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Thread: waterloo

  1. #1

    Default waterloo

    ok i have heard, and read so many different reasons as to why napoleon won waterloo(or why wellington won it whichever) that my head is spinning.
    why did he really lose?
    thanks
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  2. #2
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    too many reasons, depending on who you read!
    it rained heavily the night before, making for a late start to allow the ground to dry out for moving artillery, the last thing Napoleon needed.
    he failed (for many reasons, not all his fault) to prevent the Prussians from rejoining the battle.
    he appointed the wrong Marshals in the wrong commands (revisionists mainly blame Ney and of course Grouchy for making poor tactical decisions; but of course Napoleon appointed them to their respective commands in the first place, and this wasn't the first time he'd picked the wrong man for the job)
    he had some kind of tactical 'battle fatigue', to which he was occasionally prone (such as at Borodino) where he couldn't be bothered to do anything clever and just slugged it out, thus underestimating the British infantry on a battlefield chosen by Wellington. there is no reason for Napoleon not to have been familiar with Wellington's troop quality or expertise at using terrain as his Marshals would have told him about this (and there is anecdotal evidence that they did).
    it's hard to say whether the quality of the French army and particular their commanders was poor or not poor comparatively, after all Napoleon had accomplished great things with a very low quality army in 1814...he was certainly missing the likes of Davout and Murat, anyway.

    even so, given his strategic and (up till now) tactical brilliance in the 1815 campaign, it's odd that he failed to defeat an army that was not anywhere near the best that Wellington ever commanded. it's even possible to argue that Waterloo was lost before it was even fought, as the failure to detroy the Prussian army at Ligny and damage the British at Quatre Bras made fighting against the clock at Waterloo inevitable. personally, i think with his 1805-1812 army and its commanders Napoleon would have won fairly easily.
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  3. #3
    Clan Clan InsaneApache's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    In a nutshell. The ground was boggy and wet. The battle start was delayed several hours because of the wet. Grouchy, although urged by his senior staff, refused to ride towards the sound of the guns, instead he chased Blucher. Prince Jeromes' diversionary attack (Hougomont) developed a momentum all of it's own, sucking in the left flank of the Grande Armee. At a crucial juncture Napolean became ill and left the battlefield. In his absence Ney counter attacked the British line with his cavalry. Just think horses v pikes you'll get the picture. Wellington kept his men on the reverse slope of the ridge, negating any artillary fire that wasn't screwed up because of the mud. The Prussians turned up about 4 in the afternoon. The Grande Armee ran away. Interesting trivia, Napoleans army still outnumbered the Allies even as they routed.

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  4. #4

    Default Re: waterloo

    His attack on the Château d'Hougomont failed, which set the pattern for the rest of the day. He hoped that an attack here would draw out Wellingtons reserves. Its stubborn defence continued to draw thousands of valuable French troops which included:

    Detachments under the command of Jerome Napoleon's brother
    The divisions of Foy, Guilleminot and Bachelu
    Nearly the entire corps of Reille
    Kellermann's cavalry corps
    Bauduin's brigade failed to enter Hougomont on the north side
    Soye's brigade managed a small breach on the south side could not exploit it.

    Apparently: Napoleon's hemorrhoids contributed to his defeat at Waterloo. Apparently his piles prevented him from surveying the battlefield on horseback.

    Edit (too fast IA )
    Last edited by Templar Knight; 12-19-2005 at 17:44.

  5. #5
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    yeah, the 'illness of some kind' (piles/indigestion/fainting) appears to be fairly substantiated and effectively turned command over to Marshal Ney, who wasn't up to the job despite being insanely brave.
    Grouchy's failure may be compared to that of Bernadotte at Jena-Auerstadt, although Napoleon had no Davout to pull his irons out of the fire this time.

    Interesting trivia, Napoleans army still outnumbered the Allies even as they routed.
    i didn't know that one, InsaneApache, very interesting! psychological collapse due to the failure of the Guard. la garde recule!
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  6. #6

    Default Re: waterloo

    and i remember in cromwell, cornwall whatever author writes the sharpe series,
    something about a prince of orange who did something dumb but cant remember what.
    anything like that happen, or was it made up?
    VAE VICTUS-PaNtOcRaToR
    Quote Originally Posted by Tomi says
    Honour is that which preserves the dignity of the human spirit.
    It’s how you treat people, that makes you an honourable person.
    Not how many battles you win.
    The glory of your victories will soon be forgotten.
    But the kindness and respect you show for others, will not.
    So is there really any honour in Total War games?
    No.
    But there is in some of it’s players…

  7. #7
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    Bernard Cornwell, Sharpe's Waterloo...it may be true; the Prince of Orange held a divisional command at Waterloo. he was supposed to have exposed infantry in line to cavalry attack (which equals lots of dead infantry) at least twice during the battle and once at Quatre Bras as well...there is some evidence for this (it certainly happened, but whose fault it was is not clear). his appointment was a political one, in order to make Dutch-Belgian troops available to the allies during the campaign.

