'New Prussian
at 200 yards, by a common musket, by the Musket' (the old 0.60 Nothardt re-bored to
19
--~

- - - - - - - - - - - _ 0 - - - - - - - ------------ --- ------------------ _.0_-- _


--~ ___..J

Fig. 10. British Muskets. From Top to Bottom: New Short Land Pattern; India Pattern used
in the British service after 1809; New Land Service~· Baker Rifle (not drawn to scale with first
three muskets). Bottom Row: Baker Rifle Cock; Baker Rifle reinforced Cock; Short Land Pattern
with fiat sideplate; India Pattern with convex sideplate.

0.72) indicated that a target six feet by 100 3,675,000 rounds caused some 8,000 casual-
feet was hit by two-thirds to three-quarters ties, one hit per 459 shots - and this does not
of shots fired at 100 paces, half at 200, one- include the 6,800 artillery rounds fired: ' ... at
quarter at 300 and only I per cent. at 600. every battle in the Peninsula, except Barossa,
In combat not even these results were the author remarked on the same undue ex-
achieved. Given the misfire-rate (a British penditure of ammunition in relation to the
test under ideal conditions in 1834 established small extent of damage done ... '.26
a misfire-rate of one in 6t) the contemporary Muller estimated that 50 per cent. of balls
theory that to kill a man needed seven times fired at 100 yards hit the target; considering
his own weight of shot may not be in- misfire-rate, fatigue and the fact that in
accurate. Roquerol, in L'Artillerie au debut combat the target was moving, not stationary
des guerres de la revolution 25 states that only as in a controlled test, perhaps 15 per cent.
0.2 to 0.5 per cent. of bullets were effective. of shots which could have been fired took
Statistics for Vittoria are provided by the head effect. Further, if the target were a densely-
of the field train department, R. Henegan, packed mass, it might be expected that some
in Seven Years Campaigning: in this battle the men would be hit more than once. Hughes,
allied infantry began with some 3,000,000 calculating the casualties of Talavera, esti-
rounds, with a further 1,350,000 distributed mates that 1,250 to 1,300 French casualties
during the action. Allowing for only half the were caused in half an hour by some twenty
replenishment to have been used, these volleys (30,000 shots) from the British, an
20
/
effectiveness of about 4 per cent. of the shots musket, the British Brown Bess is un-
ordered to be fired (3 per cent. if thirty doubtedly the most famous, due partly to its
volleys were fired).27 nickname, either a term of endearment or a
This would seem to be the average casualty- corruption of the German 'Busche' (gun).
rate which might be expected at 200 yards Manufacture of the original Brown Bess - the
under combat conditions, rising to perhaps 'Long Land Service' musket with 46-inch
5 per cent. or beyond at 100 yards or less. barrel - apparently lasted until 1790, despite
Presuming the quality of the musket to be the development in 1768 of the 'Short Land
approximately equal, the decisive factors can Service New Pattern' with 42-inch barrel.
be seen to have been the speed at which the Upon the outbreak of war supplies of both
musket could be discharged and the number were found to be so inadequate that large
of muskets brought to bear at anyone point. numbers of often poor-quality arms were
Thu's the British two-deep line, with every ordered from foreign gunsmiths, sources
musket capable of simultaneous and effective which could not supply the requisite number
discharge, was much superior to the three- and standard. The Board of Ordnance - faced
deep French line and infinitely more so in 1794 with only 110,000 muskets to equip
against the column. 250,000 men - therefore 'persuaded' the East
A further factor affecting the accuracy of India Company to transfer their large arsenal,
musketry was inexperience of the infantry. In intended for Company use in India, to the
British service, line regiments received thirty Government; by the end of 1794 no less than
rounds ball and seventy blank for practice, per 28,920 muskets, 2,680 fusils and carbines,
man per year; light infantry fifty and sixty 1,342 brace of pistols and 300 wall-pieces had
respectively, and riflemen sixty each, the been ceded to the Ordnance. From 1794 to
blank to practise firing by volley, but only 1796 Short Land arms were still produced
light infantry receiving tuition in 'firing ball and foreign weapons still bought, but in 1797
at a mark'. 28 Other nations were even more Ordnance gunsmiths were ordered to produce
parsimonious with practice-ammunition: in only the 'India Pattern'.
1805 Archduke Ferdinand of Austria at- Compared to the Short Land Pattern, the
tempted to train recruits by allowing six live India Pattern was of inferior quality, with
rounds per man, though in Russia from 1810 simplified 'furniture' (fittings) and a 39-inch
Barclay de Tolly stressed the importance of barrel, easier and quicker to produce. Those
firing at a target, designing one in 181 I purchased directly from the East India Com-
painted with horizontal stripes to assist in the pany bore the Company mark - a quartered
elevation or depression of the musket accord- heart bearing the letters VEIC (United East
ing to range. In the heat of battle, inexperi- India Company) and the numeral '4' on the
enced troops might forget their training and lock. The pattern remained unchanged for the
render their muskets useless by firing away duration of its manufacture (1815) except for
the ramrod or loading cartridge after cartridge the introduction of a reinforced cock in 1809.
until the eventual explosion destroyed the Between 1804 and 1815 some 1,603,71 I India
barrel. Another factor was revealed by the Pattern were produced, including 278,932 in
French Surgeon-General Larrey, ordered in 1812 alone, many being supplied to allied
'18 I 3 to investigate almost 3,000 cases of 'self- nations (Prussia received 113,000 and Russia
inflicted' wounds. Though the conscripts in 60,000). After the Peace of Amiens a new
question had hand and forearm injuries, burnt pattern was introduced but saw only limited
skin and charred sleeves, Larrey discovered service: the New Land Service musket,
that some had been caused by charging uphill plainer than the India Pattern and with a
with raised muskets, taking the enemy fire on 42-inch barrel. From 1803-10 a Light In-
the hands, and the remainder by such lack of fantry version with 39-inch barrel and back-
experience that the third-rank men had burnt sight (necessary for aiming at a particular
the men in the two forward ranks or simply target) was issued to light infantry. Another
shot them by mistake! pattern was the 'Extra Service' musket, in
Among the many national patterns of reality a sub-standard weapon produced to
21
use up stocks and barrels previously rejected; Versailles factory began to manufacture two
in 1814 the Tower armouries contained some such patterns, described as 'infantry' and a
16,672 of these much-inferior weapons. shorter version as 'velite'. Between then and
The 'Duke of Richmond's' musket, prob- 1813 some 10,000 were delivered to the
ably the finest mass-produced musket in Grenadiers and Chasseurs a Pied of the
history, was designed by Henry Nock and Guard, but were essentially the same as the
incorporated his patent 'screwless lock', a ordinary infantry musket; as General Gas-
simplified mechanism fastened by plugs with sendi wrote in 1809, 'The firearms of the
all working parts on the interior of the lock- Guard are identical with those of the Line
plate. With 42-inch barrel, the lo-lb musket except that they are more highly finished at
was designed for efficiency alone, one version an extra cost of ten francs.'29
having the ramrod sliding into the butt and A shorter version, the 'Dragoon Musket',
resting on the interior of the butt-plate. was issued not only to dragoons but appa-
Nock was unable to produce them with rently to foot artillery and marines as well,
alacrity, however, and the project was aban- varying slightly in length, and to the volti-
doned in 1798 after only 3,300 had been geurs of some infantry units, its shorter length
produced. suited to skirmishing. A further pattern was
The standard French musket was the specified by Napoleon for the use of the
Model 1777, used with only slight modifica- Grenadiers a Cheval of the Consular Guard,
tions until the 1830s. With a barrel of 113.7 a 'distinguished model, as handsome as
cm. and a weight of about 9i Ibs, its stock possible, the length of a dragoon musket,
was more slender than the British musket. with a bayonet. '30 Finally, there existed 'fusils
Though about equal with the Brown Bess in d'honneur', instituted in 1795 by the minister
accuracy, the coarse-ground French gun- Aubert-Dubayet: finely-made muskets bear-
powder resulted in excessive fouling, requir- ing engraved plaques recording details of the
ing the washing of the barrel about every brave incidents which led to their presenta-
fifty shots; in a prolonged action men might tion to deserving soldiers.
be compelled to urinate down the barrel to The Prussian 1782-pattern musket, like the
clear the fouled powder. Slightly modified in Danish 1791-pattern, used the British system
1800-01, about 2,000,000 of the 'An IX' and of construction, the barrel being secured to
following 'An XIII' patterns were produced the stock by pins or keys rather than the more
(French equipment-patterns were referred to usual continental method of metal barrel-
by the year of first production, the old bands. In 1805 a new Prussian pattern, the
Republican calendar being retained). Its more 'Nothardt-Gewehr', had a slightly-altered
common name, 'Charleville', is taken from butt and furniture, but not until the 'Neu-
one of the chief factories of its production. preussisches Gewehr' of 1809 were barrel-
In addition, some 700,000 captured muskets bands introduced. The Austrian 1798-pattern,
were overhauled and re-issued to French used until 1828, used similar barrel-bands.
troops during the Napoleonic Wars. A further In performance, all patterns were approxi-
variation were the muskets issued to the mately equal, with a few exceptions, of which
Imperial (originally Consular) Guard, a the Russian musket deserves mention. The
special pattern being ordered in 1795 from the issued musket was generally so inferior that
Versailles factory, the 1777 design with the the 60,000 British muskets they procured
1781 overlapping pan on the lockplate, an were distributed as rewards to deserving
'improvement' which made the weapon even soldiers! A contemporary observer, Dr Clarke
more prone to fouling and which was abolish- (who wrote Travels in Various Countries of
ed by Napoleon when First Consul. Later Europe [1810]), reported that the Imperial
'Guard' muskets were of 'An IX' pattern, factory at Tula produced 1,300 muskets a
with special brass fittings and an extra-fine week, but 'the name of musquet is degraded
stock, the butt with a carved cheek-hollow, by such things as they produce; it is wonder-
with an overall length of 138 cm., and 152 cm. ful that any troops can use them: besides
for grenadiers. In 1800 'Master Boutet' of the being clumsy and heavy, they miss fire five
22
=------ -

~
Fig. II. French Musket. An XIII pattern.

times out of six, and are liable to burst when- Often found with the 'Catalan stock', an
ever they are discharged.' (In reality they archaically-shaped butt with square-cut end
were not so bad.) and 'hook' on the underside, it was also
A variation on the standard lock was favoured by the Asiatic tribesmen of the
found in Spain and the Caucasus, where the Russian army. The characteristic feature of
old 'miquelet' type had been retained, prin- regulation Spanish muskets was the straight
cipally for non-regulation weapons. Its hammer, instead of the swan- or ring-neck
hammer was robust, to hold irregularly- patterns favoured by other nations, though
shaped lumps of flint, and was ideal for the latterly British muskets were used in great
rugged service required by the guerrillas. numbers by all allied nations.

Fig. 12. Above: Spanish Miquelet lock musketoon. Below: Spanish musket, 1804.

23
Fig. I3. Firingfrom cover: rifle tacfics demonstrated by the Duke ofCumberland's Sharpshooters. The officer in
the foreground~ Charles Random de Berenger~ a noted rifie-shot~ became infamous from his participation in the
Stock Exchange fraud of 1814. Print by Reinagle after Berenger.

The rifle was German in origin, the 'mili-


THE RIFLE tary' version originally a privately-owned
A 'rifled' barrel has spiral grooving on the weapon used by the huntsmen and game-
interior, which imparts a spin upon the pro- keepers formed into specialist 'Jager' (sharp-
jectile, stabilizing its flight and providing shooter) units. Such hunting rifles were used
greater accuracy. A muzzle-loading rifle was throughout the Napoleonic Wars, but it is the
loaded in the same way as a musket, except British 'Baker' rifle which has justly become
that the tighter fit of the ball needed greater the most famous arm of its type (the first
pressure to force it down the barrel (occa- British 'regulation' rifle was probably the
sionally requiring a mallet to drive it home), pattern commissioned from Durs Egg in
slowing down the rate of fire to perhaps two 1796). Rate of fire being secondary to
shots a minute, even slower when burnt accuracy, riflemen were invariably employed
powder clogged the barrel. When prepared in skirmishing duties where rifles in the
cartridges were not used, loose powder and hands of trained marksmen could perform
ball and a greased patch below the ball were prodigies. The inventor Ezekiel Baker
used, the earlier British rifles including a recorded a test made personally with one of
lidded 'patch box' in the butt; later patterns his guns; firing at a man-sizeq target at 100
incorporated cleaning-tools in the butt-box, and 200 yards range, he discharged thirty-
suggesting an increasing use of prepared cart- four and twenty-four shots respectively; every
ridges which were carried in any case, for one hit the target. Similar accuracy was
situations demanding more rapid fire. recorded in action: George Simmons of the
24
British 95th Regiment claimed to have replaced by a version with curved knuckle-
silenced a French battery at Badajos by a bow. Due to the large number of different
continuous fusillade from 'forty as prime rifles, many patterns of bayonet were in use,
fellows as ever pulled ~ trigger,'31 the 95th including such obscure items as the 'long
being the exponents par excellence of the rifle cutting Bayonet' designed by James Sadler
and its tactics. In aiming, due to the removal for his 'Patent gun' ,32 and the 'Rifle-barrelled
of the original back-sight of the Baker,- the Gun of a new construction' used by the
soldier was trained to aim at the enemy's London and Westminster Light Horse, 'their
cross-belts up to 200 yards and at his head Broad Swords are so contrived as to serve
and shoulders thereafter. occasionally as Bayonets'. 33
The Baker's 30-inch barrel was admirably Unlike the musket, the rifle could be loaded
suited to skirmishing duties, its calibre vary- and fired with ease in the prone position, the
ing from 0.615 to 0.70; Baker also produced firer lying on his breast and supporting the
a rifled cavalry carbine with 20-inch barrel, barrel on a rock or his shako; other posi-
which in 1803 scored nine hits out of twelve tions included sitting down, with elbows
on a target at 200 yards range, against only braced on the knees, or as Capt. Henry
three hits by Henry Nock's rifled carbine; but Beaufroy wrote under his pseudonym of 'A
it had only limited use. Over 30,000 Baker Corporal of Riflemen' in Scloppetaria: ' ... to
rifles were produced between 1800 and 1815, fire laying on the back, the sling must be
equipping not only the British rifle corps sufficiently loosened to let it be passed on the
(60th and 95th Regts), some militia and ball of the right foot, and as the leg is kept
volunteers, but foreign units like the Portu- stiff, so, on the contrary, the butt is pulled
guese ca~adores as well. Only minor alter- towards the breast, the head is raised up, till
ations occurred, such as the change from the front sight is brought into the notch in
swan-neck hammer to ring-neck. Other types the usual way ... the position is not only
of rifle remained in use: in 1807 for example awkward but painful. ... '34
the 8th Btn King's German Legion com-
plained that their rifles were of three different THE FUSIL
calibres! The term 'fusil' can be confusing, describing
Prussia used several varieties of rifle, the in French an ordinary musket - hence
'Alte Corpsbiische' and the 1787-pattern rifle 'fusilier'. In English, however, it described a
both introduced in that year, the former with- light musket, styled after a fowling-piece.
out provision for a bayonet and neither with Originally 'fusee' or 'fuzee' (a name also
a patch-box; a new pattern adopted in 1810 applied to a grenade-fuze), a derivation of the
had both. The Austrian 1807-pattern Jager Italian 'fucile', a flint, it was adopted in the
rifle also resembled the 'Baker'. Some late seventeenth century by regiments raised
German units serving with the French carried for escorting the train of artillery, the close
rifles, but the weapon never found favour in proximity of gunpowder preventing employ-
France, being issued only to selected officers ment of the matchlock musket with its burn-
and N.C.O.s ofvoltigeur companies and a few ing fuse. Troops armed with the fusil were
rifled carbines to Guard cavalry, but all were termed 'fuzileers', but though three British
withdrawn by Napoleon in 1807. Russia used regiments bore this title during the Napo-
no less than eleven patterns of rifle, twelve leonic Wars they carried ordinary muskets.
being issued to the best shots of each Jager The true fusil saw limited use in the
company and sixteen per squadron of cuiras- Napoleonic Wars, favoured for its lightness
siers and dragoons. by some cavalry and light infantry. In 1797
The original rifle-bayonet was a hunting- Britain approved the recruitment of 'Healthy
knife or 'Hirschfanger', of 'socket' variety or lads under 16 years of Age who are likely to
fitting on to the side of the barrel by a clip. grow ... taken as low as Five Feet One Inch';35
A 'sword-bayonet' - a straight-bladed sword the light fusil was found to be an ideal
with stirrup-hilt bearing a bayonet-fitting - weapon until they grew sufficiently to handle
was originally designed for the Baker, soon the ordinary musket.
25
A 8

o
c

-----------------.:.--_--------------~

Fig. 14. Above: Parts of the Bayonet (with locking ring). A. Locking Ring)· B. Socket)·
C. Shoulder)· D. Blade)· E. Zig-Zag in Socket. Below Left. British Socket Bayonet 1800. Below
Right: Two views of the sword bayonet for the Baker Rifle.

THE BAYONET
Combining the offensive firepower of the from 1763. Though the bayonet for Nock's
musket with the defensive qualities of the 'Richmond' musket had this valuable feature,
pike, the bayonet was regarded as indispens- not until 1853 was a locking-ring added to
able by every army, but its actual effectiveness ordinary British bayonets. As late as 1843
should be considered carefully. British troops were resorting to string and
The commonest bayonet consisted of a wire to prevent their bayonets being
triangular-sectioned blade about fifteen wrenched off by the enemy! A few bayonets
inches in length, attached to a cylindrical were attached to the side of the barrel by
socket which fitted the end of the musket- spring-clips, usually German rifle-bayonets
barrel; though a fixed bayonet might reduce and Baker's sword-bayonet. Very few socket-
the rate of fire due to the possibility of the bayonets (none of regulation pattern) were
soldier impaling himself whilst ramming the equipped with handguards.
cartridge, it was a great improvement on To avoid the heavy casualties of a prolonged
the earlier 'plug' bayonet which fitted into the fire-fight, many experts advocated immediate
muzzle, thus preventing fire whilst fixed. shock-action by the bayonet-charge; indeed,
Socket-bayonets were usually held in place by the bayonet-charge was claimed as a proud
a right-angled slot passing over the foresight tradition by many nations. But to charge an
of the musket, very insecure unless a locking- unshaken body of troops with muskets ready
ring was incorporated as on French bayonets to fire, with any hope of success, demanded
26
very fine troops indeed, so that almost all the best possible reason, that one side turns
bayonet-charges actually made were upon an and runs away as soon as the other comes close
enemy with shaken morale or already dis- enough to do mischief'. 37 Thus, the fear of
organized by a raking of musketry, when the the bayonet, rather than the bayonet itself,
mere sight of a yelling mass of men advancing was the deciding factor.
with level bayonets would be sufficient to turn It is also interesting to note the analysis of
them to rout. The few instances when pro- one of the few hand-to-hand fights, between
longed bayonet-fights did occur, such as the French and Austrians, compiled by Surgeon-
French storm of the 'Bagration fleches' at General Larrey; he found only five bayonet-
Borodino, have passed into legend. wounds against 119 by musket-balls. 38 This
General Bugeaud wrote of being on the is perhaps not surprising, given the frequent
receiving-end of a British bayonet-charge in ill-temper of some bayonets; after the Battle
the Peninsula, most effective when counter- of the Pyramids, for example, a favourite
charging a disorganized attacker: the ad- pastime among French troops was to drag
vancing French column would become dead mamelukes out of the Nile with bayonets
disorganized by its headlong dash and easily bent to resemble fish-hooks!
demoralized by the immobile red wall
awaiting them; the French would waver as
REGIMENTAL WEAPONS
the British line shouldered arms and 'con-
centrated volleys swept our ranks; deci- An example of the diversity. of weapons to be
mated, we turned round to recover our found within the same unit is illustrated by
equilibrium; then three deafening cheers a list of those belonging to the French 14th
broke the silence of our opponents; at the Line in 1808-09. It is slightly confusing due
third they were on us, pushing our dis- to the use of the French term 'fusil' and
organized flight ... '.36 This view, that the 'mousqueton' which probably equate with the
bayonet was primarily used to finish an action English terms 'musket' and 'fusil' respec-
already virtually decided by musketry, is sup- tively. 'Fusils de Dragons' signifies short
ported by a Peninsula surgeon: ' ... opposing Dragoon muskets, 'sabres' the officers'
regiments when formed in line and charging version, and 'sabres-briquet' the short, other
with fixed bayonets, never meet and struggle ranks' sword. Excepting the latter, all terms
hand to hand and foot to foot; and this for are translated below: 39

Rank Number Weapons


Officers 134 Nine rifled carbines (for voltigeurs), 38 sabres, 96
'epees' .
Sergeant-Majors 27 Three rifled carbines (voltigeurs), 24 muskets, 27
sabres.
Sergeants 108 Twelve rifled carbines (voltigeurs), 96 muskets, 108
sabres-briquet.
'Fourriers' 27 Three rifled carbines (voltigeurs), 24 muskets, 27
sabres-briquet.
Corporals 216 24 Dragoon muskets (voltigeurs), 192 muskets, 216
sabres-briquet.
Pioneers 13 13 fusils, 13 sabres.
Grenadiers 16 7 167 muskets, 167 sabres-briquet.
Voltigeurs 24 1 241 Dragoon muskets.
Fusiliers 2,3 0 7 12 fusils, 2,295 muskets (the fusils perhaps for extra
musicians appearing on the roll as privates, or for men
detailed to guard the regimental baggage).
Drummers and 'Cornets' 54 54 fusils, 54 sabres-briquet.
27
It was very common to find officially- corps in the Napoleonic Wars.· The R.H.A.
superseded weapons still in use; for example, version with small butt and great weight
at the end of the Empire, the French hussars (7 lb 2 oz) made the use of the shoulder-
were supposedly armed with' An IX' carbines stock essential.
and 'An XIII' pistols; but some of the 1786 The 'wall piece', popular in the eighteenth
carbine and 1763 pistol were also still in use. century, was half-musket and half-artillery,
resembling a giant musket mounted on a
swivel and used in a static role, mounted
upon a fortress-wall or aboard ship. Barrel-
OTHER FIREARMS
length ranged from 4 ft 6 ins to 7 ft, and the
The bell-mouthed 'blunderbuss' (a derivation ball usually weighed from. 6i to the lb.
of the Dutch/German 'thunder-gun'), popu- Though their use decreased towards the end
larly t~ought to fire a mixture of nails and of the eighteenth century some 300 were
scrap-iron, was little-used as an 'issue' ceded to the British Government by the East
weapon. Austria had issued the 'trombone' or India C.ompany in. 1794. Range was about 800
blunderbuss to cuirassiers in 176o, firing a yards. Marshal Saxe proposed a mobile wall-
charge of twelve small balls, and 'Austrian piece in the form of the Amusette, mounted
Blunderbusses' was the description given to on wheels for use in the field, a test in
the hundred 'musketoons' issued to the Dublin in 1761 firing a half-pound ball 800
'flankers' of the British 23rd Light Dragoons yards. Though never widely-adopted, Adye
in 1781. Between 1801 and 1813, seventy- gives statistics for one-poupder 'Amuzettes'
three blunderbusses were supplied by the of five, six and seven-feet length.
Versailles factory to the mamelukes of the
French Imperial Guard, but despite wider use
for 'sea service' the blunderbuss was only
INFANTRY SWORDS
otherwise used by the Spanish guerrillas, with
whom it did use peculiar· ammunition: Marbot The infantry sword acted as a· combined
was hit by a jimped-edged flat lead bullet weapon and symbol of rank for officers,
about the size of a half-crown, calculated to among whom it was common practice for
cause frightful injury. 'battalion' companies to have straight-bladed
A few double- or multi-barrell~d firearms swords, and light infantry curved cavalry-
saw service, Henry Nock producing a com- style sabres. The first British regulation
bInation weapon in 1787 with two 'screwless' sword was the 1786-pattern 'spadroon', an
locks, -a 39-inch smoothbore barrel and a elegant straight-bladed weapon with single-
2o-inch rifled barrel directly above. Britain bar guard giving hardly any protection. It was
never adopted the weapon but Austria had a replaced by the 1796-pattern which included
similar type, eventually withdrawn because two kidney-shaped shell-guards, giving better
of weight and inconvenience. 'Volley guns' protection but still not intended for pro-
were principally a naval weapon, being tracted combat. General Mercer thought that
muskets with a number of barrels, Nock 'Nothing could be more useless or more
producing some 655 seven-barrelled guns ridiculous ... a perfect encumbrance. In the
firing small shot (46! shots to the lb), 40 never foot artillery ... we generally wore dirks
popular due to the danger of starting fires instead... '.41 The curved 'flank' company
with the excessive 'flash'. Double-barrelled sabre appeared (unofficially) in the 1790S, the
pistols were more widely used, both privately- guard often embossed with appropriate
purchased with side-by-side or over-and- grenade or bugle-horn badges. It was made
under barrels, and 'issue' weapons. The official by the 1803 pattern, but remained
British Royal Horse Artillery received eighty unpopular, contemporary writers referring to
in 1793, one barrel rifled and with a 'shifting' it by such disparaging names as 'reaping-
(i.e.. detachable) butt, probably styled on the hook', 'better calculated to shave a lady's-
double-barrelled pistols made for the Norfolk maid than a Frenchman's head' according to
Rangers in 1783 and used by some yeomanry Kincaid! In British service there also existed
28
Fig. IS. French swords. Above: Fusilier company officer. Below: Flank company officer)' waist
belt and sword frog.

Fig. 16. Above: Austrian infantry officers' sword) 1798. Below: Hungarian infantry officers'
sabre) 181 I.

a number of regimental patterns, and the curved foot artillery sabre was described in
basket-hilted broadsword carried by High- 18 1 9: 'very inefficient ... for any purpose. '42
land regiments, sometimes heirlooms of great French infantry officers carried straight-
antiquity. Few British 'other ranks' carried bladed 'epees' for 'centre' companies and
the sword, basically sergeants and musicians, curved sabres for 'elites', often varied in
their weapons being as the short-bladed, pattern with unofficial types carried at the
29
Fig. 17. British swords. Above: Flank company officers' sabre, 1803. Below, left to right:
Hilt of the Flank company sabre; Officers' spadroon, c. 1795; Battalion company officers' sword,
179 6 .
owner's whim (as in every army). French when, in 181 I, a pattern was specified for
N.e.O.s, grenadiers and voltigeurs generally Hungarian regiments, officers were allowed
carried sabres (the issue varied between to choose a plain or decorated version accord-
regiments), the short sword originally the ing to taste. The grenadier sabre carried by
1767-pattern with slightly-curved blade and Austrian other ranks changed little, the 1777,
stirrup-hilt, replaced by the 'An IX' and 'An 1802 and 1809 patterns resembling the
XI' models with slightly more curved blade French; but until 1798 Austrian fusiliers
and curved knucklebow. This pattern was carried a typically-German sabre with
carried by a number of armies in slightly quillons but no guard, similar to the straight-
different forms, Prussia using so many cap- bladed Prussian 'faschinenmesser' carried by
tured French swords that in 1818 the 'New fusiliers. Pioneer and artillery swords were
Prussian sabre' was styled on the pattern. often similar in that they had no knuckle-
Prussian officers carried a straight-bladed bow; for example, the French artillery used
'Degen' sword, Fusilier officers (and many the 1771-pattern 'glaive' with eagle-head
musketeer officers as well) having curved pommel and leaf-shaped blade until about
sabres. The Russian 'other ranks" sword 1812. Pioneer sabres were designed to act as
differed from most by virtue of its straight wood-choppers and often saws as well, with
blade, though there is evidence again that a serrated rear edge.
captured French weapons were also used. Among sword-fittings was the ubiquitous
Austrian infantry officers carried straight- sword-knot, a loop of leather or woven
bladed swords, grenadier and Jager officers material fastened around the guard and
having curved sabres, the pattern fluctuating ending in a tassel or 'acorn'. Though used as
with the preference of the owner, only the decoration its real function was to loop
loosest regulations being implemented. Even around the owner's wrist so that even if the

Fig. 18. French swords and sabres. Top to Bottom: French Drum-Major's sword c. I8IO J•
French Pioneers' sabre (Imperial Guard); French Grenadiers' sabre J 1790J· Light Cavalry sabres.
(Not to constant scale.)

sword were knocked from the hand it would provide a cushion between hilt and the top
not be lost. France used another fitting in the of the scabbard to prevent the sword from
form of a woollen pompom or 'cravat', becoming jammed.
circling the blade where it joined the hilt, to
31
Fig. 19. Above: British infantry Sergeant's spontoon~ c. 1810. Below: French Pike, An IV
Pattern~· detail of head.

PIKES ARCHERY
The pike was the infantry version of the Incredibly, the employment of the longbow
lance, never extensively used in the Napo- was considered seriously as late as 1792 when
leonic Wars, but an easily-produced emer- Lt-Col. Lee of the British 44th urged the
gency weapon; thousands of 8- to lo-foot replacement of the musket. His arguments
pikes were produced by France in 1792-3, were valid: the accuracy of the longbow was
and similarly by Prussia in 1813 for the no worse, the rate of fire four to six times as
Landwehr, being replaced as soon as possible great, the bow caused no smoke to obscure
by firearms. It was generally only carried by the target, a 'hail' of arrows shattered enemy
'second-line' troops - the Russian 'opol- morale more than a volley of musketry, any
chenie' (militia) and, in the guise of kind of hit put a man hors de combat at least
sharpened vine-poles, by the Portuguese until the arrow was extracted, and archery
'ordenan~a'. Otherwise, pole-arms were tackle was much cheaper. But the longbow
marks of rank, sergeants of British regiments .was rendered ineffective by strong wind, an
carrying the halberd (pole-axe) at least until archer needed more space around him than
1792, when gradually replaced by the 'spon- a musketeer, and the prime objection: a con-
toon' or half-pike, a nine-foot spear with a script could be trained to use a musket in a
cross-bar below the head to prevent over- matter of hours, whereas a proficient long-
penetration. Useful for dressing ranks and bowman needed years of training and
'marking', it deprived a battalion of a quantity development of physique. Nevertheless, if
of trained men who would otherwise have Henry V's 'yew hedge' had been transported
carried muskets and was even dClngerous to into the Napoleonic age it would certainly
the owner, Sergt Cooper noting a sergeant have out-shot any troops it met.
who ran himself through· by falling upon the The actual use of archery in Napoleonic
blunt butt-end! Many armies equipped their warfare was restricted to the Asiatic light
colour-parties with pikes and halberds of cavalry employed by Russia, bashkirs and
various kinds, more for' esprit de corps' than kalmuks. Dressed like refugees from the Dark
utility. Ages in mail-coats and armed with 'compo-

32
Fig. 20A. French infantry advance in column. Print after Raffet.

Fig. 20B. The appearance oftroops in line is shown graphically in this view ofQuatre Bras. Print by T. Sutherland
after William Heath.

33
site' bows, they were regarded with derision were employed at all, claiming that they only
by the French, who nicknamed them 'les served to consume supplies needed by more
Amours', a 'reference to their cupid-like useful troops. Marbot claimed he knew of
weapon. Their only tactic was a wild charge, only one man killed by 'this ridiculous
'helter-skelter like a flock of sheep', with a weapon', though he himself was wounded
volley of arrows at the end; contemporary by a four-foot bashkir arrow.
observers like Marbot wondered why they

3. Quoted in Rogers, Napoleon's Army, p. 62. 22. Hanger, Reflections on the Menaced Invasion, pp. 195-6.
4. See Oman, Wellington's Army, pp. 189-91. 23. and 24. Quoted in Hughes, Firepower, p. 27.
5. Wellington to Croker, June 1808, quoted in Oman, 25. Quoted in Hughes, Firepower, pp. 26-7.
Wellington's Army, p. 90. . 26. Henegan, I, pp. 344-6; quoted in Glover, Peninsular
6. Quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, p. 5 I. Preparation, p. 140.
7. Quoted ibid., p. 55. 27. Hughes, Firepower, p. 133.
8. Quoted in Oman, Wellington's Army, p. 77. 28. Circular Order, 25 December 1797, quoted in Glover,
9. Quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, p. 167. Peninsular Preparation, p. 141.
10. Quoted in Duffy, Borodino, p. 37. 29. and 30. Quoted in Lachouque and Brown, p. 513.
1 I. Quoted in Duffy, Austerlitz, p. 36. 3 I. Simmons, p. 227.
12. James, Regimental Companion, II, p. 200. 32. Rowlandson, Loyal Volunteers, Plate 46.
13. Oman, Wellington's Army, pp. 74-5. 33. Ibid., Plate 6.
14. Cooper, p. 13. 34. Beaufroy, p. 189.
15. Ibid., pp. 16-17. 35. Quoted in Glover, Peninsula Preparation, p. 226.
16. Manual for Vol. Corps of Inf., pp. 30-35. 36. Bugeaud, quoted in Chandler, p. 348.
17. Hanger, Reflections on the Menaced Invasion, pp. 159-60. 37. Guthrie, quoted in Glover, Peninsular Preparation,
18. Wellington to Earl Bathurst, 24 June 1813 (quoted P·142 .
'Despatches' X, p. 458). 38. Quoted in Chandler, p. 344.
19. Edinburgh Advertiser, May 1802. 39. 'Gazette des Uniformes', No. 20, p. 15.
20. London Chronicle, June 1795. 40. James, Regimental Companion, II, p. 183.
21. Quoted in Rogers, Weapons of the British Soldier, p. 41. Macdonald, p. 67.
94· 42. Quoted in Robson, pp. 154-5.

34
CAVALRY
WEAPONS & TACTICS

THE CAVALRY
Despite a bewildering variety of names, all whole light cavalry spirit by declaring: 'A
cavalry was divided into three basic cate- Hussar who isn't dead at thirty is a black-
gories: heavy, medium and light. The former guard' (he survived to 34). Less prestigious
was specifically designed to execute the was the ordinary light horse: Chasseurs a
charge, a potentially-decisive blow, hence the Cheval (French), Chevau-Legers and Ger-
name: heavy horses and large men to impart man Chevaulegers, Mounted lagers (German
maximum impetus. Heavy cavalry included and Russian) and Light Dragoons (British).
cuirassiers, 'Garde du Corps' (German and Those armed with lances, often wearing
Russian), British Household Cavalry, uniform styled on traditional Polish lines,
dragoon guards and dragoons; Grenadiers a were named either Lanciers (French) or
Cheval, Gendarmerie d'Elite and Carabiniers Uhlans (German). Other terms included
(French); Prussian dragoons; and during the Chevau-Leger-Lanciers and Eclaireurs a
Revolutionary Wars regiments simply titled Cheval (scout-lancers), both French.
'Horse'. Organization was based upon the cavalry
Dragoons were medium cavalry (one regiment, comprising several squadrons,
weight lighter than the 'heavies '), despite each sub-divided into troops or companies;
their original function as mounted infantry one company might be designated 'elite'
who rode into action and dismounted to (authorized in France in 1801, as the 1st
fight. Though France employed dismounted Company of the 1st Squadron), differing
dragoons, their function during the greater from the remainder Oilly in matters of dress
part of the Napoleonic Wars was as bona fide and sometimes morale. Within the regiment
cavalry. some men might be armed with accurate
Mounted on faster horses and lighter- firearms and designated 'flankers' (skir-
equipped, light cavalry was used for reconnais- mishers), or the front rank might be armed
sance, protection of an army, and pursuit at with lances (both adopted by the Russian
the end of a battle, though naturally was hussars, for example).
equally adept at all other forms of mounted In 1791 the establishment of a French
warfare. The consequent prestige of the arm regiment included a headquarters consisting
was usually reflected in glamorous uniforms, of the colonel, two It-colonels, a quarter-
swaggering bravado and hard-drinking, master-paymaster, surgeon-major, chaplain,
epitomized in hussar corps, light cavalry two 'adjutants' (R.S.M.s), trumpet-major
copied from Hungarian irregulars, whose and five 'craftsmen' (saddler, armourer,
costume was perpetuated by the universal fur tailor, cobbler and breeches-maker). Light
cap and pelisse. The archetype hussar, the and carabinier regiments comprised four
French Comte de Lasalle, epitomized the squadrons (others three), each of two com-
35
panies, a company consIstIng of a captain, being termed 'Chevau-Leger-Lanciers'.
lieutenant, two sub-lieutenants, a 'marechal- Other nations had similar cavalry estab-
des-Iogis-chef' (sergeant-major), two 'mare- lishments. For example, a British dragoon
chaux-des-Iogis' (sergeants), a 'brigadier- regiment of 1815 comprised three squadrons,
fourrier' (quartermaster-corporal), four each of two troops, each troop containing a
'brigadiers' (corporals), a trumpeter, and captain, two lieutenants, troop-sergeant-
fifty mounted and four dismounted troopers. major, three sergeants, four corporals,
Organization fluctuated, though company trumpeter, farrier, and from sixty to sixty-
strength rarely exceeded a hundred; similarly, five privates. Regimental strength in action
changes of terminology occurred in commis- was around 400, but often less. Further
sioned ranks, 'chef de brigade' and 'chef tactical sub-divisions included half-squadron
d'escadron' replacing colonel and It-colonel in (i.e. troop), division (half-troop), and sub-
1793, 'colonel' and a new second-in- division (quarter-troop).
command rank, 'major', being restored by Austrian regiments each comprised eight
Napoleon. Briefly the term 'demi-brigade' squadrons of varying complement, giving in
replaced 'regiment' during the Revolutionary 1805 a nominal total of over 1,400 for
Wars, each demi-brigade divided into four cuirassiers and dragoons and over 1,700 for
squadrons of two companies each, each of I 16 chevaulegers, hussars and lancers. In 1803,
men; but in practice a whole demi-brigade like France, Russia 'lightened' her cavalry by
rarely averaged above 200 or 300 men. reducing the cuirassiers to six regiments and
Shortages of horses led to the reduction increasing dragoons to twenty-two. Both
of the French heavy arm by 1803 to fourteen types had five-squadron regiments, two com-
regiments, and in 1805 twenty-four dragoon panies per squadron and over 1,000 men per
regiments were given a mixed establishment regiment; hussar regiments comprised ten
of three mounted and two dismounted squad- squadrons each, about 1,900 men per regi-
rons each, the latter formed into six-company ment. By 1812, there were five Lifeguard
battalions, two of which formed a dismounted regiments, eight of cuirassiers, thirty-six
regiment, and three regiments a division. The dragoon and eleven hussar regiments, plus
system was naturally unpopular and saw only cossacks. After the Treaty of Paris, Prussian
limited service. cavalry regiments comprised four squadrons,
By 1806, when French cuirassier regiments each of two companies of two platoons
received a fourth squadron, regimental staff (Ziigen), each squadron numbering 125 men.
consisted of colonel, major, two 'chefs On campaign it was common to field only
d'escadron', two 'adjutants-major', pay- two or three squadrons, with two or more
master-quartermaster, surgeon-major, 'aide- regiments combining to form provisional
major', two 'sous-aides-major', two units like the 'Combined Hussars' of the
'adjutants', a corporal-trumpeter and six Grande Armee in 1812. Independent
craftsmen (as above, plus spur-maker); and ('Normal') squadrons formed from selected
each company comprised a captain, lieutenant, personnel ultimately became the Guard
2nd-lieutenant, sergeant-major, four ser- Dragoon, Uhlan and Hussar regiments;
geants, 'fourrier', eight corporals, eighty-two volunteer units of 'National cavalry' and
troopers and a trumpeter. Landwehr had varied establishments, a
French hussar regiments remained virtually regiment usually comprising five squadrons.
unchanged in character, but the lancer was an For proficient manoeuvre, training was
innovation; first adopted by the Polish paramount. For a simple movement like 'The
Chevau-Legers of the Imperial Guard, the Line will retire and form Two Columns' no
lance was used more extensively as two other less than eighteen verbal commands were
Guard regiments and ultimately nine line listed in the British manual of 1808. 43
units (the two lancer regiments of the Manoeuvre varied with nationality, from
Vistula Legion, six dragoon regiments and the three-file column to single- or double-rank
30th Chasseurs a Cheval) were equipped in line, the charge executed at a gallop whenever
this role, the line units (converted in 181 I) practicable, slowly built up from a walk.
Many tacticians considered a third rank of similarly, Wellington wrote:
negligible value, restricting the attack to two 'I considered our cavalry so inferior to the
ranks as Mack instructed the Austrian cavalry. French for want of order, that although I
An Austrian manual of 1805 notes: considered one of our squadrons a match for
'The regiment attacks in two waves. The two French, yet I did not care to see four
second wave follows the first at the distance British opposed to four French, and still more
of twelve paces. Each wave has two rows, so as the numbers increased, and order (of
which are separated from one another by the course) became more necessary. They could
length of a horse's pace. The horses ride one gallop, but could not preserve their order.'47
behind the other for cover. The leaders of the In other words, the larger the formation, the
squadrons ride half a length in front of the more discipline (as opposed to swordsman-
squadron, the leaders of the platoons and ship) counted.
subalterns' ride in the ranks. '44 The British lack of control often resulted
The front rank comprised experienced in a charge getting out of hand, careering
troopers; the space between riders was such onward usually to disaster. At Campo Mayor,
that their knees were not quite touching. for example, an audacious charge captured the
(There are accounts of cavalry being pressed French siege-train, thundered on for several
together so closely that the horses could not miles, met fresh French troops, were chased
move, and conversely of the files of opposing back and lost the captured guns. Few British
units opening to allow the protagonists to pass generals (excepting Paget) had any idea of
through one another, the men hacking at the how a charge should be executed. At Maguilla
enemy as they rode past.) (I I June 1812) Slade's successful charge
Czar Paul's 'Code ofField Cavalry Service' dashed on and was routed, about which
(1796) decreed the two-rank formation, 'for Wellington wrote:
experience shows that the third rank is useless 'It is occasioned entirely by the trick our
- it impedes nearly all movements, and when officers of cavalry have acquired of galloping
anybody falls it proves dangerous to rider and at every thing, and their galloping back as fast
horse. '45 These regulations were replaced in as they gallop on the enemy. They never
1812 by the 'Preliminary Decree Concerning consider their situation, and never think on
the ·Order of the Cavalry Service' which manoeuvring before an enemy - so little that
included attacks by column of platoons, 'the one would think they cannot manoeuvre,
best formation for any kind of movement,'46 excepting on Wimbledon Common; and when
during which detachments of sixteen men they use their arm as it ought to be used,
swept out in open order to protect the flanks. viz., offensively, they never keep nor provide
Prussian cavalry regulations of 1812 revolved for a reserve.
around the basic three-man group, the 'Rotte'. 'All cavalry should charge in two lines, of
Attacks were made in column or echelon, which one should be in reserve; if obliged to
'squadron column' being the regiment's four charge in one line, part of the line, at le.ast
squadrons behind each other, or 'half- one-third, should be ordered beforehand to
squadron column' in which each squadron pull up, and form in second line, as soon as
had two 'Ziigen' in line, the regiment having the charge should be given, and the enemy
a double-Ziigen frontage and eight-Ziigen has been broken and has retired. '48
depth. Mounted skirmishers always engaged After Waterloo he endeavoured to intro-
the enemy with carbines or pistols about 150 duce controlled manoeuvre by his 'Instruc-
to 200 yards in front of the main body. tions to Officers Commanding Brigades of
Whilst swordsmanship was important, the Cavalry in the Army of Occupation,' which
control of larger formations was the decisive listed the following pointers towards a
factor in cavalry tactics. Napoleon con- successful operation:
sidered that although two mamelukes could 'I. A strong reserve should be kept to exploit
outfight three Frenchmen, 300 French could success or cover withdrawal.
defeat an equal number of mamelukes, and 2. A cavalry force should be deployed in
1,000 French overthrow 1,500 mamelukes; three lines, the first two deployed and the
37
A

