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Battle of Wagram
Battle of Wagram, (July 5–6, 1809), victory forNapoleon, which forcedAustria to sign an armistice and led eventually to theTreaty of Schönbrunn in October, ending Austria’s 1809 war against theFrench control of Germany. The battle was fought on the Marchfeld (a plain northeast of Vienna) between 154,000 French and other troops under Napoleon and 158,000 Austrians underArchduke Charles. After a defeat at Aspern-Essling in May, Napoleon needed a victory to prevent a new anti-French coalition from forming. Charlesdeployed his army along a 14-mile (23-kilometre) front (with the village of Wagram in the centre) to await the French attack. Napoleon decided to attack before Charles could be reinforced by the 30,000 troops of his brother, ArchdukeJohn. On the evening of July 5, after having crossed theDanube River, he hastily attacked the thinly stretched Austrian positions but was beaten back.
(See “Napoleon’s Major Battles” Interactive Map)
- Date:
- July 5, 1809 - July 6, 1809
- Context:
- Napoleonic Wars
On the morning of July 6 Charles attacked in the south to cut the French off from the Danube and envelop their southern flank. Napoleon’s main attack was in the north, at the Austrian line along Russbach Brook. Byreinforcing his southern flank, Napoleon repelled the Austrian attack there; at the same time, the French attack in the north succeeded. Napoleon then launched the final assault against the Austrian centre and split it. By the time Archduke John appeared in the late afternoon, Charles’s army was already in retreat. John was easily driven off. The battle took a terrible toll, mostly from the heaviest concentration of artillery fire yet employed in any war; Austria suffered more than 40,000 casualties andFrance about 34,000. Four days later Charles asked for an armistice.





