    like Ney, there's no doubting his bravery (he led a cavalry charge and was later wounded by a sniper for getting recklessly close to the fighting at La Haye Sainte) but his tactical judgement was at best questionable.

    appointments like his, and the low quality of the troops he brought with him (some of them had fought for Napoleon only the year before!) are one of the reasons why Waterloo was in no way unwinnable for the French despite the race against time and (overall, counting the Prussians) superior numbers.
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  8. #8
    Ming the Merciless is my idol Senior Member Watchman's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    Ney tends to get rated as a "excellent subordinate, poor commander" sort - he ended up with responsibilities above his abilities, which rarely turns out well. Not that he'd have been the first capable officer in history who ended up messing up due to that...

    I've also read that old "Bonie" himself just wasn't what he'd been anymore either - too much stress, hard campaigns and less-than-ideal lifestyle left him physically exhausted and with assorted health issues (he'd had those for a while, I understand), and started blunting his mental edge too if only out of sheer fatigue. Someone described it as "his opponents may have improved considerably by Waterloo, but he had also gotten worse" or something along those lines. Given his rather centralized way of running the army that would certainly have been a major drawback.
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  9. #9
    Senior Member Senior Member English assassin's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    To be fair to Ney he was a Cavalry commander put in charge of a whole army corps. I've read that he was so carried away with his cavalry charge that he forgot that his infantry would not move up behind unless he ordered it.

    With the result that the British infantry were forced into square, with the gunners inside, but no one came up behind the French cavalry to capture the British guns, turn them on the British squares, or engage the squares with musket fire. Had they done so...well, as the Iron Duke himself said, it was a close run thing.
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  10. #10
    Ming the Merciless is my idol Senior Member Watchman's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    Well, in his defense massed French cavalry had proven itself capable of demolishing - or rather rampaging through - formed infantry squares in the past - but then again that was the army *before* the ill-fated Russian sightseeing tour. Maybe he just wasn't quite up to date (or refused to acknowledge) about the capabilities of the troops he had at his disposal at the time ?
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  11. #11

    Default Re: waterloo

    i dont know much about napoleon, so ill ask this Q.
    was he a good general by himself or did his field marshalls hold him up?
    VAE VICTUS-PaNtOcRaToR
    Quote Originally Posted by Tomi says
    Honour is that which preserves the dignity of the human spirit.
    It’s how you treat people, that makes you an honourable person.
    Not how many battles you win.
    The glory of your victories will soon be forgotten.
    But the kindness and respect you show for others, will not.
    So is there really any honour in Total War games?
    No.
    But there is in some of it’s players…

  12. #12
    Bopa Member Incongruous's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    What is a general without soldiers? A loon
    What is a general without staff? A madman
    Was Napoleon incapable of commanding without his officer? Of course he was, just like any other commander.
    But to say that he left it to all his divisionals and Marshals is insane, he was a great general. Unfortunatley what had swept Europe a few years before was no longer intuative and new, it had been proven in spain that French coloumns fell before British bayonets and volleys, he was no longer the great commander he was. Yet still capable of brilliance, he could have won at Waterloo if he had sent the Guard in earlier or at leats thats what I think.

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  13. #13
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    some of the Marshals (Lannes, Davout, Massena, arguably Suchet) were almost as talented as Napoleon, but none of these were available at Waterloo. some of the Marshals were simply not up to the job, and had gotten lucky, but then war is largely luck anyway, and Napoleon always recognised this. he might have been facing generals who knew how to fight him, but Blucher still left all his men at Ligny positioned on the forward slope, thus exposing them to French artillery and got badly beaten for his troubles. Wellington was the exception rather than the rule.

    Bopa the Magyar, i suspect if Napoleon had sent the Guard up earlier they'd have got shot down earlier, but who knows! the Guard were usually a last resort, and he was also using elements of them to keep the Prussians off his right flank. had he attempted to outflank the Allied force and push it from its position, he'd have won.
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  14. #14

    Default Re: waterloo

    had he attempted to outflank the Allied force and push it from its position, he'd have won.
    Not necessarily. Napoleon couldn't have outflanked the British Left at Mont St. Jean because that would have put his army between the Prussians and the British. He couldn't have outflanked the British right because the only way to do so was guarded by 17,000 prime troops at Nivelles (I believe that is the name of the crossroads). Wellington (and the whole of the British army for that matter) expected something cleverer than he got on the 18th of June.

    What Napoleon should have done was concentrate on beating the British army at Quatre Bras. This would have forced the British to fall back on their lines of communication to the coast. Then and only then should he have attacked the Prussians.