[Q] Adjutant • Captain


[j] Adjutant Major (RSM) ~ Lieutenant
§
~
Brigadier (Corporal)
~ Brigadier-fourrier (Q.M. Corporal) Marechal-des-Iogis with standard
1ZJ Marechal-des-logis (Sergt) ~ Sous-lieutenant (2nd Lieut.)
~ Marechal-des-logis chef (Sgt-Mjr) m Trumpeter
E

~ Officer ~ Quartermaster • Commanding Officer


CZl Sergeant II] Squadron Officer D Represents line of troops
8 Corporal

Fig. 21. Cavalry Formations. A. A squadron of French light cavalry in line of battle; B. A
squadron of French Light cavalry in 'Colonne serree'; C. A squadron of French Light cavalry
in 'Colonne par divisions' of company frontage; D. A squadron of French heavy cavalry in
'Colonne serree', preceded by the regimental trumpeters; E. A squadron of French heavy cavalry
in column of fours; F. A British cavalry regiment in line in close order.

reserve in column but formed so as to be Napoleon's cavalry tactics relied upon the
easily moved into line. smashing blow of a 'heavy' charge, executed
3· When acting against cavalry the space with audacity and discipline. ' ... it is impos-
between lines should be between 400 and sible to fight anything but a defensive war',
500 yards, sufficient for effective support he wrote, 'unless one has practically achieved
but allowing the front line to retire with- parity with the enemy cavalry.'so 'Cavalry
out disturbing the cohesion of the needs audacity and practice; above all it must
remainder. not be dominated by the spirit of conservatism
4· Against infantry the second line should or avarice.'sl To this end, heavy and medium
be 200 yards behind the first, allowing cavalry were used in large bodies for shock-
the second line to charge the infantry action (his 'reserve' corps of heavy cavalry
before they had time to recover from the formed a central striking-force), supported
charge of the first line. whenever possible by horse artillery and
5· When the first line charged, the supports infantry. The actual charge (similar in most
should follow at a walk to evade involve- armies) was executed as follows: the cavalry
ment in the melee; 'For order in the would trot for one-third of the distance to the
supports must be rigidly kept - they are enemy; then canter; then gallop when 150
useless if they have got into confusion. '49 yards from the target, and only in the last
39
Ft"g.22. French cut"rasst"ers t"n actt"on t"n Russt"a, 1812. Prt"nt after Albrecht Adam.

fifty yards break into the charge 'a l'outrance' attaches to an hussar officer who retreats, than
when the horses were given their heads; to one who gets embroiled with the enemy in
discipline was enforced throughout so that the unfavourable circumstances',53 as a Russian
horses would not become exhausted before order read. 'Outpost duty' demanded great
the moment of impact and so that an immedi- vigilance, as disaster could overtake the
ate rally could be made to resist counter- unwary (such as Ney's surprise at Foz
attack. Massive mounted attacks relied d' Arounce, 181 I, and Gerard's at Arroyo dos
heavily upon adequate support (the failure of Molinos). Despite lack of official training
the charges at Waterloo was a result of ('any idea ... of outpost duty was considered
insufficient co-ordination of support), but the absurd'),54 many British units became more
successes of Napoleon's cavalry - Eylau adept than the French at reconnaissance; for
the supreme example - proved the validity of example, the 1st Hussars of the King's
his comment: 'Without cavalry, battles are German Legion kept a forty-mile line against
without result.'52 four times their number of French from
Light cavalry were often distributed to March to May 181 I, without letting a French
make full use of their specialist role (in 1812, patrol through, without losing a vedette, or
for example, each of Napoleon's heavy divi- transmitting a single piece of incorrect
sions had a light regiment, usually Chevau- information.
Leger-Lanciers, attached), and were often Light cavalry was paramount at the end
instructed not to seek combat: 'less disgrace of a battle, covering a retreat or pursuing the


Fig. 23. Cavalry in combat at t%:terloo: Private Samuel Godley ·of the British 2nd Life Guards -
known as 'the Marquis of Granby' because of his bald head - defends himself successfully against a
French cuirassier. Print published by Thomas Kelly~ 1816.

enemy. Spectacular results could follow the simple cossacks rode at the enemy, but all in
pursuit of a disordered foe; Napoleon wrote: vain. The columns rode on, one behind the
'After Jena, the light cavalry capitalized the other, drove us off with shots from their
victory all on its own', 55 not only driving the muskets and laughed at our art of cavalry
Prussian army to the Baltic but capturing fighting ... [they] ploughed straight through
fortresses as well, Lasalle (with typical hussar our cossacks, like a battleship among fishing
bravado) with 500 men receiving the surren- boats ... '.56
der of the 6,000 garrison of Stettin! But the cossacks eventually harried the
Long-range raids were rare, though the Grande Armee out of existence.
cossacks were expert at this type of 'hit-and- Casualties resulting from a cavalry charge
run' warfare; in fact their loose organization against infantry could fluctuate surprisingly;
was unsuitable for conventional combat, for though Colborne's brigade was all but
as Denis Davidov described an attack of annihilated at Albuera, the French 4th Line,
hussars and cossacks on formed troops: similarly ridden-over at Austerlitz, escaped
'Colonels, officers, subalterns and many with only eighteen dead.

41
CAVALRY SWORDS
Cavalry sabres were classified in two distinct they were supremely proficient), even the
types, depending upon the manner in which light cavalry's curved sabres being capable of
they were employed. Those designed for the thrusting. The British chopper-like sabres
cut - the swinging slash with the edge of the compared badly, as 'An Officer of Dragoons'
blade - were usually curved with a sharpened wrote about the Peninsular War in the United
edge, or straight and wide-bladed with blunt Service Journal (1831):
point. Those designed for the thrust - in 'The sword of the British heavy dragoon
which the sabre stabbed forwards with the is a lumbering, clumsy, ill-contrived machine.
straight arm, like an extended finger - were It is too heavy, too short, too broad, too much
narrow-bladed with sharpened point and like the sort of weapon which we have seen
often blunt edge. Some sabres combined the Grimaldi cut off the heads of a line of
characteristics of both types. urchins on the stage. The ... light dragoon
The best employment of a sabre remained sabre ... we can answer for its utility in
a vexed question throughout the period. making billets for the fire ... There can be
Marshal Saxe believed the sabre '. . . should no doubt that thrusting is the proper use to
be three square ... and carefully blunted on make of the sword; it is a brutal
the edges, that the soldier may be effectually operation ... ' 59
prevented cutting with it in action, which Training was.. essential to produce a good
method of using the sword never does cavalryman. Not only was a good seat vital,
execution',57 but the cut remained the pre- but the sword had to become an extension of
ferred stroke of many, the thrust not being the arm for the cavalryman had virtually to
regarded as feasible against a mounted oppo- learn to fence on horseback, to protect his
nent in the British Rules and Regulations for breast, back, bridle-arm and thigh, to execute
the Sword Exercise of Cavalry (1796): a blow against cavalry on his right or left,
'The thrust has only one mode of execution infantry standing, kneeling or even lying
... a greater degree of caution is required in down, and often with a cumbersome, ill-
its application against cavalry ... for if the balanced sabre. Even the simple cut varied
point is parried, the adversary's blade gets with circumstance, the British 1796 manual
within your guard, which is not to be re- emphasizing that against cavalry, all move-
covered in time ... for which reason the ment should come from the wrist and
point should seldom or never be given in the shoulder, a bent elbow exposing the forearm
attack, but principally confined to the pursuit, to the enemy's blade; whereas against infantry
when it can be applied with effect and without a bent elbow was necessary to obtain sufficient
risk. The case is different in acting against sweep for the blow. In the charge it was
infantry, as the persons against whom you usual to 'point' the sabre, often with the-guard
direct the point are so much below your own uppermost for maximum protection, this
level, that the weight of your sword is not so movement with a curved blade resulting in
felt; consequently it is managed with greater the tip pointing downwards and the cutting-
facility than with an. extended arm carried edge uppermost.
above the level of the shoulder ... against The weight of metal and its distribution
infantry, the point may be used with as much was important in sabre-design, a cutting
effect as the edge and with the same degree weapon needing more weight on the blade
of security.'58 to assist the downward slash, and the thrust-
French heavy and medium cavalry used ing sabre requiring a heavy hilt to facilitate
sabres suitable only for the thrust (at which the raising of the point. The channels

Fig. 24. Above: The Cut with the curved cavalry sabre. A British Light Dragoon from The
Sword Exercise of the Cavalry, 1796. Below: The Thrust with the straight cavalry sword. A
French Dragoon 'Giving Point'.
42
43
Fig. 25. Left: A French Carabinier) showing the cuirass. Engraving by M. Haider after Gericault. Right:
French cuirassier officer. Print by Martinet.

running down a blade (erroneously called heavy version an ill-balanced monstrosity,


'blood channels') were a method of reducing both of very inferior steel. When compared
weight without reducing strength, the deepest to the sabres and proficiency of their
channels being found on weapons designed Austrian allies in Flanders in 1793, they were
solely for the thrust. Guards varied from the a disgrace. John Gaspard Le Marchant
single knuckle-bow or quillon type, providing attempted to remedy the situation by copy-
little protection, to the basket-hilt version, ing everything possible from the Austrian
sometimes almost enclosing the entire hand, cavalry, renowned as swordsmen and for
and counter-balancing too greatly the weight high-quality weapons. His reforms began
of the blade. But in the hands of a proficient with the issue of the 1796 Rules and Regula-
trooper, the sabre, whether blunt or sharp, tions and continued with sabre-design, Le
could inflict horrific injuries, amputations Marchant finding the existing patterns so ill-
and decapitations being very common. 'It is balanced that many wounds to British soldiers
a brutal operation... '. and their horses were inflicted by their own
Britain began the Revolutionary Wars with weapons!
the 1788 sabre, the light version not curved Ensuring an improved quality by enforcing
enough to execute a decent cut and the stricter controls, Le Marchant copied the
44
Fig. 26. Cavalry combat between British dragoons and French cuirassiers at waterloo. Print by R. Havell after-
/. M. Wright.

Austrian 1775-pattern heavy cavalry sabre for French sabres, despite a number of minor
the British 1796 pattern, with a broad, alterations in pattern, retained the same basic
straight blade and pierced 'disc' hilt. Though design: thrusting-swords with long, narrow
an improvement, it was still a cumbersome blades and multi-barred hilts, and light
weapon, having a blunt point (some were cavalry sabres designed for the cut but with a
sharpened regimentally) and prompting Capt. sharpened point capable of thrusting, initially
Bragge of the 3rd Dragoons to note in with single-bar guard but later adopting the
April 1812 the results of an engagement at better protection of multi-bar. Some, particu-
Bienvenida: larly those of carabiniers, had shell-guards
'. .. scarcely one Frenchman died of his bearing plaques embossed with regimental
wounds although dreadfully chopped, where- devices, in this case the bursting grenade. As
as 12 English Dragoons were killed on the with French firearms, sabre-patterns were
spot and others dangerously wounded by named after the year in the Revolutionary
thrusts. If our men had used their swords so, calendar in which they were authorized, not
three times the number of French would have the year of actual issue; for example, the
been killed. '60 'An IX' (1800-01) heavy cavalry sabre was
The 1796 light cavalry sabre was better, not issued until 18°3-05, apparently; whilst
having a wide, curved blade but a single-bar the 'An IX' and 'An XI' light cavalry patterns
hilt which gave scant protection; but it was were not issued until about 1807, old patterns
so good for slashing that Prussia copied it continuing in use even after a newer pattern
exactly for their 181 I-pattern sabre. had been distributed to some units. Two
45
)

Fig. 27. British swords. Top to Bottom: Heavy cavalry troopers' broadsword and scabbard,
1796 pattern; detail of hilt; light cavalry sabre, 1796 pattern.

further patterns - the 'An XIII' for metal scabbard (leather, or leather covering
dragoons and light cavalry - were issued a wooden core) in theory keeping the 'edge'
even later. on the blade longer than a metal scabbard.
The 'Pallasche' was a German design of In practice it was a negligible point, British
sabre with a straight, broad and heavy 'cutting' sabres all having metal scabbards
cutting-blade, the term usually associated also with apparently little ill-effect on their already
with the huge guard, half-enclosing the hand, dubious efficacy, whilst French thrusting-
often encountered in German and Russian sabres, also with metal scabbards, had blunted
service, sometimes bearing elaborately- blades to begin with. Leather scabbards,
embossed designs or cut-out segments. The however, were light and more manageable,
large guard was rarely seen outside Germanic with no danger of the sword becoming rusted
armies, though British Household Cavalry in the scabbard as it could in a metal one. The
officers latterly carried such a sabre, and the two common methods of suspension were by a
French 'An IV' carabinier pattern was not stud on the scabbard fitting into a 'frog' on
dissimilar. The single-bar guard was common the waist- or shoulder-belt, or the more
in Germany for all types of light cavalry common scabbard-rings· attached to two
sabre, though a refinement found on some slings suspended from the belt.
Austrian weapons was a second bar fitting The campaigns in Egypt prompted the
over the first, hinged to swing out and lock adoption of the oriental or 'mameluke' sabre,
into position to provide extra protection. a sharply-curved weapon with guardless hilt.
Both all-metal and half-metal, half-leather Highly-fashionable, particularly amongst
scabbards were used by all nations, the non- light cavalry officers, the pattern was carried
,\"---~'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ) ..

Fig. 28. Top to Bottom: Austrian heavy cavalry broadsword, 1803,0 Austrian light cavalry
sabre with folding hilt ,0 detail of hilt,0 Baden dragoon officers' sabre, 1800,0 Saxon cuirassier officers'
sabre, 1800.

unofficially, becoming so popular that Euro- cases this process was aided by the adoption
pean copies of oriental weapons were pro- of large numbers of captured weapons, in
duced; they were also favoured by musicians particular large quantities of French weapons
and particularly by drum-majors. Other in use by both Prussian and Russian forces
'native' weapons included the Caucasian in 1812-14. Russia copied the French cuiras-
knife/sabre used by Russia's Asiatic irregular sier sabre in 1806 (for dragoons) and 1809 (for
cavalry, the 'kindjal' being a double-edged, cuirassiers), replacing the previous German-
slightly-curved and guardless short sword; style weapons; curved sabres introduced in
longer-bladed versions were used though the 1809 also followed French lines, except the
regulation cossack 'shashqa' was not issued pommel which curved sharply at the top in
until 1834. The mamelukes of the French an opposite direction to the blade; and so
Imperial Guard carried not only Turkish many 'An XI' light cavalry. sabres were
scimitars but even a Turkish dagger in brass captured by .Russia in 1812 that the pattern
sheath. was copied for the 1826 sabre.
Many nations copied the sabre-designs of
others, examples being cited above. In some
47
Fig. 29. French cavalry swords. Left to Right: Carabinier troopers' sabre; cavalry sword-belt~
sabretache, slings and sabre of An XI Pattern; Hussar officers' sabre; Mameluke scimitar.

-8
-
THE CARBINE
The carbine was a short-barrelled cavalry from 1797. The Brown-Bess style cavalry
firearm, not to be confused with the longer- musket was reported in March 1796 to be
barrelled cavalry musket or the 'musketoon', 'very inconvenient, useless and cumbersome',
the latter an imprecise term used by different the report recommending its replacement by
nations to imply different weapons, usually a 26-inch barrel carbine until which time 'the
describing a longer-barrelled carbine with present Dragoon Firelock should be cut down
greater range. A characteristic of the carbine to ... 26 ins so as to be reduced to a
was a belt-fitting, allowing the gun to be Carbine; a Swivel Bar added to it ... will give
suspended on a spring-clip from a shoulder- an additional convenience in the carriage and
belt. to be carried But [sic] downwards.'61 A
Despite its short range, the carbine enabled further recommendation, carried into effect
cavalry to fight as skirmishers, both on foot for a few years, was a standardization of
and from horseback, and was thus principally bores which, as the French realized, greatly
a light cavalry weapon (some heavy units simplified ammunition-supply. Though all
never received carbines). A well-disciplined new wea'pons were produced in musket-bore
regiment could even fire a volley from horse- for a time, the old system returned, meaning
back; Parquin records the French 20th that the cavalryman had to carry two lots of
Chasseurs a Cheval at Eylau, meeting a ammunition, for pistol and carbine. The
Russian charge with a volley of carbine-fire complexity of different bores is exemplified
at six paces range, knocking over the Russian by the following table from James' Regi-
first line before charging the remainder with mental Companion: 62
the sabre.
The most common British carbine was the Drams of No. of
'Paget', General Henry Paget being credited powder per balls per
with its design. It was characterized by its cartridge lb weight
inaccurate, small 16-inch barrel, a lock incor- Musket 6 14-!
porating a waterproof raised pan and bolt-lock Carbine,
(a 'safety-catch', apparently produced as musket bore 5-! 14-!
early as 1806), and a ramrod mounted upon Carbine pistol,
a 'stirrup' or swivel, attaching it permanently musket bore 3-! 14-!
to the stock to prevent accidental loss when Carbine 4 20
loading on horseback. A further modification, Carbine pistol 3 20
used by the 16th Light Dragoons at least, Common pistol 3 34
was a folding butt, making it even more
portable. Other patterns, also named after Other weapons styled 'carbines' were actually
generals, were the Elliott and Harcourt car- short muskets used by artillery and infantry
bines, the former approved in 1773 but N.C.O.s.
produced throughout the Napoleonic Wars; French light cavalry, train and gendarmes
its 28-inch barrel had a ramrod with bulging were issued with carbines, but not until 1812
end which was secured by fitting into a notch did the heavy cavalry receive them, though
on the stock. The Harcourt apparently was some captured Austrian weapons were
issued only to the 16th Light Dragoons, 500 ordered to be distributed in 1805. The 'issue'
being supplied by Henry Nock in 1794; its pattern was the 1786 musketoon (musket-
pattern is uncertain but Nock's 'screwless bore), and after 1801 the 'An IX' pattern,
lock' was fitted to some ordinary carbines including a bayonet worn from a frog on the

Fig. ]0. Left: Top to Bottom: British Paget cavalry carbine~' British Elliott pattern carbine;
French Dragoon musket~ An IX-XIII Pattern; French cavalry carbine An IX-XIII Pattern~
showing reverse side.
49
Fig. 31. Top to Bottom: French 1777 Pattern cavalry pistol British Light Dragoon pistol
J• J•

French An XIII Pattern cavalry pistol British New Land Pattern pistol.
J•

waist-belt. Other nations issued carbines, but Due to the infrequency of its use, con-
not all as liberally as the French and British; temporary comparisons of carbines are few,
in the Russian hussars, for example, only though the superiority of the French type
sixteen men per squadron, the 'flankers', were (and the manner in which it was handled)
so equipped after the withdrawal of the was obvious. For example, 'An Officer of
general issue in 1812. Dragoons' writing in 1831 respecting the
50
Peninsular War reported that ' ... our light ling' pistol with (after 1812) swivel ramrod
dragoon carbine is so decidedly bad in all and raised pan, and in 1814 a 'Squirrel'
respects, that we have only patience to say, pistol, perhaps another name for the 'Dump-
the sooner it is got rid of the better. '63 ling'. Unofficial attempts were made to adapt
'Vanguard', writing in the same publication, carbine-ammunition to the pistol, so that only
describes the duties of light troops in skir- one type of ammunition need be carried, by
mishing in the Peninsula: shaking half the powder out of a carbine-
'... a man with common observation could cartridge to use it for the pistol; if a soldier
not shut his eyes to the glaring fact, that the in the heat of battle forgot to reduce the
firearms of the French chasseur, and his charge of powder the recoil would blow the
capability of acting on foot in cases of emer- pistol out of his hand.
gency, gave him vast advantages over our French pistols had the standard bore (17. I
light dragoons at the out-posts. '64 mm.). The 1777 pistol, characterized by a
In fact, Stapleton Cotton in 18 I 3 reported small amount of woodwork and a steel ramrod
that he had ordered the British Household set to one side of the barrel, was used until
Cavalry to cease to carry carbines (except six the issue of the 'An IX', which had ?
per troop), 'as these troops can never be called stock extending almost to the muzzle; the
upon to skirmish, and the horses have already later 'An XIII' again reverted to the fore-
a sufficient load to carry. '65 shortened stock.
Cavalry pistols were commonly carried in
THE PISTOL holsters attached to the saddle, but when
Despite the manufacture of vast quantities of carried by artillery or engineers (as they were
pistols (2°3,137 pairs by French makers until in a number of armies) were suspended in
1814, for example), so that almost every holsters from the waist- or shoulder-belt.
cavalryman had one or two, they were hardly They were carried in this manner by most
- ever used. 'An Officer of Dragoons' recorded infantry officers. For cavalry regiments not
the opinion of Marshal Saxe: 'Pistols ... are armed with carbines, or with carbines carried
only a superfluous addition of weight and in a saddle-boot, the pistol could be hung on
incumbrance' [sic] and added his own the spring-clip of the carbine-belt; a number,
comment: 'We never saw a pistol made use usually 'Sea Service' pistols, had a belt-clip
of except to shoot a glandered horse. '66 The attached, a rectangular bar which slipped over
pistol's range was so limited that its discharge the waist-belt, obviating the need for a
was pointless 'till you feel your antagonist's holster. Small pistols could even be carried
ribs with the muzzle,'67 at which range it was in the pockets of a greatcoat.
easier to use the sword. Huge numbers of privately-purchased
Nevertheless, Britain issued a bewildering pistols were used by officers, ranging from de
variety of pistols in pistol- and carbine-bore, luxe versions of regulation patterns to ornate
barrel-lengths varying from the 12-inch duellers; some were produced with detachable
'Heavy Dragoon Pistol' to the 9-inch 'Light shoulder-stocks to turn them into short
Dragoon', as well as a continuous supply from carbines. Even such finely-made weapons,
the East India Company. The 1796-pattern however, had little effect on the battlefield
cavalry pistol had a ramrod carried in the except at the closest range.
holster, but this development was not popular
and the 'old pattern' was being ordered again THE LANCE
in 1801. Variations included the 1796-pattern Traditionally a Polish weapon, the lance was
fitted with Nock's 'screwless lock', bolt-locks employed by most armies during the Napo-
like the Paget carbine, and the 'raised pan' leonic Wars, Britain being a notable excep-
which had channels on either side to divert tion. The lance, however, was issued only
rain-water. The common 'Land Pattern' sparsely; even France only formed appreciable
pistol had a swivel ramrod like the Paget numbers of lancer units afte~ 181 I - 12.
carbine to its 9-inch barrel; another pattern The reason for this lay in the characteristics
was the 9-inch barrelled carbine-bore 'Dump- of the weapon, for whatever its advantages the
51
lancer was at a distinct disadvantage in a melee
once the initial 'shock' had passed; the fact
that a lancer was almost defenceless once the
point had been turned was a major factor
influencing Britain against its adoption. In
addition, specialist training was required to
produce a proficient lancer; when the French
3rd Hussars were issued experimentally with
lances but without training in 1800-01 they
were recorded as not being armed but simply
carrying a pole! For skirmishing, scouting and
pursuit, however, the lance was lethal, and
even in a defensive role, with a regiment
formed in close order with lances levelled, an
impenetrable 'hedge' could be formed at least
until the opposition had hacked off sufficient
lance-heads to force a way through.
A lance can be 'aimed' at a target with
greater accuracy than a sword, so not only
could a lancer strike an enemy horseman
before coming within sabre-range, against
unformed infantry he was an executioner.
Colborne's Brigade at Albuera was caught in
the flank by Polish lancers; one battalion, the
2/31st, was farthest from the point of impact
.Ii I and was able to form square. The others
.' i: suffered percentage losses of 85.3 per cent.
(1/3rd), 75.9 per cent. (2/48th) and 61.6 per
cent. (2/66th). A further use of the lance was
demonstrated at Katzbach (1813), when mud
prevented the French cavalry from exceeding
a walk and heavy rain made the Prussian
infantry unable to fire; a square was thus
able to hold off the French with a hedge of
bayonets until some lancers arrived, their
superior 'reach' breaking the square immedi-
ately. Prime exponents of the lance were the
cossacks, of whom General Wilson wrote that
the lance
,... is the constant exercise of his youth and
boyhood, so that he wields it, although from
14 to 18 feet in length, with the same
address and freedom that the best swordsman
in Europe would use his weapon. '68

Fig. 32. Left: Front and side views of French


cavalry lance J 1812 Pattern (Not to scale.)
52
Fig. .13. Austrian cuirassiers with campaign equipment, c. 1813. Print after JA. Klein.

43· An Elucidation . .. for the Formations and Movements of 54· Tomkinson, quoted in Oman, {%/ellington's Army, p. 110.
Cavalry, p. 76. 55· Quoted in Chandler, p. 355.
44· Quoted in Wagner, p. 62. 56. Wagner, p. 62, quoting Tarle, E., Napoleonovo tazeni
45· Quoted in Duffy, Austerlitz, p. 34. na Rus f8I2, p. 313.
46. Quoted in Duffy, Borodino, p. 44. 57· Quoted in United Service Journal, 1831, II, p. 6r.
47· Wellington to Lord John Russell, 21 July 1826, quoted 58. Quoted in Rogers, Mounted Troops of the British Army,
Oman, Wellington's Army, p. 104. p. 153·
4 8 . Wellington to Lt-Gen. Hill, 18 June 1812; 'Despatches' 59· 1831, II, p. 6r.
IX, p. 240. 60. Bragge, p. 49.
49· Quoted Oman, Wellington's Army, pp. I 11-12. 61. Quoted in Blackmore, British Military Firearms, pp.
50. Chandler, p. 35 I, quoting Napoleon, Correspondence 107-08.
(Paris, 1858-70), Vol. XXXI, p. 426. 62. James, II, p. 183.
51. Ibid., p. 35 I, quoting Napoleon, Correspondence, XXXI, 63· United Service Journal, 1831, II, p. 61.
p·4 2 8. 64· Ibid., p. 206.
52. Ibid., p. 355, quoting Napoleon, Correspondence, XXXI, 65· Quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, p. 50.
P·4 2 7· 66. and 67. United Service Journal, 1831, II, p. 6r.
53· Quoted in Duffy, Austerlitz, p. 35. 68. Wilson, 'Brief Remarks'; see also Royal Military
Chronicle, 1812, p. 207.

53
Fig. 34. Three illustrations showing British artillery c. 1802J on the march and being manhandled by infantrymenJ
by bricole. Print after W H. Pyne.
54
ARTILLERY & ENGINEERS

ARTILLERY
All cannon were classified into types or was expressed by calibre, (e.g. 'Io-inch')
'natures' by the weight of projectile they rather than by weight of shot. Without
fired, an approximate measure at best: thus, exception all guns were smoothbore and
a 12-pounder (pdr) gun fired a 12-lb shot, muzzle-loading, cast either in 'brass' (bronze),
etc., though due to the difference in weight an alloy giving great strength in relation to
between a British and the heavier French weight, or iron; brass and iron guns were
'pound', a French 8-pdr approximated to a used in about equal proportions though the
British 9-pdr. Strictly, 'guns' were cannon heaviest pieces were invariably iron.
with a length of twelve calibres or more (i.e. There were considerable variations in
twelve bore-diameters in length); shorter- calibre between the guns of similar types of
barrelled cannon, between five and ten different nations; the following table is
calibres long, were termed 'howitzers' and extracted from Adye's Bombardier and Pocket
intended for high-angle fire; their 'nature' Gunner (1802):69

Calibre (ins)
'Nature' British French Spanish Dutch Russian Portuguese
36-pdr 6·9 6.84 6.86 6.8
32-pdr 6.4 1 6·4
24-pdr 5. 82 3 6.03 6.03 5.9 2 6.0 5·93
18-pdr 5.29 2 5.5 2 5·45 5·45 5·4
12-pdr 4. 62 3 4.7 8 4·8 4.7 6 4.7 6 4·7
9-pdr 4. 2 4. 2 4·3
8-pdr 4. 18 4. 13 4. 17
6-pdr 3. 668 3.7 8 3.7 8 3·75

(In addition, Britain had 42-, 4-, 3- and variation, necessitating the weight of each gun
I-pdrs, France 16- and 4-pdrs, Russia 30- to be stamped upon the barrel, for example
pdrs and Portugal 48-pdrs.) '17-3- 1', representing 17 cwt, 3 qtrs, I lb.
Barrel-weight varied even between guns of Interminable tables of length and weight are
the same design and 'nature' (hence the terms of little interest except to the purist, but the
'light 3-pdr', 'long (or heavy) 3-pdr', etc.), random examples below show the wide
and even between guns of identical specifica- variety of cannon in use: 70
tion there might be as much as two cwt
55
Length Weight
Type (Ft ins) (Cwt Qtrs Lbs)
British brass heavy 24-pdr 9 6 53 0 9
light 5 0 16 3 13
" " 24-pdr "
iron 10 0 52 0 0
" 9 0 47 2 0
" " "
12-pdr 9 0 32 0 0
" " 7 6 29 I 0
"
French " " 8 7 31 2 0
" " 6 10 28 0 0
" "
British brass " 6-pdr
heavy 8 0 19 I 6
new medium 6-pdr 6 0 8 3 27
" " reduced medium 6-pdr 5 6 8 0 22
" " light 6-pdr 4 6 5 0 18
" " 6-pdr
iron 8 0 22 0 0
" 6 0 16 2 0
" " "
Although the term 'field artillery' was not There were two types of 'carriage', i.e. the
generally used during the Napoleonic Wars wooden, wheeled framework which support-
it is a convenient way of differentiating ed the barrel. Most common was the 'double
between artillery used on the battlefield from bracket' carriage, a rectangular wooden
the heavier pieces used for siege or garrison framework with the two longer sides of the
duty. rectangle constituting the 'trail'. At the front
Having explained the basic terminology, was an axle supporting the two wheels (the
the actual construction and use of a cannon term 'wheel' described a spoked wheel of
should be considered. more than twenty inches diameter; smaller
A cannon was composed of two parts: barrel wheels were described as 'trucks'). On top of
and carriage. The barrel was a tube of cast the trail were semi-circular cut-outs to receive
iron or 'brass' (alloys of copper and tin with the trunnions, secured by shaped metal
zinc sometimes added, sometimes termed 'capsquares' which fitted over the top of the
'Gun Metal') with the centre bored out, few trunnions. Some carriages had two pairs of
guns after 1750 being cast with the bore .trunnion cut-outs, one to support the barrel
already hollow. At the sealed end of the barrel in firing position and one further back for the
was a knob or 'cascabel', which in later years travelling position. The rear end of the
was attached to various elevating mechanisms. carriage included a hole to take the limber-
Around the barrel were 'reinforces' or raised attachment or 'pintle', and bars, rings or holes
metal rings for additional strength, the barrel for the 'handspikes', levers used to traverse
swelling outwards towards the open end or the cannon. The whole carriage was banded
'muzzle'. At either side of the barrel was a with iron reinforcing as the discharge was
projecting cylindrical lug or 'trunnion', upon enough to shake a carriage to pieces if not
which the barrel rested on the carriage; the robustly made.
trunnions were usually sited on the lower half The second type of field carriage was the
of the barrel though some nations (including 'block trail', the trail of which consisted of a
France and the U.S.A.) moved them up level single baulk of timber, widening as it
with the bore. At the closed end or 'breech' approached the capsquares to move forward
of the barrel was a small passage connecting the gun's centre of gravity and thus make
the outside with the bore, the 'vent' or 'touch- traversing easier. One of the first block trails
hole' through which the igniting spark passed. was designed by Sir William Congreve in
Above and slightly to the rear of the 1792 and adopted by the British horse artillery
trunnions were lifting-handles or 'dolphins', in the following year, but the bracket-trail
so called because of their original design in was predominant throughout Europe.
the form of a leaping dolphin. Though naval carriages were often left in
2 3 4 5

12

8 9 W 13 14 16 18 19 20 21 22

..- / I'... /"


~
23=IDl
24

V '"

c: \
~v \
0
1/
- "-
-
25
26

27

Fig. ]5. Parts of the cannon barrel. I. Cascabel; 2. First Reinforce; ]. Second Reinforce;
4. Chase; 5· Muzzle; 6. Calibre; 7. Cascabel Neck; 8. Button,· 9. Elevating Screw Mount;
10. Breech; II. Base ring and Ogee; 12. Charging Cylinder; I]. First Reinforce Astragal and
Fillets; 14. First Reinforce Ring and Ogee; 15. Chase Girdle; 16. Trunnions; 17. Dolphins;
18. Second Reinforce and Ogee; 19. Chase Astragal and Fillets; 20. Muzzle Astragal and Fillets;
21. Swell of Muzzle; 22. Muzzle Moulding; 2]. Fillet; 24. Astragal; 25. Ring; 26. Ogee;
27. Howitzer Barrel.
Fig. ]6. Parts of a British Field Carriage. A. Bracket; B. Trail-plate Eye; C. Trunnion-hole;
D. Capsquares and Eye-bolts; E. Lockplate; F. Traversing Stay; G. Limbering-up Handle;
H. Traversing Loop; J. Elevating Screw; K. Match or Shot-case.

K C

E
I

F G H B

57
E

A B c D

Fig. 37. Barrels of the Gribeauval system, showing the comparative lengths of the dlfferent
calibres. A. 12-Pounder; B. 8-Pounder,· C. 4-Pounder; D. 6-Inch Howitzer; E. 8-Inch Howitzer
with 'Dolphin' handles.

'natural' wood, land carriages were usually there is little conclusive evidence; other
painted for protection against the weather. carriages were apparently just treated with
Many nations adopted a standard, individual turpentine and left to 'weather' naturally.
colour-scheme: Britain used the 'common Elevation and depression of the barrel was
colour', a greenish-grey with metal fittings achieved by two methods. The earlier method
painted black with a little red paint added; used a 'quoin', a triangular-shaped wooden
France used an olive-green shade achieved by block inserted between barrel and the base of
mixing yellow ochre and black in a ratio of the carriage, but later the more efficient
80: I; Prussia favoured a light greyish-blue screw-elevation was adopted, in which an iron
whilst the Holy Roman Empire had com- rod projected underneath the cascabel, raising
binations of yellow and black or black and red. or lowering the barrel according to the move-
Some Italian states used red carriages with ment of the screw of the elevating rod. The
yellow mounts, or even painted the wheels a two methods were sometimes combined, as in
contrasting colour to the body of the carriage. the Russian 1805 System which had a screw
Spanish carriages may have been blue, though passed horizontally through a moveable
B
A

Fig. 38. Artillery projectiles. A. Quilted Grape shot; B. Case, or Canister,. C. Spherical
Case with (Sabot' attached to the base, and with a wooden fuze in the top,. D. Chain-shot,.
E. Bar shot.

quoin. 12-pdrs, leading to the re-introduction of the


The primary projectile of the cannon was 9-pdr as the standard British weapon.
the 'roundshot', a simple iron ball, represent- A roundshot when fired fell steadily from
ing 7cr-80 per cent. of all ammunition held the height of the muzzle until it struck earth,
in the field. It was used to strike down the 'first graze' (about 400 yards for a 9-pdr
columns of men and demolish obstacles; in at ° deg. elevation), when it bounced or
the former role it was a horrifying weapon, 'ricocheted' until it hit the ground again (in
a single ball being capable of killing as many the above case about 800 yards from the
as forty men at 600 or 800 yards, though this muzzle) at the 'second graze', after which 80
was the extreme; Muller estimated that a shot per cent. bounced again (100 yards in the case
fired at a line of infantry could be expected above). As the entire trajectory was below
to kill three men. Though muzzle-velocities 'man height' anything in its path would be
of all cannon were similar, the heavier the shot struck down. As velocity and accuracy
the greater its remaining velocity (i.e. velocity decreased with bounces, it was ideal to have
at the target): at 1,000 yards an 18-pdr 840 the 'first graze' on the target itself, which
fps, 9-pdr 690 fps, 6-pdr 450 fps. Therefore, could be achieved by elevating the barrel:
the heavier the shot, the greater its effect, t deg. advanced the point of 'first graze'
Muller calculating that a 6-lb shot was 50 per between 100 and 200 yards, a 9-pdr at I deg.
cent. more effective than a 3-lb, and a 12-lb elevation having a 'first graze' at about 700
twice as effective. Hence the out-gunning of yards and the second at 1,000. Even so the
the British in the Peninsula when matching trajectory was so low as to preclude any firing
their 6-pdrs against the French 8- and over the heads of friendly troops, and in any
59
case the target had to be 'sighted' along the had a thinner casing, was filled with musket-
barrel. Ricochet was considerably reduced, of balls plus a bursting-charge of gunpowder
course, in soft ground, and roundshot was and timed fuze. With careful timing, achieved
much more destructive if it could be fired by adjusting the fuze, it could be calculated
along a line of men ('at enfilade') rather than to explode above the target, showering
through it. musket-balls upon the enemy. Fired from
Roundshot could be transformed into 'hot both howitzers and fieldpieces, its wide
shot' by heating, normally used only for spread (6-pdr shrapnel had a spread of 250
setting fire to ships or buildings, the shot yards at point-blank range) compensated for
heated in a furnace or portable oven, carried the gun's lack of accuracy. It represented
to the cannon in pincers or a spoon, and between 13 per cent. and IS per cent. of all
rolled down the cannon-barrel, igniting the British fieldpiece ammunition and up to 50
powder-charge. Imbedded in a wooden beam, per cent. of howitzer ammunition. The neces-
hot-shot would smoulder for hours; in an sity for accurate fuzing was paramount, and
experiment in 1771 a 24-lb hot-shot was laid Wellington after Busaco commented on this
in the open air for four minutes, plunged into point:
cold _water three times, then thrown amongst 'I have seen our artillery produce great
some wood, which burst into flame in seven effect on the enemy, and I have been induced
minutes; doused with water for two minutes, to attribute this effect to the use of Shrapnel's
it was alight again in fifty. The expansion of shells. But my opinion in favour of these shells
hot-shot (about 1/16th of the diameter) was has been much shaken lately.
not sufficient to affect its fit in the barrel. 'I st. I have reason to believe that their
Despite differences in calibre, 'captured' effect is confined to wounds of a very trifling
shot could usually be fired back at its original description ... I saw General Simon, who was
owner by using a different calibre of cannon wounded by the balls from Shrapnel's shells
from that for which ifwas originally intended. . .. but they were picked out of his face as
For example, a French 36-lb shot with a duck shot ...
diameter of 6.64 ins could be 'returned' by '2nd. From the difficulty of judging of
the nearest British gun capable of firing it, the direct distances, and in knowing the shell has
42-pdr which normally fired a 6.68 in. dia- burst in the air in the proper place, I suspect
meter shot. that an original error in throwing the shells
'Common shell' was a hollow iron sphere is seldom corrected; and that if the shell is
filled with gunpowder which exploded at a not effective the first shot the continuance of
predetermined moment by means of an adjust- the fire of these shells seldom becomes more
able fuze lit by the flash of ignition. Shells effectual ... no doubt, however, that if the
were fired from howitzers and mortars, field- shell should be accurately thrown, and burst
pieces not having the high-angle trajectory as it is intended, it must wound a great
required. A shell landing before the fuze had number of men, but probably none very
burnt down would fizz and splutter on the materially. '71
ground, allowing troops to extinguish it 'Case shot' or 'canister' was the universal
before it burst, highlighting the necessity for close-range projectile, consisting of a tin case
considerable skill in trimming the fuze to a fitting the bore of the cannon, containing a
precise length. A form of 'air-burst' could be number of loose bullets. The tin ruptured as
achieved by reducing the propellant charge in it left the muzzle, turning the cannon into a
order that the shell exploded after the 'first giant shotgun. Limited to a maximum effec-
graze'. With the high trajectory, shells could tive range of 600 yards, it was the final
be fired over the heads of friendly troops or weapon for repelling a charge, the 'spread'
even features of terrain. recorded by Muller as a circle of 32 feet
'Spherical case' was the British secret diameter per 100 yards of range. It could even
weapon, invented in 1784 by Henry Shrapnel be fired 'double-shotted', i.e. two tins of case
and eventually bearing his name. First used or one of case and a roundshot. Most artillery
in 18°4, it resembled an ordinary shell but used 'light' and 'heavy' case, the light for a
60
British 6-pdr contaInIng eighty-five 1-!-oz long, inserted in bars or slots in the trail,
bullets and the heavy forty-one 3-!-oz, for this 'traversing' establishing the direction of
example. Heavy case had the longer range (up shot. Secondly, it had to be aligned in the
to 600 yards) and was used offensively by the vertical plane to compensate for the target
French, whereas light case had an extreme being above or below the gun, and finally an
range of about 250 yards, the British tending additional 'tangent' elevation to compensate
to limit the firing of all case to about 350 for the drop of shot in flight. The intro-
yards. duction of the elevating-screw greatly speeded
'Grapeshot' is mentioned by many contem- the process (eliminating the levering of the
porary writers, usually being confused with barrel with handspikes to inset the quoin),
canister. Genuine 'grape' consisted of a as did the 'tangent sight' fixed to the barrel's
number of iron balls packed around an iron base-ring, an adjustable, notched cross-bar
column attached to a circular base, the whole used in conjunction with the fore-sight on the
covered with painted canvas tied with string, muzzle. Both perfected by about 1780, the
giving the appearance of quilting. Extensively screw-elevator and tangent-sight made the
used at sea it saw little service on land, as it once-haphazard 'naked eye' gun-laying into
was not as efficient against personnel as a science, though the skill of the gunner was
canister, and could damage the bore of brass still vital in assessing the 'fall of shot' and
guns. consequent adjustments to achieve the correct
Other projectiles were used exclusively for range.
sea service: chain-shot (two roundshot con- Before each shot the barrel was swabbed
nected by a chain), bar-shot (two roundshot out with a wet 'sponge', a rammer with fleece
or half-roundshot connected by a bar), knife- or similar material nailed on the head. This
blade, expanding and 'dismantling' shot (two- movement forced a current of air out of the
feet-long iron bars attached to a ring), all vent which might ignite any smouldering
designed to expand and slice away sails and powder, injuring or killing the spongeman; so
rigging like a flail. while the sponging was in progress the third
By this period 'prepared cartridges' of crewman (after the aimer and spongeman),
powder inside a fabric or paper bag had the 'ventsman', placed his thumb in a leather
totally replaced the ladling of loose powder thumbstall over the vent. The fourth crew-
into the barrel for the propellant charge. man, the 'loader', standing in front and left
'Fixed ammunition' was that in which the of the muzzle (the spongeman was on the
projectile had a wooden shoe or 'sabot' right), then inserted the propellant charge and
affixed, seated on the powder of the cartridge. projectile into the bore. The spongeman then
Fabric cartridge were preferable to paper in reversed his sponge and forced the charge
that they left fewer unburnt fragments in the and shot down the barrel with the wooden
barrel after firing, such fragments having to rammer-head (the rammer was usually
be removed by a 'worm' or 'wad-hook', a double-headed and about 14 inches longer
rammer-pole with a 'screw' end. than the bore). The ventsman then punctured
Having covered the construction and pro- the cartridge by inserting a 'pricker' down the
jectiles of fieldpieces, the actual firing-drill vent, then plugging the vent with a quill or
should now be described before range, effec- paper tube of mealed powder (after about
tiveness and the various national patterns are 1800) or (before 1800) 'quick-match', cotton
considered. strands soaked in saltpetre and spirits of wine,
Firing-drill varied with nationality, the size the tube or match providing immediate con-
of gun and the number of crewmen available, tact between the cartridge and the spark
but the following details the basic drill used which ignited it. Priming could also be
by all nations. Having unlimbered the cannon, achieved by pouring loose, finely-ground
it first had to be aimed, this being the powder into the vent. In British service the
responsibility of the senior gunner. The ventsman stood to the right of the breech, and
manoeuvring was achieved by means of in the French to the left. The fifth member
'handspikes', levers usually six to seven feet of the team was the 'firer', who ignited the
61
B

Fig. 39. Gun Drill. A. The position of the crew before loading. The man by the right wheel carries
the combined rammer and sponge. the man by the left wheel has a roundshot in his left hand.
Behind him can be seen the gun captain with the portfire in his right hand; B. The moment of
ramming J• C. The movements of the gun captain using the portfire J• D. The gun crew at the moment
of firing.