    By attacking the Prussians first Napoleon allowed the British to fall back on their own accord, and by giving the Prussians a 12-hour head start before sending Grouchy he allowed the British and Prussians armies to meet up.

    Then there is the whole farce of D'Erlon's corps during the battles of Ligny and Quatre Bras, which spent the entire day marching from Napoleon to Ney and back again without fighting in either battle.
    Last edited by Grey_Fox; 12-20-2005 at 13:11.

  15. #15
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    bang on the money Grey Fox, i'd forgotten about the troops at Nivelles (or Hal?)

    although i think it was D'Erlon's corps that got an impromptu route march instead of a battle. Davout was back in Paris running the Ministry of War...and i doubt such a competent soldier as Davout would have allowed himself to be shuttled between two critical battlefields like that!
    maybe Napoleon should have kept Grouchy's force closer at hand on the right, and used it to counter the Prussian advance? still, in sending it to tail the retreating Prussians he was only following standard practice, unfortunately he sent it the wrong way. Grouchy did engage the Prussian rearguard at Wavre, and then extricated his force very skillfully, but it was too late to salvage his reputation.
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  16. #16

    Default Re: waterloo

    Ah yes, it was D'Erlon, not Davout, thanks for the correction

    Can't remember the name of the crossroads, it could have been Hal but I'm not too sure. Always was terrible at placenames

    People can blame rain, Grouchy, or his piles (for the love of God) but the main reasons for Napoleon's loss at Waterloo were mistakes he made both before and during the battle.

  17. #17
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    Can't remember the name of the crossroads, it could have been Hal but I'm not too sure. Always was terrible at placenames
    god knows, it's all Belgian to me! better go check the map again.

    yep, as we all know, mistakes tend to lose you battles sooner or later (in my case pretty much immediately...)! Napoleon had by the end of his life blamed almost everything possible for his defeat except himself. he had a poor day tactically and allowed the strategic initiative he had won to slip away amid the mud.

    it's a fascinating campaign to study though, full of what-might-have beens (aren't they all), such as; what if Gneisenau had persuaded the Blucher to withdraw?
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  18. #18
    Senior Member Senior Member econ21's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    Did Napoleon lose or Wellington and Blucher win it? Napoleon certainly did not fight a very smart battle - he came on in the old fashion and was driven off in the old fashion, as Wellington said. But the odds were against him on the day. Try most wargames of the battle and it should be apparent. He did not outnumber Wellington by much and Wellington was in a fairly strong defensive position. I'm not sure about InsaneApache's claim about Napoleon's army outnumbering the enemy even when it routed - if you add Blucher's troops to Wellington's, I think there was a clear advantage to the allies.

    Plus Wellington fought a pretty good defensive battle. The breaking of D'Erlon's assault and the defeat of the Guard were almost as nicely done as the French cavalry assaults were badly done. The fact is that Wellington had a pretty impressive record of defeating the French. Wellington had developed a tactical system and an army that could regularly defeat the Napoleonic style of attack. At Waterloo, the French showed none of the innovation or inspiration they would have needed to overturn that record.

    Blucher, of course, did his part admirably. Whipping on his army to launch an attack on Napoleon was brave, loyal and very aggressive. I am pretty sure the Iron Duke - and perhaps even Napoleon himself - would not have done as well in his position. The ordinary Allied and Prussian soldiers also fought doggedly, while the French army rather unaccountably dissolved in adversity.

  19. #19
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    agreed, Simon, i have wargamed this and it's very hard to win with the French, even if the Prussians turn up late in the day. (although a Waterloo refight appeared in one of the more popular wargames mags of the 80s when the Allies not only managed to lose, but lose quite crushingly!)
    troops numbers are hard to pin down, but modern estimates roughly agree that - Wellington had 65-70,000 (he sometimes stated as low as 60,000!)
    Napoleon had around 75-80,000
    the Prussians had i think 3 corps approaching the field, probably around 60,000. Napoleon had Grouchy's 30,000 chasing them, and Wellington had dispatched 17,000 infantry to some wretched location i can't remember the name of.
    (ok, everyone may now rip these figures to shreds!!)

    Napoleon definitely had more guns, but they were not as effective as usual due to Wellington's reverse slope tactics. both side's cavalry had some successes (the controversial charge of the Union Brigade did in fact achieve it's objective of clearing D'Erlon's infantry attack away), but the French then likewise threw theirs away by being very silly...although the British saved their light stuff correctly for harassment and pursuit purposes, the Prussians did most of the pursuit work.

    as for Blucher...well, he never, ever gave up, even despite being run over by French cavalry at Ligny! one of the great 'characters' of the Napoleonic Wars, his nickname was 'Old Vorwarts', or 'Marshal Forwards'.
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  20. #20

    Default Re: waterloo

    Has anyone here read 'Wellingtons Smallest Victory: The Duke, the Model Maker and the Secret of Waterloo' by Peter Hofschröer?