62
c
charge (when the other men had stood clear) 0;0 of rounds
by means of a 'linstock' - a pike holding a Gun Range (yards) taking effect
piece of burning slow match - or, more 3-pdr 45° 100
commonly, with a 'portfire', a holder for a 75° 34
piece of slow-match which would burn for up " 1,100 20
to half an hour, lighted from a linstock stuck "
6-pdr 520 100
in the ground at the rear of the battery. 95° 31
Adye details a portfire mixture consisting of " 1,200 17
60 parts saltpetre, 40 parts sulphur and 20
"
12-pdr 600 100
parts mealed powder, made into a I6-!-inch 95° 26
length which burnt for 12 to 15 minutes. 72 " 1,300 15
The firer always stood opposite the ventsman. "
Other methods of ignition, principally by The 'Madras Records' trials show similar
flintlock, were not used on land. results, except that the 100 per cent. figure
Additional 'packing' for the charge and was never attained. Casualties would natur-
projectile was provided by the 'wad', made ally be heavier in such cases where the target
from hay or straw ('junk wads') or turf, the was in more dense formation, such as column.
British Ordnance issuing 'punches for sod The equivalent French guns were probably
wads'. A 'grommet wad', used to prevent the slightly more accurate due to the less
ball from rolling out of a depressed barrel, 'windage', projectiles more nearly fitting the
was a rope circle just fitting the bore. bore, as suggested by the fact that French
In addition to the five principal crewmen, batteries tended to engage at longer range
at least one other was usually included to than British, though at smaller targets the
bring ammunition from the limber or caisson, chance of a hit was much reduced, gunners
and one or two more to assist in re- usually refusing to waste ammunition by
positioning the gun after every shot. No gun- firing at long range; thus the maximum effec-
crew could suffer more than one or two tive range of all fieldpieces can be said to
casualties without loss of efficiency; crews have been between 100 and 1,000 yards,
varied in size according to the type of gun, irrespective of the size of the gun. Variations
and extra 'muscle' was often provided by in the quantity of propellant, however,
requisitioned infantrymen. For example, could radically affect the range: Adye quotes
standard French guncrews consisted of: a 12-pdr at 2 deg. elevation sending a ball
Non- 293 yards to 'first graze' with an 8-oz charge,
Specialist specialist 350 yards with 12-0Z, and 707 yards with
Type crew crew 24 ozs of powder. 74
I2-pdr 8 7 Muller records the effect on a target 100
8-pdr, 6-in. howitzer 8 5 feet wide by eight feet high representing
4-pdr 5 3 cavalry, and 100 by six feet representing
Many contemporary records exist of the infantry, of British 6-pdr canister: 41 per cent.
effectiveness of artillery; not all are com- of the bullets were effective at 400 yards and
patible and many 'variables' must be con- 23 per cent. at 600. From these figures
sidered. The difference between 'maximum' Hughes calculates that from a 6-pdr the
and 'effective' range was often great, the following might be expected to take effect:
French 12-pdr for example having a 'maxi-
mum' range of 1,800 metres but an 'effective' Range Hits per round
of 900 metres. For roundshot, Muller noted 200 yards 55 bullets, light case
the following test against a six-feet high 400 yards 36 bullets, light case
screen representing a line of men: 73 600 yards 6 bullets, heavy case
Fig. 40. Right: A Trajectory of a roundshot from a 9-Pounder fieldpiece at 0° elevation)·
B. At /0 elevation)· C. At 2° elevation)· D. Problems in firing spherical case shot)· E. DIfferent
types of artillery fire. (After Hughes.)
FEET
A
15
10

a
I
100 I
200
I
300
I
400
I
500
I
600
I
700
I
800
I
900
I
1000
I

YAROS

20 B
15

a
!
100 I
~oo
I
300
I
400
I
500
I
600
I
700
I
800I
900
I
1000
I

30 c
25
20
15

a 200 500 600

/
100 300 400 700 800
- - - - . l - -_ _---l--I_
900 1000
I I I I I I I -L---l-.-

Fuze correct
Trajectory incorrect

Trajectory correct
Fuze too short

~ -

~.
____
/.
c .....
C)
-
Trajectory correct
Fuze correct
\
/
*
,.-.
/
(.)
~:::"" ""
\ ..:.:....
..........
.............
..::~:~:~:~:~:::::: ..
D

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66
so that a battery of 6-pdrs, firing over 500 (It should be noted that Indian artillery
bullets at 200 yards range, could expect some carried more spherical case than did British,
300 hits. 75 who would have fired more roundshot; other
Few trial-records exist for 'spherical case', nations would have fired roundshot instead
save a test in 1812 in which between 2 per of spherical case.)
cent. and 17 per cent. of bullets fired hit the Casualties per shot also varied. Muller
target-screens at 700 and 1,500 yards. The (optimistically) calculated that a 6-pdr
'Madras Records' suggest that about 10 per attacked by infantry would kill thirty men and
cent. of bullets were effective, though the wound ninety in the time taken to cover the
number of bullets contained in each shell was final 400 yards. But on average, well-sited
varied: a 6-pdr shell held between 27 and 85, and well-handled artillery could expect to
a 9-pdr between 41 and 127, and a 12-pdr inflict between one and I ! casualties per shot.
between 63 and 170. 76 In the above case of a battery of six 6-pdrs
There seems to have been an unofficial firing canister, of the 300 hits caused prob-
'table' of ranges at which various types of shot ably no more than 50 per cent. would be
were used: effective due to the probability of more than
British: light case from 0-250 yards; heavy one bullet striking each victim. In practice,
case 250-500; roundshot (guns) or there were so many 'variables' that the above
common shell (howitzers) 350-600; 'test' data can hardly be regarded as evidence
roundshot and spherical case over for what happened in action. So variable were
600. the circumstances that actual casualty figures
Other nations: light case 0-250 yards; heavy range from the reported loss of Lannes' troops
case 250-500; roundshot at Austerlitz - 400 casualties in three
(guns) or common shell minutes from forty guns - to four squares
(howitzers) over 500. at Smolensk, under fire from twelve guns for
three hours, losing only 119 casualties.
Taking into account 'variables' such as rate
Even the noise of a cannon had tactical
of fire, visibility, etc., the 1848 Madras
value, one criticism of the French 4-pdr
Artillery manual 77 seems to indicate accu-
being that its report was insufficient to
rately the number of shots each gun could
demoralize, whereas the loud bang of the
fire upon an advancing enemy:
8-pdr and particularly of the 12-pdr did!
At advancing cavalry (first half-mile trot, Ammunition was stored in the gun-chest
third quarter-mile canter, fourth quarter ('coffret') or axle-box of the cannon (if such
gallop ): existed), the limber, and in the attached
ammunition-waggons ('caissons'). For French
Range from gun (yards) Rounds fired per gun
ordnance the standard supply was:
1,5 0 0-6 50 7 spherical case
650-35 0 2 roundshot
Rounds
350- 0 2 canister
Rounds per caisson
Against infantry: Gun in 'coffret' Ball Canister
12-pdr 9 48 20
Range from gun (yards) Rounds fired per gun
8-pdr 15 62 20
1,5°0-6 50 19 spherical case
4-pdr 18 100 50
650-35 0 7 roundshot
6-inch howitzer 4
8 canister 49 I I
350-100
100- 0 2 canister
Fig. 41. Left: Artillery 'side-arms'. A. Drag Chain; B. English Drag Rope J· C. French Crooked
Sponge for the light 4-PounderJ· D. Searcher with Reliever J· E. Searcher J· F. Powder Ladle J·
G. English Sponge and Rammer J· H. Worm or Wad Hook J· J. English Crooked Handspike J·
K. English straight hand spike J· L. English Water Bucket J· M. French Water Bucket J· N. Portfire
Case; o. Tompion J· P. Forked-Linstock J· Q. Thumb or Finger StalI J· R. Priming Wires J· S. Portfire
Cutter J· T. Vent Cover J· U. Bricole J· V. Prolonge J· W. Portfires. (After Peterson.)
67
·
@

68
Fig. 42. Left: British Artillery pieces. Top to Bottom: Galloper Gun, 1795; Plan of a Light
6-Pounder on a double bracketfield carriage, 1793,0 Plan and elevation of a block trailfield carriage
for 6- and 9-Pounders,o 9-Pounder gun on afield carriage,o heavy 51-Inch Howitzer, 1786-1819.

Fig. 43. Above: British Artillery Limbers. Top: 9-Pounder Limber. Below: Limber with
attached ammunition waggon.

For British Artillery, Adye lists: 78


Gun In limber-box In waggons
I2-pdr medium 6 roundshot, 2 canister 120 roundshot, 24 canister
6-pdr heavy 36 roundshot, 14 canister 84 roundshot, 16 canister
51-inch howitzer 22 shells, 4 canister, 2 carcasses 122 shells, 20 canister, 2 carcasses

Of the two types of waggon, the 'common cartridges; the older pattern ofwaggon carried
pattern' contained 72 I2-pdr rounds, 120 66 I2-pdr, 120 heavy 6-pdr, 138 light 6-pdr
heavy 6-pdr rounds, 156 light 6-pdr rounds, or 60 5-!-inch howitzer rounds. 79 British horse
288 3-pdr rounds, 72 5-!-inch howitzer shells, artillery carried the following at this time: 80
24 8-inch howitzer shells, or 20,000 musket-

Gun On limber In one waggon


Light 12-pdr 12 roundshot, 4 canister, 4 shell 52 roundshot, 10 canister, 10 shell
Light 6-pdr 32 roundshot, 8 canister 97 roundshot, 13 canister
5-!-inch howitzer 13 shell, 5 canister 41 shell, 10 canister, 4 carcasses
Adye also lists the amount of ammunition of artillery of the following nationalities at
normally available in the field with each piece this time (1802) shown in the table.

Austria Prussia Hanover France


Gun Canister Round Canister Round Canister Round Canister Round
3-pdr 4° 18 4 20 9° 5° 15°
4-pdr 5° 118
6-pdr 36 17 6 3° 15° 48 144
8-pdr 3° 71
12-pdr 44 94 20 13° 5° 15° 20 57

'The French horse-artillery waggon, called firing roundshot, to 31 feet for a heavy 3-pdr
the wurst, carries 58 rounds for 8-pounders; firing canister. (These tests were carried out
or 30 for 6-inch howitzers. '81 on elm planks; in soft ground the recoil
Actual quantities of shot fired in action would be much less.)83
were often smaller than might be expected, I t is difficult to generalize about rates of
due to the need to conserve ammunition movement of artillery, the weight of equip-
because of uncertain re-supply; there are few ment making the condition of the ground a
examples of batteries running out of ammuni- more vital consideration than for infantry or
tion in action. At Waterloo, a prolonged cavalry. Normally, a French gun-team walked
artillery action, no more than 10,000 rounds at 86 metres per minute, trotted at 189 and
were fired by 78 British guns, averaging galloped at 200, but unless the gunners had
about 129 each. transport even a trot was impossible for any
Highest' expenditure was by Sandham's distance. Horse artillery, with lighter equip-
company, 183 rounds of 9-pdr ammunition ment and the gunners all mounted or riding
and 5!-inch howitzer shells. During this on the limbers, could achieve considerable
period Hughes calculates that each gun could speed, as witness Norman Ramsey's cele-
have fired 250 rounds,82 indicating that only brated 'charge' at Fuentes de Ofloro. Artillery
half the shots which theoretically could have formations needed frequent halts to rest the
been discharged actually were, proof not only horses and close gap~ between vehicles, so
of conservation by the gunners but smoke that on good roads perhaps two and a half or
which obscured the target and therefore three miles an hour was the average.
slowed the rate of expenditure. For rapid advances or withdrawals without
Rate of fire depended upon the time needed the time-consuming limbering-up, two
to re-Iay the gun after every recoil; in methods could be used: the 'prolonge'., a rope
practice a rate of two roundshot or three connecting the limber and the gun, in effect
canister per minute was about average, enabling the gun to be fired without dis-
though this could decrease rapidly when the connecting it from the horses, and the
crew became tired (one shot every three or 'bricole', by which the gun was manhandled
four minutes was not unreasonable in a pro- by attaching drag-ropes and leather straps to
tracted action), or if the enemy were too close the carriage and pulling it manually. The
to necessitate re-positioning the gun an almost rapidity of movement thus achieved is
continuous fire could be maintained for short demonstrated by Senarmont's remarkable
periods; ,a competition in 1777 achieved artillery 'charge' at Friedland, when his thirty
twelve to fourteen unaimed shots per minute, guns opened on the Russians at 1,600 yards,
a useless waste of shot under combat con- then dragged forward by their crews, fired
ditions. The heavier the piece, of course, the again at 600 yards, then 300, then 150, and
slower the rate of fire: a 12-pdr might ended by pouring canister at only sixty yards.
average one shot per minute. Recoil was con- Travelling in column, a French battery of
siderable, Adye's table ranging from twelve six guns and two howitzers would march
feet for a medium 12-pdr and light 6-pdr with all eight guns at the front, followed by


the other battery vehicles: eighteen caissons dismounted, but French 8- and I2-pdr
of artillery ammunition, one of musket- batteries needed additional time to transfer
ammunition, one of tools and equipment, the the barrels from travelling to firing trunnion-
forge and a spare gun-carriage. Where roads positions. Firing was rarely by salvo, but
allowed, a double column was used, the guns 'sections' (i.e. each pair of guns) would often
always grouped together at the front. Arriving fire alternately
on the battlefield and receiving a post, the When attacked, artillery had little defence
battery-commander would reconnoitre to if their gunnery failed to repel the enemy; this
pick the best field of fire: open space in front emphasized the need for co-operation between
with no 'dead' (i.e. hidden) ground, prefer- 'arms', infantry or cavalry protection being
ably with firm ground near the enemy to assist vital for a battery. Otherwise they could
ricochet, and with a gentle slope in front of limber-up and retire, or even engage the
the gun (more than I in 5 made the gun enemy in person: twice in 1800 French horse
difficult to depress). If the battery could be artillerymen protected their battery by
sited behind marshy ground so much the mounting and charging the enemy, but such
better, absorbing the enemy's ricochet fire instances were rare. Sharpshooters were a
and not throwing up stones when the round- continual menace; there are numerous cases
shot landed. Ideally the guns should have of batteries being silenced or impeded by the
been placed on the crest of a hill, with the accurate fire of a few marksmen.
caissons on the reverse slope, concealed from If over-run, it was vital for artillery per-
the enemy; earthworks could be raised for sonnel to deny the enemy the use of their
the protection of the battery, or the guns cannon. Few armies would expose their guns
could be concealed from view by infantry who to capture, Russia being an exception;
would move away just before fire was opened, Kutaisov's directive read:
thus luring the enemy into an artillery trap. 'The artillery must be prepared to sacrifice
First-line caissons would be about fifty yards itself ... Fire your last charge of canister at
behind the guns, the second-line a further point-blank range! A battery which is cap-
fifty, and other vehicles as much as another tured after this will have inflicted casualties
hundred to the rear; in action, instead of each on the enemy which will more than com-
gun drawing from its own caissons, it was pensate for the loss of the guns. '84
safer to move forward only one or two The simplest way of rendering a gun in-
caissons at a time, all guns drawing from them operable was to remove a wheel; more per-
and thus not exposing more vehicles than manently, it could be 'spiked', achieved by
necessary to enemy fire, as a single spark blocking the vent with a soft iron rod, bent
could destroy a battery's entire ammunition. inside with the blow of a rammer. Although
Having selected his position, the battery- 'spikes' were made specifically for this task,
commander would bring up his guns, with split ends which opened out in the bore,
theoretically siting them some six to ten yards even the hammering of a bayonet into the vent
apart; but only in massed batteries would would enlarge it sufficiently to prevent im-
guns be so pushed together, twelve to twenty mediate use. More permanent was to wedge
yards between each being usual, to offer a a ball at the base of the bore with wooden
more extended target. To avoid the possibility plugs, necessitating the burning of the wedges
of enemy enfilade fire the battery would be to remove it, a time-consuming task; or for
placed in an uneven line. The length of time permanent destruction a trunnion could be
taken to open fire varied; horse artillery could knocked off with a sledge-hammer. Spikings
be in action almost as soon as the gunners in the field were much simpler, due to the

Fig. 44. Overleaf: French Artillery pieces:J Gribeauval System. Top to Bottom: 8-Pounder field
piece:J· I 2-Pounder field piece and ammunition chest:J· 6-Inch Howitzer.

Fig. 45. Overleaf: French Artillery Waggons. Top to Bottom: Grzbeauval cannon limbered up:J·
Gribeauval Caisson; Gribeauval Horse Artillery Caisson.
71
Fig. 44
72
Fig. 45

73
74
limited amount of time available, thus im- tive compromise, lacking the 4-pdr's mobility
mobilizing the gun for a shorter period than and the 8-pdr's power; the carriage also
if a thorough job had been done. tended to be shaken to pieces. Other modi-
fications, such as larger caissons, were
NATIONAL PATTERNS
successful but although the Grande Armee of
The excellence of Napoleon's artillery was 1812 was equipped with new designs, the
largely due to Jean Baptiste Gribeauval, who French in Spain had to use the pure
in the years after 1765 re-designed all Gribeauval System.
French artillery with a double purpose: On campaign, the heavier guns were
standardization and mobility. Limiting 'field' generally held in reserve; the 6- and 8-pdr
artillery to 12-, 8- and 4-pdrs and 6- and batteries were attached to advance-guards or
8-inch howitzers, he streamlined barrels, divisional parks (though the light horse-
introduced reinforced carriages and greatly artillery was held in reserve), the 12-pdrs
reduced the weight (a Gribeauval 1z-pdr on largely allocated to Corps and Army reserve
field carriage weighed 1,600 lbs as against the parks. Howitzers provided about one-third of
previous 3,200 lbs). His elevating-screw divisional artillery though, except for each
adjusted the platform upon which the breech battery's howitzers, a battery always consisted
rested, instead of being attached to the cas- of one weight of gun. During the Revolu-
cabel in the British fashion (howitzers retained tionary Wars all artillery was organized in
quoin elevation). All barrels were brass. The 'compagnies' (batteries) of four pairs of guns
double-bracket trail included two trunnion- each, this number later retained for field (or
positions (for firing and travelling) and a 'foot') batteries, horse artillery having six
detachable ammunition-chest ('coffret'); guns per battery, both foot and horse batteries
'windage' was reduced by careful calibration having two howitzers each. Each gun had two
of the size of shot, wheels were enlarged and caissons attached (three for every 1z-pdr and
repairs made easier by standardization of howitzer, and more for Guard pieces - five
design. Other vehicles were also re-designed; per 1z-pdr and howitzer, three for others).
the limber had a 'tongue' so that horses Each battery also possessed a forge, spare
could be hitched abreast (six horses for the carriages and baggage-waggons, raising the
12-pdr, four for the others). The four- total battery establishment to about thirty
wheeled ammunition-waggons ('caissons') vehicles and 140 horses. Manpower of each
were divided internally into compartments battery consisted of a company of gunners,
for easy stowage of powder and shot, and the comprising four sections of two guncrews
lid peaked (or rounded with a padded top for each (for an eight-gun battery), and a com-
the accommodation of gunners sitting astride pany of drivers from the Artillery Train, a
it). total of about 130 men.
Napoleon adapted the Gribeauval System, Horse artillery was habitually equipped
replacing many 8-pdrs with 12-pdrs and with lighter guns (4- and 6-pdrs and 6-inch
many 6-inch howitzers with the heavier ver- howitzers), and had all their gunners mounted,
sion, increasing both range and power; and thus giving them vastly superior mobility.
replaced the 4-pdr with are-designed 6-pdr Unlike the 'foot' batteries which had to
for the same reason, to allow many Austrian employ civilian drivers until the foundation
and Prussian 6-pdrs captured from 1794 to of the Artillery Train, horse artillery always
1800 to be employed and as part of Mar- had their own drivers. A variation was seen
mont's plan to replace both the 4- and 8-pdr in 1792 when, due to shortages of horses, at
with an intermediate gun. But the new 6-pdr least one battery had its gunners riding on the
- part of the 'System of Year IX' - was limbers and on 'wurst'-waggons. Horse artil-
hastily-produced and found to be an ineffec- lery was grouped into 'squadrons' of two

Fig. 46. Top to Bottom: Prussian 6-Pounder field piece; Austrian 6-Pounder field piece with
padded seat for the crew; Russian lo-Pounder 'Unicorn' equipment.
75
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10e e14
11_ e15

9 13

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200
I
400
!

YARDS

A B C
.... -------~
Musketry
.... ------~--------~
Canister zone
.... -----------------------------------~
Round shot zone
zone 2 112 minutes 4 112 minutes
7 shots per gun 9 shots per gun
companies each; the terms 'battery', 'com- with barrel-length of between 41 to eight feet
pany' and 'division' can be confusing, long was obsolete by 1795-.1800, leaving the
'battery' (originally a gun-emplacement) seven-foot 'long 6-pdr' and five-foot 'light
becoming synonymous with 'company', 6-pdr' in use; the iron 4-pdr and brass I-pdr
whilst 'division' could indicate a company or were obsolete by 1800 and 1815 respectively;
an unspecified number of guns. the brass 3-pdr from three to seven feet long
Though British ordnance had no re- was also obsolete by 1795-1800, leaving the
designing comparable to that of Gribeauval, six-foot 'long 3-pdr' and 31-foot 'light 3-pdr'.
certain innovations were introduced, pri- Iron guns (excepting the 4-pdr) were restrict-
marily the 'block trail' adopted for horse ed to garrison and siege service.
artillery 6- and 9-pounders, but not used for An artillery battery (termed 'brigade'),
other ordnance until after Waterloo; a block both foot and horse, had six guns each. In the
trail for the 51-inch howitzer was designed Waterloo campaign the foot batteries were
but never manufactured. Some weights were equipped with five 9-pdrs and a 51-inch
withdrawn after failure in the Peninsular War: howitzer each. Of the horse artillery 'troops'
the 6-pdr and 8- and 1o-inch brass howitzers (batteries) at Waterloo, two were equipped as
were replaced, the 4 2/5th-inch and 51-inch in the Peninsular War: five 6-pdrs and a 5t-
howitzers remaining in use, and the 8- and inch howitzer. Four other troops had 9-pdrs
lo-inch iron howitzers in use by 1820. and a 51-inch howitzer each, and one troop
Among the wide range of field artillery in use, six 51-inch howitzers. In 18 I 5 a foot battery
the brass 12-pdr with barrel from five to nine comprised five officers and ninety-seven
feet long was obsolete by 1800, leaving the other ranks plus an officer and eighty-seven
61-foot 'medium 12-pdr' and the five-foot men from the Corps of Drivers. Mercer
'light 12-pdr'; the six-foot brass 9-pdr was detailed his 'G' Troop, Royal Horse Artillery
extensively used after 1808; the brass 6-pdr in 1815:
Five 9-pdrs and a 51-inch howitzer, 8 horses each: 48 horses
Nine ammunition-waggons (one per gun plus one spare per 'division')~
6 horses each: 54
One spare-wheel cart: 6
Forge, curricle-cart, baggage-waggon, 4 horses each: 12
Six mounted detachments, 8 horses each: 48
Two staff-sergeants, two farriers, collar-maker: 5
Officers' horses lent by Board of Ordnance: 6
Officers' baggage-mules: 6
Spare horses: 30
Two horses per officer, one for surgeon, personally-owned: II
Total complement of animals: 226
Personnel: captain, second-captain, surgeon, three lieutenants, three sergeants,_ three
corporals, three bombardiers, farrier, three shoeing-smiths, two collar-makers,
wheeler, two trumpeters, eighty gunners, 84 drivers.

The troop comprised three 'divisions' of two divisions each, one half-brigade commanded
'subdivisions' each, a subdivision being one by the captain and one by the second-
gun, crew, and ammunition-waggon; each captain.
division was commanded by a lieutenant, Other artillery included 'gallopers', light
each right subdivision by a sergeant and the guns with the trail in the form of 'shafts' to
left by a corporal. The troop could also be harness directly to the horse (often attached
split into two 'half-brigades' of three sub- to cavalry regiments), and the bizarre 'War
Fig. 47. Left Above: Diagrammatic view of a French gun crew in action. Crew members
numbered one to fifteen. Left: When firing. Centre: Advancing by 'Bricole'. Right: Retreating by
'Bricole'. Below: Diagram of a theoretical advance against artillery and infantry.
77
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Caisson of Tools

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--ro
Chariot' designed by one Mr Sadler of Prior to the reforms of Archduke Charles
Pimlico for the use of his volunteer Sharp- from 1806 to 1809, Austrian artillery was
shooters, a light four-wheel, two-horse inefficient when compared to the French,
carriage with two 3-pdrs on a swivel- with insufficient trained crewmen and no
mounting, crewed by two gunners and a permanent train. Concentrations of fire were
driver~ the guns handled with 'alacrity and rare as the lighter artillery was distributed
safety'85 with a range of two furlongs. piecemeal among the infantry and only the
Like France, Russia re-designed the artil- heavier organized in reserve batteries. The
lery by Alexi Arakcheev's 'System of 1805', basic types were 3-, 6- and 12-pdr guns and
introducing lighter carriages and limiting 7-pdr howitzers, with the double-bracket
fieldpieces to light and medium 6- and 12- trail, though one unusual feature was the
pdrs. Russia also used the 'Unicorn', a 'wurst'-type padded seat on the trail of horse
long-barrelled howitzer designed in 1757, artillery guns, allowing four gunners to ride
which had greater range and accuracy than the upon the carriage. By 18°9, when infantry
French 6-inch howitzer, and which existed in guns had been discontinued and organization
3-, 10- and 20-pdr versions, the lightest being established to provide concentration, the
withdrawn after Friedland. Carriages were artillery commanders were too inexperienced
of the double-bracket variety with horizontal to use its full potential.
screw-elevation, all barrels were brass and in The Prussian artillery arm had to be re-
181 I improved 'Karbanov' gun-sights were constructed after the debacle of 1806, the
fitted. Lighter pieces had four-horse teams number of pieces in that year (4,614) falling
and Iz-pdrs eight or ten. The net result was to only 149 in 1808. The basic fieldpieces
lighter and faster artillery which' ... is so well were the 6- and 12-pdr gun and 7- and 10-
horsed, so nimbly and so handily worked, that pdr howitzer, with crews of nine, thirteen,
it bowls over almost all irregularities of twelve and fifteen respectively; the double-
surface with an ease, lightness, and velocity bracket trail had a Gribeauval-style ammuni-
that give it great superiority.'86 Battery- tion-chest which was removed for action.
composition reflected the excessive quantity Organization in August 18 I 3 consisted of
of Russian artillery, 'heavy field batteries' six 12-pdr foot batteries, thirty 6-pdr foot
comprising eight Iz-pdrs, two light and four batteries, twelve 6-pdr horse batteries and one
heavy unicorns, 'light field batteries', eight battery each of 3-pdr cannon and 7-pdr
6-pdrs, four medium and two light unicorns, howitzers. All batteries comprised six guns
and 'horse batteries', twelve 6-pdrs. Wilson and two howitzers, the 7-pdr in the 6-pdr
remarked unfavourably on the Russian prac- batteries and the lo-pdr in the 12-pdr; each
tice of providing excessive numbers of guns: battery was subdivided into four sections.
' ... out of all proportion to the infantry The expansion of 18 I 3 resulted in some
... particularly inconvenient and embarrass- batteries containing only guns, with no
ing in countries and seasons where forage was howitzers.
not to be procured. Occasionally, indeed, by Spanish artillery generally followed the
the delays it compelled, it endangered the Gribeauval system whilst retaining traditional
safety of the army.'87 Spanish barrel-design, and British-style iron

Fig. 48. Left: French eight-gun battery in firing line. A. Gun and limbers in the firing line;
B. Line of 1st Caissons; C. Line of 2nd Caissons; D. Line of 3rd Caissons of the 4th Section)
and Battery vehicles.
Right: French eight-gun battery in column. I. 1st Line Caissons)· 2. 2nd Line Caissons)· 3. 3rd Line
Caissons)· H. Howitzer caissons)· I. Infantry ammunition carts)· T. Tool Carts)· F. Forge)· S. Spare
carrlage.
79
Fig. 49. Artillery transported on improvised sledges during Napoleon's crossing ofthe Alps. Print after J Girardet.

guns. At the beginning of the Peninsular nineteen and eighteen pieces at Castiglione
War governmental parsimony and theft and Marengo, artillery concentrations con-
resulted in four-gun instead of six-gun tinued to exist at 'divisional park' level,
batteries, totally devoid of draught-animals though the massing of artillery at Corps level
(deducting the four complete batteries sent to was rare in the French forces, due to the
Denmark with La Romana, the remaining 216 reticence of divisional commanders to sur-
guns and caissons had only 400' animals). render their guns to a 'Corps park'. The
Spanish gunners rarely joined the routine Imperial Guard was devoid of such jealousy
'sauve qui peut' which followed every and the large Guard park was used en masse
Spanish defeat but fought until the end, as an army reserve, becoming one of the
resulting in huge losses of equipment and deciding features of Napoleonic warfare.
trained personnel. Eventually the artillery Senarmont's thirty-eight-gun artillery 'charge'
had to be dragged by mules yoked tandem- at Friedland, already mentioned, turned the
fashion and goaded by men on foot, the course of the battle and thereafter Napoleon
slowest imaginable locomotion. Constant attempted to hold even larger masses of artil-
losses of guns also resulted in the use of lery in reserve to strike the decisive blow; at
ancient and archaic guns, particularly in the Wagram a 102-gun battery was employed, its
siege-train. only partial success due to a better-prepared
enemy and lack of French co-ordination. At
TACTICS AND OTHER
Liitzen sixty Guard pieces appeared from
ARTILLERY PIECES
behind a ridge, repelling the enemy; at Baut-
Only when large quantities of artillery were zen a seventy-six-gun battery had limited
massed together did the arm assume an effect due to inappropriate terrain and
offensive role in its own right, the allocation Russian fieldworks; at Dresden the artillery
of batteries to small tactical formations being was inexplicably ordered to withdraw and the
able only to support the actions of those 80-gun battery at Leipsig blew a hole in the
formations. But' the allocation of artillery to enemy line but the supports failed to take
'divisional reserves' enabled two or three advantage. Breakthroughs achieved by artil-
batteries to be massed together at decisive lery fire demanded careful co-ordination of
points, a combined bombardment exerting other arms, a task in which Napoleon often
greater influence than the individual fire of failed, never exploiting the massed-battery
the component parts. Following the decisive tactic to its full potential.
actions of Marmont's massed batteries of Similar bombardments were used by
80
Fig. 50. A British artillery battery in position at the siege of BadajozJ 1812. Contemporary print.

armies other than those commanded by


Napoleon: Senarmont broke the Spanish at
09ana and Medellin (the tactic could not be
used against Wellington, who would fight
only on ground unsuitable for artillery), by
Wellington (accidentally) at Vittoria and
Bulow at Gross Beeren, but only Russia was
as expert as the French. Thanks to their
enormous quantity of artillery, they formed
two massed batteries at Eylau (sixty and
seventy guns). Kutaisov, unlike many others,
believed that artillery-fire should be directed
against the enemy guns except in a defensive
battle, and advocated massed batteries to
effect a breakthrough, introducing more guns
as the battle continued. At Borodino he
forgot his own importance as artillery com-
mander and was killed leading a bayonet-
charge, so that much of his artillery reserve
was never ordered into action.
'Battalion guns' were common at the end
of the eighteenth century, being light field-
pieces belonging to infantry battalions and
crewed by members of the battalion. The
system was not as effective as might be
imagined, and largely died out around the
early 1800s (Britain, for example, trained an
officer and thirty-four men per battalion to
handle the unit's two 6-pdrs, and an officer
and eighteen men per cavalry regiment to
crew the 'gallopers', but by 1799 'battalion
guns' were virtually extinct). The principal
objection was the reduction of the unit's
Fig. 51. French artillerymen defending their guns when overrun by British cavalry at waterloo. (Engraving
after W B. Wollen).

veritable museum of Spanish and Portuguese per hour for 151 hours a day maintained
ordnance dating back to the 1620S, these against San Sebastian being reckoned an
guns having no standard calibre, no calibrated incredible feat.
ammunition and consequently weak effect, Similar large cannon were used for garrison
prone to 'drooping' or vents becoming un- duty, with a wider assortment of carriages.
workable. Eventually Wellington received Carriages often resembled naval patterns,
proper 24-pdrs but for the second siege of occasionally iron but usually wood, with small
Badajos he was sent Russian 18-pdrs which iron 'truck'-wheels (wooden trucks were
his ammunition did not fit! Even this siege- restricted to sea service). Heavier ordnance
train had to rely upon eight pairs of bullocks used quoin-elevation, the barrels being too
per gun for transportation, with ammunition heavy to use a screw-elevator. For both
hauled on ox-carts. The 24-pdr was invariably garrison and siege-work guns were ideally
preferred, the difference between its shot sited on wooden platforms to prevent the
compared to that of an 18-pdr '... is far guns sinking into the ground. In garrison
greater than would be conceived ... no 'traversing platforms' could be used, upon
engineer should ever be satisfied with 18- which the gun was securely fixed, the entire
pounder guns for breaching when he can by platform being traversed on a pivot which
any possibility procure 24-pounders. '91 Am- made aiming both faster and easier. To reduce
munition-expenditure during a siege could be recoil the rear trucks could be replaced by a
considerable: the breaching-batteries at wooden block, forming a 'rear chock carriage',
Badajos used 2,523 90-lb barrels of powder, or the trucks could be removed completely,
18,832 24-pdr roundshot and 13,029 18-pdr producing a low-recoil 'sliding carriage'.
roundshot, almost 5,000 mule-loads of Garrison-guns with full-size wheels could
ammunition, not including canister and also be mounted on platforms, the direction
shel1. 92 Siege-guns had a much slower rate of of recoil being controlled by wooden rails on
fire than fieldpieces, the twenty-three rounds the platform. Carronades were used occasion-
82
Fig. 52A. Napoleon personally aims a cannon at Montereau. Print after E. Lamy.

Fig. 52B. A French artillery battery-position at Toulon, I793. Print after Jung.

ally for garrison-duty; originally manufac- existed in 68- to 6-pdr versions, with a
tured at the Carron foundry near Falkirk range between 230 yards for a 12-pdr at
they were short, large-bore cannon secured point-blank elevation to 1,280 yards for a
not by trunnions but usually by a loop cast 68-pdr at 5 deg. elevation. 93
on to the underside of the barrel, mounted Mortars were shell-guns designed for high-
on wooden carriages with two or four trucks .. angle fire, almost exclusively used for siege
Used almost exclusively at sea, the carronade and garrison work due to their great weight
Fig. 53. Left Above: French mobile artillery accompanying a cavalry advance, at Dierhojf, I8Aprii I797. Print
after Coginet & Girardet.

Fig. 54. Left Below: French artillery battery at Frankfurt-am-Main, I79 2 , showing the use of brushwood
'blinds 'to shield the position. (Print after H. Lecomte).

Fig. 55. Above: British artill~rymen and a piece of ordnance upon a garrison carriage. Print by 1. C. Stadler
after C. Hamilton Smith.
[)

Fig. 56. Top to Bottom, Left to Right: British Coehoorn Mortar on a wooden bed:J l8l4:J'
French lo-Inch Gribeauval Mortar:J' British lo-Inch Mortar on a wooden bed:J' Plan of a wooden
bed:J' Garrison artillery British carronade on an iron Land Service carriage:J' Prussian l2-Pounder
. .
cannon on a garrzson carrzage.

86
and immobility. Their very short barrels were of 50 parts saltpetre, 25 sulphur, 5 antimony,
fixed on to wooden 'beds' bereft of wheels, 8 rosin and 5 pitch, or 'Valenciennes com-
supported on trunnions positioned at the rear position' comprising 50 parts saltpetre, 28
of the breach; all recoil was absorbed by the sulphur, 18 antimony and 6 'rosin or
bed, necessitating most sturdy construction, Sweedish [sic] pitch', the latter cast in
the simplest beds (for small mortars) con- cylindrical blocks and inserted into an
sisting of a single block of wood with a ordinary 'common shell'. 95 For illumination-
hollowed-out depression to accommodate the flares, 'light balls' were used, fired from a
barrel. Elevation was by quoin inserted at the cannon and comprising an oval iron frame-
front of the bed, but a quicker method was work covered with painted cloth, containing
to position the barrel permanently at 45 deg. mixtures of saltpetre, mealed powder,
and vary the range by reducing or increasing sulphur, resin and linseed oil. Each had three
the amount of powder used as propellant; for fuzes protruding from the cloth cover, ignited
example a British I3-inch mortar at 45 deg. by the flash of the cannon. 'Smoke balls'
had a range of 245 yards with a 14 oz charge were used mostly at sea, intended for con-
and 2,7°6 yards with an 8 lb charge. 94 British cealment or for the suffocation of men
mortars ranged from the 36-cwt I3-inch iron working in confined spaces, being mixtures
mortar, 3 ft 7-! ins long, through the 8-, of saltpetre, corned gunpowder, sea coal and
10- and 5-!-inch ('Royal') versions to the 4 antimony, in a tarred papier-mache case. The
2/Sth in. brass 'Coehorn' mortar, only I ft most primitive illumination consisted of a
I -! in. long and weighing i cwt, so light as barrel of combustible material, rolled to the
to be carried by two men and used in the field, bottom of a ditch to illuminate a breach.
despite its alarming jump into the air when A normal, wheeled gun-carriage was known
fired. Napoleon retained Gribeauval's 12- and as a 'travelling carriage', but for mortars
8-inch mortars but replaced the 10- and 6- and guns on garrison carriages other modes
inch. Like howitzers, mortars were 'cham- of transportation had to be used. A garrison-
bered'; that is, the part of the barrel carriage and gun-barrel could be loaded on
containing the charge was smaller in diameter to a four-wheel 'devil carriage', the carriage
than the bore. upside-down on top of the devil, the barrel
Mortar-bombs resembled howitzer-shells- slung below the rear axle. A flat-bed, four-
iron spheres filled with powder and sealed by wheel 'platform carriage' could also be
a tapered wooden fuze - but were often utilized, with both barrel and carriage laid on
thicker at the base to ensure landing fuze- top of the platform; and for short distances
uppermost. The effect of mortar-bombs a barrel could be slung below a two-wheel,
falling almost vertically from their high shafted 'sling cart'. Mortars were usually
trajectory could produce startling results, transported by devil or sling-cart, the beds
such as the exploding of the Almeida maga- following on a separate vehicle. To move a
zine in 1809. Bags of stones could be fired as gun-barrel from such a vehicle on to its own
anti-personnel devices, large mortars or carriage, a three-legged 'gin' (or 'gyn') was
'perriers' being designed for the purpose; used, a sixteen-foot high structure from
Britain had 'stone mortars' of up to I3-inch which a block-and-tackle was suspended. In
bore. an emergency, when gins were unavailable,
Incendiary shells or 'carcasses' originally drills existed for improvising a crane out of
consisted of tarred canvas bags, later cast-iron a limber, also useful for hauling guns uphill.
cases with three or five holes in, filled with A further improvisation was that used by
combustible mixture and the fuze-holes filled Napoleon when crossing the Alps: the manu-
with powder. Once ignited they were almost facture of sleds from hollowed-out logs in
impossible to extinguisl1, burning-time which gun-barrels were placed, allowing the
ranging (according to Adye) from three gun and its carriage to be dragged over
minutes for an II-lb carcass to eleven terrain impassable for wheeled vehicles.
minutes for a 2I3-lb carcass fired from a Rockets were an innovation in European
I3-inch mortar. The filling was a compound warfare, only Britain and Austria seriously
Fig. 57. British artillery in action at WUterloo. Print after George Jones.

employing them, both of the type designed which the rocket was leaned.
by Sir William Congreve and first used in As en:visaged by Congreve's 'Details of the
action in 18°5. In construction, a rocket Rocket 'System' (1814) the weapon had much
consisted of a head containing a charge of to recommend it: cheap, easily-portable (a
various types, attached to a stick, the longer mounted 'Rocket Troop' of 172 men without
varieties made in sections and joined with iron any vehicles could carry 840 missiles), and
ferrules. Launching required some nerve but deceiving to the enemy, a 'Rocket .Cavalry-
little equipment: the rocket could be laid man' carrying the heads under his shabraque
along the ground, on a tripod, on an inclined and the poles on his shoulder resembling a
bank or on a 'rocket car' (a vehicle not used " lance (pennons and lance-heads were pro-
in action during the Napoleonic Wars), angle vided). But in practice they were unreliable,
of fire depending upon the gradient against prone to fly off course and even double back

Fig. 58. Austrian Mortar battery bombarding the city of Li//e) September .1792. After Bertaux.
88
olAt=Jno

12 6
I I
a
I
2
I
3I
4
I
5I
6I
7,
Inches Feet

Fig. 59. Rockets and sticks. Above, Top to Bottom: 32-Pounder Carcass; 24-Pounder Case-
shot; I8-Pounder Shel!:; 6-Pounder Shell. Below Left: Rocket fired from a rocket cart. Right:
Rocket fired from a tripod, in the case of smaller rockets.

upon the firers. This unreliability led to few Signal-rockets and parachute-flares to 'illu-
occasions of use in action, though 40,000 were minate the atmosphere for nearly ten
fired at Copenhagen in 1807 and British minutes'97 were also used. Congreve proposed
rocket troops served in Spain, America, that the 'heavy rockets be restricted to sea
Leipsig and Waterloo, despite Wellington's service, the 24- and 18-pdrs for rocket cars,
disapproval: 'I do not wish to set fire to any the 12-pdrs for 'rocket cavalry' and the
town, and I do not know any other use for lighter ones for rocket infantry; in the event,
rockets.'96 only the cavalry saw active service. Austrian
Rockets fell into three classes: 'heavy' (8-, rocket-batteries comprised twenty-four
7- and 6-inch diameter of head with 24, 22 'launchers' each, using 24-, 16-, 12- and
and 2 I-feet sticks respectively) used as 6-pdrs.
incendiaries or for explosives for long range The principal use of rockets was to shatter
(2,100 to 2,500 yards); 'medium' (42-, 32- and enemy morale, as G. R. Gleig reported:
24-pdrs); and 'light' (18-, 12-,9- and 6-pdrs), '. . . the confusion created in the ranks of
the 32-pdr being the lightest 'bombardment' the enemy beggars all description ... you see
rocket and the heaviest 'field' rocket. Heads it coming yet know not how to avoid it. It
were originally bound in paper but from 1806 skips and starts from place to place in so
in thin sheet iron cases, the largest (8-inch) strange a manner, that the chances are, when
weighing 3 cwt. Incendiary-heads were made you are running to the right or left to get out
like carcasses, containing 25 to 50 lbs of of the way, that you run directly against it;
explosive; the 'medium' pattern could carry and hence the absolute rout which a fire of
roundshot or shell and the 24-pdr could carry ten or twelve rockets can create.... '98
canister which burst in the air over the targe~. Hand-grenades - in effect miniature shells
- were long redundant by the Napoleonic
GUN-EQUIPMENT
period, though still occasionally used at sea,
fired from cannon or from a musket bear- Each piece of artillery was equipped not only
ing a cup-attachment. One intriguing late with the 'sidearms' - rammer, handspikes,
mention of hand-grenades is contained in a etc. - needed for actual firing, but also with
report of February 1798, when the garrison a wide range of additional equipment carried
of Templemore, Tipperary, turned out for a on the limber or attendant waggon. An
false alarm of insurrection with 'grenades example is the list of stores given by Adye 101
ready, matches lighted'.99 A primitive 'gren- for a British heavy 12-pdr in addition to
ade' could be improvised by rolling a carriage and ammunition:
lighted howitzer-shell down an incline into Eighteen portfires, one 'apron of lead' (a
the enemy ranks. foot-long, lo-inch wide sheet weighing 8 lbs
4 OZ),102 two 'spunges, with staves and heads',
one wad hook with stave, two traversing
VISIBILITY
handspikes, one 'tampion' (a plug used to
The Artillerist's Manual and British Soldier's close the muzzle), three straps for lashing
Companion (1839-59) included the following side-arms, one gun-tarpaulin, one limber-
account of visibility under ideal conditions tarpaulin, one linstock, two pairs drag-ropes,
with the naked eye: 100 three padlocks with keys, 28 lbs slow-match,
'Good eyesight recognises masses of troops one 'spring spike', two 'common spikes' (both
at 1,700 yards: beyond this distance the glitter for 'spiking' the gun), two 'punches for
of arms may be observed. At 1,300 yards vents', one 'budge barrel' (for powder), six
infantry may be distinguished from cavalry, 'couples for chain traces', one spare sponge-
and the movement of troops may be seen; the head, one spare rammer-head, one claw-
horses of cavalry are not, however, quite hammer, one set of priming-irons, one pair
distinct but that the men are on horseback is draught-chains, one powder-horn, one
clear. A single individual detached from the French water-bucket, one felling-axe, one
rest of the corps may be seen at 1,000 yards pick-axe, one bill, two spades, one 'skain' of
but his head does not appear as a round ball 'tarred marline' (skein of tarred rope), one
until he has approached up to 700 yards at skein of tarred twine, one skein of 'Hambro'
which distance white crossbelts and white line', one lb packthread, one firkin of grease
trousers may be seen. At 500 yards the face (one firkin = nine gallons), two grease-boxes,
may be observed as a light coloured spot; the one lb tallow, one dark lantern, one lifting-
head, body, arms and their movements, as jack, one 'waggon with hoops and painted
well as the uniform and the fire lock (when covers, Flanders pattern', one 'wad miltilt',
bright barrels) can be made out. At between one tanned hide, one set 'Men's harness
200 and 250 yards all parts of the body are (twelve to a set)', one set chain horse-harness,
clearly visible, the details of the uniform are one set harness-traces, one 'wanty' (leather
tolerably clear, and the officers may be waggon-rope), ten hemp horse-halters, five
distinguished from the men.' short whips, ten nose-bags, two corn-sacks,
In combat, however, dense clouds of smoke two sets forage-cords, one waggon linch-pin,
were produced by the ignition of gunpowder, two 'body-clouts' (for waggon), two 'linch-
frequently forming the 'fog of war', greatly clouts' (for waggon), thirty-two sixpenny
reducing the theoretical rate of fire as targets clout-nails, one spare ladle-stave, two tube-
were obscured, and demanding considerable boxes, two portfire-sticks, one cutting-knife,
skill to determine at what moment a volley one pair scissors, 1-0Z worsted, two needles,
should be fired through the swirling smoke- two leather cartouches, three copper powder-
screen. measures and two thumb-stalls.
Howitzers possessed even more equipment,
including mallets, pincers and other tools for
fuzing shells. Though powder-ladles were
made obsolete by the use of the prepared


cartridge, they were usually held in store in Contrary to what might be expected, in
case of emergency. each battle the side with the highest propor-
tion of artillery was defeated. Whilst it is
dangerous to presume too much from this
fact, it should be noted that too much
RATIO OF ARTILLERY TO TROOPS
artillery could be as bad as too little, excess
Considerable significance was put upon the guns slowing down the rate of manoeuvre.
'correct' ratio of the number of guns to the This was particularly true, for example, at
total strength of an army, this usually being Eylau, when the Russians' 460 guns repre-
expressed as a figure of 'guns per thousand sented a ratio of almost six per thousand men.
men'. A random sample of Napoleonic battles The most vital factor, nevertheless, was the
for which reasonably accurate figures are quality of the gunners and the skill with which
available is given below: the artillery was handled.

Troops (approx.) Guns Guns per 1000 men


AUSTERLITZ French 73,200 139 1.89
Allies 85,40 0 27 8 3. 2 5
BORODINO French 133,000 5 87 4.4 1
Russians 120,000 64 0 5·33
LIGNY French 80,000 210 2.62
Prussians 84,000 224 2.66
MARENGO French 28,000 23-2 9 Approx. I
Austrians 31,000 100 3. 22
SALAMANCA Allies 59,000 60 1.01
French 4 8,5 0 0 78 1.6
VITTORIA Allies 75,3 0 0 90 1.19
French 66,900 13 8 2.06
WAGRAM French 170 ,5 00 500 2·93
(6 July 1805) Austrians 146,600 45 0 3. 06

ENGINEERS
Engineers' duties ranged from the construc- constructions carried out by untrained
tion of roads, fieldworks and bridges to the labourers and infantry. Pontoon-trains were
fortification and besieging of cities, mining, under artillery control, but permanent bridges
entrenching and map-making. The French were the responsibility of engineer personnel,
engineers werethe best in Europe, as they had who eventually possessed their own pontoon-
been in the eighteenth century; as Foy wrote, equipment. Naval personnel were also
'All Europe has been covered by our redoubts attached to assist the engineers; in 1809, for
and entrenchments ... '.103 example, Napoleon's engineer park consisted
French engineer organization fluctuated of an 800-strong naval battalion, 1,200
greatly, particularly during the Revolutionary marines, nine sapper, three miner, three
Wars, comprising companies of sappers, pontoon, four pioneer and two artillery
miners and the corps of officer engineers, companies, in addition to the two sapper and
initi,!lly part of the artillery but a separate one pontoon company possessed by each
entity from April 1795. Ultimately eight corps.
sapper battalions existed (reduced to five after The quantity of equipment carried is sur-
1812), from 1806 each battalion possessing its prising; Napoleon's 48-waggon engineer train
own vehicles, part of the engineer train in 1809 transported some 30,000 tools, the
battalion. Companies usually operated inde- variety illustrated by those used in the capture
pendently, and engineer officers were of Badajos in 1811: 100 miners and 483
attached to every headquarters to supervise sappers had 1,700 pickaxes, 170 miners' picks,
91
1,700 shovels, 1,700 long-handled shovels, zation, the Royal Sappers and Miners were
680 felling axes, 1,020 billhooks, 1,802 increased to 2,800 and the equivalent of four
artificers' tools, 253 miners' tools, 8,318 kg. companies served at San Sebastian. Trans-
of machinery and stores, 35 waggons, 10 port was usually lacking; in 18 13 Wellington's
waggons of bridging-equipment and 230 engineers had a total of only 120 mules and
draught horses. 104 So fine were the tools that even in 1815 Flemish waggons and civilian
captured ones were prized by the British drivers had to be hired, 'many ... of bad
above all; as Wellington wrote, 'Is it not character, so that frequent desertions took
shameful that they should have better cutlery place. '110 Even personal arms were wretched;
than we have?'105 some had muskets but others are recorded as
The British engineer corps comprised the carrying blunderbusses or pikes.
Royal Engineers (officers only); the Corps of Austria hadfive engineer corps, often com-
Royal Military Artificers (N.C.O.s and peting with each other for personnel.
privates only), which became the Royal Engineers and Sappers and Miners had their
Sappers and Miners in 1812-13; the Royal own establishments and trained officers, but
Staff Corps, formed as part of the Quarter- before 1800 the rank and file had been misfits
master-General's Dept in 1800, who, though transferred from line regiments. Civilian
skilled, rarely served abroad; and the Barrack recruits - young, healthy, unmarried, at least
Artificer Corps, formed in 1805 when the five feet four and literate - were accepted,
removal of the Barrack Office from Ordnance greatly improving the standard. The Miners
control prevented repairs to barracks being were employed not only in their specialist
made by the Artificers. In 1809 there were role but as ordinary engineers as well; the
only 179 members of the Royal Engineers, fourth unit was the Pioneer Corps, until 1809
only seventeen of whom were sent to Portugal. not even controlled by the Director-General
Though they performed sterling service and of Engineers, and doing the same job as the
lost heavily (eleven out of twenty-four killed Sappers; their separate identity resulted from
at Badajos [1812] and eleven out of eighteen their national composition, 50 per cent.
at San Sebastian), Wellington commented: Bohemians and 35 per cent. Moravians,
' ... equipped as we are, the British army are almost all specialist tradesmen. The fifth
[sic] not capable of carrying on a regular corps was the Pontoniers, six companies
siege.'106 Both personnel and equipment were strong, and so elementarily trained that they
lacking. Of the twelve Artificer companies in needed Pioneer assistance for bridge-
semi-permanent garrison in 1809, eight were building!
in Britain, two in Gibraltar and one each in Prussia reorganized her engineers in 1809
Nova Scotia and the West Indies, in a 'state into fifty-six officers of the Engineer Corps
ofvegetation';107 skilled in 'domestic' arts like and three Fortress Pioneer Companies, each
carpentry, they were inexperienced in field of 123 of all ranks. The arm was expanded
duties. In 1809 only two sergeants and until by 18 15 there were nine Field Pioneer
twenty-seven men were with the Peninsula Companies, eight Fortress Companies and
army, augmented two years later by two ser- one Landwehr unit, the Mansfeld Pioneer
geants and fifty-seven men 'who had never Battalion. Russia's small engineer corps was
seen a sap, battery or trench constructed. '108 particularly adept at the construction of
Before Ciudad Rodrigo 180 infantry had to fieldworks, contributing far more than their
receive elementary training in sapping, and limited numbers might suggest.
at Burgos miners were acquired by requesting Infantry regiments in most armies included
ex-coal diggers to volunteer from the line! pioneer sections, distinguished by often-
Such inexperience resulted in mis-conducted colourful uniforms, leather aprons, beards
sieges and consequent heavy casualties, ill- and axes, the latter three being jealously-
positioned trenches 'leaving poor officers and guarded 'trademarks'. They were responsible '
troops to get into and across the ditch as they for the construction of shelters and minor
can.'109 When Wellington blamed the casual- fortifications and often preceded the unit in
ties of Badajos on inefficient engineer organi- attacks on prepared positions, to demolish

92
Fig. 60. Crossing a river by pontoon: Prussians at the Rhine~August I792. Print after J UJlz.

obstacles in the attackers' path. Regimental boat-hook, maul, pump, windlass and four
pioneer-sections were small; a British bat- pickets. (A further variety, 'Colonel Con-
talion in 1815, for example, had a pioneer- greve's Wooden Pontoons', were 26 ft long at
corporal and ten men, carrying between them the top, 23 ft at the bottom, 2 ft 8 ins deep and
eleven billhooks, three saws, three 'broad 2 ft 3 ins wide.)
axes', two felling axes, eight spades, three Adye describes how a pontoon-bridge was
pickaxes and three mattocks. constructed. llZ First, both river-banks were
made solid by the laying of fascines. A cable
PONTOONS
was then carried across the river and fixed to
Portable bridges were necessary equipment a 'picket' (stake), and drawn taught by a
for any field army, pontoon-trains coming windlass. Each pontoon was launched with
under the authority of engineers or (as in the two men in, and rowed downstream until
French army) artillery. Pontoons were one end could be lashed at right-angles to the
shallow, box-like boats with sloping prow and cable (with a second cable at the other end
stern, made of wood or tin on a wooden if the river flowed strongly). Each boat was
framework, transported on four-wheel connected to its neighbour, about its own
vehicles. According to Adye lll the standard breadth apart, by diagonal lashing, with
pontoon was 21ft 6 ins long at the top and anchors fixed upstream. The 'baulks' were
17ft 2 ins at the bottom, 4 ft 9 ins wide and then laid at right-angles across the pontoons,
2 ft 3 ins deep, each pontoon equipped with: and on top of them the 'chesses', forming the
four baulks 22 ft 8 ins by one foot wide, one surface of the bridge, held by gang-boards
22-foot gang-board one foot wide, six 11ft along the outer edge of the bridge. Such a
6 in. 'chesses' 2 ft 4 ins wide, two oars, an bridge would support between 4,000 and
anchor; 'graplin', 'setter', four iron bolts, two 5,000 lbs but care had to be taken, vehicles
mounting bars, four binding sticks, four keeping a good distance from each other and
spring-lines, four 'faukes', a cable, sheer-line, cavalry leading their horses across to avoid
93
undue movement. Usually two pontoon- counterparts of the shield of the individual
bridges were built in conjunction, one for soldier. '114
traffic each way and if sufficient were Fortresses were usually constructed in a
available the pontoons could be lashed standard, geometric design, with fabric of
directly together, with no space between, stone, usually covered with earth, or of earth-
allowing a greater weight to pass over. works alone, the latter cheaper to build but
Pontoons could be improvised from local difficult to maintain. An earth covering
river-craft; the British engineer Squires, for absorbed roundshot which would ricochet off
example, bridged the Guadiana in April 181 1 unprotected stonework and send stone-
with two trestle-tiers connected by five splinters flying like shrapnel. The language
moored boats, until swept away by the river, of fortress-construction is incomprehensible
whereupon the boats were used as 'flying to the uninitiated, so is explained below.
bridges' (ferries) and a 'slight narrow The standard shape was the 'bastion', a
bridge'113 improvised from spare pontoons four-sided construction with an open end,
and wine-casks. Similarly, Major Sturgeon and a 'point' towards the enemy. Four or five
improvised a repair to the broken bridge at such bastions grouped in a circle formed a
Alcantara in 1812 by construction of a 'citadel', the central point of a fortified place,
suspension-bridge of a network of rope around which the main defence-works were
overlaid with planks. placed, often in two or three concentric rings,
Pontoon-building could be hazardous, par- each defensible alone but connected to the
ticularly under fire, though it could be vital. others by passages. The main fortress-wall or
General Eble, for example, commander of the 'enceinte' consisted of a high, almost-vertical
French 'Pontoniers' in 1812, though ordered stone wall or 'revetment' backed by earth,
to burn his pontoons at Orsha, kept enough with a wide rampart-top or 'terr~plein', from
equipment to construct two bridges over the which artillery and muskets could be fired
Beresina, over which the remnant of the through gaps or 'embrasures' in the 'parapet'.
Grande Armee was able to make its escape. At the bottom of the wall on the outward side
was a wide ditch with a lower wall parallel
to the revetment, giving the ditch an un-
FORTIFICATIONS
scaleable face on both sides; at the top of this
To describe all the types of defence utilized lower wall was a walking-space or 'covered
during the Napoleonic Wars would entail a way', protected by a w.ooden palisade and
history of fortification beginning with the firing-step from which defenders could shoot
medieval castle, as all ages of fortification across the 'glacis', a gently-sloping earth bank
were used. up which any attacker would have to charge.
The basic theory of fortification was that The ditch, ideally impassable by assault, was
no army could operate or leave its lines of the most vital part of any fortification.
communication unguarded with any sizeable Along the enceinte bastions protruded,
enemy presence in the rear. Thus a fortified allowing the space between them to be swept
city could not be bypassed without risk, by cross-fire. To protect the enceinte between
particularly if its garrison were capable of bastions, 'detached works' could be built,
sallying out; thus, enemy fortresses had to be either triangular bastions termed 'ravelines'
'reduced' (captured) before any lengthy or 'demi-Iunes', or independent, detached
advance could continue. Furthermore, fort- forts some distance away. Other fortifications
resses provided a refuge for a field army, included 'retrenchments' (interior works
supply-depots, and could protect an army's covering the site of a likely breach), 'redoubts'
flank. Most effective were defensive-chains (powerful works inside a bastion), 'redans'
of fortresses, like the 'Quadrilateral' in Italy (V-shaped works open at the rear) and
(Mantua, Verona, Peschiera and Legnano), or 'cavaliers' (raised gun-platforms). Some fort-
Vauban's border-defences which twice saved resses boasted 'casements' - vaulted chambers
France in 1792--93; as Carnot remarked, they in the wall in which guns could be sited.
were 'the defensive arms of states, and the The capture of a fortress demanded great
94
"...._._._._._._._._._ . _._._._._-_. __ ._ . -.......

G
H

I(

Fig. 61. Vauban's First System of Fortification. A. Curtain; B. Part of Bastion)· C. Tenaille)·
D. Caponier)· E. Main Ditch)~ F. Ravelin)· G. Ditch of Ravelin)· H. Covered Way)· J. Glacis)·
K. Salient Place of Arms J• L. Re-entrant Place of Arms.

3 4

r- -
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
r
I

13----t
L _

Fig. 62. Above: The cross section of a fortification. 1. Talus)· 2. Terreplein)· ]. Banquette)·
4. Parapet J• 5. Tablette)· 6. Cordon)· 7. Scarp Revetment)· 8. Cuvette)· 9. Counterscarp Revetment)·
10. Covered Way)· 11. Palisade)· 12. Glacis)· 1]. Counterfort. Below: Plan and elevation of part
of a battery constructed on a wooden foundation.
95
E
a
I
100
I
200
I
300
I
400
I
500
I
600
I

YARDS

Fig. 63. Diagram of the principles of siege work. A. Third Parallel B. Demi-ParalleI
J• J•

C. Second Parallel J• D. First Parallel J• E. Batteries.

expenditures of energy and equipment. First until the garrison starved, an assault would
came the 'investment' - cutting communi- be launched, inevitably a bloody affair. The
cations of the fortress with its nearest support, breach would be barricaded with debris and
achieved by judicious troop-placement. The 'chevaux-de-frise', wooden planks with im-
opening of a 'practicable' breach - one which bedded stakes or sword-blades, and planted
could be stormed - began by the digging of with 'mines', charges of powder and shells
a 'parallel', a trench in front of the wall to be ignited below the attackers. A garrison's
assaulted. This trench, usually begun at night, refusal to surrender was regarded as legiti-
was pushed forward by zigzag trenches until mate cause for the sack of a city once the
a second, third, and fourth parallel took the besiegers got inside, horrific affairs like
besiegers close to the enceinte, breaching- Badajos, Ciudad Rodrigo and Saragossa.
batteries firing upon the selected point of Mining could be used to tunnel beneath the
storm. Particularly deadly was working in the enceinte, the burning or exploding of the
final parallel, 'when every bullet takes effect tunnel bringing down the wall above;
- when to be seen is to be killed - when counter-mining by the garrison resulted in
mine after mine blows up at the head of the hand-to-hand fights in the blackness of the
road ... when the space becomes so restricted mine-shafts.
that little or no front of defense [sic] can There were few innovations in fortifications
be obtained, and the enemy's grenadiers sally during the Napoleonic Wars other than
forth every moment to attack the work- those associated with weapon-improvement.
men ... '115 Among new defence-works were the 'Lines
Once the breach was open and the defen- of Torres Vedras', a series of mutually-
ders forced to retire to the enceinte, it was supporting forts protecting Lisbon; and the
usual for the attackers to 'offer terms', to call French constructed a series of block-houses
upon the garrison to surrender. If the offer behind their own lines in Spain, protecting
were declined and the besiegers unable to wait lines of communication from guerrillas.
I I
I I
I I
~--A-

""\
l.~ ...

o
B

Fig. 64. Plan and section of a Martello Tower. A. Pivot; B. Chimney; C. Access stairs.

The Martello tower was another innovation, tion of Martello 68 at Eastbourne in 186o,
copied from an immensely-strong circular which required 100 rounds each from a 100-
tower at Mortella [sic] Point in Corsica, pdr, 80- and 40-pdr rifled Armstrong guns,
whose tiny garrison offered a protracted immeasurably more powerful than any
resistance to the British in 1794. It so im- Napoleonic cannon.
pressed them that a series of similar towers Earthwork fortifications could be raised
was built along the south and east coasts of before a battle, the Russians being par-
England in preparation for the anticipated ticularly proficient as the Raevsky Redoubt
French invasion. Circular or elliptical in plan, and Bagration 'fleches' (arrow-shaped con-
the original proposal for 'Bomb Proof' towers structions) at Borodino testify. Simpler to
suggested a height of 33 feet and interior construct was an 'abatis', a barricade or
diameter of 26 feet. They usually had two or parapet of felled trees. 'Fascines' were used
three floors and a door set half-way up the for crowning defences or filling parapets,
wall, accessible only by ladder. On the upper being bundles of brushwood or branches,
storey - a flat, lead-covered roof - cannon often about eighteen feet long by nine inches
were situated, often one heavy (18- or 24-pdr) diameter; 'gabions' were earth-filled wicker-
and two light, fixed on traversible mountings work baskets, between two and a half and
which gave a complete field of fire over the three feet high by two feet diameter, used for
six-foot parapet. A typical garrison comprised bolstering a trench or providing a parapet.
an officer and twenty-four men. The walls An easier alternative was the sandbag, about
(widening towards the base) were at least six two feet long by eight inches wide, Adye
feet thick, stone with often a stucco finish. noting that 250 sandbags were needed for each
Their strength was indicated by the demoli- fathom of battery.

97
69· Adye, p. IS3· 96 . Quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, p. 101.
70. Ibid., pp. IS4-6. 97· Congreve.
71. 'Supplementary Despatches', VII, p. 304; see also 98. Gleig, The Subaltern, pp. 290-9 I.
Chambers p. 104. 99· Sir J. Carden, I S February 1798; quoted in Packenham,
72. Adye, pp. 2 I 8-19. P·3 6 .
73. Quoted in Hughes, Firepower, p. 37· 100. See Hughes, Firepower, p. 26.
74. Adye, p. 161. 101. Adye, pp. 11-14.
7S. Hughes, Firepower, p. 40. 102. Ibid., p. 8.
76. Ibid., p. 38. 10 3. Quoted in Chandler, p. 36S.
77. Quoted in ibid., p. 43. 10 4. Jones, Journal of Sieges, II, p. 386; see Glover,
78. Adye, pp. 15-16. Peninsular Preparation, p. 107.
79. Ibid., pp. 16-17. lOS· Wellington to the Earl of Liverpool, I I February 1812;
80. Ibid., p. 17. see Brett-James, Wellington at War, p. 233.
81. Ibid., p. 21. 106. Wellington to Lt-Col. Torrens, 7 April 1812;
82. Hughes, Firepower, p. 6S. 'Despatches', IX, p. 49.
83. Adye, p. 229. 10 7. Pasley, Elementary Fortifications, quoted in Glover,
84. Quoted in Duffy, Borodi~o, p. 87. ~flellington as Military Commander, p. 173.
8S. Rowlandson, Loyal Volunteers, Plate 46. 108. Quoted in ibid., p. 173.
86. Wilson, Journal, p. 30. 109· Wellington to Maj. Gen. Murray, 28 May 1812;
87. Wilson, 'Brief Remarks'; see also Royal Military 'Despatches', IX, p. 183.
Chronicle, 1812, p. 20S, 110. Pasley, Course of Military Instruction, II, p. xii, quoted
88. Quoted in Chandler, p. 340. in Glover, Peninsular Preparation, p. 108.
89. Napoleon, Correspondence, XIX, p. 361, quoted in I I I. Adye, pp. 217-18.
Chandler, p. 340. 112. Ibid., pp. 62-4.
90. Adye, p. 9. 113· Napier, Peninsular War, III, p. 499.
91. Jones, Journal of Sieges, I, p. 14S. 114· Carnot, De la Defense des Places Fortes, Paris, 18 I 2,
92. Ibid., I, pp. 209-10. quoted in Duffy, Fire and Stone, p. 20.
93. Adye, p. 7 2 . I IS. Jones, Journal of Sieges, I, pp. xiv-xv.
94. Ibid., p. 203.
9S· Ibid., pp. 70-71.

Fig. 65. Napoleon undertakes his own reconnaissance. Print after Raffet.
STAFF & SUPPLIES

TACTICAL FORMATIONS
The Brigade was an administrative grouping Wellington ins.tituted the first British
of two or more battalions or cavalry regi- divisional system in 1809, only brigades exist-
ments, to which orders were issued and which ing prior to that year. During the Peninsular
acted as a tactical entity; it was commanded by War it was customary for each Anglo-
a field officer of one of the component Portuguese infantry brigade to include rifles
battalions or by a junior general officer. Two or light infantry as skirmishers, and each
or more brigades formed a Division, com- division artillery and administrative units, but
manded by a general officer, with a divisional only the Light Division had a permanent
artillery park and sometimes a light cavalry attachment of cavalry. Cavalry brigades were
brigade attached. Two or more infantry grouped in a single division (two in 1811-12)
divisions comprised a Corps, with light for administrative reasons only, it usually
cavalry and a reserve artillery park either being impossible to manoeuvre any cavalry
instead of, or in addition to, divisional parks. formation larger than a brigade. There was
Commanded by a marshal or senior general no official 'Corps' organization though two,
the Corps was a self-contained army, com- later three groups of divisions were made
plete with commissariat, capable of in- semi-independent, with divisional staff ex-
dependent action. panded to form a 'Corps headquarters'.
Methods of organization varied. For There was no fixed size for brigade,
example, France favoured the establishment division, or Corps; thus in Napoleon's army in
of 'Reserve' Cavalry Corps, comprising heavy 1805 Corps-strength ranged from Soult's IV
cavalry divisions with light brigades attached Corps (41,000) to Augereau's VIII Corps
as skirmishers, enabling enormous masses of (15,000).
heavy cavalry to be concentrated. In the
Austerlitz campaign, both Russian and
STRATEGY
Austrian armies were run at regimental level,
with no permanent brigade, divisional or Although strategy does not fall properly with-
Corps organization; the Russians realized the in the scope of this book, a brief mention is
folly of such a system, Barclay de Tolly necessary to illustrate the inter-relation and
instituting a semi-permanent organization by co-ordination of 'arms' within a Napoleonic
which two three-battalion regiments (one of army.
which was in the reserve or 'Supply' Army) By eighteenth-century concepts, strategy
formed a brigade, two line and one light (the manoeuvre of an army towards an
brigades a division, and two divisions a Corps, objective) and tactics (the conduct of a battle)
with artillery and cavalry attached at Corps were seen as separate entities, but Napoleon
level. considered both part of the same subject, thus
99
employing strategical ploys on the battlefield, original posItIon. Enemy reinforcements
and vice-versa. Due to the French system of would be temporarily blocked by Napoleon's
foraging, Napoleon was unhampered by the 'corps of observation', interposed between
enormous supply-trains of other armies and the theatre of operations and the route
was thus able to pursue a 'blitzkrieg' policy. of reinforcements. Napoleon employed 'la
He broke every campaign into three parts: manoeuvre sur les derrieres' some thirty
move to contact the enemy, battle, and times, most successfully in 1805 when he
pursuit, all merging into a single concept. achieved a crushing and bloodless victory
Whilst every campaign was different, there over the isolated Austrian general Mack at
existed underlying features, applied accord- VIm. Its success lay in taking the initiative
ing to circumstance. immediately, cutting communications and
First, the plan: Napoleon believed that a shattering the enemy's strategic position and
single target should be selected, preferably morale by encirclement. The only effective
the enemy's main field army; that the army answer was to disregard the flanking move-
should move by a single line of operations, ment and push on regardless, as the Allies did
keeping lines of communication open; that he in October 1813 and March 1814, only
should always move against the enemy's flank feasible when the enemy enjoyed a superiority
and rear, turning the enemy's most exposed in numbers over Napoleon and had enough
flank to isolate him from reinforcements. supplies to invalidate a temporary break in
Great flexibility and good co-ordination were communications.
required to concentrate large bodies of troops Another favourite strategic manoeuvre em-
quickly and effectively, requiring discipline, ployed by Napoleon was 'the strategy of the
good staff-work and the ability to move central position', adopted when the French
rapidly over comparatively short distances. were faced by two or more numerically-
Napoleon's favourite manoeuvre was the superior enemy armies supporting each other.
envelopment ('la manoeuvre sur les der- Napoleon realized that numerical superiority
rieres'). To avoid a 'frontal' battle - both on the battlefield, not in the campaign, was
sides lined up and battering away until one the deciding factor, so would launch a 'blitz-
withdrew, costly even to the victor (e.g. krieg' at the enemy's weakest point, the
Borodino), Napoleon would hold th~ enemy's juncture of the two armies; thus, by inter-
attention by a feint frontal attack, whilst posing himself between two enemy forces,
slipping a large force, hidden by terrain or Napoleon commanded the 'central position',
cavalry screen, to threaten the enemy's from where he would detach one wing as
flank or rear. Successfully achieved, this 'corps of observation' to hold off one enemy
manoeuvre isolated the -enemy army from its army, whilst the remaining French annihil-
supports, whereupon Napoleon would begin ated the other, having more troops available
a general advance, leaving his adversary two for the battle than the enemy. Part of the
alternatives - surrender or fight on ground victorious French would be assigned to pur-
not of his own choosing. To remedy the sue the defeated enemy, whilst the remainder
situation, the enemy commander could con- would move to support the 'corps of observa-
tinue his action with the initial holding force, tion' and destroy the second enemy force; in
which Napoleon would provide with an ade- other words, divide and conquer. But this
quate reserve or retire and draw the enemy ploy had its failings; though Napoleon could
deeper into the trap; or the enemy could risk switch the emphasis from one flank to the
dividing his force in an attempt to cut other thanks to a centrally-placed reserve, it
Napoleon's communications, a temporary was difficult to control both wings with
break in which was unimportant due to the absolute precision as even Napoleon could
French ability to live off the land; or the only be in one place at once! Equally, due to
enemy could move against the main French the necessity of switching from one enemy to
force, i.e. that which had turned his flank, and another, no decisive pursuit could be made;
fight on Napoleon's terms with an army dis- consequently Napoleon, advocate of the
organized by the withdrawal from their single, decisive victory, used the 'central
100
Fig. 66. Napoleon and his staff at Leipzig. Print by Molte;, after Grenier.

position' move only when necessary. Napoleon; thus in tactics, as in strategy, he


The third of Napoleon's general manoeuvres aimed for a single, decisive victory, concen-
was the 'strategical penetration'; when faced trating on all-out attack. Only three times did
by a cordon of enemy forces, Napoleon \vould he fight a purely defensive battle (Leipsig, La
smash through at a weak point and march Rothiere, Arcis), and then only after an initial
rapidly deep into enemy territory, creating a attack had failed. Enemies who attempted to
situation favourable for the employment of counter-attack suffered more than those who
one of the previous systems. All three remained on the defensive, so part of
manoeuvres could be merged in the same Napoleon's plan was to tempt the enemy to
operation, adapted according to changing cir- attack, as at Austerlitz where he deceived
cumstances, to baffle and demoralize an the enemy into under-estimating French
enemy operating according to 'conventional' strength.
tactics. As in strategy, envelopment was the key to
'It is often in the system of campaign that success. There were two types of flank-
one conceives the system of battle,'116 wrote movement: one executed by a large force
101
acting independently of the main body, and At this point, only the scale of the victory was
an outflanking movement by part of the left undetermined. By pressing the retiring
French line of battle, the former threatening enemy with light cavalry and horse artillery,
the enemy's rear and the latter forcing him allowing no time to reform, Napoleon could
to re-deploy or change his front, which rarely end a war by a single battle. Even when the
led to a complete dislocation of the enemy plan did not go smoothly, French organiza-
position as did the former. Even the appear- tion and Napoleon's planning were so flexible
ance of a flank-manoeuvre, not an attack, that improvisations could be made without
could be sufficient to demoralize an enemy, as damaging the general scheme. But ironically
at Mount Tabor when two judicious cannon- Napoleon's last battle was the very reverse of
shots caused the flight of the enemy. classical Napoleonic warfare: Napoleon com-
There were three basic types of battle, manded the 'static' army whilst Blucher per-
capable of combination into a single opera- formed the role of the Napoleonic enveloping
tion. Firstly, the straight frontal combat, with attack, forcing Napoleon to commit his
no attempt at manoeuvre, costly to the victors reserve and thus being hoisted by his own
and usually allowing the vanquished to with- tactical petard.
draw in some order. Secondly, a battle on two
fronts, with a distinct break between the
THE STAFF
actions (corresponding to the strategic 'central
position' for allocation and transfer of troops), The organization of general staff and head-
for example Jena-Auerstadt and Quatre Bras- quarters varied greatly between armies but
Ligny. Thirdly was the Napoleonic battle par maintained a basically similar framework.
excellence: the strategic battle depending Following the Revolution, a new staff
upon manoeuvre, envelopment and break- hierarchy was created by France in 1790
through. The flexible French Corps system with ranks including Generals-in-Chief,
allowed the first Corps in contact to fight a Lieutenant-Generals, 'Marechaux-de-Camp'
holding action, with the remaining Corps (Major-Generals), and Adjutant-Generals as
close enough to lend rapid support, each chiefs of staff for the Lieutenant-Generals;
Corps being capable of holding a superior the latter rank and 'Marechal-de-Camp' was
enemy for at least a day. As French reinforce- later replaced by 'General de Division' and
ments arrived the enemy would be compelled 'General de Brigade' respectively. Lower
to commit his reserves, whilst Napoleon's ranks included Aides-de-Camp, 'Adjoints'
enveloping force would reveal itself at the (Assistant-Adjutant-Generals) and for a short
moment in which the enemy had committed time the sinister political commissars, 'Rep-
all his reserves, this revelation often timed by resentants en Mission' or 'Representants du
Napoleon's watch, measured literally to the Peuple aux Armees'. A typical divisional
minute, the exact moment for revelation being staff might be organized with a General of
signalled to the commander of the enveloping Division in command, assisted by two
force by cannon-shot or, if closer at h.and, by Adjutant-Generals; each brigade commanded
message borne by A.D.C. by a General of Brigade; with divisional
With this threat to his rear and lines of artillery and engineer commanders attached
communications, the enemy general had two to headquarters. All general officers had
choices: order a general withdrawal, usually aides-de-camp to act as couriers, and usually
impossible as Napoleon increased pressure on other 'personal' staff - secretaries, grooms,
the front to coincide with the flank attack, or surgeons, etc.
transfer troops from the front (his reserves Napoleon's 'Imperial Headquarters' (num-
already committed) to meet the flank attack. bering about 800 persons in the Jena cam-
Napoleon launched his hitherto-concealed paign, for example) included not only military
'masse de rupture' against the sector of the staff but his 'household' - Master of Horse,
line thus weakened, this strong striking-force Grand Master of the Palace, etc.; all
plunging into a gap blown open by the Guard Napoleon's A.D.C.s were general officers
artillery and dividing the enemy force in two. themselves, ~ach with a staff of ordinary aides
102
Fig. 67. A French staff officer reconnoitres the enemy., while a chasseur holds his horse. Print after Meissonier.

for routine (though dangerous) courier ser- in a limited sphere of operations. With this,
vice. Inside Imperial Headquarters were two and fewer capable subordinates, Wellington
departments, the Imperial Cabinet and Army dispensed with a Chief of Staff, this being
Headquarters, the latter the office of the shared by the Military Secretary (simply a
Chiefof Staff. The former included secretarial junior officer responsible for the transmission
staff, the Statistical Office, and Bacler of orders) and the Quartermaster- and
d' Albe's Topographical Office which not only Adjutant-Generals. The Quartermaster-
provided the cartographical services but acted General's Department was responsible for
as Napoleon's 'Operations Room'. The Chief all commissariat organization, topographical
of Staff's Office transferred the strategical surveys and ultimately intelligence; the staff
plan into reality by the issue of movement- consisted of Assistant QMGs and Deputy
orders, supply-instructions, etc., to accomp- Assistant QMGs, usually officers seconded
lish which there existed a complex organiza- from line regiments and attached not to head-
tion of departments and General Staff quarters but to individual units. The
Cabinets, supervising the entire running of Adjutant-General's Department was respon-
the army from quartermaster duties to the sible for all discipline and statistical matters,
accommodation of prisoners of war. and similarly consisted of Assistant AGs and
This enormous bureaucracy which accom- Deputy Assistant AGs. Attached to General
panied Napoleon's army on campaign con- Headquarters were other departments and
trasted with the simpler system employed by staffs: officers commanding Royal Artillery
Wellington in the Peninsular War, with far and Engineers; the Provost-Marshal and his
fewer number of troops to be supervised and Staff Corps Cavalry responsible for enforcing
1°3
discipline, deserters and prisoners; and the personnel and guides. A characteristic of
Corps of Guides, used as couriers and inter- inferior staff organization was the excessive
preters. The attached Civil Departments number of useless people gathered around a
comprised the Inspector of Hospitals' Medi- general (Napoleon's staff, though vast, was
cal Department, the Purveyor's Department proficient), for example the Russian General
(responsible for hospitals), the Paymaster- Buxh6wden who in 1805 not only dragged
General and staff, and the Commissariat, the behind him eleven carriages and as many carts
latter headed by the Commissary-General, but no less than ninety-six animals and 139
assisted by Deputy CGs, Assistant- and servants and staff.
Deputy Assistant-Commissaries and others,
an Assistant-Commissary being attached to
INTELLIGENCE
each infantry brigade and cavalry regiment.
Heavy baggage was the responsibility of the The. gathering of intelligence rested largely
Storekeeper-General. with spies of one variety or another.
Junior staff appointments included Brigade- 'Observing officers' rode deep into enemy
Majors and A.D.C.s, the latter fewer in territory, sometimes clandestinely, gathering
number than those of the French, regulations information about enemy troop-movements.
limiting Major-Generals to one, Lieutenant- They were aided by 'correspondents', resi-
Generals to two and even Wellington to only dents reporting troop-movements in their
three (though numerous supernumerary own area, like Dr Patrick Curtis of the Irish
A.D.C.s were used, their subsistence coming College at Salamanca, whose network of
from the general's own pocket). Contrasting agents supplied Wellington with much
with France, Britain had virtually no trained valuable information. Others were spies in the
staff officers, the entire army having only ten conventional mould, like Napoleon's agent
(the Quartermaster-General's Permanent Charles Schulmeister, a master of disguise
Assistants), of whom in 1813 only four were who infiltrated Austrian headquarters in the
with the field army. All other staff positions, 1805 campaign (he was discovered but set free
excluding general officers, were filled by by the Austrians after a beating)!
officers 'on detachment' from line regiments. Reports from such observing officers and
Staffs were very small; in autumn 18 I 3 the agents were collated with information gathered
Peninsula army's QMG had only four British by the army's outposts and from the interro-
officers and an A.D.C., .and the Adjutant- gation of prisoners. Napoleon's intelligence-
General four assistants and one trainee, this system included a file of enemy regiments,
paucity partly due to the almost self-sufficient covering strength, morale and efficiency, each
brigade system, the brigade-major (liaison compartment of the file representing a loca-
officer between headquarters and brigade tion; regimental details were noted on a
staff) being the only permanent appointment. playing-card and moved to the correct com-
Ironically, the general staff list was over- partment according to the latest reports.
loaded; in November 1812 there were 518 Cyphers were used when there was a danger'
general officers, of whom only 200 were of couriers being intercepted. They were vital
employed in staff duties, only forty-two with to the French in the Peninsula, though
the Peninsula army; of the three senior Wellington's code-breaker, Capt. Scovell,
Major-Generals in 181 I none had seen service even mastered the Great Paris Cypher. As
since 1783! Scovell was attached to the Quartermaster-
Staffs of other armies varied between two General's Department most intelligence work
extremes: the Spanish staff of Cuesta's hey- was passed there rather than to the Adjutant-
day, for example, though multitudinous, were General's Department which should have
totally useless; others, like the Austrians, were been responsible.
so proficient at staff-work that in the Auster- Accurate maps were a vital part of intel-
litz campaign they even took over the running ligence-work, often made by cartographers
of the Russian army, which was scarcely able attached to the army, -such as the 'sketching
to move without Austrian administrative officers' who mapped on a scale of three
1°4
Fig. 68. Different concepts ofstaffofficer. Left: A French general and his escort. Print after Meissonier. Right:
'A Major Part of the Town of Portsmouth'- Major Nathan Ashurst) I807. Print after Robert Dighton Sr.