    The book is about a British Officer William Siborne who made a huge diorama of the battle at its crisis point of about 7.00pm. On the model he placed the Prussians - as they were - on the battlefield just after 7pm. Wellington saw this as undermining his reputation, particularly as the detailed research that Siborne had conducted revealed flaws in the Duke's official account of the battle, the Waterloo Dispatch of 19 June 1815.

    Wellington had always maintained that the Prussians had arrived late, after the battle was won, however research into Prussian orders and British orders said otherwise. With these Siborne could prove that they had actually become involved in the battle several hours earlier than Wellington claimed, and consequently had played a far greater part in the victory than was credited to them in the Dispatch. Wellington responded by insisting that Siborne was "mistaken" and demanding that most of the Prussian troops displayed on the model should be removed.

    Siborne suffered the consequences. The funding of the model was blocked, he did not receive the promotion promised for this work and he was subjected to a vicious smear campaign that went on for years. Not only was his integrity brought into question, but also his ability. Even removing 40,000 of the 48,000 Prussians did not regain him Wellington 's favour. He died a broken and impoverished man. But history had been manipulated in a blatant fashion. The model, which today is on display in the National Army Museum in London , retains this fundamental flaw.
    http://www.napoleonicsociety.com/eng...Hofschroer.htm

  21. #21
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    yeah, i've seen that diorama, it's incredible!
    the Duke was responsible for quite a few mistaken pronouncements about the battle during his life, especially in his last years, and could be very nasty to people...

    curiously, no mention of this model appears in Andrew Roberts' 'Wellington and Napoleon', when it would have been interesting to include it...
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  22. #22
    Senior Member Senior Member English assassin's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    On the wargaming point, there was a TV series a while ago where UK staff college officers refought various battles. I got the impression they were using the system actually used in training army officers. (which of course may or may not be a good one)

    Anyway, "Wellington" lost Waterloo when they did this, or at least his army was driven off the field before the Prussians got there.

    Can any UK poster remember the series, they did Balaclava as well. It was quite interesting. (It was NOT the horrible "Time Commanders", the generals were real army officers.)
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  23. #23
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    Can any UK poster remember the series, they did Balaclava as well. It was quite interesting. (It was NOT the horrible "Time Commanders", the generals were real army officers.)
    according to this link what i found - 'The latest and most highly developed attempt to put wargames on TV was Channel 4's series 'Game of War', which was broadcast in August 1997. The series consisted of three kriegsspiels - on Naseby 1645, Waterloo 1815 and Balaklava 1854 - using playing committees of real generals, military historians and defence journalists &c.'

    don't remember it myself, but that looks like it.
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  24. #24

    Default Re: waterloo

    ignore this, bad post
    Last edited by Templar Knight; 12-20-2005 at 15:42.

  25. #25
    " Hammer of the East" Member King Kurt's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    The problem with most wargame reenactments of Waterloo is that the participants probably know the battle inside out and never make the mistakes the generals - especially Napoleon - made. The approach is get all your best troops into a massive attack - usually the Imperial Guard backed with loads of cavalry - and go straight up the middle before the Prussians arrive. No diversions taking farmhouses, no all cavalry attacks etc. Of course, Napoleon would never commit the Guard at the begining of an attack - in fact he rarely commited them at all, so most refights are flawed unless you restrict the French - and then they have to do the mistakes they did on the day.

    This might seem a little harsh on Wellington, but he had shown himself capable of beating the french over and over again with basically the same tactic - so it was no surprise that the French acted as they did - even if Napoleon had piles!!
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  26. #26
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    the people they get on Time Commanders would probably manage to make the mistakes the French did, they always seem to do something totally suicidal.

    that's why i don't like refighting historical battles; either you already know what not to do, or you get restricted by rules devices to ensure you have to make the mistakes that got made historically.
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  27. #27

    Default Re: waterloo

    In TC didn't the players always command the loosing side?

  28. #28
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    by the end of the battle, yes.

    oh, sorry, i see what you mean. i'm not sure...i swear i recall them getting the side that won historically a few times...? i couldn't watch it after a while, it got too frustrating. or, as General Cambronne probably didn't say at the end of the battle of Waterloo upon being asked to surrender, 'merde'.
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  29. #29
    " Hammer of the East" Member King Kurt's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    Quote Originally Posted by Templar Knight
    In TC didn't the players always command the loosing side?
    The thing I always like about Time Commanders is that it is fronted by Mark Urban. I wargammed against him many years ago when he was about 16 and I steamrollered him out of sight - so I always feel smug when I see him.
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  30. #30
    Retired Member matteus the inbred's Avatar
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    Default Re: waterloo

    really? brilliant!
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