SIGNALLING AND
inches to a mile under the direction of
COMMUNICATIONS
Quartermaster-General Murray in the Penin-
sular War. Otherwise, inaccurate civilian Communications between military forma-
maps had to be used, such as Lopez's map of tions was largely a matter of courier, bearing
Spain-which caused Massena such trouble. In either written or verbal messages, accom-
British service this item was replaced by the plished on the battlefield by the Aides-de-
more accurate Faden's map, which was itself Camp attached to every general officer, whose
so bad as to deserve 'to be burned by the high mortality-rate frequently resulted in the
public hangman.'117 The fine French Topo- non-delivery of orders. For the bearing of
graphical Department does not seem to have messages over greater distances, relays of
operated in Spain at all, though it was a vital riders or even post-chaises were employed,
contributing factor to Napoleon's successes some units being raised for the purpose, like
elsewhere. The supply of accurate maps could the Allied Corps of Guides (composed of
affect a general's strategy; for example on the Portuguese and renegade Italians) in the
day of Vimiero Wellington had ordered an Peninsula.
advance on Mafra, as 'I should have brought For short messages various mechanical
the army into a country of which I had an devices could be used. The semaphore was
excellent map and topographical accounts ... first introduced by Claude Chappe, who
and the battle ... would have had for its field installed twenty-two stations between Lille
a country of which we had a knowledge.'118 and Paris in 1792, capable of transmitting
1°5
With the telegraph virtually inoperable in
snow or fog, messages were still transmitted
by horseback, sometimes with disastrous con-
sequences. In April 1809 Napoleon dis-
patched a message to Berthier by telegraph,
following it with a qualifying message half an
hour later by courier. The telegraph message,
delayed by bad weather, took six days to
arrive; Berthier received the horse-borne
second message two and a half days before the
first, presumed that the second message was
in fact the first, and acted upon it, with
consequences which could have been tac-
tically catastrophic.
Other nations also used various systems of
message-machine. By 1796 Lord George
Murray, Director of Telegraphs at the~British
Admiralty, had erected a chain of twenty-four
stations between London and Portsmouth,
each with a wooden framework on which
letters were displayed. In 1797 one Richard
Edgeworth, having devised a semaphore-
system to transmit race-results from New-
market to London, proposed a 'Tellograph'
visible by telescope at 15 miles, with a
portable version for use in the field, but no
system was adopted until Admiral Popham's
two-arm semaphore devised in 1803. In 1806
this device transmitted a message and reply
Fig. 69. A French Observation Balloon, between London and Portsmouth in two
1794· minutes. Such devices, though static, were
used on campaign (th~ semaphore-station at
Elvas relayed news of the fall of Badajos on
I I March 1814 to Wellington by the 14th),
letters and words by means of three moveable but no attempt was made to introduce signal-
arms on a vertical pole. This 'Tachygraphe' systems on the battlefield, probably because
as Chappe named it, later 'Telegraph', was powder-smoke would have made all attempts
adopted by the French army at the instigation futile. In 1808 Joseph Connolly proposed a
of Lazare Carnot, whose chain of stations mobile system consisting of seven-feet square
linking Paris with the Rhine frontier trans- sheets hung between two pikes, costing £2 to
mitted news of the capture of Conde in 1793 produce and visible at three miles 'by the use
in twenty minutes. Despite maltreatment by of six-guinea telescopes', but despite suc-
the authorities which led to Chappe's suicide, cessful tests nothing came of the idea. Impro-
the telegraph prospered during the Empire, visations actually used in the field included
the small but efficient Military Telegraph the removal of two windmill-arms by Sir
Service manning chains of signal:..stations William Congreve at Menin in 1793, signal-
connecting Paris with other major cities and ling with the two remaining arms.
the seat of war, flag-relay posts connecting Other devices included the hoisting of
campaign headquarters with the nearest coded combinations of balls or flares on
permanent semaphore station. In good church-towers or flagpoles and the employ-
weather messages could travel at an astonish- ment of carrier-pigeons. Most rudimentary
ing 120 miles per hour. was the beacon-chain on the coast of Britain,
106
to be lit in case of invasion. The effectiveness descend they would allow him to visit their
- and drawback - of the system was demon- headquarters. Coutelle declined!
strated in 1804 when the beacon-watch at In 1796 France possessed 'L'Entreprenant'
Home Castle mistook a domestic fire ill and three other balloons, 'Celeste', 'Hercule'
Northumberland for the signal of invasion, and 'Intrepide'; in 1797 Napoleon took one
the local defence forces turning out with section to Egypt but it was never employed
incredible alacrity as the whole chain of successfully, and the whole corps - excepting
beacons was ignited. a detachment in Egypt - was disbanded in
1799, not to re-appear (except for an abortive
experiment in Algeria) until the Franco-
AERIAL OBSERVATION
Prussian War. The principle of aerial 0 bserva-
Guyton de Morveau of the French Committee tion was sound, but too revolutionary for the
of Public Safety instigated the first employ- somewhat hidebound military theorists of the
ment of captive balloons in a military capacity, day.
the 'Ire Compagnie d' Aerostiers' being
RATES OF MOVEMENT
created under J. M. J. Coutelle and N. J.
Conte on 23 March 1794. The world's first The movement of an army depended upon
military 'aircraft' was constructed at the the speed of march physically possible, the
Chateau de Chalais-Meudon, the hydrogen- amount of artillery and baggage, t.he state of
balloon 'L'Entreprenant', powered by the the roads and the hours of daylight, all
passing of steam over red-hot iron, the use variable quantities.
of sulphuric acid being forbidden in the In British service in 180 I there existed
interests of the production of gunpowder. three 'steps' for infantry: 'Ordinary Time', 75
Secured by two cables, 'L'Entreprenant' had paces to the minute; 'Quick Time', 108; and
a crew of two - pilot and observer. 'Wheeling Step', 120, used only for manoeuvre;
Coutelle, commander of the Aerostier each pace was thirty inches. Similar 'steps'
company, joined the French army at Mau- were used by most armies, Russia for example
berge, using his balloon to report the positions having a.slow pace of 75 to the minute and a
of the Austro-Netherlands army outside the quickstep of 120 (added in 1803), in their case
city, signals being transmitted by flags, executed in a 'goose-step' with unbended
luminous balls hung over the side of the knee. France used a 25.6 in. step, 76 paces to
basket, or written messages in sandbags slid the minute in ordinary time and 100 in quick
down the cables by small rings. On his fifth time, so that in theory the British should have
ascent Coutelle encountered history's first marched faster; on campaign, the reverse was
anti-aircraft fire; when a roundshot glanced true.
off the bottom of the basket he ascended a Though cavalry travelled quickly over
further 1,300 feet until out of range! short distances, Adye estimated the 'usual rate
From Mauberge the company moved to of marching' to be seventeen miles in six
Charleroi, the appearance of the balloon in the hours, 'but this may be extended to 21, or
sky apparently demoralizing the Austrians even 28 miles in that time'119 ... 'military
into immediate surrender. Next day Coutelle horses walk about 400 yards in 4-! minutes.
took up General Morlot as observer for the Trot the same distance in 2 minutes 3 seconds,
full ten hours of the Battle of Fleurus, the and gallop it in about I minute. '120
information relayed to the ground contri- An average speed for an army was about
buting to French victory. A second balloon fifteen miles per day, though even this would
section was formed, serving at Donauw6rth exhaust the horses if maintained. Some
and Wiirzburg (where a balloon was cap- nations were renowned for ponderous move-
tured). On one occasion Coutelle was airborne ment: Russia, usually encumbered by an
in so strong a wind that sixty-four men hang- excess of artillery; Spain, armies lethargic,
ing on to the cable could barely control it; ill-disciplined and short of horses; and
fearful for his safety, the Austrians sent a Austria, whose armies moved quickly only
message to the effect that if Coutelle would under certain circumstances. For example, in
1°7
Fig. 70. British regimental baggage- waggon~ c. 1802. (Print afterW H. Pyne).

Fig. 71. Right Above: British infantrymen loading baggage and their families on to a regimental waggon.
Print afterW H. Pyne.

Fig. 72. Right Below: A halt on the march: French troops at rest in the Russian campaign of 1812. Print after
Albrecht Adam.

1809 an Austrian army took eighteen days to days behind the infantry! Later in the war
advance from the River Inn to the Isar; the Wellington marched 80,000 men from the
left wing covered the same distance, in rout, Portuguese frontier to Vittoria over the same
in two days! poor roads at over fifteen miles per day,
Sustained effort could wreck an army. At without affecting the efficiency, due both to
the beginning of the Peninsular War Junot's superior organization and experience and to
French marched from the French border to the season (midsummer, as against October-
. Lisbon, taking 43 days to cover 640 miles, November for Junot).
the first 300 at twelve miles a day on main Extraordinary feats could be achieved by
roads and the remainder, over minor roads, trained units or horsemen. Wellington's
averaging eighteen miles a day. This left the A.D.C.s could cover four miles in eighteen
cavalry and artillery behind, having to be re- minutes, twelve miles in an hour, and with
horsed en route and arriving in Lisbon ten a relay of horses about sixty miles a day.
108
601
Wellington himself rode the 174 miles from 'When the small species are not issued,
Ciudad Rodrigo to Badajos in 76 hours, and I! lbs of flour or bread, with I! lbs of beef,
even more spectacular was the 595-mile ride or 10 oz of pork, forms a complete ration: or
of Sir Charles Vaughan, from the Tudela to 3 lbs of beef; or 2 lbs of cheese; or half a
Corunna via Madrid and Salamanca, in nine pound of rice.'
days (Vaughan himself mis-calculated the 188 When, of course, it was issued. John Shipp
leagues to be 790 miles, a figure accepted describes a typical meal provided by an un-
by Fortescue and Oman). A similar mis- scrupulous landlord: ' ... fat pea soup ... suet
calculation has distorted the most rapid dumplings heavy as lead ... greasy puddings,
infantry march of the Napoleonic Wars, that and fat stews made of the offal of the house
of the British Light Brigade to Talavera, '62 for the past month, with fat an inch thick on
miles in 26 hours', due to the different the top .... '123 Alcohol was provided, often in
'leagues' in use in Spain ('Legales castellana' startling quantity: aboard ship, says Adye,
== 2.63 English miles, maritime leagues == each group of six men should receive four
3.49 miles, 'Geograficas' leagues == 4 miles, gallons of beer, two pints of spirit or four pints
and 'Legales Espana' == 4.21 miles). The of wine per day.124 In the Peninsular War
actual distance covered by the Light Brigade the standard daily ration was I lb of meat
would seem to be 42 miles in 26 hours, plus (travelling on the hoof), I lb of 'biscuit' or
four or five miles beyond Talavera, a pro- I! lbs of bread or rice, and one pint .of wine
digious feat nonetheless. 121 or i pint of spirit. Other nations' rations,
Napoleon's speed of march constantly however, were much worse: for example,
astonished his opponents; on 13 November prior to British re-organization, the Portu-
1805 Lannes' and Soult's Corps arrived at guese soldier was given i lb of fish and I! lbs
Vienna after marching 152 miles (plus de- of bread on Sundays and Fridays, and on
tours) in thirteen days on poor roads; and other days! lb of beef, I! lbs of bread and a
Davout entered Berlin on 25 October 1806 quart of wine. The fish and meat were usually
after marching 166 miles and fighting the rotten, the wine sour and the bread baked with
Battle of Auerstadt in only fourteen days. sand to save flour! Army 'biscuit' was either
Climatic conditions could drastically re- rock-hard (at least one British officer saved
duce the rate of movement, both dust-clouds his life by stuffing his jacket with biscuit and
in summer or snow-drifts in winter, heavy thus turning a musket-ball), or alive, as
rain turning roads into a quagmire which Charles Napier wrote: 'We are on biscuits full
sucked off boots and even drowned men, or of maggots, and though not a bad soldier,
burning sun causing heatstroke. Even a hang me if I can relish maggots. '125 In British
blocked road - such as that closed by fire service, the ration was made daily whenever
at Wavre - could have a decisive bearing possible, for a larger issue usually resulted in
upon the outcome of a battle. the troops eating as much as possible and
selling the remainder to buy alcohol.
RATIONS, SUPPLIES AND Wellington wrote: 'No troops can serve to
TRANSPORT any good purpose unless they are regularly
fed.'126 This was the duty of the commissariat,
Nauseating though contemporary recipes transporting rations from depots to the army;
now seem, the British army was compara- in mid-I8I3 this amounted to 100,000 lbs of
tively well-provendered. Adye records the biscuit, 300 head of cattle and 200,000 lbs of
daily 'Complete Ration of the small forage-corn per day for Wellington's army.
Species. '122 As each mule carried 200 lbs of supplies plus
'Flour, or bread I! lbs its own feed for the round trip (in other words,
Beef I six days' biscuit for thirty-three men, rum for
or Pork 1
2 one hundred or rice for twenty men),
Peas i'pint enormous mule-trains were required. The
Butter, or cheese I oz depots or 'magazines' were ideally situated
Rice I oz within three or four days' mule-march of the
110
army, supplies being taken to the depots by cow and even in the Peninsula, where rascally
bullock-carts and river-boats, coming not muleteers were recorded as selling 'pork
only from Portugal but by ship from Britain slices' from a French corpse!
and the lJ.S.A. Even more than food, forage for horses was
France used the other classic method of vital to keep an army mobile. On service a
food-supply: living off the land by foraging. horse could carry three days' food, corn in a
This process increased an army's mobility sack behind the saddle and hay slung in nets
and manoeuvrability, and was closely-tied to wherever possible. Frequently the forage was
the Napoleonic 'blitzkrieg' theory of warfare, provided by regimental parties detached for
and worked reasonably well until barren the purpose, though it was often despatched
country was encountered, though even in from depots by the British in the Peninsula,
fertile terrain required a wide dispersal of a mule carrying six days' corn for three horses,
forces to avoid the total exhaustion of anyone plus 20 lbs over.
area. Throughout the Peninsular War and Supply-trains were enormous, even ex-
particularly in Russia, however, starvation cluding the droves of 'camp followers'. For
was an ever-present companion of the French example, each British brigade and cavalry
armies. The system of foraging also had regiment in the Peninsula required about 150
strategic drawbacks; though it allowed a mules, whilst a horse artillery troop is
commander to ignore temporarily his lines of recorded with seventy-one mules for bread,
communication, it presented strict limits: as twenty-four for rum, twelve for rice, sixty-
Marmont wrote to Napoleon in February nine for forage and twenty-nine spares: total
1812: 'If the army marches against Rodrigo 205 mules. In addition to commissariat-
now we should not be able to stay there for animals, each unit had animals to carry camp-
three days for lack of food. We should achieve kettles, medical stores, ammunition, etc., plus
nothing as the enemy knows we cannot stay officers' baggage, the latter on a sliding scale
there.... '127 according to rank: lieutenant-colonel ten,
Russia adopted the same policy. As Wilson major seven, captain five, subaltern one, etc.
wrote of the Russian commissariat: 'This may (General Order, 1 September 1809). Even so
be dismissed in three words - There is none British trains never approached the enormity
at all ... 128 ... their regular food of the coarsest of those which trailed behind other armies,
and plainest quality, and so precarious ... the Spanish for example.
that the usual and best mode of supply, even Waggon-trains originally depended upon
in their own country, is by rapine.... 129 ... civilian drivers, and even civilian contractors
where the magazines are lost, or the army is to supply and maintain the waggons, usually
compelled to leave them at a distance, every a hopeless system as both contractors and
one must nearly take care of himself.... '130 frequently the officials in charge were riddled
Thus, the Napoleonic soldier was often on with corruption. Until 1807 this system was
the brink of starvation, which a few random used by France, the waggoners (ni~knamed
examples illustrate. In the Eylau campaign 'Royal Cart Grease') despised and the con-
neither French nor Russians had anything but tractor, the Breidt Company, termed 'a band
potatoes and water; in fact on 25 December of rascals'13! by Napoleon. In 1805, for
1806 General Lasalle's gift to Marshal Murat, example, instead of providing the thirty
a princely gift indeed, consisted of a loaf of transport-brigades they had promised, the
bread and a bottle of wine, sent by special company fielded only six brigades, of which
courier! One Russian soldier complained to only sixty waggons remained available by
the Czar that for seven days he and some December. Napoleon was served so badly in
comrades had only a piece of hide, softened
in water, on which to chew. The ultimate Fig. 73. Overleaf Left: Various French wag-
pangs of hunger invariably led to the con- gons.
sumption of the army's horses and, occasion-
ally, to cannibalism. The latter practice Fig. 74. Overleaf Right: Various Russian
occurred frequently on the retreat from Mos- waggons.
III
112
113
the Eylau campaign that he scrapped the current consumption and as a reserve; supply-
previous arrangements and instituted the trains were normally allowed to carry only
Carriage Train Corps, which grew in size to between four and seven days' rations of flour
twenty-three battalions, each possessing 140 and biscuit, to feed the army when battle was
waggons, a total often either exceeded or not imminent, when the usual foraging was im-
reached in the field. In addition, each bat- possible. Ration-food was also carried by the
talion or cavalry regiment after 1805 had two individual; at the beginning of the 18 I 2
waggons, plus one for officers' baggage, a campaign, for example, some French soldiers
total invariably exceeded on campaign. So were given four 16-oz biscuits and a cloth
many waggons were lost in 18 12 that there- 'sausage' to hold 10 Ibs of flour.
after all manner of civilian carriages were Living off the land had advantages, but
pressed into service. could be disaster to an army unaccustomed
Britain supplanted its civilian waggoners to the art of forage. Austria (of whom one
with the infamous Royal Corps of Waggoners veteran claimed that their 'tail' of waggons
in 1794: 'Of this Corps little need be said, as was so immense and the officers so unwilling
its miserable state became proverbial in the to be parted from their comforts that they lost
Army; it failed completely in every part, and half a march on the French every day)
the only trace remaining of it is a heavy attempted to emulate the French mobility by
charge on the half-pay list of reduced living off the land; the system was a disaster to
Officers.'132 In 1799 the Royal Waggon Train the inexperienced Austrians who not only
was formed, and by the time of the Peninsular starved but were unable to concentrate
War was apparently chiefly used for the trans- rapidly when necessary.
portation of wounded (its waggons were un- Such a system occasioned not only dispersal
suitable for Portuguese by-roads), though it of forces but loose organization on the march.
was not until 1810 that the commissary A French emigre in Bavarian service recorded
officers were given military rank, being mem- the march of the French from VIm to Vienna
bers of the Civil Service until that date; they in 1805:
ranged from brilliant organizers to downright ' ... the victorious army ... appeared ... no
thieves. Paltry though the commissariat was, longer anything but an army in rout, but rout
the government tried to reduce it further in advance ... this torrent took the direction
during the Peninsular War, Huskisson noting: of Vienna, and henceforth there was nothing
'The Waggon Train is an annoyance on but an "arrive qui peut" .... '136
foreign service and useless at home;'133 but Yet at the first alarm this milling mass was
Wellington refused to send home the two instantly transformed into orderly units. As
troops scheduled for reduction. the quality of the French army declined, so
The old system of relying on depots could the straggling increased: an estimated 60,000
severely limit the manoeuvrability of an army; men were 'absent' after Eylau and in 1809
before Valmy, for example, the Prussians had five travelling courts-martial were estab-
to halt every sixth day to bake a week's bread lished: 'Every straggler who, under pretext of
before moving on (they later possessed a more fatigue, leaves his corps for the purpose of
sophisticated 'Train' which supplied services marauding, will be arrested, tried by court
such as remount-depots and postal services in martial, and executed on the spot' (14 May
addition to usual duties; detachments of 1809).137
'Truppentrain' were seconded to individual Despite a number of regulation patterns of
units to drive regimental vehicles as well). vehicle, many baggage-waggons were im-
Napoleon persisted with his foraging system pressed from the local population or privately-
('We must separate to live but unite to purchased civilian vehicles. The British in the
fight')134 until barren terrain compelled him Peninsula were equipped with waggons sent
to write in February 1807: 'Circumstances from Britain (unsuitable for local conditions),
have forced me to return to the system of and a few 'spring waggons' for the trans-
depots.'135 These depots concentrated upon portation of wounded, but depended almost
armaments though bread was produced for entirely on great numbers of Portuguese ox-
114
carts. These primitive vehicles with wicker- travel upon an average nearly as fast as a stage
work sides, solid wheels and turning axles coach: it went quite round the park, carrying
which made an excruciating noise, were pain- its full complement of men, in ten minutes.
fully slow - two miles an hour was a fair They are accommodated with seats, one
speed - and too small, but were used because higher than the other, so constructed that the
they were suitable for local terrain and could men's legs are out of each other's way. The
be driven and repaired by any peasant. arms, accoutrements, &c., are deposited in a
Regimental baggage-trains marched in the kind of narrow chest in the centre of the
following order: oxen for the day's meat; then waggon.... '138
vehicles drawn by horses or mules; carts Under active service conditions, however,
drawn by oxen; mules bearing ammunition; it would probably have proved too cumber-
baggage of the staff; mules carrying camp- some.
kettles or tents; and finally baggage of regi- Sledges were used over snow when avail-
mental officers. able; small, two-man vehicles pulled by· a
Excessive transport impeded an army's single horse were much used by the Grande
progress, particularly over poor roads in bad Armee in 1812, and even adopted a defensive
weather. Wellington eventually forbade the function. Marbot dismounted the 23rd and
use of bullock-carts for transporting reserve 24th Chasseurs aCheval and formed a sledge-
ammunition because of blockages caused by transported brigade, drawn into square at
these slow-moving convoys. In Poland in night to resemble a 'Wild West' waggon-
1806-07 the roads so deteriorated in winter laager: with each man armed with two
that nothing would move without a double- or muskets it provided a mobile fort secure from
treble-team. marauding cossacks.
There was comparatively little use of Water-borne transport was only of use
vehicles for the transportation of troops. when an army had unchallenged domination
Where roads allowed, France used this system of the sea (as had the British in the Peninsula),
in limited quantities; in 1805, for example, or when rivers and canals coincided with the
a column of Imperial Guard went from Paris position of the army. In 1812, for example,
to Strasbourg by 'post' - troops packed four Napoleon organized convoys of river-boats
or five to a two-wheeled cart and twelve per and barges to supplement the waggon-trains
four-wheel waggon, covering sixty miles a day moving from Dantzig and Konigsburg to the
by changing horses at 'posting-stages' about army.
ten miles apart. It was both exhausting for the
men and wearing on equipment. Similarly,
MEDICAL SERVICES
Kutuzov employed some 2,233 Austrian two-
horse carts in 1805, the first part of each During the Napoleonic Wars medical know-
column riding ahead of those on foot to give ledge was limited, methods of treatment
the men a brief (if uncomfortable) rest. Other primitive and hygiene non-existent. Any
improvisations included such episodes as the wound, no matter how slight, could result in
commandeering of Irish jaunting-cars and death from neglect or gangrene, with amputa-
carriages by the Dumbarton Fencibles, racing tion a universal palliative. As one British
to the battle of Arklow (1798). surgeon wrote about those with severe
Ingenious vehicles were occasionally de- wounds:
signed specifically for the transportation of ' ... a simple inspection of their wounds,
troops, one such 'military fly' reported by the with a few words of consolation, or perhaps
London Chronicle (1796): a little opium, was all that could be recom-
' ... a carriage for the rapid conveyance of mended ... prudence equally forbids the rash
troops from place to place. It is a light waggon, interposition of unavailing art, and the useless
which carries fifty men, with their arms, indulgence of delusive hope. '139
baggage, &c. drawn by six horses a-breast, Disease was a greater threat even than
harnessed as in a coach, and ridden by two battle-wounds. From 1793 to 1797 in the
postillions. This machine is calculated to West Indies 80,000 British troops died or
lIS
were permanently disabled by fever. In 181 I, provIsIon for two and four stretcher-cases
a hard-fought year in the Peninsula, Britain respectively, but though they were used as
lost 22,953 men; of these, some 2,000 were early as 1793 the parsimony of the administra-
killed in the Peninsula and 100 in Java, with tion prevented any widespread introduction.
over 4,000 in the Peninsula and 15,000 else- In 1797 Larrey organized ambulance-trains,
where dying or being disabled through sick- each 'ambulance' of 340 men comprising
ness. In 1807, out of every 196 Frenchmen three divisions of 113 men each plus one
admitted to hospital, only forty-seven were surgeon-in-chief, each division comprising a
wounded. Unable to determine the cause of surgeon-major, fourteen assistant-surgeons,
diseases, the medical establishment had no four quartermaster personnel, a military
idea of how to combat them; when in 1809 police lieutenant, six N.e.O.s, two musicians,
the British Physician-General was asked to twelve mounted and twenty-five dismounted
investigate the epidemic at Walcheren, he orderlies, eight two-wheel and four four-
declined as ' ... he was not acquainted with the wheel ambulances and drivers, and four
diseases of soldiers in camp and quarters. '140 'fourgons' crewed by four N.C.O.s, a
'Remedies' included bleeding, pouring twenty- trumpeter and twenty men. Only in the
five buckets of cold water from a third-storey Imperial Guard, however, was Larrey's
window on a man suffering from 'Guadiana system truly effective, the benefits of early
fever' (probably malaria), and the 'cure' pre- treatment and proper care being evident in the
scribed by one doctor: ' ... the best of living Guard's casualty-figures for Aspern-Essling
and at least two bottles of Madeira per and Wagram: out of 1,200 wounded, 600 by
diem.'141 August had returned to their units, 250 been
France possessed the most enlightened evacuated to France and only forty-five had
medical service thanks to a number of en- died. Outside the Guard, however, the prob-
lightened surgeons like Pierre Fran~ois Percy lem was almost as bad as ever; despite Larrey's
and, in particular, Dominique Jean Larrey, overall command of medical services for the
surgeon-in-chief of the Imperial Guard and 18 I 2 campaign personnel and equipment were
perhaps the greatest humanitarian of the age. so inadequate due to governmental parsimony
'Revolutionary fervour' had led in 1792 to the that in the 24 hours after Borodino Larrey
abolition of all medical schools (privileged had to perform 200 amputations himself; and
institutions being anathema), the training in 18 I 3 the situation was so chaotic that
establishments which replaced them being Larrey had to resort to transporting the
largely useless. Only in 1803 were the old wounded from Bautzen in straw-filled wheel-
faculties resurrected, the medical services in barrows. Other unusual innovations included
the meantime depending upon a few gifted the use of camel-panniers for the transporta-
surgeons like Larrey, Percy and the Physician- tion of casualties in Egypt, and latterly the
in-Chief, Rene Desgenettes (the ci-devant equipping of orderlies with pikes which
Baron Des Genettes). doubled as stretcher-poles.
Effective treatment of wounds depended The British army possessed a small number
upon early casualty-evacuation, originally of medical 'staff' who supervised hospitals,
dependent upon slow-moving carts or 'four- and regimental medical officers (one surgeon
gons' which might take 24 or 36 hours to and two assistants per battalion). Evacuation
transport wounded to the nearest dressing- relied upon carts or commissariat-waggons
station. In 1·793 Percy began despatching which rode so badly as to finish off many
surgeons on horseback to the battle-front, wounded before they even reached hospital;
and in 1799 designed a four-wheel 'wurst Wellington would allow no systematic trans-
wagen', a caisson with a padded top to seat up portation of casualties as such vehicles would
to eight medical orderlies, to treat men as soon have impeded movements of the offensive
as they were wounded. Actual evacuation was part of the army. Hospitals usually resembled
completed by Larrey, who invented the charnel-houses, even those with beds putting
'flying ambulances', two- and four-wheel two patients in each. Small wonder that when
sprung carriages with covered roofs and Harry Smith went to Lisbon in 1810 to have
116
Fig. 75. A French camel litter as used in Egypt. Light wooden framework with silk or cotton
panels and roof. The ramp at the back was held by a notched bar.

Fig. 76 . Larrey's ambulances. Above: Two-wheeled and Below: Four-wheeled examples.


117
Fig. 77. The appalling sight of a battleft"eld: Borodino. Print after c. G. Faber du Faur.

Fig. 78. The common neglect ofthe wounded: injured French soldiers left to their own devices. Print after Raffet. I

118
a bullet removed from his leg the surgeons law-enforcement being largely the duty of
advised him to keep his stiff leg rather than these auxiliary troops. 'Fencibles' - both
risk having the ball extracted! infantry and cavalry - were similar to the
Lack of knowledge, care and interest all regular army, save that they could not be
contributed to make the 'butcher's bill' of the ordered out of the country in which they were
Napoleonic Wars far greater than it should raised without their consent; a few did serve
have been. Even today humanitarians like abroad, in the' '98' in Ireland and one unit
Larrey remain largely unknown, whilst the in Egypt.
instigators of the carnage have been almost France implemented a limited 'levee en
immortalized. As Percy remarked in 1799, masse' (mass-conscription) at the start of the
'One would believe that the sick and wounded Revolutionary Wars, but the main second-
cease to be men when they can no longer be line troops were the National Guard (formed
soldiers. '142 1789) who, when called upon, could perform
with distinction (as at La Fere-Champenoise),
IRREGULARS
though . not all were so steadfast. Other
The term 'irregular' is used to describe any auxiliaries included the 'Gardes d'Honneur'
unit not classed as part of a 'regular' army. of individual towns, and the National Guard
The statutory British home-defence force, system was adopted by many nations in the
the Militia, existed as a number of county French sphere of influence.
infantry battalions, recruited by ballot, a form A form of 'levee en masse' was activated in
of conscription which enabled balloted men to Prussia in 1813, the mass-conscription of men
buy exemption by providing a 'substitute' to aged seventeen to twenty-four to form 'Land-
serve in their place. Though never required to wehr' units, who fought alongside the regu-
serve abroad en masse, militiamen vvere lars; in fact it is a moot point whether the
latterly allowed to volunteer into line regi- 'Landwehr' should be classed as 'irregulars'.
ments, providing the regular army with a The Austrian Landwehr was much inferior,
constant supply of trained recruits. After the though numerous: in 1809 there were 200,000
Militia came the Volunteers, local-defence Landwehr and 40,000 members of Hungarian
companies who drilled for a few hours a week and Croatian 'insurrections' (home-defence
and were not required to serve outside a corps). Out of 175 battalions at or near
specified area - town, county or military Wagram, thirty-one were Landwehr or
district - and then only in cases of civil similar, though even the Minister of War
disorder or invasion. Including cavalry termed them 'a body without a soul';143 when
('yeomanry') and artillery, the volunteers mobilized in 1809 two battalions refused to
originally comprised only those who could march at all and another attacked its com-
afford to purchase their arms and equiprnent; mander with bayonets! 'Freikorps' were
the formation was given a wider social basis another German innovation, being small
after 18°3, the 'establishment' of that Decem- units or companies of middle-class volunteers
ber numbering some 463,134 British volun- attached to regular corps, adept at scouting
teers. Volunteer artillery was restricted to and skirmishing, and acting as a training-
manning shore-batteries, the Government ground for officers and N.C.O.s. 'Burgwehr'
considering the allocation of fieldpieces to be were town-guard units, also German; and the
unwise. Training and equipment varied from 'Landsturm' was a popular insurrectionist
very good to occasionally wretched, though movement established in Prussia in t8 13,
morale (in as much as it was possible to intended to encompass all males between
estimate that of troops not on active service) eighteen and sixty years, wearing no uniform
was high. The volunteers were largely re- and acting as guerrillas; it was a total failure
placed in 1808 by 'Local Militia', an attempt as it was bound by government restrictions
to organize the hundreds of independent units and lacked the necessary spontaneous sup-
into cohesive battalions. The militia and port.
volunteers' main contribution was to relieve 'Guerrilla' warfare originated in Spain
regular troops for active service, security and during the Peninsular War, in a massive
119
Fig. 79. Popular enthusiasm: the departure of the Paris National Guard for the battlefront, September 1792.
Print after Coginet.

popular movement to expel the French. with sharpened vine-poles, was of negligible
Despite an attempt to regularize the size of value.
guerrilla bands in 'partidas' in December The cossacks were the most effective 'ir-
1808 they ranged from a handful to the 8,000 regulars' of the period: nomadic tribesmen,
men controlled by Espoz y Mina, one of superb horsemen, trained from childhood and
many guerrilla chieftains who became folk- unswervingly loyal to the Czar, yet un-
heroes. The guerrilla contribution to the disciplined, prone to looting and barbarity.
Peninsular War has been under-estimated, They were organized in tribal groups or
for not only did they wreak havoc by cutting 'voiskos', with chieftains or 'atamans' as
French communications, they also accounted officers, and the 'hetman' (general) over all.
for, by one estimate, one hunqred Frenchmen Superb light horse, avoiding contact except
per day throughout the entire war. Inevitably upon their own terms, they favoured the 'hit-
much simple banditry was disguised as and-run' tactics which speeded the destruc-
patriotism and on both sides the most horrific tion of the Grande Armee in 1812. Similar
atrocities were perpetrated. The Portuguese auxiliaries - tartars, bashkirs and kalmuks -
militia was of value only in relieving regular were of less value, many armed in medieval
troops from garrison duty whilst their (levee fashion. The Russian version of the levee en
en masse' or 'ordenan~a', often armed only masse was the opolchenie, crudely-armed
120
Fig. 80. Cossacks with a local guide~ c. 1813. Print after JA. Klein.

peasants who lacked equipment but not spirit; an enterprising private Chetvertakov raised a
at Maloyaroslavets they' ... not only stood as partisan band of up to 4,000 men in the
steady under the cannonade as their veteran Gzhatsk region in 1812, but was branded a
comrades, but charged the sallying enemy with trouble-maker and compelled to return to his
as ardent ferocity'144 according to General regiment. In allover 90,000 Russian irregulars
Wilson. Eventually they received grey kaf- served in the 1812 campaign.
tans, cloth or fur caps and firearms. Partisan-
bands were formed in Russia in 1812, often
'FOREIGN CORPS'
from local opolchenie around a nucleus of
cossacks and regular hussars, producing folk- A number of armies included contingents of
heroes li~e Denis Davidov; haphazard bands foreigners, serving as mercenaries, 'emigres'
of peasants armed with agricultural imple- (fugitives from their own country) or, like the
ments also existed, and were responsible for fine Swiss troops in French service, supplied
most of the atrocities inflicted upon French by client states under contracts of employ-
stragglers in 1812. The Russian authorities, ment. In addition, some ordinary units
ever afraid of insurrection, refused to allow contained large numbers of foreign-born per-
these irregular forces the freedom of action sonnel; in 1812, for example, the French
demanded by guerrilla warfare; for example, 11th Hussars and 14th Cuirassiers were
121
Fig. 81. 'Foreign' troops made up a large proportion of Napoleon's army in 1812; here a French cuirassier
observes Bavarians tending a casualty. Print after Albrecht Adam.

Dutch, the 7th and 8th Chevau-Leger- Waterloo. The quality of 'foreign corps'
Lanciers Polish and the 9th German, the varied from the excellence of the Franco-
I 11th and 113th Line Italian, the 123rd to Swiss and the British King's German Legion,
126th Dutch and the 129th German, the latter to trash like the mutinous rabble of Greeks,
also including some of the 1,000 conscripted Croats, Serbs and Albanians in Froberg's
Lithuanian peasants also distributed to the Regiment in British service, 1804-07. The
Illyrian Regiment. practice of enlisting deserters and ex-
French emigre units served with other prisoners drastically reduced the quality.
nations during the Revolutionary Wars and Many individuals served in foreign armies:
some, augmented by ex-prisoners, mercen- French emigres, many Germans in Russian
aries and other riffraff served throughout the service, and many second- or third-generation
period. Germany provided troops to several Irish in the Spanish army (whose 'foreign'
nations, some smaller states having made a regiments - Irish, Swiss, Neapolitan, etc. -
regular industry of supplying troops for cash: contained a large percentage of Spanish-born
as late as 1793 Hanover, Hesse-Cassel, Hesse- foreigners). Britain employed many Germans
Darmstadt, Baden and Brunswick supplied (George III being Elector of Hanover),
33,750 men to Britain, and 7,300 more in the French emigres, plus a few Canadians,
following year. The Duke of Brunswick's Americans and Portuguese. The career of one-
'Black Legion' had a chequered career, raised officer illustrates the inter-change of per-
for Austrian service, transferred to British sonnel between armies, the anonymous writer
and fighting under their own colours at 'Capt. Fritz'; from an aristocratic Mecklen-
122
Fig. 82. Infantry from the Duchy ofUlarsav) march to the attackJ observed by Napoleon. Print after Raffet.

burg family, he served as a Prussian hussar and any landings usually unopposed.
officer until 1806 when he attached himself Transporting troops by sea was unpleasant,
to the Russians, then joined the Brunswick the troopships hopelessly insanitary and dis-
Legion in Austrian, later British service, embarkation by longboat fraught with dif-
transferred to the King's German Legion and ficulty, even worse for horses than for men,
served in the Peninsular War, fought with the there often being no other way of landing
Russian army at Borodino and rejoined the them other than throwing them over the side
Prussians in 1813! Officers even fought on and letting them swim to shore. There were
different sides: von Kruse the Nassauer no special boats used for disembarkation,
served with the French in 1813 and against though Napoleon gathered fleets ofba~ges for
them at Waterloo. More unusual was the his proposed descent upon England, in
career of the British 97th; raised from addition to the fanciful 'rafts' of enormous
Tyroleans (called Swiss) for Austrian service, size planned by eccentric designers.
they were captured in Italy by the French who Naval actions could radically affect the
sold them to Spain at a dollar a head; captured course of warfare on land, for example the
by the British in Minorca they were formed destruction of the French fleet in Aboukir
into the Queen's German Regiment and were Bay, and the very presence of a naval force
ultimately taken into the British line! capable of landing troops - for example the
diversionary attacks by the British on the
coast of eastern Spain during the Peninsular
AMPHIBIOUS OPERATIONS
War - could occupy large numbers of troops
Though control of the sea was a vital factor which could have been employed to greater
affecting trade and the supply of overseas effect elsewhere.
contingents, amphibious operations were few Marines, originally infantry units raised
12 3
;P£g.83. Br£t'ish troops land£ng upon an enemy-held coast. Pr£nt by M. Dubourg after JA.Atk£nson.

for service aboard ship, were either from boarders. Equally, they could serve on land,
specialist corps or from detachments of line as the French Guard Marines did; Russian
troops seconded for the purpose, even dis- marines fought in the 1812 campaign and the
mounted cavalrymen being used occasionally French Marine Artillery - actually 'coast
in this role. At sea, marines were used as artillery' employed to garrison seaports -
sharpshooters, firing from the deck and served in the 1813 campaign.
fighting-tops, and occasionally to repel

116. Napoleon, Correspondence, XII, No. 10032, quoted in 130. Ibid., p. 203.
Chandler, p. 178. 13I. Napoleon, Correspondence, XIV, No. 12178.
117. General Graham, quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, 132. Le Mesurier; see Glover, Peninsular Preparation, p. 273.
p. 133· 133. Quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, p. 18.
118. Quoted in ibid., p. 133. 134. Quoted in Rogers, Napoleon's Army, p. 98.
119. Adye, p. 179. 135. Napoleon to Darut, 2 February 18°7, quoted in Rogers,
120. Ibid., p. 167. Napoleon's Army, p. 99.
12I. See Verner, pp. 487-9. 136. Comeau, Memoires des Guerres d' Allemagne, p. 219; see
122. Adye, p. 225. Petrie, Napoleon and Archduke Charles, p. 25.
123. Shipp, p. 16. 137. Saski, Campagne de 18°9, III, p. 366; see Petrie,
124. Adye, p. 226. Napoleon and Archduke Charles, p. 25.
125. Napier, Llfe of C. Napier, I, p. 166; quoted in Brett- 138. London Chronicle, 29 October 1796.
James, Llfe in Wellington's Army, p. 110. 139. Dr Adam Neale, quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army,
126. Wellington to Lord Wellesley, 8 August 1809; p. 128.
'Despatches', V, p. I I. 140. Quoted in ibid., p. 126.
127. Marmont, 26 February 1812; quoted in Glover, 14I. Quoted in ibid., p. 129.
Peninsular War, p. 3 I. 142. Percy, Journal des Campagnes de Baron Percy, Paris,
128. Wilson, 'Brief Remarks'; see Royal Military Chronicle, 1904, p. 16; quoted in Richardson, p. 2.
1812, p. 205. 143. Quoted in Petrie, Napoleon and Archduke Charles, p. 27.
129. Ibid., p. 205. 144. Wilson, 'Narrative'; quoted Brett-James, 1812, p. 215.

12 4
UNIFORMS & EQUIPMENT

UNIFORMS
The Napoleonic Wars produced the most manner; and that he is forced to keep himself
colourful array of uniforms ever, but although clean and smart, as a soldier ought to be ... '
patterns are much-recorded the tactical impli- He then quoted the capture of an 11th Light
cations are often overlooked. Originally, uni- Dragoons officer to illustrate
forms had a triple purpose: to identify friend ' ... one thing I deprecate ... any imitation
fr<?m foe; to raise morale; and, by the adoption of the French, in any manner. It is impossible
of epaulettes and tall head-dress, to over-awe to form an idea of the inconvenience and
the enemy. All these considerations could injury which result from having any thing like
have been achieved without the over- them ... Lutyens and his piquet were taken
elaborate and impractical costumes designed ... because the 3rd Hussars had the same caps
by military clothiers, but few contemporary as the French Chasseurs a Cheval and some of
writers urged for uniforms to be made more their hussars; and I was near being taken on
functional. On campaign, however, indi- the 25th September from the same cause. At
viduals made their uniforms as comfortable a distance, or in an action, colors [sic] are
as possible until 'uniformity' was sometimes nothing: the profile, and shape of a man's cap,
non-existent, partly due to uniforms be- and his general appearance, are what guide us;
coming worn-out with no replacement avail- and why should we make our people look like
able. Thus can be found hundreds of quota- the French? ... there is no such mark as the
tions like that of Ross-Lewin of the British English helmet, and, as far as I can judge, it
32nd in 1814: is the best cover a dragoon can have for his
'No one ... could possibly have discovered head ... I only beg that we may be as different
... the original colour of our clothing, for it as possible from the French in every thing.
was so patched with a diversity of colours, and The narrow top caps of our infantry, as
so bespoke a variety of wretchedness that ... opposed to their broad top caps, are a great
we must have borne an undesirable resem- advantage to those who look at long lines of
blance to Falstaff's ragged regiment. '145 posts opposed to each other.'146
The tactical implications were more im- Confusion in battle also occurred because
portant, particularly when similarity of uni- of common items of 'service dress' worn by
forms could cause confusion. Wellington, most armies, oilskin or fabric shako-covers,
attempting to prevent the adoption of French- greatcoats and loose trousers, making bodies
style uniform by the British in 181 1, made this of troops virtually indistinguishable at a
point: distance. For example, Nassau and Prussian
'There is no subject of which I understand troops fought each other at Waterloo, both
so little ... I think it indifferent how a soldier believing the others to be French, whilst
is clothed, provided it is in an [sic] uniform during the Peninsular War French and
12 5
Spanish infantry wearing blue uniforms and Portuguese army, wrote home for a new hat,
'broad top caps' with white covers were often he instructed that it
confused. When the distinctive 'Tarleton' '. .. must not be gold laced, as the new
helmet was replaced in 1812-13 by the British regulation is ... I suppose our good chiefs do
light dragoon shako, and the bicorn by the not think our Generals or Staff get killed off
maned helmet, men so dressed looked exactly fast enough that they order them cocked hats
like the French in silhouette. The French with gold binding. It must only be meant for
Hanoverian Legion, wearing red uniforms, Wimbledon. There are no Voltigeurs there,
lost several men killed at Busaco by their own and a gold laced cocked hat, though very ugly,
side mistaking them for British. Fearing a is a very harmless thing - not here. '148
repetition their commander requested that Yet another function of uniforms was
they might wear their greatcoats at Fuentes pointed out by Wellington:
de Oiioro; the request was rejected and the ' ... the state of the Spanish troops ... an
Hanoverian Legion were again mistaken for exertion ought to be made immediately to
British redcoats. Attacked by their own side, clothe them in the national uniform. By the
they lost 100 men before retiring from the adoption of this measure, the practice which
firil1g-line, whereupon the sight of r~d uni- prevails ... of throwing away their arms and
forms appearing through the smoke threw the accoutrements and running away, and pre-
French rear into confusion! Similar mistakes tending to be peasants, would be discon-
occurred due to the similarity between French tinued. Large bodies could not change their
gendarme and Spanish cavalry uniform, clothing ... and it is probable that as they
Napoleon himself suggesting that gendarmes would not only find no security, but rather
'should be distinguished from the Spaniards increase their danger by throwing away their
by some peculiarity of uniform, such as a arms and accoutrements in their flight, the
white stripe on the arm.'147 State would not so frequently sustain the loss
In the 1814 campaign the wide variety of of these valuable articles. Another advantage
allied uniforms made the adoption of a similar ... from the more general use of the national
mark imperative, following the wounding of a uniform is, that it would be in the power of the
British staff officer at La Rothiere by a general to punish the troops who misbehave
cossack, and considering that the Prussian before the enemy ... when a number of
army had units dressed in British and Portu- peasants are collected together with arms in
guese uniforms. From 2 February, therefore, their hands, and in the garb of peasants, it is
all allied personnel wore a white brassard on difficult to fix a mark upon those corps or
the left upper arm, a return to the 'field individuals who have behaved ill, which shall
sign' of the seventeenth century. point them out as objects of excretion to the
Confusion was sometimes deliberate. The whole community ... if the whole army wore
British 7lst, for example, tricked the French the national uniform, it would be possible to
in October 181 1 into believing them to be disgrace those who should misbehave, either
Portuguese militia by wearing their greatcoats by depriving them of it, or by affixing some
and concealing the diced band on their shakos mark to it, which would tend more effectually
with black crepe. The French made an than any thing else to prevent a repeti-
injudicious attack on the 'militia' and were tion.... '149
bloodily repulsed. But although fine uniforms attracted re-
Most staff officers favoured magnificently- cruits, the theory that they also improved
laced uniforms (the British, often preferring morale did not always apply; the King of
plain uniforms or civilian dress, were an Naples, for example, discussing a project for
exception); but laced uniforms drew the fire re-uniforming his army, is reported to have
of sharpshooters and several commanders remarked: 'Dress them in blue, in red, or
were killed because of being identified by yellow; they will run just the same!'150
their costume. Some staff officers realized the
danger; for example, when William Warre, an
English A.D.C. to Marshal Beresford in the
126
Fig. 84. Infantry equipment. Left: 'Line' infantry style worn by a grenadier of the British 3rd Foot Guards~
showing the knapsack u'ith mess-tin affixed. Print by Martinet~ I8I5. Right: Rifle corps style worn by the North
lbrk Militia~ I8I4~ including powder-horn. Print by R. & D. Havel! after George WUlke1:

PERSONAL EQUIPMENT
The infantryman's burden was remarkably have 60 lbs about his person, with little
similar in most armies: usually a knapsack consideration given to the way in which it was
worn on straps passing over the shoulder and carried. Cross-belts compressed the chest
under the armpit, a leather cartridge-box on and, if the knapsack-straps were connected by
a belt over the left shoulder, often a second a breast-strap, could seriously impair breath-
belt over the right shoulder supporting a ing. Unless the cross-belts were connected
bayonet and/or sabre, a water-canteen, rolled at the back the cartridge-box and bayonet
greatcoat or blanket atop the knapsack or could become entangled and the soldier
slung across the body, and often a mess-tin thrown off-balance; particularly guilty must
and haversack. Thus equipped, a man might have been the untidy Bavarian equipment
12 7
A B c

D E F

128
G H

Fig. 85. Infantry Equipment. A, B. British, 1812-15; C. French Fusilier; D. French


Grenadier; E. Prussian Fusilier; F, G. Prussian Musketeer; H, J. Russian.

worn before the adoption of French-style back as before). In addition each man had a
patterns. The' ... load of arms and accoutre- 'little semi-circular tin saucepan, with its
ments considered by the peasantry under soup-plate in it,'153 and often extra food:
their ordinary habits to be impracticable'151 fourteen or fifteen days' bread carried by the
was sufficient to cause collapse and even French, six days' by the Portugllese, etc.,
death, Costello of the British 95th claiming though the British could only be trusted with
that their 70-80 lbs weight killed some 400 of two or three days' supply at most; Wellington
the regiment before the remainder learnt to in fact ordered a twice-daily inspection in
throwaway all but the most essential items. 1812-13 to ensure that the food was still in
A typical set of equipment, with weight, is the individual's possession! For a man desig-
listed by Sergt Cooper of the British 7th nated a 'handicraft' (cobbler, etc.) he would
Fusiliers on the march to Vittoria: 152 musket have the tools of his trade to carry, but
and bayonet (14Ibs), pouch and sixty rounds fortunately a greatcoat and blanket were
of ball (6 lbs), canteen (I), mess-tin (I), rarely carried together: 'The Duke of Wel-
knapsack (3), undress jacket (-!), two shirts lington tried it in the year that -his army
(2-!), two pairs shoes (3), trousers (2), gaiters entered France, but it distressed the troops
(-!-), two pairs stockings (I), four brushes, greatly.... '154
comb and button-stick (3), cross-belts (I), The common knapsack was of simple con-
pen, ink and paper (-!-), pipe-clay (I), two struction, frequently made of goat- or calf-
tent-pegs (-!), three days' bread (3), two days' skin with the hair left on, fastening
beef (2), and water in canteen (3). In addition satchel-fashion by buckled straps. The French
could be a greatcoat (4 to 5i lbs), extra knapsack, of this pattern, did not have the
ammunition, fOUf bill-hooks per squad and an extra breast-strap as did those of Prussia and
iron camp-kettle between ten soldiers (re- Austria. British knapsacks were made of
placed by a light tin kettle in March 1813, painted canvas, originally of the same pattern
carried by the men in turn instead of mule- or 'envelope' form, the latter opening flat for
12 9
B

130
Fig. 86. Left: Knapsacks and cartouche boxes. A. French cowhide infantry knapsack~· B. Austrian knapsack
with folded blanket and tent pegs; C. Cartouche box; D. WOoden block to hold cartridges~· E. Wire pickers and
brushes for cleaning the touch-hole and pan ofthe muskeG E British Foot Guards pattern equipment; G. French
cartouche box showing (Left) rear view~ (Centre) view when open~ and (Right) front view.

Fig. 87. Above: A typical knapsack ofpainted canvas~ marked to the loth North British Militia (Edinburgh) ~
c.1800.

13 1
the sides and flap to be folded over the to 'official' equipment, most soldiers on
contents, which pattern continued in use campaign accumulated a quantity of 'per-
despite the introduction in 1805 of 'Mr sonal' impedimenta.
Trotter's' knapsack, a rectangular, wooden- Leather-work was usually 'buff', usually
frame'd construction covered with canvas. pipeclayed for parade, though glazed or
Originally painted in regimental colouring, painted leather was also used, black being
with regimental devices, all British knapsacks favoured by many Jager and light infantry
were ordered to be painted black in 1808 and corps. When a sabre and bayonet were
to bear the regimental number. More unusual carried, both were usually held in a combined
was the cylindrical knapsack used by the 'frog', but when the bayonet was carried alone
Russian army and replaced by a rectangular its scabbard could be affixed to the cartridge-
leather pattern. , box belt (as carried by French fusiliers, for
Cartridge-boxes contained a variety of example), eliminating the need for a second
fittings, either wood or tin compartments or shoulder-belt. The shoulder-belt plate was
a wooden block drilled with holes, both to an invariable fitting on British equipment,
hold cartridges. The underside of the flap but rarely-used in others; its contemporary
often included a small pocket to hold spare name was 'breastplate', which should not be
flints and tools, though the 'picker' and wire confused with the modern name for the
brush were usually attached to the shoulder- cuirass.
belt where they were more accessible for their Cavalry troopers wore an ammunition-
use in cleaning the touch-hole and priming- pouch at the rear of the shoulder-belt, and
pan of a musket-lock. Another pattern of often a second belt over the same shoulder to
pouch was worn on the front of the waistbelt; support the carbine. In the early years of the
more accessible, it was favoured by light Napoleonic Wars the sabre was often sus-
infantry. Smaller pouches worn at the side of pended from a shoulder-belt, but this gave
the waistbelt-clasp were used by Jagers to way to a waist-belt with slings, at times
hold loose ball ammunition. Powder-horns, supporting a bayonet-scabbard as well. The
usually slung along the shoulder-belt by a sabretache, initially a satchel slung from the
flask-cord, were carried by light troops who waist-belt, became purely ornamental though
did not always use prepared cartridge. Brass during the Napoleonic Wars it was still used
match-cases, sometimes attached to grenadiers' for holding papers, pen and ink and even
shoulder-belts, were purely decorative due to acting as a writing-desk for officers. Cavalry-
the obsolescence of the grenade. men also carried such items as spare horse-
The haversack was simply a fabric bag, shoes and nails, sponges, combs, corn- and
slung over one shoulder, to contain food and nose-bags, watering-bridle and grooming-
spare equipment. Water-canteens varied in brushes, and much of their personal equip-
pattern; Britain used a wooden design re- ment in the valise on the saddle; Frederick
sembling a shallow barrel. With no official Johnson of the British 6th Dragoons in 1815,
issue, French troops carried a variety of for example, carried a 'Writing Roll', two
canteens, gourds, barrels, metal flasks or glass. shirts, flannel waistcoat, nightcap, pair of
bottles in wickerwork covers. Other items of stockings, pair of overalls, knife and fork, and
personal equipment included spare headgear a leather roll holding a comb, razor and
(the French Imperial Guard carried theirs in tooth-brush, all in his 'Velleice'. 155
ticken covers, strapped to the knapsack), with Officers' equipment, more elaborate and
plumes often enclosed in oilskin and tied extensive than that of their men, was usually
around the sabre-scabbard by the cap-cords carried on waggons or mules. Apart from such
on campaign. If necessary, knapsacks could exotics as patent folding beds, candelabra,
be replaced by a blanket-bundle held together porcelain and the like (occasionally taken on
with straps, or by rolling its contents into campaign) a typical waggon-Ioad was that
the greatcoat and slinging the resulting tube belonging to Major Dickson of the Royal
over one shoulder, when it became a consider- Artillery in February 1810: 'I large chest,
able protection against sabre-cuts. In addition 2 portmanteaux, I carpet bag with liquor
A

c D

Fig. 88. Types of Waterbottle. A. Non-regulation glass bottle in a leather frame~· B. Non-
regulation glass bottle in a wickerwork case; C. Tin water bottle; D. Gourd; E. British regulation
canteen of barrel construction.

canteens, 2 canteen baskets, 1 cot and mobility, many British officers (particularly
bedding, 2 camp-kettles, 1 tent with poles, those in the forefront of campaign) carried
1 sword, 1 cheese in bag, 1 box with papers, equipment similar to that of their men, like
1 bag with papers and orderly books.'156 the officers of other armies, often including a
'Canteens' of this type varied from the large haversack which according to Kincaid
'curious and ingenious contrivance' contain- of the 95th:
ing cooking utensils, breakfast- and dinner- '. .. is a sort of dumb waiter ... a well
services, lamps and candlesticks all in a regulated one ought never to be without ... a
portmanteau,157 to a box holding tea, sugar, couple of biscuit, a sausage, a little tea and
brandy, a tin kettle-cum-teapot, two cups and sugar, a knife, fork and spoon, a tin cup
saucers, two spoons, two forks, two metal (which answers to the names of tea-cup, soup-
plates and a soup-tureen, 'which on fortunate plate, wine-glass and tumbler), a pair of socks,
occasions acted as a punch-bowl. '158 Senior a piece of soap, a tooth-brush, towel, and
officers might take dressing- and writing- comb, and half a dozen cigars. '159
cases, marquees, tables, chairs and even live-
stock on campaign: in the Peninsular War
BOOTS
Major-General Lowry Cole was followed by a
dozen goats, a cow, thirty-six sheep and a Footwear was one of the most vital pieces of
shepherd! equipment; generals often took more care to
Despite Wellington's rescinding in 1809 of see that their army was well-shod than well-
an order which instructed officers to carry fed. Adequate boots was a question which
knapsacks, to lessen fatigue and increase obsessed Napoleon, who issued detailed
133
o 0
o 0

Fig. 89. French Sabre-Briquet showing front and back views of the belt, sabre scabbard and
bayonet scabbard. Note the woollen washer below the hilt intended to prevent the blade rusting in
the scabbard.
orders before embarking on a campaign, for even 'home-made' items fashioned by .regi-
example in 1806: mental cobblers; there were cases in the
'Every detachment ... should start, each Peninsula when the situation was so critical
man with a pair of shoes, besides two pairs that pieces of raw hide were sewn arollnd the
in his knapsack. At Mayence they will receive feet, remaining in situ until they dropped off!
another pair to replace that worn on the Only occasionally was 'native' footwear an
march. At Magdeburg they will receive a new advantage; for example, Spanish sandals were
pair ... so that every man may reach his corps preferable to boots for climbing the Pyrenees,
with a pair of shoes on his feet and a pair in his and were often more comfortable.
knapsack';160 in this one campaign (1806-07) The term 'shoe' was used in contemporary
587,008 pairs of shoes and 16,948 of boots parlance to describe the low infantry boot;
were issued to the French army, plus 397,000 'boot' implied the high cavalry styles. Except
pairs sent from France. 161 that top-boots made walking difficult, cavalry
Nevertheless, armies frequently staggered footwear had little tactical significance,
through a campaign with bare feet, slowing whereas deficient infantry footwear could
down the rate of movement and cohesion affect the outcome of a battle. The typical
on the march. The issued boots might never British infantry shoe was the same shape for
be replaced or might be manufactured by both feet, the soldier being told to wear them
unscrupulous contractors using glue instead alternately to equalize the wear. They had no
of stitching, so that they soon fell apart; or lace-holes; the soldier had to punch his own.
they might be replaced out of necessity by An issue of two pairs (plus extra soles and
requisitioned civilian footwear (sandals in the heels for which the man paid 4s. annually) a
Peninsula, fur winter boots in Russia), or year took no account of the rigours of cam-
134
,I
II
~

---------------------------------------------~

c
Fig. 90. A. French light cavalry waistbelt with bayonet frog J• B. French cavalry shoulder belts
and carbine swivelJ• C. French cavalry pouch.

paign, and unless a free issue of shoes was heavy cavalry of a number of armies; in
authorized by a kindly general the soldier had France the first general issue was made in
to pay for any replacements over and above his 1802, though the 7th Cavalry (ex-Cuirassiers
two pairs a year. Despite widespread corpse- du Roi of the Ancien Regime) had worn them
robbing, however, torn blankets and strips of before. The French pattern consisted of a
hide wrapped around the feet provided the heavy iron breastplate and a lighter backplate,
footwear of many armies often for months on joined together by shoulder-straps and secured
end. by a waist-belt buckled at the front and bolted
to the backplate. The shoulder-straps con-
stituted an extra protection, being made of
BODY-ARMOUR
overlapped brass scales or occasionally chain
A relic of medieval warfare, the cuirass or leather. Two later patterns of cuirass ('Mk
(breast- and back-plates) was worn by the II' after 1806, 'Mk III' in 1809) differed only
135
A

c
Fig. 91. A. French officers' cuirass, 1812, front viewj B. Side viewj C. French Engineers)
Trench armour.

marginally, though officers' cuirasses were for each Frenchman. 162 A cuirass could be a
more decorative, with gilded rivets and orna- severe disadvantage when the rider was un-
mental straps. From 1810 French carabiniers horsed, however, Wellington remarking at
wore similar cuirasses, covered with thin Waterloo how unhorsed Frenchmen were
brass sheeting (copper-plated for officers). unable to rise, struggling like 'turned turtles'.
Protecting the jacket from wear, the cuirass- Cavalry helmets cannot really be con-
lining or 'cuffs' was scarlet for cuirassiers sidered 'armour' ~ even the French iron
and light blue for carabiniers, of cloth with cuirassier helmets and the German boiled-
white lace edging for troopers and silver lace leather types would not stop a hefty sword-
for officers. The usual German cuirass con- cut. Heavier armour - helmets, breastplates
sisted of a front-plate alone, with cross- and sometimes thigh-plates - were worn by
straps on the wearer's back, the front often some engineers when working in range of the
enamelled black (as worn by Austria and enemy. Antique Turkish helmets and mail-
Russia). coats were worn by some Asiatic tribesmen of
In combat the cuirass was proof against the Russian army and the mamelukes in
long-range musketry but was of most value Egypt, but were of little use against firearms.
in melee. The breastplate would turn a sabre A further protection was the ubiquitous rolled
or lance, though the unarmoured back of cloak or greatcoat, worn bandolier-fashion by
German cavalry was a desperate disadvan- both cavalry and infantry, giving considerable
tage; at Eckmiihl, when French and Austrian protection against the cut to the left shoulder,
cuirassiers met, the unarmoured Austrian the principal stroke of a cutting weapon. The
backs resulted in most uneven casualties: the order to 'roll cloaks' came to be regarded by
proportion of Austrian killed and wounded the French cavalry as a sign that action was
respectively amounted to thirteen and eight imminent.
'FOREIGN' EQUIPMENT was poked into the back of my neck, the ~air
twisted tightly round it, and the whole tIed
Apart from enormous quantities of captured
with a leather thong ... the skin of my face was
materiel used by many nations, huge amounts
pulled so tight by the bag ... that it was
were supplied by Britain to various allied
impossible so much as to wink an eye-
nations throughout the Revolutionary and lid.... '164
Napoleonic Wars. Some idea of the magni-
In British service a General Order of 20
tude of these supplies can be gathered from
July 1808 was received with great delight:
a list made by Lord Londonderry, describing
'His Majesty has been graciously pleased to
equipment supplied to Prussia, Ru~sia and
dispense with the use of queues ... the com-
Sweden prior to the 1813-14 campaIgn:
manding officers of regiments will take care
218 cannon with carriages, ammunition and
that the men's hair is cut close in their necks
attendant waggons; 124,119 stand of arms,
in the neatest and most uniform manner, and
18,231,000 rounds of ball-ammunition and
that their heads are kept perfectly clean by
23,000 barrels of powder and flints; 34,443
combing, brushing, and frequently washing
swords and lances, 624 drums, bugles and
them.... '
cavalry standards; 150,000 complete uniforms
Other styles of hair-dressing included that
including greatcoats, cloaks, etc.; 187,000
favoured by hussars (especially French),
yards of cloth, 175,796 boots and spare
of a queue and braided side-tresses or
leather, 114,000 blankets, 58,000 linen shirts
'cadenettes', as described by a hussar of the
and drawers, 87,19° pairs of gaiters, 69,624
Beon Legion: the hair was parted down the
pairs of stockings, 90,000 sets of accoutre-
middle of the head, the tresses plaited and tied
ments, 63,457 knapsacks, 14,820 saddles and
around the end with ribbon, or strips of lead
blankets, 100,000 caps and feathers, 22,000
from a flattened musket-ball, and treated with
forage-caps, 14,000 stocks, 140,000 shoe-
pomade or candle-grease. They actually pro-
brushes, combs and blacking-balls, 3,000
tected the cheeks from sabre-cuts. In some
gloves, 20,000 pickers, brushes, sponges, etc.,
armies officers were allowed to wear false
5,000 flannel shirts, caps and trousers, 14,000
queues of horsehair or whalebo~e, sometim~s
sheets, 5,000 haversacks and canteens,
attached to the collar; simIlar cosmetIC
702,000 lbs of biscuit and flour, 691,360 lbs
decoration included the painting-on of mous-
beef and pork, 28,625 gallons of brandy and
taches in burnt cork for recruits too young to
rum, plus tents, carts, medical equipment
grow their own, in those corps in which
and hospital-stores. 163 . moustaches were compulsory. 'Sideboards',
From this it is obvious that many natIons
when permitted, were usually allowed to
throughout the Napoleonic Wars used not
extend no lower than the bottom of-the ear.
only items of their own manufacture, but
Though beards were traditionally the dis-
vast quantities of weapons and equipment of
tinguishing feature of pioneers, moustaches,
foreign pattern also.
beards and long hair were not uncommon on
campaign, some British officers wearing
'whiskers' even in England, as the mark of a
HAIRSTYLES
veteran campaigner. Other hair-dressing in-
The powdered 'queue' (pigtail) of the cluded that of the cossacks noted by Countess
eighteenth century lingered well into t~e Schwerin, of plastering their hair with gun-
Napoleonic Wars; originally to keep long ha~r oil, whilst the famous traveller Dr Clarke
out of the eyes, it had become an archaIC noted that all Russians, aristocracy and serfs,
ornament, its preparation described by John kept their hair 'universally in a stat~ not to
Shipp (1797). . be described ... only divested of vermIn when
'A large piece of candle-grease was applIed they frequent the bath!'165
first to the sides of my head, and then to the
long hair behind. After this, the same ?pe!a- HORSES AND SADDLERY
tion was gone through with nasty, stInkIng
soap ... A large pad, or bag, filled with sand, Adequate training was necessary to produce a
137
A

Fig. 92. A. French 'Hungarian' pattern saddle, 1812; B. French light cavalry shabraque,
showing method of attaching carbine; C. Other side of same saddle; D. Austrian heavy cavalry
horse-furniture.

Fig. 93. Left: French light cavalry bridle. Right: French heavy cavalry horse-furniture.
138
suitable cavalry horse; as Le Marchant wrote and lightweight 'hunter' was superior to most
in his Rules and Regulations (1796): others, despite the large fodder-consumption
' ... a dragoon and his horse should be so of the heavyweight, but frequently the British
formed to each other to act as one body; for cavalry received mounts which were totally
which purpose the rider should make himself unsuitable: in July 1809, for example, the
acquainted with the temper and powers of his 14th Light Dragoons received sixty-one
animal, so that by judicious management, the remounts,
horse may be rendered docile, and execute ' ... I may almost say Cart Horses from the
readily whatever may be expected of him. . . Irish Commissariat Corps. What makes this
It is alone by temper and perseverance, not more ridiculous is that they are chiefly Horses
by severity, that vice is to be conquered.... '166 that have been cast in England as being
Contemporary horsemen believed that cer- unserviceable for the Heavy Dragoons!'168
tain breeds were more easily trained, an old It is interesting to note the number of
Peninsular officer writing: 'The superior horses used by a cavalry regiment: the 14th
breeding of the English horses renders them Light Dragoons from 1808 to 1814 received
more unsteady than the half cart-horse of the 1,384 mounts plus 381 from other units;
Frenchman';167 hence, by implication, one bought thirteen Spanish horses and captured
reason for the lack of control of British sixty-three, a total of 1,821, of which only 278
charges. returned to England. Officers purchased their
Horses varied in size according to their own horses, receiving an often-inadequate
duties: the heavy cavalry required strong, fixed compensation of £35 for those lost. The
large mounts, and the light cavalry smaller, quality of Spanish and Portuguese horses was
faster horses with stamina for more protracted often infamous; in 1808 Col. William Robe
fast movement than the heavy type. The claimed that for artillery duty, any old, 'cast'
French heavy cavalry preferred Norman or animals from England were better than the
Flemish mounts, great weight-carriers but best Iberian horses, ill-proportioned and
heavy and slow: a 'charge' executed at lacking in strength. So short were the Spanish
Eckmiihl after a long day was unable to move and Portuguese armies that, for example, the
faster than a trot, whilst Marbot found a Spanish 1st Chasseurs mustered only 185
cuirassier horse incapable of travelling at the horses for 577 men in June 1808.
speed required of an A.D. C. In the 1806 Fodder-consumption varied. The British
campaign the Prussian and Saxon cavalry daily ration consisted of 14lbs of hay or straw,
horses were superior to many of the French, 12 lbs of oats, or 10 lbs of barley or Indian
so Napoleon re-mounted a large part of his corn; in January 1810 this was reduced to
cavalry on captured horses. Despite the often 10 lbs of hay and 12 lbs of barley or Indian
poor-quality mounts used by many French corn; 'green forage', when issued, was 28 lbs.
cavalry (particularly in Spain), most regi- Often on campaign any edible material was
ments took pains to acquire the best available, consumed (on the retreat from Burgos horses
colonels being allowed to purchase remounts are recorded as eating their own harness and
locally when available. This allowed the even limber-box lids), from corn-flour cakes
fashionable practice of mounting squadrons eaten normally by Portuguese peasants, to the
on horses of the same colour; in 1803, for German Legion troops who shared their own
example, the 20th Chasseurs a Cheval had bread-ration with their horses, which main-
black horses for the 1st Sqdn, bay for the 2nd, tained a better condition than the mounts of
chestnut for the 3rd and grey for the 4th, a their British comrades, whose unsavoury
practice copied by several armies. Similarly, habit was to sell part of their horse's forage
whole regiments could be mounted on horses to buy alcohol for themselves.
of the same colour, for example the black of A hard campaign with little forage could
the Grenadiers a Cheval of the French reduce whole brigades to pitiable wrecks, the
Imperial Guard. best English horses being particularly vulner-
The quality of British horses has often been able, being unused to such conditions, as Sir
remarked upon; certainly, the heavyweight Robert Wilson noted:
139
'English horses can never serve abroad in items as grooming-equipment, picket-rope
English condition ... at least as long as the (which could be attached to the bridle) and
English cavalry are nurtured to require warm horseshoes, the latter sometimes carried in the
stables, luxurious beds, etc. - as long as second holster of regiments armed with only
efficiency abroad is sacrificed to appearance one pistol each. Though the carbine could
at home.... '169 be carried slung from the spring-clip on the
The Russian cavalry mounts were ideally rider's shoulder-belt, many saddles included
suited for campaigning, Wilson writing that: a tube or 'boot' in which the muzzle (or
'Their heavy-horses are matchless for an butt) of the carbine could be placed, with a
[sic] union of size, strength, activity, and loop higher up to secure the stock (or barrel).
hardiness; they have the bulk of the British Among unusual saddlery was that of the
cart-horse, but have too much blood to be cossacks: as Wilson reported,
coarse,' 170 'They have only a snaffle bridle on their
whilst the ill-conditioned cossack ponies, horses for the convenience of feeding at all
'mean in shape and slouching in motion' were times, and even in the presence of the enemy
so rugged as to travel 'incalculable journeys, ... Their activity is too incessant to admit of
and remain exposed to heat or cold, day or long stops for regular feeding .... '173
night, without manifesting any sense of in- and according to Sir R. Ker Porter, 'An
convenience,'171 ' ... can walk at the rate of five uncouth saddle is bound on the horse ... like
miles an hour with ease, or dispute the race a doubled pillow, under which is a square
with the swiftest.... '172 piece of oil cloth painted in various
A wide variety of saddlery was used by colours. '174
different nations, most conforming to the
same basic construction. The saddle was FLAGS AND STANDARDS
made of wood and/or leather, secured by a Originally serving to identify bodies of troops
leather or woven girth passing under the in the days before the evolution of uniforms,
horse's belly, and straps around the horse's flags and standards were primarily used in the
breast and a 'crupper' around the tail; stir- Napoleonic Wars for reasons of morale.
rups, either iron or brass, were sometimes Infantry flags, or 'Colours', were large and
ornamented and equipped with a socket on rectangular (the British size was 6 ft 6 ins by
the right stirrup in which to rest the butt of 6 ft, on a 9 ft 10 in. pike); cavalry carried
a lance. Pistol-holsters were attached to the rectangular 'standards' or swallow-tailed
front of the saddle, at either side, covered by 'guidons', much smaller and frequently not
cloth 'holster-caps' in some cases. Bridles taken on campaign. Though a number of
were varied in pattern, sometimes including standard motifs existed for each army, flags
cross-straps over the horse's fore-head, and invariably bore distinctive regimental devices
sometimes (as on the French 'Hungarian' or lettering either embroidered or painted,
bridle) with an ornamental metal crescent the standard of painting often being sur-
hanging under the horse's throat. Harness- prisingly crude.
plates, worn on the breast and sometimes Republican France boasted many designs
fore-head, usually bore regimental devices. of flag, often based upon the national' red,
Over the saddle was placed the 'shabraque', white and blue and bearing the Phrygian cap
an ornamental blanket in regimental colour- and fasces, though some, particularly those of
ing, or in many cases a sheepskin, or half- the National Guard, more closely resembled
sheepskin and half-shabraque. On campaign the elaborate patterns of the seventeenth
plain shabraques were used, or were removed century. In 1797 a regulation pattern was
completely. A blanket was usually placed adopted by the demi-brigades, but not until
under the saddle and the rider's equipment - 1804 were the legendary 'Eagles' issued.
rolled cloak at the front and valise or port- Unique among military heraldry, the 'Eagles'
manteau at the back - was strapped over the relegated the flag to a decorative extra, the
shabraque (the cloak could also be carried real symbol being the Iz-inch high, gilt
underneath). Extra pouches contained such sculpted eagle atop the pike. The actual flags
rD§rnID][JC1g]Or]JD~<:
'iiJ'~~~~~.

r~~1nk
~~-if&Jo.!Jllff:r6-iJ

Fig. 94. Left: Eagle of the French 84th Line Regiment, with an honour award plate, the only
case of such an award known. Right: Eagle of the 8th Line Regiment taken by the 87th Regiment
at Barrosa.

were small, only 80 cm. square, originally or 'waves' of a contrasting colour. Each
comprising a white diamond with alternate Prussian musketeer battalion had two flags,
red and blue triangles at the corners, with but fusiliers none (except the Guard Fusiliers,
gold embroidery on one side reading: granted flags in 1814); each Russian battalion
'L'EMPEREUR/DES FRANCAIS/AU had a 'white' flag and a 'coloured' flag, the
erne REGIMENT/D'INFANTERIE 'white' ones withdrawn in 1813. Three
(ARTILLERIE, etc.)/DE LIGNE', and the Russian patterns (1800, 1803, 1813) and the
reverse: 'VALEUR/ET DISCIPLINE/ler (2 'Colours of St George' (honour-flags bearing
erne, etc.) BATAILLON.' Due to the num- details of the award) were carried simul-
ber lost in action it was ordered in 1808 that taneously, there being no automatic replace-
Eagles should be carried by I st Battalions ment of 'old' flags upon the advent of a new
only. In 1812 a tricolour design was issued, pattern.
with battle-honour instead of the 'Valeur et British infantry battalions carried a 'King's
Discipline', and in 1815 some units received Colour', and a 'Regimental Colour', the
a plainer type, devoid of almost all decoration former a large Union flag and the latter of the
save lettering. A few ancient flags were carried facing-colour with a small Union in the top
- the Vistula Legion, for example, used corner nearest the pole (units with black or
those of the old Polish Legion at least until white facings had large St George's crosses on
1812 - and satellite nations used similar the Regimental Colour). Both Colours carried
patterns to the French but in their own regimental devices, title and battle-honours,
colouring - red, white and green for the usually a shield, escutcheon or circlet with
Kingdom of Italy, for example. a 'Un~ion' wreath around. Cavalry standards
Prussia and Russia used a similar motif - were allocated at one per two troops, the first
the national eagle - placed centrally on a or 'King's' crimson and the remainder of
coloured flag bearing diagonal or vertical bars the facing-colour, both bearing regimental
as a reward for deserving N.C.O.s. As the
automatic target for enemy fire, appointment
to the colour-party was often an unwelcome
honour, as Sergeant Lawrence of the British
40th recorded when ordered to the Colours at
Waterloo:
'Though used to warfare as anyone, this
was a job I did not like. There had been
before me that day fourteen sergeants killed or
wounded around them, and both staff and
colours were almost cut to pieces. '175
In the field the practical value of Colours
was to act as a rallying-point, lifted high to
indicate through the chaos where a broken
unit should re-form. For more pedestrian
uses such as the marking of camping-grounds,
small marker-flags or 'camp colours' were
used. In inclement weather all flags might be
'cased', rolled around the pole and enclosed in
an oilskin tube; in French service the flag
was often removed completely, leaving just
the metal eagle as the symbol. For morale,
however, flags were paramount, symbolizing
a mystical bond between the regiment, its
sovereign and sometimes religion as well; the
measure of victory was calculated by the
number of flags captured, and the loss of a
flag was the worst disgrace which could befall
a unit.
Fig. 95. 'Eagle'-bearer of the Grenadiers of Nap-
olean's Imperial Guard. Print after Charlet. Consequently, the most bitter fights
occurred around the possession of flags. For
example, the defence of the Colours of the
devices and/or the 'Union' badge of rose, British 1/3rd Foot (Buffs) after the regiment
thistle or shamrock. was scattered by cavalry at Albuera. The
Other states - Austria for example - took Regimental Colour was carried by 16-year-
their flag-designs from the national coat-of- old Ensign Edward Thomas, who raised his
arms; some ~ere small, like those of the flag to rally his company, of whom only two
Duchy of Warsaw, whose flags had orna- men oul of sixty-three survived. Thomas
mental eagle-heads in French fashion. answered a call to surrender his Colour with:
'Colour parties' were established to protect 'Only with my life'; the French took both.
the regimental flags, consisting of a subaltern The bearer of the King's Colour, Ensign
('ensign') who carried the flag, and a number Charles Walsh, fell wounded, and Lieutenant
of experienced N.C.O.s as escort; after 1808 Matthew Latham seized it. Alone and sur-
the French flag-bearer was designated rounded he clung to the flag despite terrible
'Premier Porte-Aigle' and his two senior injuries including a severed left arm and a
N.C.O.s 'Deuxieme' and 'Troisieme', carry- disfiguring blow to the face. Pierced by a
ing half-pikes bearing a small pennon, red and dozen lance-thrusts and trampled upon, he
v/hite respectively, lettered 'NAPOLEON' managed to tear the Colour from its pike and
on one side and the regimental number on conceal it beneath his body, from where it
the other. Similar appointments existed in was recovered after the battle; miraculously,
most armies, the rank of 'Colour-Sergeant' Latham survived. Such was the value placed
being introduced into British service in 1813 upon regimental flags; in fact even today two
14 2
Fig. 96. Rampon defending the colours of the 32e Demi-Brigade at Montelegino J 10 April 1796.
After Berthon.

British regiments - Blues & Royals and Royal badges respectively commemorating the cap-
Scots Dragoon Guards - wear arm- and cap- ture of French Eagles at Waterloo!

145. Ross-Lewin, H., With the ]2nd in the Peninsular and 157· J. G. Smith, The English Army in France, London,
other Campaigns (ed. J. Wardrell), Dublin, 1904· 1831, II, pp. 198-9; quoted in Brett-James, Lzfe in
146. Wellington to Lt-Col. Torrens, 6 November 181 I; Wellington's Army, p. 71.
'Despatches', VIII, pp. 371-2. 158. Blakeney, pp. 209-10.
147. Napoleon to Joseph, 22 December 1808; 'Napoleon's 159· Kincaid, p. 23.
Correspondence with King Joseph', I, p. 384. 160. Napoleon, Correspondence, No. 11413.
148. Warre, p. 191. 161. Quoted in Petrie, Napoleon's Campaign in Poland, p. 24.
149. Wellington to Marquess Wellesley, 8 August 1809; 162. Marbot, I, p. 300.
'Despatches', V, pp. 11-12. 16 3. Londonderry, The War in Germany and France, p. 366.
150. Phipps, R. W., The Armies of the First French Republic 16 4. Shipp, p. 14.
(1926-39); quoted in Rogers, Napoleon's Army, p. 64. 16 5. Quoted in Royal Military Chronicle, 18 I 2.
151. Sir John Burgoyne, 'Military Opinions ofField-Marshal 166. Quoted in Rogers, Mounted Troops, p. 155.
Burgoyne', 1839, p. 465, quoted in 'Journal', Society 16 7. United Service Journal, 1831, II,. p. 62.
for Army Historical Research, Vol. XLVII, .p. I I. 168. Capt. Henry Neville, I July 18°9, quoted in Rogers,
152. Cooper, Rough Notes, pp. 80-81. Mounted Troops, p. 165.
153. Sir John Burgoyne, Lzfe and Correspondence of Field- Wilson, 'Brief Reniarks'; see Rogers, Napoleon's Army,
Marshal Burgoyne (ed. Lt-Col. Hon. G. Wrottesley, P·4 2 .
London, 1873), I, p. 255, quoted in Brett-James, Lzfe 170. Ibid.; see Royal Military Chronicle, 1812, p. 204.
in Wellington's Army, p. 117. 171. Porter, pp. 131-4.
154. 'Militaris', 'On the Equipment of the British Infantry', 17 2 . Wilson, 'Brief Remarks', p. 27.
United Service Journal, 1831, II, p. 204. 173· Ibid.
155. Quoted in 'Journal', Society for Army Historical 174· Porter, p. 134.
Research, Vol. XXXV, p. 176. 175· Lawrence, p. 239.
156. Quoted in Brett-James, Lzfe in Wellington's Army, p. 70.

143
Fig. 97. Enrolment of volunteers in France 1792 . Print after A. Vinchon.

Fig. 98. A common aspect of the soldier's life: drill and inspection. Print published by J Wheble, 1798.

144
LIVING CONDITIONS

RECRUITING
Though many nations relied upon some form twenty-five years. Prussia's mass-conscrip-
of impressment, mass-conscription was rarely tion was imposed in 18 13 to raise the
considered. France passed the 'Requisition' Landwehr, including all able-bodied men
law in 1793, authorizing a 'levee en masse' between seventeen and twenty-four. Other
by making all males between the ages of nations, like Spain, only used conscription to
eighteen and thirty-five liable for military make up the numbers not covered by voluntary
service for the duration of hostilities, though enlistment; their system, the 'Quinta' (origin-
the term 'conscription' was not used until ally taking every fifth man) gave exemption
September 1798 when the Conscription Law to all artisans and middle-class, the bulk of
divided the available manpower into five the levied troops selected by ballot from the
classes by age and marital status. These were agricultural labourers.
subject to call-up by annual classes, Napoleon The only major power to rely totally upon
fixing the proportion of each class to be voluntary enlistment was Britain, hence
selected after 18°5, selection within the class Wellington's oft-misquoted 'scum of the
by lot; thereafter it was usual to anticipate earth' remark: recruits came only from the
the annual conscriptions. In 18°9, for lower orders of society or those driven to
example, 100,000 of the 1809 class were enlistment from penury. To form an army like
called, plus 20,000 of 1806, 30,000 of 1807 the French, Wellington wrote,
and even some from 1810'S class. Thus by ' ... we must compose our army of soldiers
18 I 3 many conscripts were boys of fifteen drawn from all classes of the population ...
and sixteen years of age (the 'Marie-Louises'); from the good and the middlIng, as well in
in that year 400,000 recruits were under rank as in education, as from the bad, and
twenty-one and 147,000 a little older. The not, as we in particular do, from the bad only';
conscription system was naturally unpopular nevertheless, ' ... it is really wonderful that
and produced the 'refractaires' who went into we should have made them the fine fellows
hiding to avoid military service; of the 936,000 theyare.'176
called up in 1813-14 probably less than Britain's only 'conscription' was a ballot-
120,000 ever served. system for service in the militia, which could
Russia's conscription was a 'levy' on the be avoided by paying for a substitute. In
number of 'souls' entered on the tax-roll, the 18°3, another scheme, the 'Army of Reserve',
population being so large that a levy of one raised a 'regular' force by ballot but was
per 500 would produce 32,000 recruits. In restricted to service in the British Isles and
some years there' were no levies, but there intended to provide volunteers for the regular
were three in 1813, each of five men per army without depleting the militia. The plan
hundred 'souls'. Duration of enlistment was was a failure, the Army of Reserve consisting
145
largely of substitutes who would have enlisted missioned officers had risen from the ranks.
in the militia or regulars in any case, and The officer-training schools produced many,
was abandoned when the second year's ballot, but it is interesting to note that of Napoleon's
intended to raise 29,000 men, brought in only marshals, Berthier, Davolit, Grouchy, Keller-
7,683 and 3,041 deserted! From 1805, militia- mann, Macdonald, Marmont, Perignon,
men were allowed and encouraged to volun- Serurier and Soult had all been commissioned
teer into the regular army, providing a much under the Ancien Regime.
higher calibre of recruit than before; hence Instruction and discipline began with the
the high quality of Wellington's Peninsula non-commissioned officers, who were doubly
army when compared to that before volun- important in armies (like the Russian) in
teering from the militia was sanctioned. which the officers were indolent and poorly-
educated. The selection of N.C.O.s was far
from easy, for although a man might be
PROMOTION
promoted for some act of valour he might be
Military education was limited, despite a incapable of performing his duty; in the
number of military colleges producing trained British army, for example, some privates were
subalterns; for example, only 3.9 per cent of promoted and 'reduced' four or five times.
British first-commission officers came from One of Wellington's comments concerned the
the Royal Military College (established N.C.O.s of the Guards, who 'regularly got
1802),177 though the artillery and engineer drunk once a day, by eight in the evening, and
officers of most nations received the specialist got to bed soon after - but they always took
training their duties demanded. 'Influence' - care to do first what they were bid. '178
patronage by influential individuals - whilst
rife in many German states, accounted for a
DISCIPLINE
smaller number of commissions than might be
imagined; in 1809, for example, the British Methods of enforcing discipline varied be-
army contained only 140 peers or sons of tween armies, and between regiments; some
peers. were so good that a word of chastisement from
For promotion, 'seniority' was prevalent an officer was sufficient, whilst others had to
in many armies: promotion in chronological be transformed into virtual penal battalions.
order of length of service irrespective of Punishment was frequently barbaric. For
ability, producing ancient senior officers and serious crimes, a popular system in German
stifling young talent. 'Purchase', the buying armies was the 'horse', a triangular-section
of advancement, whilst producing anomalies box with the point uppermost, upon which
like seven-year old ensigns and a rise from the culprit was sat with a leg on each side,
ensign to It.-colonel in nine months (Andrew each leg often weighted with muskets.
Gammell, ensign 24 December 1793, It-col. Flogging was the staple British form of
18 September 1794), was in British service correction, with as many as 1,000 lashes
later controlled to ensure officers were suf- (usually in instalments) being not uncommon.
ficiently experienced before buying another Less-severe punishments included 'running
step, and after all produced comparatively the gauntlet'; and capital punishment was
youthful commanders like Wellington. Only meted out by firing-squad or (for looting) the
about one-fifth of British officers in the gallows. The different levels of correction
Peninsula were 'purchase' men. consisted of company 'court', regimental
Promotion from the ranks was more courts-martial (with a maximum sentence of
unusual, but no less than 5.42 per cent. of 300 lashes in British service) or, for more
British officers had risen that way, plus 4.5 serious crimes, general courts-martial.
per cent. who had served as 'volunteers' - i.e. For minor infringements the N.C.O.s and
fought as enlisted men until a vacancy for officers in many armies were allowed to strike
a subaltern occurred. There was much more the culprit; foreign observers related with
scope for ad\'ancement in the egalitarian distaste how prevalent was this practice in the
French army; in 1805 fully half the com- Russian army, junior officers frequently be-
Fig. 99. Two of the troubles commonly endured by soldiers. Top: The exhaustion of the march. Bottom: The
nervous expectation of combat: an artillery battery awaits in reserve. Prints after Albrecht Adam, showing the
Russian campaign of 1812.
147
labouring their poor, uncomplaining and often more pleasant to bivouac in the open
faithful soldiers without mercy, despite than suffer the smoke-filled barrack-rooms.
Barclay de Tolly's 'Code of Infantry Service' The most rudimentary bivouac was the
(181 I) which stressed that officers. must soldier's blanket or greatcoat, the latter some-
'refrain from dealing out punishment ... times used as a sleeping-bag by inserting the
when you are teaching you should reserve legs into the sleeves; other sleeping-bags
chastisement only for occasions of careless- could be made by sewing two sacks together.
ness, though even here you must proceed with A more elaborate shelter, often constructed at
moderation and prudence.'179 the end of every day's march, was a 'booth'
Contrasting to this brutal treatment was the or lean-to made from tree-branches and
British 'Regulations for the Rifle Corps': covered with straw or ferns. Officers often
'Every superior ... shall give his orders in carried tarred canvas, waterproof mattresses
the language of moderation and of regard to into which dry leaves or straw could be
the feelings of the individual under his stuffed; those lacking such luxuries could
command; abuse, bad language and blows build a 'bedstead' of branches, covered with
being positively forbid.'180 straw, lying on top about nine inches from
Few regiments adopted so enlightened a the ground to avoid rising damp; a more
code, and barbarous though the punishments bizarre version was built by the French 26th
were, they were little-resented by the men Light Infantry for their colonel after Auster-
who accepted that every regiment contained a litz: ' ... a number of Russian corpses, face
hard core of criminals; indeed, one who was to the ground ... a layer of hay on top .... '182 .
himself flogged wrote of his ordeal: Tents varied from enormous, multi-roomed
'Perhaps it is a good thing for me as could edifices in which an officer could live in style,
then have happened, as it prevented me from surrounded by bed, table, chairs, desks and
committing greater crimes, which must at last dinner-services. Officers' tents tended to
have brought me to my ruin.'181 As in so many decrease in size according to the occupant's
other cases, the mentality of the early rank, subalterns usually sharing with two or
nineteenth century is scarcely reconcilable three others. Designs included 'marquis tents'
with that of the last qu~rter of the twentieth. (marquees),183 originally of canvas lined with
ticken, with a 'porch' attached; Adye lists
the standard marquee with a 7-foot ridgepole
ACCOMMODATION
and a weight of I cwt 17 lbs, but many were
Permanent barracks originated only in the larger and in semi-permanent camps could
nineteenth century, though fortified places include stone-built chimneys. 'Bell'-tents
had always included accommodation for the were conical, with a nine-foot pole and
garrison. The usual system of quartering in weighing 43 Ibs;184 designed to hold twelve
the eighteenth century was the 'billet', the men, three per company were issued to the
compulsory appropriation of parts of civilian British army in 1813, with at least twenty men
dwellings, some nations assigning their troops to each, so that 'none could turn without the
to inns and lodging-houses, paying for rent general consent, and the word "turn"
and food, whilst others imposed upon un- given. '185 'Private tents' held five men, Adye's
willing civilians; unscrupulous innkeepers 'Common Infantry Tent' listed as having
could make a handsome profit by accepting a seven-foot ridgepole and a weight of
full payment and feeding their guests with 27 Ibs. 186 'Fly'-tents with an extended 'roof'
offal. Permanent barracks, where they existed, were similar. 'Laboratory tents' were used for
were often insanitary, airless buildings with the making of munitions, Adye's dimensions
no facilities at all, 'beds' often consisting of being an eighteen-foot ridgepole, I4!-foot
planks with (sometimes) straw mattresses, high and weighing 3 cwt 24 Ibs. 187
two or three men to a bed; 'married quarters' Despite tented 'encampments' for home
where such existed were usually sections of service, the use of tents on campaign was
the barrack-room enclosed by blanket- restricted by difficulties of transportation.
partitions. In fact, in good weather it was Those issued by Britain in 18 I 3 were prone to
A B c

D E

F G

Fig. 100. Various tents. A. 'Private Tent',. B. Bell tent, 1801" C. Horsefor supportingfirelocks,.
D. Tent 'chiefly calculated for Subalterns'; E. 'Fly Tents'; F. Field officers' 'Marquis',·
G. 'Marquis' with chimney.

blowing away in high winds and collapsing places, bedsteads of green boughs, shelves for
like 'clammy winding-sheets'188 in wet their prog, and arm-racks, so like the natty
weather. Prior to these tents, Britain had Frenchman in camp.'189 The British built
copied the Portuguese, whose military blankets similar huts, constructed of 'Two upright
had loops at the corners which allowed them posts, about seven feet high, with forked ends
to be assembled into three- or two-man ... planted in the ground about fifteen feet
shelters; Wellington ordered that British asunder. On these was placed a ridge-pole, or
blankets should be similarly adapted. France roof-tree, against which other poles were
was so reluctant to use tents (apart from placed on each side in a slanting position, so
those belonging to officers) that quantities as to form the frame of a roof. The whole was
of captured Prussian tents were cut up for then covered with pine branches, or heath,
bandages. broom, or straw. One end was closed up with
The French, however, excelled in the con- poles placed nearly close together, and stuffed
struction of huts, camps resembling little in the joins with grass or moss. The other end,
wooden towns complete with thatched or tiled whicll was left open at the entrance, had for
roofs, glazed windows and even gardens, a door a moveable screen of wicker-work.'190
every hut with its tables, chairs and cooking One such hut built by the British 51st in the
utensils. Those at Nivelle were found by the Bois de Boulogne in 18 I 5 was so large that
British to have 'their green blinds over their it was named 'The British Hotel'! Even more
little lattice windows; their neat little fire- substantial dwellings were constructed by the
149
Fig. 101. Left Above: Austrian troops in camp. Print after J A. Klein.

Fig. 102. Left Below: Cossacks in bivouac. Print after J A. Klein.

Fig. 103. Above: A typical scene from Napoleon's campaigns: the Emperor works amid the bivouac of the
Guard Grenadiers. Print after Raffet.

CAMP-FOLLOWERS .
Highlanders, trenched and with adequate A train of civilian 'camp-followers' trailed
drainage, and roofed 'more substantially than behind every army. Some were employed by
many of our Highland bothies.... '191 the army - waggon-drivers and muleteers of
But even veteran bivouackers could not the commissariat, the latter sometimes
alleviate all the miseries of campaigning; they brigands in disguise (particularly during the
had to be philosophical, like Charles Napier: Peninsular War when each British battalion
'I make no apologies for the dirt of this note; employed about twenty or thirty). Other non-
for flead, bugged, centipeded, beetled, establishment personnel were the servants
lizarded and earwigged, cleanliness is known and grooms employed by some officers, in
to me only by name. Moreover, a furze-bush addition to the batman usually allocated from
makes a bad table for writing on, and a worse the ranks.
chair, when breeches are nearly worn out with Many wives followed an army, including
glory, oh! oh!'192 some officers' ladies who became as famous
15 1
·Fig. 104. A cavalry camp in the field: Italian dragoons in the Russian campaign of 1812. (Print after Albrecht
Adam).

as their husbands, like Mrs Dalbiac and Juana camp-followers 'stuck to the army like
Smith who accompanied the British in the bricks. '193
Peninsula. In British service, six wives per Sutlers often accompanied an army, selling
company (plus children) were "allowed to food, alcohol and tobacco from carts or mule-
accompany their husbands overseas, a num- back. In French service they included
ber inevitably swelled as unofficial 'wives' 'vivandieres' or 'cantinieres', women attached
were accumulated en route. They undertook to particular units of which their husband
the company's washing, cooking, etc., and was often a member, often distinguished by
were so prized that any widow could expect quasi-military uniform and a spirit-barrel
a dozen proposals of marriage before her slung over the shoulder. They often followed
deceased husband was even buried. The hard- their regiments into action, encouraging,
ships borne by these women on campaign, helping the wounded and handing out cups of
particularly in retreat like those to Corunna brandy gratis, saying, like those of the 4th
and from Moscow, are difficult to compre- Line and 26th Light Infantry at Austerlitz,
hend; devoid of official assistance, their plight 'Pay me tomorrow.' Inevitably some were
was desperate. Camp-followers posed a killed, like Marie Tete-du-bois of the 1st
strategic problem, blocking roads and im- Grenadiers of the Imperial Guard at Water-
peding movement, plundering and disrupting loo, whose regiment erected a simple wooden
discipline. Active Provost-Marshal or not, the cross bearing the inscription: ' ... dead on the
Fig. 105. French prisoners of war with a Hungarian guard (right). Print after J A. Klein.

field of honour ... Passerby, whoever you occasion simply to exhibit their elegant cos-
may be, salute Maria,'194 a fitting tribute to all tume 'a la Amazone'; dresses styled on
female camp-followers whose tribulations military uniforms were highly fashionable for
have gone unrecognized by all except those a time, until the novelty wore off.
with whom they marched.
A few women actually fought in the
DESERTION
Napoleonic Wars, some enlisting as men to
follow a husband or sweetheart and some, like Desertion was the bane of every army. Some
Madame de Bennes, to fight for a cause. This rogues enlisted and deserted regularly simply
aristocratic French lady enlis.ted, not dis- to collect enlistment-bounties; in 1787 a
guised as a man, in the Damas Legion, an British deserter was hanged for absconding
emigre unit in British service, 'in defence of and re-enlisting forty-nine times. On cam-
her religion and her King'195 and to avenge paign enormous numbers would slip away
her husband, killed by Republicans in 1793. after a defeat or during harsh service, a
After several campaigns she was captured at favourite trick being to accompany wounded
Quiberon, ordered to be shot, but escaped to men to the rear, as many as ten or a dozen
England to fight again! Other female 'soldiers' men helping each casualty to the dressing-
- a few civilian volunteer companies - station, and only re-joining their unit after the
ostensibly trained with arms, using the battle. Others deserted to become brigands,
153
like the notorious Frenchman 'Marshal 'Irish Legion', to the Russo-German Legion
Stockpot' who led a multi-national gang formed by Russia from German prisoners, to
during the Peninsular War until caught and the so-called 'emigres' enlisted by Britain
shot. during the Revolutionary Wars as being
There was little political defection without preferable to a protracted stay in prison-
orders from higher command (though whole camp.
regiments deserted en masse at times, for Though desertion was, in some armies,
example the 2nd Nassau Regiment and more the rule than the exception (for example
Frankfurt Battalion which marched over to the Spanish and Neapolitan), G. R. Gleig of
the British in 1813), though there was a steady the British 85th gave an interesting reason to
trickle of impressed Germans leaving the account for a proportion of desertions: super-
French army. William Warre saw one such stition. He believed the desertion-rate was
group, captured at Jena and conscripted into higher when single sentries were posted near
French service, deserting to the British in a corpse: 'I don't care for living men, but,
May 1810: for Godsake, sir, don't keep me beside him' as
'. .. remarkably fine men ... but they one remarked. 198
complain of never being paid, and that the
French treat them like canaille. Nor have they REINFORCEMENTS
enough to eat ... they told me they had Different methods of reinforcement were
rather serve us than the enemies of their used by various armies. France possessed a
country.... '196 comparatively sophisticated system for sup-
Conscripted troops were usually more plying drafts of conscripts, illustrated by the
prone to desertion than volunteers, for order issued by Napoleon in November 1806
example the thousand impressed peasants and to Marshal Kellermann, commander of the
convicts sent from Naples to Spain in 1810, Reserve Army (training-units and depot
half deserting even before reaching the battalions), requesting between 8,000 and
Pyrenees. The greatest desertion was amongst 10,000 conscripts.
the inferior types of 'foreign corps', like the Eight provisional battalions were formed,
Chasseurs Britanniques of the British army, each around a company of a third battalion
an emigre unit diluted by ill-assorted of a regiment of the Grande Armee, to which
foreigners who fought well but could not be nucleus conscripts of eight to ten days'
trusted with 'outpost' duty due to their training were added, their training continuing
partiality for desertion. A Court-Martial of en route to the army during which march
October 1812 was held on eighteen Chasseurs they were organized into companies, bat-
who had deserted en masse, sixteen Italians, talions and provisional regiments. On arrival
a Swiss and a Croat. Others were seen in the provisional units were broken up and the
the French ranks at San Marcial, still wearing men drafted as required, a practice which
British uniform. The Brunswick Oels Jagers, ensured that every unit maintained a hard
also in British service, deserted so frequently corps of experienced troops. During the
that Leach of the 95th claimed that the British 1806-07 campaign Kellermann despatched
had but a lease on them, whilst Costello 73, 62 4 men and 9,559 horses, in addition to
records how General Craufurd addressed 78,832 men and 9,747 horses from regimental
them: depots. The estimated time required to train
' ... if any of those gentlemen have a wish an adequate soldier was an optimistic one
to go over to the enemy, let them express it, month.
and I will give my word of honour I will grant The alternative system of reinforcing, as
them a pass to that effect instantly, for we are practised by the British for example, was less
better off without such.'197 effective: throughout the Peninsular War a
The iniquitous practice of enlisting steady flow of new battalions replaced those
prisoners-of-war (who usually changed sides depleted by campaigning, some regiments
at the first opportunity) was used by many being thus totally inexperienced, prompting
armies, from the British enlisted in the French correspondence like the following from
154
Wellington in June 18 13: a specified period. An example of parole-
'The new regiments are, as usual, the worst breaking occurred in the Vendee, when the
of all. The -th - - - - are a disgrace to paroled French Army of Mayence was sent
the name of soldier, in action as well as else- to suppress the Vendean rebels who claimed
where; and I propose to draft their horses alliance with the captors of the 'Mayen~ais',
from them, and to send the men to England, the conditions of parole being that they should
if I cannot get the better of them in any other not take the field against any Allied troops;
manner. '199 the Republicans claimed that the Vendeans
Reinforcements to serving battalions were internal rebels, against whom the parole
travelled separately from Britain, varying did not apply. The Vendeans themselves,
between a handful to 100 men in the charge unable to accommodate prisoners, released all
of inexperienced subalterns who frequently they took on parole, shaving the prisoners'
had difficulty in delivering their drafts. One heads to indicate their parole and to signify
young officer was court-martialled for that they could expect death if captured a
delivering only twenty-nine out of forty-one second time. Prisoners could be redeemed, or
men, and another whose twenty men had sold released from parole, by 'exchange', the
fourteen of their blankets. mutual agreement to swap man for man and
Units becoming so weak as to be unable to rank for rank.
act in the field were sometimes formed with
other such into a 'provisional battalion'; MUSIC
several were used by the British in the Music played an important part in Napoleonic
Peninsula. F~ used similar provisional warfare, most significantly for the trans-
units in Spain for convoy-escort, taking a mission of orders in the field by infantry
squad from several corps to avoid seriously drum and cavalry trumpet. It was the most
depleting anyone. Stragglers and recovered vital for light infantry, where troops in
invalids could. similarly be formed into pro- skirmish order might be out of range of voice
visional units until they re-joined their own or signalling-whistles. Various types of light
corps; for example the British 2nd Battalion infantry 'bugle' were used, including hunting-
of Detachmertts which fought at Talavera had horns, large 'waldhorns' by Germans and
one company of 92nd Highlanders and others even animal-horns. Cooper's manual (1806)
from the 42nd, 79th, 9Ist and 95th Rifles. claimed that 'A good bugle may be heard at
Some provisional units became permanent, the distance of three miles,'20o and though
for example, the French 13th Cuirassiers, Cooper included drum-calls in his book light
originally the 1st Provisional Heavy Cavalry infantry invariably used the handier bugle. A
consisting of detachments from the 1st, 2nd wide range of calls existed, not only the
and 3rd Cuirassiers and 1st and 2nd Cara- essential 'Advance', 'Retreat', 'Halt', 'Cease
biniers. Firing', etc., but such detailed instructions as
'Run', 'Fire', 'Extend', 'Close', 'Lie Down',
'Call in Skirmishers', etc., as well as ordinary
PRISONERS-OF-WAR
calls like 'Rouse', 'Drill', 'Fatigue', and
Prisoners-of-war were accommodated in 'Officers' Dinner'.
camps erected for the purpose, prisons or Regimental bands were usually regarded as
occasionally 'hulks', decrepit ships moored separate from the drums and fifes, ranging in
permanently offshore and inevitably foul. members from five to fifty-odd, with non-
There were other ways, however, which combatants or even civilians hired by the
relieved the captors of the duty of providing battalion commander in some armies. Instru-
guards. Prisoners could be encouraged to ments included keyless trumpets, French
change sides, a doubtful policy but one used horns, keyless harmony-horns and trombones
by a number of nations. Secondly, prisoners (the latter often with gargoyle-heads) among
could be released on 'parole', allowing them the brass, clarinettes, hautbois, huge bassoons
to be sent home if they gave their word of and curved 'serpents' among the woodwinds;
honour not to serve against their captors for plus fifes, flutes and a number of percussion
155
E

D
instruments ranging from side-drums to own damned tune.'202 With 'La Carmagnole'
'base' drums (wider than the modern type), and 'La Marseillaise', '<::a Ira' was the most
kettle-drums (large ones for mounted bands), popular battle-song of the Revolution. Other
tambourines, cymbals and 'jingling johnnies' tunes were 'borrowed': the British 3 I st played
or 'chapeaux chinois', ornamental poles hung a catchy French tune known as 'Bonaparte's
with bells which tinkled when shaken or when March' after they recruited two French
the upper section was rotated by a handle. deserters into their band in 18 13, and similarly
The three latter instruments were often 'Le Sentinel': written by an Austrian, popular
played by negroes dressed in outlandish with the French and adopted by the British in
oriental costume. Instruments like fifes and the Peninsula.
triangles were sometimes played by small As well as providing appropriate music for
children, though the popular idea of the solemn occasions (the most moving of all
'drummer boy' is not exactly true: many, perhaps the playing by the British 79th of 'To
particularly French, were adults and seasoned the Land of the Leal' as the cortege of the
campaigners. popular Spanish general La Romana passed
'Military music' reached a peak in France, through Cartaxo in 181 I), the regimental
Napoleon encouraging its playing as a morale- band's main function was as a morale-booster.
booster; for example he gave LeBrun and In battle it could fire the blood (Coignet
Rouget de Lisle the daunting task of com- thought the French Imperial Guard band at
posing 'a hymn based on a familiar tune like Austerlitz 'enough to make a paralytic move
that of the "Marseillaise" or the "Chant du forward' ,203 and perhaps distract the men
Depart" which must contain sentiments for from their likely fate; at Geldermalsen (1795)
any and all circumstances of war.'201 French Lord Cathcart is reputed to have shouted to
bands played their troops along the march the British 28th just as they came under fire:
and right into action, drummers often suffer- 'Where is your band, sir? Now is the time for
ing severe losses beating out the 'Pas de it to play.'204 At Tarifa (181 I) the Irish 87th
Charge' (known as 'Old Trousers' to the repelled a French attack with their band
British). Indeed, drum-majors like Senot of playing behind them, first the rousing
the Imperial Guard became more famous 'Garryowen' (later immortalized as Custer's
than many generals! signature-tune) and, as the attack was
British bands were usually less involved in repelled, 'St Patrick's Day'. More menacing
the fighting than the French, the musicians was the tune played by the Liddesdale
sometimes helping to evacuate casualties, but volunteers as they marched to face the
only rarely (like the 48th's band at Talavera) reported 'invasion' in 18°4, an intimidating
having to join in the fighting. In general song from reiving days:
their music was less 'martial' than that of the
'Oh wha daur meddle wi' me?
French, though 'The British Grenadiers' and
An' wha daur meddle wi' me?
'Rule Britannia' were always popular. 'The
My name is wee Jock Elliott,
Downfall of Paris' was a universal favourite,
An' wha daur meddle wi' me?'205
the tune originally the anarchist '<::a Ira' of
the French Revolution, banned by Napoleon German bands accompanied singing, on
but popular with Prussian, Austrian and the march, in bivouac, and in action. British
Russian bands. Traditionally its first non- observers wrote with delight about German
French performance was at Famars (1793) music: 'They were marching in columns ...
when the colonel of the British 14th exhorted and the men in front singing choruses of the
his musicians to copy what the French were most pleasing description ... there can be no
playing so that they might be beaten 'to their doubt of its beneficial influence ... ';206

Fig. 106. Musical instruments. A. Serpent; B. Bucin~' C. Trombone with Bucin head~'
D. Bassoon; E. Jingling Johnny or 'Chapeau Chinois'.
157
A

Fig. 107. Bugles and horns. A. British Rifle horn of cow-horn and silver)· B. French horn)·
C. Prussian horn)· D. Light Infantry bugle)· E. Cavalry trumpet)· F. Harmony horn.

'It was not the least delightful of our signing 'Heil dir im Siegerkrantz!', the old
pleasures to listen to the glees of the German Prussian national anthem sung to the tune of
riflemen.... '207 Both bands and singers - par- 'God Save the Queen'. The unit came under
ticularly those of the King's German Legion- shell-fire, but ' ... this hostile greeting only
were far more proficient than those of other made us sing louder our hymn of war and the
nations. A great favourite was the stirring 'Ein Fatherland.... '208
Schifflein sah ich fahren' ('I saw a small ship Singing cheered other nations as well; at
sailing'), later given French words and as 'La Barrosa Col. Browne heartened his pro-
Parisienne' becoming the song of the 1830 visional battalion with a solo rendition of
Revolution and being adopted by the Foreign 'Heart of Oak',and at Waterloo an anonymous
Legion. The Germans also sang in action; Scot sang 'Bruce's address', appropriately
for example, the Prussians raised Luther's 'A modified: 'See approach Napoleon's
Mighty Fortress is Our God' as they pushed pow'r. '209 The Spanish marched to a half-
into the blazing shambles of Plan~enoit, song, half-chant, lead-singers beginning and
whilst an officer of the Allied army at Leipsig the remainder joining in the chorus. 'A la
remembered how his men marched into action guerra, Espagfioles' and the many anti- French

'F£g. 109· Right: Br£t£sh hussar trumpeters. Contemporary pr£nt.


D

Fig. 108. Drums. A. French drummer showing the method of carriage.>· B. Drum belt and apron.>·
C. Method of slinging drum on the march.>· D. British bass drum.

159
~ Horn
[1] Clarinet
[I) Hautbois
~ Serpent
rn Trombone
~ Bassoon
~Flute @] Fusilier Drummer
[]] Trumpet [!] Voltigeur Drummer
~ Voltigeur Hornist
~ Cymbals
[Q] Bass Drum [!J Grenadier Drummer
[I] Jingling Johnny [!] 'Tambour Maitre'
~ Triangle
00 Bandmaster
Fig. 110. Left: Diagram of the layout of a French 20 piece lnilitary band.
Right: Diagram of the corps of drums of a three battalion French Infantry regiment drilling as
a body.

songs or 'cancioneiros' were popular, in- that am a musician?'211 Consequently, many


cluding one incorporating the catch-phrases feats of heroism were performed by pipers,
of their allies and enemies: like George Clark of the 7 I st, wounded at
Vimiero but continuing to play saying: 'Deil
"Viva los Ingleses que dicen
ha' my saul if ye shall want music!';212 or
God damn you.
John McLauchlan of the 74th, who played his
Mueran los que dicen
pipes over the wall of Bada;os and fell at
Sacre nom de Dieu. '210
Vittoria; or Kenneth Mackay of the 79th who
Portuguese bands accompanied their men in walked outside a square at Waterloo playing
song, most popularly 'Veneer 0 morir' ('Con- 'Cogad na sith' ('Peace or War'). Pipe-music
quer or Die'). inflamed the Highlanders on going into
Highland bagpipers probably had more action; surely the most appropriate battle-
morale-effect than all other bands put music in history was 'Hey Johnny Cope, are
together. Not carried on official regimental ye waukin' yet?' as the French were turned
strength, pipers were privately-engaged to out of their beds at Arroyo dos Molinos (the
fulfil their traditional honour of playing their song was later modified to name the surprised
clansmen into action, and thus scorned the French general - 'Hey Monsieur Gerard, are
status of regimental bandsmen, one referring ye waukin' yet?').213 And at Maya 'The haughs
to a drummer: 'Shall a little rascal that beats of Cromdale' caused the 92nd to charge a
upon a sheepskin take the right hand of me much-superior French force who' ... panic-
r60
struck at their audacity wheeled about and an amazing level, be it 'La Marseillaise' or
ran. '214 At the Cape of Good Hope in 1806, 'Chanson de l'Oignon', 'Heart of Oak' or
Highlanders not only played the pipes but 'The Young May Moon'. As Robert E. Lee
even danced a reel, causing both the English was to remark, 'Without music we wouldn't
and the retiring enemy to regard them with have any army.'
'utter astonishment.'215 Musicians usually wore uniforms more
1~otally different was the music played by costly and distinctive than their pedestrian
naval landing-parties; at San Sebastian British fellows, often 'reversed colours' (jackets of
'tars' in the trenches fiddled 'Heart of Oak', the regimental facing-colour), though these
answering each French shell with 'Jack's attracted too much attention from the enemy;
Alive'! A good regimental band was in- such practices were therefore officially for-
valuable for recruiting purposes, but in the bidden by Britain in 1812, an order which
field and under fire it could raise morale to had but little effect.

176. Quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, p. 24. 196. Warre, pp. 120-21.
177. This and following statistics from Glover, Wellington's 197· Costello, pp. 46-7.
Army, pp. 37-9. 198. Gleig, pp. 106-7.
178. Stanhope, Conversations with the Duke of Wellington, 199. Wellington to Earl Bathurst, 29 June 18 I 3; 'Despatches',
p. 18, quoted in Oman, Wellington's Army, p. 217. X, p. 473.
179. Quoted in Duffy, Borodino, p. 42. 200. Cooper, p. 98.
180. Quoted in Glover, Wellington's Army, p. 75. 201. Quoted in Winstock, p. 142.
181. Stevenson, Sergt. J., Twenty-One Years in the British 202. Quoted ibid., pp. 106-7.
Foot Guards, London, 1830; quoted in Glover, Welling- 203. Coignet, p. 124.
ton's Army, p. 69. 204. Sir H. Murray, Memoir of Capt. A. S. Murray, 1859,
182. Souvenirs de Guerre du General Baron Pouget, Paris, p. 51.
1895; quoted in Duffy, Austerlitz, p. 67. 2°5. Sir Walter Scott, The Antiquary, notes, p. 378,
183. Grose, II, p. 233. Routledge Kenilworth edn., n.d.
184. Adye, pp. 262-3· 206. Anon, Memoirs of the late War, 1831, p. 245; quoted
185. Cooper, Rough Notes, p. 146. in Winstock, p. 142.
186. Adye, p. 262. 207. Quoted in Winstock, p. 141.
187. Ibid. 208. Lieut. Kretzchmer, quoted in Brett-James, Europe
188. Lt-Col. Gurwood, quoted In Brett-James, Lzfe zn Against Napoleon, pp. 182-3.
Wellington's Army, p. 94. 209. Hope, p. 423.
189. Bell, pp. 99-100. 210. Quoted in Winstock, p. 145.
190. Leslie, p. 83· 211. Quoted ibid., p. 137.
191. Sergt. Anton: Fitchett, pp. 248-9. 212. Lt-Col. L. B. Oatts, Proud Heritage, Nelson, London,
192. Napier, Life of C. J. Napier, I, p. 164. 195 2, I, p. 72.
193. Bell, I, pp. 74-5· 213. A. Clerk, Memoir of Col. John Cameron, 1858, p. 51.
194. Lachouque and Brown, p. 483. 214· Hope, p. 179.
195. London Chronicle, 10 December 1795. 215. Quoted in Winstock, pp. 139-40.

Fig. III. Skirmishing: French grenadiers drive off cavalry. Print after Horace ~rnet
161
APPENDICES

THE REVOLUTIONARY CALENDAR


Western Europe used the Gregorian Calendar Thermidor (July)
throughout the Napoleonic Wars (the Julian Fructidor (August)
Calendar was used in Russia until 1917; in
The years were numbered:
1812, for example, it was twelve days behind
the Gregorian); but France intro·duced the I 179 2-93
Revolutionary Calendar in 1792, re-naming II 1793-94
the months and numbering the years 'I', 'II' III 1794-95
etc. from the birth of the Republic. Years ran IV 1795-96
from September to August, months being: V 1796-97
Vendemiaire (September) VI 1797-98
Brumaire (October) VII 179 8-99
Frimaire (November) VIII 1799- 1800
Nivose (December) IX 1800-01
Pluvoise ( January) ,X 1801-02
Ventose (February) XI 1802-03
Germinal (March) XII 18 0 3-04
Floreal (April) XIII 180 4-05
Prairial (May) XIV 1805; the Gregorian Calendar was
Messidor ( June) reinstated in 1806.

UNITS OF MEASUREMENT
Adye lists the different measurements for the One English mile 868 geometrical paces
term 'pace':216 One Swedish " = 5,761 " "
France and England: 2! feet per pace. One Swiss ,,= 4,512 " "
Five French royal feet = one geometrical One Danish " = 4,07 1 ,~ "
pace One German" = 4,000 " "
= 6.102 English feet One Dutch " = 3,158 " "
= 5. 67 1 9 Rhineland
One French league = 2,400 " "
feet. One Spanish " = 2,286 " "
One Toise = 6.395 English feet. One Scottish" = 1,500 " "
One Italian mile = 1,000 " "
And different measurements for the term One Russian verst 575 " "
'mile':217
r62
ARTILLERY TABLES
The following tables are extracted from Adye, in which manual many more comprehensive
details of specification and performance can be found.

I. Ranges of Brass Guns with one shot, 1793.


Charge Point- To first graze of shot (yds)
Nature lbs ozs blank 1° 2° 3° 4° 5°
Heavy 24-pdr 8 0 473 7 81 1,032 1,40 5 1,585 1,710
Medium 24-pdr 8 0 4 88 757 1, 10 3 1,42 5 1,557 1,745
Light 24-pdr 3 0 162 364 606 7 22 1,390
Medium 12-pdr 4 0 70 5 973 1,189
Light 12-pdr 3 0 601 816 1, 06 3
Desagulier 6-pdr 2 0 646 9 66 1,3 2 5
Six-feet 6-pdr 2 0 68 3 94 8 1,3 2 7
Medium 6-pdr 2 0 775 1,003 1,444
Reduced 6-pdr 2 0 642 97 6 1,150
Five-feet 6-pdr 1 8 58 7 82 5 950
Four ft 6 ins 6-pdr I 8. 628 80 4 99 1
Desagulier 3-pdr I 0 679 883 9 18

2. Ranges of French Brass Field Guns in French weights and measures.


Elevation
Nature Deg. Min. Range in Toises
12-pdr (4 lbs charge) 58 300
I 3 35 0
1 39 400
1 49 45 0
I 56 4 80
8-pdr (2-! lbs charge) I 24 35 0
I 51 4 00
2 8 45 0
2 24 4 80
4-pdr (I-! lbs charge) 58 25 0
1 20 300
I 40 35 0
2 0 4 00
2 20 45 0
2 40 480

3· Ranges with a heavy sf-inch howitzer, 1793.


Elevation Range to first graze (yds) Elevation Range to first graze (yds)
(degrees) (2-lb charge) (3-lb charge) (degrees) (2-lb charge) (3-lb charge)
I 453 479 7 1,449 1,577
2 595 7 22 8 1,355 1,721
3 666 9 21 9 1,5 8 5 1,801
4 847 1,000 10 1,853 1,79 1
5 957 1,3 2 5 II 1,793
6 1,173 1,53 0 12 1,686

Extreme range from 1,400 to 1,900 yards (2-lb charge), 1,400 to 2,000 (3-lb charge)
16 3
Note: 'The Germans do not name their shells from the diameter of the bore which receives
them, but from the weight of a stone ball that fits the same bore as the shell. Thus a 7 lbs
howitzer admits a stone ball of that weight; the shell for this weighs 15 lbs and answers
to the English 5! inch. The 30 lbs howitzer shell weighs 60 lbs. and is rather more than
8 inches in diameter. '218

4. Ranges with Land Service Mortars at 45° elevation.


Nature Charge Range (yds)
13-inch iron 140ZS 245
8 lbs 0 ozs 2,7 06
" "
brass 2 lbs 2 ozs 862
" 4 lbs 8 ozs 1,3 24
" "
lo-inch iron 80zs 235
4 lbs 8 ozs 2,53 6
" "
brass I lb 10 ozs 82 3
" 2 lbs 8 ozs 1, 21 5
"
8-inch "
iron 5 ozs 225
I lb 90ZS 1,720
" "
brass 10 ozs 8 dr 5 80
" 17 ozs 8 dr 1,062
" " I oz 8 dr
5!-inch 155
" 6 oz 0 dr 1,175
" "

5· Charges for Field Guns.


Charge for Charge for
Nature roundshot (lbs) canister (lbs)
Medium and heavy 12-pdrs 4 3!
Light 12-pdrs 3 3
Desagulier 6-pdr 2! 2
Medium 6-pdr 2 2
Light 6-pdr I! It
Heavy 3-pdr I I
Light 3-pdr 12 ozs
'The charge for battering guns is l the weight of the round shot, for round shot, and t of
it for case shot ... By experiments made at Woolwich in March, 1801, it is recommended
. .. on service, the charges of field ordnance with round shot, shall be reduced to the
usual quantities for case shot. '219

6. Marks on powder barrels.


'The different sorts of powder are distinguished by the following marks on the heads of
the barrels.
LG ! C yIn
No. 1· d er

NO.2 C 1· d - Marked in Red: denotes powder entirely made of the cylinder charcoal,
SG Y In er and is that which is now always used on service.
~~ 3 Cylinder
SA - The dust from NO.3.
RA - For rifle arms.
LG - in white ... being a mixed powder, is not so uniform as the other and is
therefore generally used in filling shells.

L G or F G - in blue, is powder made of pit-coal.


RS - in yellow, is restoved. '220

7. Composition of match.
'The slow match used by the English is made by contract: one yard of it will burn about
8 hours. The French slow match is usually made by soaking light twisted white-rope for
3 days in a strong lye. It burns about 3 feet in 6 hours.
'Slow match was made at Gibraltar, during the last siege, in the following manner: eight
ounces of saltpetre were put into a gallon of water, and just made to boil over a slow fire;
strong blue paper was then wetted with the liquor, and hung to dry. When dry, each sheet
was rolled IIp tight, and the outward edge pasted d<?wn, to prevent its opening; half a sheet,
thus prepared, will burn 3 hours.
'Quick Match Compositions:

Worsted Match Cotton Match


Worsted 10 oz Cotton I lb 12 oz
Mealed powder 10 lbs Saltpetre I lb 8 oz
Spirits of wine 3 pints Mealed Powder 10 lbs
Water 3 pints Spirits of wine 2 quarts
Isinglass ! pint Water 3 pints
'Note - The French have lately made their slow match by soaking the rope in a solution of
sugar of lead and rain water: in the proportion of i of an ounce of sugar of lead to one pint
of water: and this they esteem as preferable to the old sort. '221

ARTILLERY TACTICS, AFTER ADYE


may rest its flanks, be secured by them, and
'The artillery of the park is generally divided from which the enemy may be fired upon
into brigades of 4 or 6 pieces, and a reserve, obliquely.
according to the force and extent of the front 'The guns should be placed as much as
of an army. The reserve must be composed of possible under cover; this is easily done upon
about 1/6th of the park, and must be placed heights, by keeping them so far back that the
behind the first line. If the front of the army muzzles are only to be seen over them: by
be extensive, the reserve must be divided. proper attention many situations may be
'The following are the principal rules for found of which advantage may be taken for
the movements and positions of the brigades this purpose, such as banks, ditches, &c. every
of artillery: where to be met with.
'In a defensive position, the guns of the 'A battery in the field should never be
largest caliber must be posted in those points, discovered by the enemy till the very moment
from whence the enemy can be discovered at it is to open. The guns may be masked by
the greatest distance, and from which may be being a little retired; or by being covered by
seen the whole extent of his front. troops, particularly cavalry.
'In an offensive position, the weakest points 'To enable the commanding officer of
of the line must be strengthened by the largest artillery to choose the proper positions for his
calibers, and the most distant from the enemy; field batteries, he should of course be made
those heights on which the army is advancing acquainted, with the effect intended to be
produced; with the troops that are to be dimension; it should therefore take a line
supported; that he may place his artillery so obliquely or in flank; but a column in front.
as to support, but not incommode the 'The artillery should never be placed in
infantry; nor take up such positions with his such a situation, that it can be taken by an
guns, as would be more advantageously enemy's battery obliquely, or in flank, or in
occupied by the line. That he may not place the rear; unless a position under these circum-
his batteries too soon, nor too much exposed; stances, offers every prospect of producing
that he may cover his front and his flanks, a most decided effect, before the guns can be
by taking advantage of the ground; and that destroyed or placed hors de combat.
he may not venture too far out of the pro- 'The most elevated positions are not the
tection of the troops, unless some very best for artillery, the greatest effects may be
decided effect is to be obtained thereby. produced from a height of 30 or 40 yards at
'The guns must be so placed as to produce a distance of about 600; and about 16 yards of
a cross fire upon the position of the enemy, height to 200 of distance.
and upon all the ground which he must pass 'Positions in the rear of the line are bad for
over in an attack. artillery, because they alarm the troops, and
'They must be separated into many small offer a double object to the fire of the enemy.
batteries, to divide the fire of the enemy; while 'Positions which are not likely to be shifted,
the fire from all these batteries, may at any but from whence an effect may be produced
time be united to produce a decided effect during the whole of an action, are to be
against any particular points. preferred; and in such positions a low breast-
'These points are the debouches of the work of 2 or 3 feet high may be thrown up,
enemy, the heads of their columns, and the to cover the carriages.
weakest points in the front. In an attack of 'Artillery should never fire against artillery,
the enemy's position, the cross fire of the guns unless the enemy's troops are covered, and his
must become direct, before it can impede the artillery exposed; or unless your troops suffer
advance of the troops; and must annoy the more from the fire of his guns, than his troops
enemy's positions nearest to the point do from yours.
attacked, when it is no longer safe to continue 'Never abandon your guns till the last
the fire upon that point itself. extremity. The last discharges are the most
'The shot from artillery should always take destructive; they may perhaps be your sal-
an enemy in the direction of its greatest vation, and crown you with glory. '222

216. Adye, p. 210. 220. Ibid., pp. 164-5.


217. Ibid., pp. 189-90. 221. Ibid., pp. 177-8.
218. Ibid., p. 252. 222. Ibid., pp. 24-7.
219. Ibid., p. 81.

r66
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BATTLES OF THE
REVOLUTIONARY AND
NAPOLEONIC WARS

Note: In the following list, the names of commanders are sometimes those of generals in overall com-
mand, rather than actual battlefield commanders.

Date Battle Victors Defeated

179 2
20 September Valmy French (Dumouriez/ Austro-Prussians (Brunswick)
Kellermann)
6 November Jemappes French (Dumouriez ) Austrians (Albert of Saxe-
Teschen)

1793
18 March Neerwinden Austrians (Saxe-Coburg) French (Dumouriez)
21-23 May Valenciennes Austrians (Saxe-Coburg) French (Custine)
6 September Hondschoote French (Houchard) Anglo-Hanoverians (York)
13 September Menin French (Houchard) Netherlandish (Orange)
15-16 October Wattignies French (Jourdan) Austrians (Saxe-Coburg)
28-30 November Kaiserslautern Prussians (Brunswick) French (Hoche)
22 December Froschwiller French (Hoche) Prussians (Brunswick)
26 December Geisberg French (Hoche) Austrians (Wurmser)

1794

24 April Villers-en- Anglo-Austrians (Ott) French


Cauchies
18 May Tourcoing French (Souham) Allies (Saxe-Coburg)
26 June Fleurus French (Jourdan) Allies (Saxe-Coburg)

1795
16-20 July Quiberon French (Hoche) French royalistslBritish
(Puisaye and d'Hervilly)
29 October Mainz Austrians (Clerfayt) French (Pichegru)
24 November Loano French (Massena) Austro-Piedmontese (Wallis)

179 6
12 April Montenotte French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Beaulieu)
14 April Millesimo French (Augereau) Austro-Piedmontese (Provera)

17 1
1796 continued
14-15 April Dego French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Beaulieu)
16-17 April Ceva Austro-Piedmontese French (Augereau)
(Colli)
21 April" Mondovi French (Bonaparte) Piedmontese (Colli)
8 May Fombio French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Beaulieu)
10 May Lodi French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Beaulieu)
30 May Borghetto French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Beaulieu)
16 June Wetzlar Austrians (Charles) French Gourdan)
9 July MaIsch Inconclusive encounter between French (Moreau) andAustrians
(Charles)
3 August Lonato French (B'onaparte) Austrians (Quasdanovich)
5 August Castiglione French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Wurmser)
24 August Amberg Austrians (Charles) French Gourdan)
24 August Friedberg French (Moreau) Austrians (Latour)
3 September Wurzburg Austrians (Charles) French Gourdan)
4 September Roveredo French (Massena) Austrians (Davidovich)
8 September Bassano French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Wurmser)
12 November Caldiero Austrians (Alvintzy) French (Bonaparte)
15-17 November Arcola French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Alvintzy)

1797
14 January Rivoli French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Alvintzy)
23 March Malborghetto French (Massena) Austrians (Charles)
18 April Neuweid (or French (Hoche) Austrians (Werneck)
Lahn)

179 8
2 July Alexandria French (Bonaparte) Egyptians (Coraim)
21 July Pyramids French (Bonaparte) Egyptians (Murad and
Ibrahim)
27 August Castlebar French (Humbert) British (Lake)
5 September Collooney French (Humbert) British (Vereker)
8 September Ballinamuck British (Cornwallis) French (Humbert)

1799
19 February EI Arish French (Bonaparte) Ottoman (Ibrahim Aga)
7 March Jaffa French (Bonaparte) Ottoman (Abou-Saad)
18 March-20 May Acre (siege) Ottoman (Djezzar) French (Bonaparte)
21 March Ostrach Austrians (Charles) French Gourdan)
25 March Stockach Austrians (Charles) French Gourdan)
5 April Magnano Austrians (Kray) French (Scherer)
17April Mount Tabor French (Bonaparte) Ottoman (Achmed)
27 April Cassano Austro-Russians (Suvarov) French (Moreau)
4-7 June Zurich Austrians (Charles) French (Massena)
17-19 July Trebbia Austro-Russians (Suvarov) French (Macdonald)
25 July Aboukir French (Bonaparte) Ottoman (Mustapha)
14 August Zurich Austrians (Charles) French (Massena)
15 August Novi Austro-Russians (Suvarov) French Goubert)
19 September Bergen-op-Zoom French (Brune) Anglo-Russians (York)
25 September Zurich French (Massena) Allies (Korsakov)
2 October Bergen-op-Zoom Anglo-Russians (York) French (Brune)
6 October Castricum French (Brune) Anglo-Russians (York)
4 November Genoa Austrians (Melas) French (Championnet)

17 2
1800
20 March Heliopolis French (Kleber) Ottoman (Vizier)
3 May Stockach French (Moreau) Austrians (Kray)
5 May Moskirch French (Moreau) Austrians (Kray)
16 May VIm French (Moreau) Austrians (Kray)
9 June Montebello French (Lannes) Austrians (Ott)
14 June Marengo French (Bonaparte) Austrians (Melas)
19 June Hochstadt French (Moreau) Austrians (Kray)
3 December Hohenlinden French (Moreau) Austrians Gohn)

1801
20 March Alexandria British (Abercromby) French (Menou)

18 0 5
II October Haslach French (Dupont) Austrians (Mack)
14 October Elchingen French (Ney) Austrians (WernecklRiesch)
17 October VIm (capitu- French (Napoleon) Austrians (Mack)
lation)
30 October Caldiero French (Massena) Austrians (Charles)
8 November Zell French (DavoutlMarmont) Austrians (Merveldt)
I I November Durrenstein French (Mortier) Russians (Miloradovichl
Dokhturov)
16 November Oberhollabriinn French (Napoleon) Russians (Bagration)
(or Hollabriinn)
2 December Austerlitz French (Napoleon) Austro-Russians (Kutuzov)

1806
8 January CapeTown British (Baird) Franco-Dutch Ganssens)
6 July Maida British (Stuart) French (Reynier)
9 October Schleiz French (Bernadotte) Saxons (Tauenzein)
10 October Saalfeld French (Lannes) Prussians (Louis)
14 October Jena French (Napoleon) Prussians (Hohenlohe)
14 October Auerstadt French (Davout) Prussians (Brunswick)
6 November Lubeck French (SoultlBernadotte) Prussians (Blucher)
26 December Pultusk Indecisive encounter between French (Lannes) and Russians
(Bennigsen)
26 December Golymin Indecisive encounter between French (Murat) and Russians
(Gallitzin)

180 7
25 January Mohrungen French (Bernadotte) Russians (Markov)
7-8 February Eylau French (Napoleon) Russians (Bennigsen)
10 June Heilsberg French (Napoleon) Russians (Bennigsen)
14 June Friedland French (Napoleon) Russians (Bennigsen)
29 August Kjoge (or British (Wellesley) Danish (Castenskiold)
Roskilde)
2-5 September Copenhagen British (Cathcart) Danish (Peimann)

1808
15 June-17 August Saragossa Spanish (Palafox) French (Verdier)
14 July Medina del Rio French (Bessieres) Spanish (Cuesta/Blake)
Seco
19 July Baylen Spanish (Castaiios) French (Dupont)
17 August Roli<;a (or Roleia) British (Wellesley) French (Delaborde)

173
1808 continued
21 August Vimeiro British (Wellesley) French Gunot)
23 November Tudela French (Lannes) Spanish (Castafios)
30 November Somosierra French (Napoleon) Spanish (San Juan)
20 December-20 Saragossa French (Lannes) Spanish (Palafox)
February 1809
21 December Sahagun British (Paget) French (Debelle)
29 December Benevente British (Paget) French (Lefebvre-
Desnouettes)
1809
16 January Corunna British (Moore) French (Soult )
28 March Medellin French (Victor) Spanish (Cuesta)
16 April Sacile Austrians Gohn) French (Eugene)
19 April Tengen French (Davout) Austrians (Hohenzollern)
19-20 April Abensberg French (Napoleon) Austrians (Charles)
21 April Landeshut French (Napoleon) Austrians (Hiller)
22 April Eckmiihl (or French (Davoutll...annes) Austrians (Charles)
Eggmiihl)
23 April Ratisbon French (Napoleon) Austrians (Charles)
3 May Ebersberg French (Massena) Austrians (Hiller)
12 May Oporto British (Wellesley) French (Soult)
21-22 May Aspern-Essling Austrians (Charles) French (Napoleon)
14 June Raab French (Eugene) Austrians Gohn)
5-6 July Wagram French (Napoleon) Austrians (Charles)
10 July Znaim Inconclusive encounter between French (Napoleon) and
Austrians (Charles)
28 July Talavera British (Wellesley) French (Victor)
19 November O~ana French (Soult) Spanish (Areizago)

1810
27 September Busaco Anglo-Portuguese French (Massena)
(Wellington)

1811
4 March Barrosa (or British (Graham) French (Victor)
Chiclana)
3 April Sabugal Anglo-Portuguese French (Reynier)
(Wellington)
5 May Fuentes de Anglo-Portuguese French (Massena)
Ofioro (Wellington)
16 May Albuera Anglo-Portuguese/ French (Soult )
Spanish (Beresford)
25 May Usagre British (Lumley) French (Latour-Maubourg)
25 September EIBodon Anglo-Portuguese (Picton) French (Montbrun)
28 October Arroyo dos Anglo-Portuguese (Hill) French (Girard)
Molinos

1812
9 January Valencia French (Suchet) Spanish (Blake)
19 January . Ciudad Rodrigo Anglo-Portuguese French (Barrie)
(Wellington)
6 April Badajoz Anglo-Portuguese French (Philippon)
(Wellington)

174
1812 continued
22 July Salamanca Anglo-Portuguese French (Marmont)
(Wellington)
28 July Vitebsk French (Napoleon) Russians (Barclay de Tolly)
8 August Inkovo Inconclusive encounter between French (Sebastiani) .and
Russians (Platov)
17 August Smolensk French (Napoleon) Russians (Barclay de Tolly)
17-18 August Polotsk French (OudinotlSt. Cyr) Russians (Wittgenstein)
19 August Valutino French (Napoleon) Russians (Barclay de Tolly)
7 September Borodino (or French (Napoleon) Russians (Kutuzov)
'The Moscowa')
18 October Vinkovo Russians (Bagration) French (Murat)
24 October Maloyaroslavets French (Eugene) Russians (Kutuzov)
3 November Fiodoroivskoy French (Davout) Russians (Miloradovich)
14 November Polotsk French (Victor) Russians (Wittgenstein)
16-17 November Krasnyi French (Napoleon) Russians (Kutuzov)
26-28 November Berezina French (Napoleon) Russians (Chichagov/
Wittgenstein)
28 November Loshnitsa French (Oudinot) Russians (Chichagov)

181 3
I May Poserna French (Ney) Allies (Winzingerode)
2 May Lutzen French (Napoleon) Allies (Wittgenstein)
20-21 May Bautzen French (Napoleon) Allies (Wittgenstein)
21 June Vittoria Anglo-Portuguese French Goseph/Jourdan)
(Wellington)
25 July Maya Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)
25 July Roncesvalles Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)
28-30 July Sorauren Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)
23 August Grossbeeren Allies (Bernadotte) French (Oudinot)
~6 August Katzbach Allies (Blucher) French (Macdonald)
26 August Pirna French (Vandamme) Allies (Eugene of
Wurttemberg)
26-27 August Dresden French (Napoleon) Allies (Schwarzenberg)
30 August Kulm-Priesten Allies (Ostermann-Tolstoy/ French (Vandamme)
Kleist)
31 August San Sebastian Anglo-Portuguese French (Rey)
(Wellington)
31 August San Marcial Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)
6 September Dennewitz Allies (Bernadotte) French (Ney)
7 October - Vera Anglo-Portuguese/Spanish French (Taupin)
(Wellington)
12 October Colditz French (Murat) Allies (Schwarzenberg)
14 October Liebertwolkwitz Inconclusive encounter between French (Murat) and'Allies
'1-(5-19 October Leipzig Allies (Schwarzenberg/ French (Napoleon)
Bernadotte/Blucher)
30-31 October Hanau French (Napoleon) Bavarians (Wrede)
9 November St. Jean de Luz Anglo-Portuguese (Hope) French (Soult)
10 November Nivelle Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)

175
1813 continued
9-12 December Nive Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)
13 December St. Pierre Anglo-Portuguese (Hill) French (Soult)

18 1 4
29 January Brienne French (Napoleon) Allies (Blucher)
30 January La Rothiere French (Napoleon) Allies (Blucher)
10 February Champaubert French (Napoleon) Russians (Olssufiev)
I I February Montmirail French (Napoleon) Allies (Yorck/Sacken)
12 February Chateau-Thierry French (Napoleon) Allies (Yorck)
14 February Vauchamps French (Napoleon) Allies (Blucher)
17 February Valjouan French (Grouchy/Gerard) Allies (Wrede)
18 February Montereau French (Napoleon) Allies (Schwarzenberg)
27 February Bar-sur-Aube Allies (WittgensteinlWrede) French (Oudinot )
27 February Orthez Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)
7 March Craonne French (Napoleon) Allies (Blucher)
9-10 March Laon Allies (Blucher) French (Napoleon)
13 March Rheims French (Napoleon) Allies (St.-Priest)
17 March Fismes Allies (Blucher) French (Marmont)
20-21 March Arcis-sur-Aube Allies (Schwarzenberg) French (Napoleon)
25 March La Fere- Allies (Schwarzenberg) French (MarmontlMortier)
Champenoise
30 March Paris (or Allies (Schwarzenberg) French (Marmont)
Montmartre)
10 April Toulouse Anglo-Portuguese French (Soult)
(Wellington)
14 April Bayonne Anglo-Portuguese (Hope) French (Thouvenot)

181 5
2 May Tolentino Austrians (Bianchi ) Italians (Murat)
16 June Quatre Bras Anglo-Allied (Wellington) French (Ney)
16 June Ligny French (Napoleon) Prussians (Blucher)
18 June Wavre Inconclusive engagement between French (Grouchy) and Prussians
(Thielmann)
18 June Waterloo Anglo-Allied (Wellington) French (Napoleon)
and Prussians (Blucher)
GLOSSARY

Words and terms listed in thi~ glossary Foreign words are indicated by a letter in
include many in common usage during the parentheses:
Napoleonic Wars, and those which had a (F) French
different meaning at that time from what they (G) German
have today. Words in languages other than (S) Spanish
. English are listed only in those cases where (Port.) Portuguese
the precise military definition might not be (Pol.) Polish
found in a modern dictionary. (R) Russian

Abatis - barricade of felled trees. Banquette (orig. F) - firing-step behind a


Adjoint (F) - Assistant-Adjutant-General. parapet.
Aide-de-Camp (orig. F) - Junior staff officer Barrelled sash - Hussar girdle with lace
attached to marshal or general. 'barrels' .
Aiguillette (orig. F) - Braided cord shoulder- Barbette (orig. F) - a cannon was 'en barbette'
decoration. when able to fire over a parapet without
Amalgame (F) - Tactical amalgamation of using an embrasure.
regular and volunteer units. Barret (G) - large, floppy field cap.
Ammuzette - Large-bore firearm or 'wall Bashkir (R) - Asiatic light cavalryman.
piece'. Bastion - a) four-sided fortification; b) design
Arm (of service) - cavalry, infantry, artillery, of lace on a uniform, following the same
etc. shape.
Arme blanche (F) - a) cavalry sabres; Batardeau (orig. F) - dam to retain water in
b) generic term for cavalry. a fortress-ditch.
Artillerie volante (F) - fast horse artillery, Battalion company - 'centre' company of an
all gunners being mounted. infantry battalion.
Association - early term for local volunteer Battery - orig. a gun-emplacement; later
company. became synonymous with a company of six
Ataman (R) - cossack senior officer. or eight fieldpieces.
Athwart - Method of wearing a bicorn hat Belly-box - cartridge-box worn at the front
with corners at the sides. of the waist-belt (archaic).
Atiradore (Port.) - sharpshooter of ca~adores. Bengal lights - type of carcass composed of
Avant-train (F) - limber. saltpetre, sulphur, and red orpiment.
Blacking ball - blackening agent for equip-
Ball (as in 'ball ammunition') - musket-ball ment.
or musket-cartridge. Blouse (F) - smock-type garment.
177
Bomb - Mortar-shell; loosely applied to all illumination-device (usually a shell but
explosive projectiles. term also applied to tar-barrels, etc.).
Bombardier - junior N.C.O. of artillery. Carnets (F) - Notebooks kept by Napoleon to
Bonnet (orig. F) - triangular fortification record details of units.
placed in front of a ravelin. Carriage - wooden framework supporting a
Bonnet de police (F) - undress cap. cannon-barrel.
Brassard - cloth arm-band. Carronade large-calibre, short-range
Breastplate - small badge worn on the cannon.
shoulder-belt. Cartouche (F) - cartridge-box.
Breastwork - parapet for the protection of Cascabel - knob at the sealed end of a
troops. cannon-barrel.
Bricole (F) - rope or strap used for man- Casemate - chamber in a fortress-wall.
handling a cannon; a cannon fired 'en Case-shot - canister.
bricole' when the shot struck a sloping Cavalier - raised battery, usually inside a
revetment. bastion.
Brigade - a) tactical formation of two or more Cazador (8) - as 'ca9adore'.
battalions; b) British artillery battery. Cazador a caballo (8) - as 'chasseur a cheval'.
Brigadier (F) - sergeant. Centre company - 'battalion company'.
Briquet (F) - infantry sabre. Chapeau chinois (F) - lit. 'Chinese hat': see
Brown Bess - nickname applied to Long Land 'jingling johnny'.
Pattern musket and subsequent patterns. Charoual (F) - marneluke trousers.
Busby - fur hussar cap (not in common use Chase - segment of cannon-barrel between
at this date). chase-girdle and muzzle.
Butin (F) - colloquialism for personal kit, Chasseur (F) - lit. 'hunter': light troops.
orig. 'booty'. Chasseur a cheval (F) - light cavalry.
Chasseur a pied (F) - light infantry.
Cabinet (F) - Napoleon's personal household. Chasseur-carabinier (F) - Westphalian Guard
Ca9adore (Port.) - rifleman (lit. 'hunter'). rifleman.
Cadenettes (F) - tresses of plaited hair Chef de Bataillon (F) - battalion-commander.
hanging from the temples. Chef de musique (F) - bandmaster.
Cahouk (F) - marneluke head-dress. Chef de peloton (F) - platoon-leader.
Caisson (F) - ammunition-waggon. Chef d'escadron (F) - cavalry squadron-
Canister - artillery ammunition comprising commander.
lead balls in a tin. Chemin des Rondes (F) - sentry-walk around
Cantiniere (F) - female sutleress. the top of a revetment.
Cap - general term for any military head- Cheval-de-frise (orig. F) - barricade made of
dress. stake- or blade-studded beams.
Caponniere (orig. F) - a) a covered com- Chevau-leger (F) - light cavalry.
munication-trench from an enceinte to a Chevau-leger-lancier (F) light cavalry armed
detached work; b) a casemated fortification with lance.
projecting across a ditch for delivering Chinese light - illumination-device composed
flanking-fire. of nitre, sulphur, antimony and orpiment.
Capsquare - metal plate securing the Chock - see 'quoin'.
trunnions of a cannon to the carriage. Chosen man - corporal (archaic; used by
Captain-lieutenant - British commissioned British 95th Rifles until c. 1805).
rank (archaic). Citadel - four- or five-sided strongpoint in a
Captain-general (8) - commanding general fortress defence.
(of a province, etc.). Clash pans - cymbals.
Carabinier (F) - a) type of heavy cavalry; Clinometer - instrument for measuring the
b) grenadier of light infantry. incline on which a cannon stands.
Carbine - short cavalry musket. Club - hair-dressing in the form of a short
Carcass (also carcase) - incendiary or queue.
Cockade - rosette of national colours worn Demi-brigade (F) - unit comprised of part-
on head-dress. regulars and part-volunteers.
Coehorn (also Coehoorn) - mortar named Demi-Iune (F) - see 'ravelin'.
after its designer. Dents de loup (F) - cloth 'wolf-teeth' edging
Coffret (F) - ammunition-chest. to a shabraque.
Cohort (F) - formation of National Guard Desagulier - light fieldpiece named after
(orig. Roman). designer.
Colback (also colpack) (F) - fur hussar cap. Detachments - (as in Btn ofD-.): composite
Colour-sergeant - British senior N.C.O. rank unit formed of stragglers.
instituted 18 13. Diechselpferd (G) - wheel-horse.
Commissaire ordinaire (F) - assistant- Dispart - Half the difference between the
commissary. diameter of a gun-barrel at the base-ring
Commissaire ordonnateur (F) - commissary- and at the swell of the muzzle; generally
in-chief. I/S6th of the length.
Commissary - supply-officer. Division - a) tactical formation of several
Company - small unit of infantry, cavalry brigades; b) two companies of a battalion,
or artillery. drawn up in line, three ranks deep; c) two
Conducteur (F) - artillery-driver. fieldpieces with attendant vehicles; d)
Cordon (orig. F) - rounded coping-stones section of General Staff.
surmounting a revetment. Dolman - tail-less, braided jacket.
Cornet - cavalry second-lieutenant. Dolphin - lifting-handle on a cannon-barrel.
Corps - a) tactical unit comprising several Draft - system of breaking up a unit, trans-
divisions; b) term used to indicate any unit ferring personnel to other corps.
of troops from detached companies up to Dragon (F) - dragoon.
brigade. Dragoon - medium cavalry; orig. mounted
Corps d'observation (F) - detached formation infantry.
protecting lines of communication, watch- Dragoon Guard - British heavy cavalry.
ing enemy, etc. Dumpling - short-barrelled pistol.
Cossack (R) - generic term for Caucasian
irregular cavalry; from Turkish 'quzzaq' == Eclaireur (F) - cavalry-scout.
freebooter. Ecoute (orig. F) - small mine-gallery.
Counterscarp - slope or retaining-wall on Embrasure - opening in a parapet to allow
outer side of a ditch. gunfire through the wall.
Countersign - password. Enceinte (F) - fortress-wall or perimeter.
Covered way (also covert-way) - infantry fire- Enfilade - fire from a flank, raking the
step along a ditch. entire length of the formation.
Crapaud - British nickname for French Ensign - infantry second-lieutenant.
soldiers. Envelope - continuous enceinte.
Cravat (F) - a) swatch of material on top of Epaulement (orig. F) - breastwork.
a standard-pole; b) pompom encircling a Esplanade - open s·pace between a citadel
sword-blade at the juncture of blade and and the nearest buildings.
hilt. Espontoon - see 'spontoon'.
Crochet (F) - miniature parallel trench. Etat-Major (F) - staff.
Crownwork - fortification composed of two Evolution - drill-movement.
small bastions with two long branches at Expense magazine - small magazine placed
either side. near a battery.
Cuirass (F) - breastplate.
Cuirassier (F) - armoured heavy cavalry. Facings - coloured distinctions on a uniform
Czapka (also Czapska, Shapska, Tchapka, (collar, cuffs, etc.).
etc.) (Pol.) - square-topped cap. Fahnentrager (G) - infantry colour-bearer.
Fahnrich (G) - aspirant officer serving in
Degen (G) - straight-bladed infantry sword. the ranks.
179
Fantassin (F) - infantryman. Frizzen - part of a flintlock from which the
Farrier - cavalry pioneer or one who cares for flint strikes sparks.
unit's horses. Frog - leather belt-fitting from which a
Faschinenmesser (G) - bill-hook or machete. scabbard is suspended.
Fascine - bundle of brushwood used in Fugelman - (G., lit. 'file-leader'): a soldier
fortification. who stood in front of a company during
Fausse-braye (orig. F) - low outer rampart, drill, from whom the others took their time.
usually earthen. Fuhrwesen (G) - train.
Feld Lazaretten (G) - field hospital. Furniture - metal fittings on a musket.
Feldmiitze (G) - field-cap. Fusil - light musket (F) any musket.
Feld-Postillione (G) - courier. Fusil depareille (F) - Republican term
Felloe (also Felly) - curved wooden segment describing a composite musket made from
forming part of the outer ring of an spare bits of marty different patterns.
artillery wheel. Fusil d'honneur (F) - presentation-musket
Fencible - home-defence unit corresponding awarded for outstanding service.
to regular army. Fusilier - (F) line infantry 'centre' company;
Fermelet (F) - mameluke waistcoat. (G) as before or light infantry; (B) title of
Feuerwerker (G) - artillery N.C.O. three line regiments (7th, 21st & 23rd),
Feuerwerkscompagnie (G) - artillery rocket- orig. one armed with a fusil.
corps (Austrian). Fusiliers-Chasseurs (F) - unit .of Imperial
Fire Ball - illumination device comprising Guard infantry. .
rosin, sulphur, alum powder, starch, salt- Fusiliers-Grenadiers (F) - unit of Imperial
petre, mealed powder and linseed oil. Guard infantry.
Firelock - flintlock musket.
Fixed ammunition - artillery projectile with Gabion (orig. F) - earth-filled wickerwork
wooden 'sabot' affixed. basket used in fortification.
Flank company - grenadiers and light infantry Gabion farci (F) - gabion rolled in front of
of a line battalion. a sapper to shield him from enemy fire.
Flanquers (F) - light infantry, particularly Gala (G) - 'gala uniform' = parade-dress.
of Middle Guard. Gallery - largest type of mine-tunnel.
Fleche (F) - lit. arrow; arrow-shaped earth- Galloper - light, shafted fieldpiece without a
works. limber.
Fliegendes Lazarett (G) - mobile hospital. Garde du Corps (G) - French term used by
Fliigel-Adjutant (G) - A.D.C. many German armies for heavy bodyguard
Fliigelhorn (G) - hunting-horn. cavalry.
Fliigelmiitze (G) - mirliton cap. Gardes d'honneur (F) - light bodyguard
Fly - rapidly-moving infantry waggon. cavalry; also escort units of individual
Flying artillery - horse-artillery. cities.
Fore-and-aft - method of wearing a bicorn Garland - wooden framework to hold round-
hat with corners at back and front. shot in a neat pile.
Foreign corps - all non- British units of British Gendarme (F) - orig. any armed man, but
army. by this time 'implying troops engaged in
Forlorn hope - first storming-party into a security or provost role.
breach. General de Brigade, de Division, etc. (F) -
Fourgon (F) - heavy transport-waggon. General of Brigade, Division, etc.; title
Fourrier (F) cavalry quartermaster- not automatically accorded to commanders
sergeant. of these formations.
Fraises (orig. F) - storm-poles. Generalquartiermeister (G) - chief of staff.
Freikorps (G) - independent companies. Glacis (orig. F) - slope descending from a
Freiwilligenjager (G) - rifle companies of fortification.
middle-class volunteers serving as N. C. 0 Goddam (F) - French nickname given to
and officer-training units. British troops from their constant use of
180
that expression; dates from Hundred Years Hessian boots - decorative boots, below knee-
War. length, often trimmed with lace.
Gorget (orig. F) - decorative crescent-shaped Hetman (R) - cossack general.
plaque worn by officers around the neck; Hirschfanger (G) - wide-bladed, machete-
symbol of commissioned rank and a relic of like sword.
medieval armour. Hornwork - fortification consisting of a
Grand-Quartier-General (F) - general head- bastion front and two branches at the sides.
quarters. Horse - cavalry (archaic).
Grasshoppers (F) - French nickname given Housings - horse-furniture.
to British riflemen. Howitzer - short-barrelled cannon designed
Grenadier - elite infantry, orig. those armed for high-angle fire.
with hand grenades. Hussar (B) ('Hussard' F, 'Husar' G) - light
Grenadier a Cheval (F) - Imperial Guard cavalry, styled on Hungarian light horse.
Horse Grenadier.
Infirmier-brancardier (F) - stretcher-bearer.
Grognard (F) - lit. 'grumbler'; nickname of
Insurrection (G) - Hungarian and Croation
French Guard infantry.
home-defence organizations.
Grosse-bottes (F) - lit. 'big boots'; nickname
Intendant (F) - commissary.
of French Guard Horse Grenadiers.
Invalids - soldiers unfit for active service,
Guard ('Garde' F & G) - orig. royal body-
used for garrison duty.
guard; term implied veteran elite troops.
Guerite (orig. F) - sentry-box sited on Jager (G) - lit. 'huntsman'; light troops.
ramparts; loosely applied to sentry-boxes in Jager zu Fuss (G) - light infantry.
general. Jager zu Pferd (G) - light cavalry, mounted
Guerrilla (S) - irregular patriot-fighter. rifles.
Guides (F) - light cavalry, orig. escorts. Jingling Johnny - musical instrument com-
Guidon (orig. F) - cavalry standard. prising bells hung from an ornamental pole.
Gun-metal - usually described 'brass' guns, 'Junta' forces (S) - regiments raised by
generally eight to ten parts tin to 100 parts authority of provisional regional govern-
copper. ments in Spain during Peninsular War.
Kalmuk (also kalmuck, calmuk, etc.) (R) -
Habit-veste (F) - jacket.
Asiatic light cavalry.
Halberd - pole-arm with axe-head used by
Kasket (G) - helmet; usually applied to
colour-escorts of some armies.
leather helmets (excluding shakos).
Half-brigade - (F) see 'demi-brigade'; (B)
Kiwer (R) - concave-topped shako adopted
half an artillery battery.
by Russia in 1812.
Half-moon - see 'demi-Iune'.
Knapsack - infantry pack.
Half-pay - an officer receiving half-pay was
Kollet (G) - short-tailed tunic.
one who held a commission but had no
Konfederatka (Pol.) - early type of czapka.
employment.
Krankentrager (G) - stretcher-bearer.
Handicraft - enlisted man employed in a
Kriimper (G) - Prussian reservist trained in
trade, e.g. regimental cobbler.
1808-12 period.
Handlanger (G) - artillery labourer.
Kurtka (Pol.) - lancer-jacket.
Handspike - lever used to manoeuvre a
cannon. Laboratory - room (in fortress) or tent (in
Handwerker (G) - artillery artificer. field) where powder was made up into
Hat company - 'battalion company', i.e. those cartridges.
wearing hats, not flank company head-dress Lancer (F 'lancier') -light cavalryman armed
(grenadier bearskins or light infantry caps). with a lance.
Haversack - fabric bag used for carrying food, Landsturm (G) - home-defence militia.
etc. Landwehr (G) - second-line 'levee en masse'
Helmet-cap - usually applied to a fur-crested or militia.
'round hat' made to resemble a 'Tarleton'. Legion (F 'legion') - orig. a self-contained
181
unit comprising infantry, cavalry, artillery, Match - impregnated burning-cord for
transport etc.; term often used indis- igniting cannon, etc.
criminately but some examples of original Match-case - metal cylinder worn on
use in Napoleonic Wars - e.g. Brunswick grenadiers' cross-belts, orig. to ignite hand-
'Black Legion', etc. grenades; purely decorative by this period.
Leib (G) - Lifeguard or Guard unit (e.g. Marquis - large tent, now 'marquee'.
'Leib-Battalion' etc.). Masse de manoeuvre (F) - part of French
Lentille (F) flat woollen disc worn on shako army entrusted with enveloping attacks.
instead of pompom. Masse primaire (F) - main part of French
Levee en masse (orig. F) - mass-conscription. army engaged in main theatre of battle.
Light Bobs - British nickname for light Masse secondaire (F) - secondary part of
infantry. French army engaged in subsidiary sector
Light dragoons - light cavalry. of battle.
Light infantry (F 'infanterie legere') - orig. MerIon - solid parapet between two em-
fast-moving skirmishers, but in practice brasures.
sometimes little different from line troops. Military shoe - term describing footwear
Limber - two-wheeled carriage connecting which even James' 'Regimental Com-
cannon with gun-team. panion' (1804) was 'at a loss to understand';
Line - term describing ordinary infantry, probably alluded to shape.
cavalry etc.; meaning 'infantry of the line Militia - home-defence force.
of battle', etc. Mirliton (F) - hussar-cap with flying 'wing'.
Linstock (also linkstock) - pike holding slow- Mother Shipton - British tall 'round hat'
match. named after famous Yorkshire witch.
Litewka (G) - thigh-length tunic. Music - regimental band.
Local Militia - British . part-time home- Musketeer (G) - 'centre' companies of line
defence force formed 1808. infantry.
Loophole - small hole punched in a wall to Musketoon - light musket.
allow defenders to fire through.
Lunette (orig. F) - a) triangular fortification National Guard (F 'Garde Nationale') -
on or beyond a glacis; b) small fortification home-defence units.
sited to one side of a ravelin. Nid d'hirondelles (F) - see 'swallows' nest'.
Necessaries - issued items of personal kit.
Normal (G) - title given to units formed
Magazine - a) storage-place for munitions; from selected personnel.
b) supplementary container for musket-
ammunition carried by the individual Oberjager (G) - Jager N.C.O.
soldier. Old Trousers - British nickname for the
Mameluke - Egyptian cavalry, some in- French drum-call 'Pas de Charge'.
corporated in the French Imperial Guard. Opolchenie (R) - militia.
Mantlet - wheeled wooden screen protecting Ordenanca (Port.) - levee en masse militia.
the diggers at the head of a sap. Ordinar (G) - term describing field batteries.
Mine - a) subterranean gallery in which an Ordre mixte (F) - attack-formation com-
explosive charge was placed to bring down prising both columns and lines.
a fortification; b) the explosive charge Ouvriers (F) - artisans, labour battns.
required to accomplish (a).
Marechal de Camp (F) - major-general. Palisade - fence of pointed wooden stakes.
Marechal-des-Iogis (F) - senior N.C.O. Pallasch (G) - straight-bladed heavy cavalry
(quartermaster). sabre.
Marie-Louises (F) - nickname for young Parados - a rearward parapet.
conscripts of the 1813-14 period. Parallel - siege-trench running parallel to
Marine (F 'marin') - troops raised for service enemy fortifications.
aboard ship. Parapet - wall or earthen bank on the forward
182
edge of a fortification or siege-work, Rampart - earthen or masonry wall forming
protecting troops behind. main part of fortress-defence.
Park - artillery reserve. Rangers - orig. describing fast-moving light
Parole - a) system of releasing prisoners of infantry.
war; b) password. Raquettes (F) - 'flounders' or knots on end of
Partida (S) - guerrilla band; regularized cap-cords.
strength from 2 Dec. 1808 of 100 infantry Raupenhelm (G) - crested helmet, e.g.
or fifty cavalry, a regulation generally dis- Bavarian.
regarded. Ravelin (also raveline) - triangular detached
Partisan - guerrilla. fortification in front of a fortress-wall.
Pelisse (orig. F) - furred hussar jacket; also Redan - 'V'-shaped fortification.
applied to officers' braided frock-coats. Redoubt - detached fortification, or a redan
Peloton (F) - platoon. placed in a bastion.
Pennon - lance-flag. Reinforces - reinforcing-bands on a cannon-
Petard - explosive device for blowing in a barrel.
door; almost redundant by this time. Retrenchment - interior defence of a fortress.
Petit Quartier General (F) -lit. 'small H.Q.': Revetment - retaining-wall of a fortification.
staff which accompanied Napoleon when- Rifles - infantry armed with rifled muskets.
ever he went on horseback. Roller - neck-cloth.
Pickers - wire needle used for clearing musket Rotte (G) - basic three-man unit for cavalry
touch-hole. manoeuvre.
Piece - any cannon (orig. 'fieldpiece'). Round hat - short 'topper', often with wide
Pioneer (F 'pionier') - regimental artificer or turned-up brim.
or carpenter. Running ball - musket-charge without
Piquet (also 'picquet') - infantry outpost or wadding.
sentinel.
Place of Arms - enlargement of covered way
of a fortress where troops could be Sabot - wooden shoe on 'fixed ammunition'.
assembled for sorties. Sabre - cavalry sword; (F) a cavalryman,
Plastron - coloured chest-panel on a jacket. e.g. 'a regiment of 800 sabres'.
Pokalem (F) - undress-cap worn 1812-15. Sabretache - decorated leather case hung
Pomatum - hair-dressing. from sword-belt.
Pontonier (F) - pontoon-constructor. Sap - narrow siege-trench.
Pontoon - mobile bridge of boats. Sap faggot - eight-inch thick fascine, three
Porte-Aigle (F) - colour-bearer. feet long.
Post - outpost, sentinel. Sap roller - see 'gabion farci'.
Prepared ammunition - ball and propellant Sapper - orig. one who dug saps; later generic
in a cartridge. term for engineer.
Present - to 'present' (fire) = to take aim. Saucissons (F) - lit. 'sausages': long, thin
Prolonge (F) - rope attaching cannon to team fascines ..
to obviate repeated unlimbering. Scarp - outer slope of a rampart.
Provisional Cavalry - similar to British Schirmiitze (G) - peaked cloth cap.
Fencible Cavalry. Schiitzen (G) - riflemen.
Provisional regiments - composite units Sea Fencibles - British home-defence naval
formed from detachments. volunteers based in sea-ports.
Pupilles (F) - cadets. Sentinel (also 'centinel') - sentry; also archaic
term for private soldier.
Serpent - woodwind musical instrument.
Queue - a) pigtail-hairstyle; b) tobacco-plug Shabraque - ornamental horse-furniture.
shaped like a queue. Shako (also 'chaco') - cylindrical head-dress,
Quoin - wooden block used for elevating peaked.
a cannon-barrel. Shell-jacket - orig. a sleeveless over-jacket.
Shoulder-knot - early term for epaulette or Tin helmet - lightweight, tropical cavalry
fringed shoulder-strap. helmet.
Shoulder-scale - epaulette constructed of Tirailleur (F) - sharpshooter.
overlapping metal scales. Tirailleur-grenadier (F) - Imperial Guard
Slow-match - see 'match'. light infahtry.
Spadroon - light, straight-bladed sword. Toise (F) - old French unit of measurement,
Spatterdash - long gaiters. = 6.395 English feet; used for measuring
Spencer (F) - short-tailed jacket. fortifications.
Spontoon - short or half-pike. Toug (F) - mameluke standard - horsehair
Stamm-regiment (G) - regular unit acting as tail on a pole.
depot or cadre for reserve regiment. Tow Rows - British nickname for grenadiers.
Standartentrager (G) - cavalry standard- Train - troops responsible for driving trans-
bearer. port, artillery etc.
Steel - frizzen. Trench fascine - fascine from four to six
Stock - leather or fabric strip worn around feet long, four to nine inches thick.
the neck. Triangle - framework constructed from
Storm-poles - palisade planted on a scarp, spontoons to which a prisoner was tied for
projecting horizontally or slightly down- flogging.
wards. Trou de loup (F) - see 'wolf pit' .
Stovepipe - cylindrical shako. Trucks - small, solid artillery-carriage
Subdivision - British artillery formation: one wheels.
gun, crew and waggon. Trunnions - lugs projecting from a cannon-
Substitute - militiamen paid to serve in place barrel, fitting on to the carriage.
of one selected by ballot. Truppentrain (G) - train detachments
Suffocating Pots - sulphur/nitre composition, assigned to line units.
when ignited causing distress to the enemy, Turban - ornamental cloth strip around a
or used for fumigation. helmet.
Sugar-loaf - any tall, cylindrical head-dress - Turkish bells - Jingling Johnny.
'round hat' or shako. Turkish music - musical instruments of
Suprevest (F) - cloth 'over-jacket' cut in the oriental origin - jingling johnny, cymbals,
shape of a cuirass, worn by German and tambourine, kettle-drum etc.
Russian bodyguard units. Turnback - turned-back section of coat-tail.
Swallows' nest - large 'wing' enveloping top
Uhlan (G) -lancer (orig. Turkish 'oghlan' =
of shoulder.
'child').
Sweeps - nickname of British 95th Rifles.
Unicorn - light Russian howitzer (also
'licorn').
Tambour (F) - a) a drum; b) a drummer;
Unlaced - an 'unlaced' regiment was one of
c) a small, palisaded fortification.
which the officers' uniforms had no
Tarleton - fur-crested leather helmet, named
metallic lace decoration.
after General Banastre Tarleton.
Tartar (R) - Asiatic light cavalry. Vandyke (also 'vandyck') - zigzag lace edge
Tenaille (orig. F) - small fortification in a along a shabraque, etc.
ditch in front of a wall. Vedette - cavalry scout.
Tenaillon (orig. F) - small fortification on Velite (F) - trainees; light infantry (orig.
one side of a ravelin. Roman light troops).
Tenue de route (F) - marching-order. Vent - touch-hole in a cannon-barrel.
Terreplein (orig. F) - wide upper part of a Veterans - old or semi-invalid soldiers fit only
rampart. for garrison duty except in emergencies.
Tete de colonne (F) - lit. 'head of column': Vivandiere (F) - female sutleress.
term describing colour-party, musicians, Voisko (R) - cossack tribal regiment.
pioneers etc. Volley-gun - multi-barrelled firearm, all
Timonier (F) - wheel-horse. chambers igniting simultaneously.
Voltigeur (F) - lit. 'vaulter'; light infantry White Light - see 'Chinese light'.
companies of line battalions. Wing - shell-like epaulette worn by flank
Volunteers - a) part-time home-defence companies and light cavalry.
troops; b) young men serving as enlisted Wolf-pit - cone-shaped pit used as anti-
men in hope of winning a commission. personnel trap, usually' six feet deep and
four to five feet wide at the surface.
Wachtmeister (G) - artillery or cavalry Wolf-teeth - zigzag cloth edge to a shabraque.
sergeant-major. Worm - corkscrew-device for extracting
Wadmiltilt - waterproof tarpaulin made of unfired charge from barrel.
woollen material, retaining natural oils of Wurst Wagen (G) - lit. 'sausage-waggon';
sheep. artillery transport or caisson with padded
Waldhorn (G) - hunting-horn. seat on top.
Wall-piece - large-calibre musket mounted
on fortress-wall (F 'mousquet a chevalet').
Waterdeck - waterproof, painted canvas Yalek (F) - mameluke jacket.
saddle-cover. Yeomanry - British volunteer cavalry.
Water fascine - fascine six feet long, one to
two feet thick, weighted with stone to make
it sink into wet or marshy ground. Zigzags - approach-trenches in siege-works.
Watering-cap - cylindrical shako (usually Zimmermann (G) - pioneer.
with folding peak) worn by cavalry in Ziig (G) - platoon.
undress. Ziigfiihrer (G) - file-leader.
ISBN 1-85409-495-5

I 1111111
9 "781854 094957

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