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===18 October=== ====Napoleon's attempt to sue for an armistice==== It was soon evident that the Allies would encircle Napoleon and his army, and he knew that not retreating from the battle would mean capitulation for his entire army, which by this time were starting to run out of supplies and ammunition.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=933}} So Napoleon began to examine whether the roads and bridges of Lindenau could be used to withdraw his troops, or at the very least to secure a bridgehead crossing on the Pleiße River.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=933}} However, he was not yet in the mood for withdrawing as he thought to achieve one more great victory for France.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=932}} He also thought that a strong, formidable rear guard in Leipzig itself could repulse any Allied assault, which could buy him and his forces more time to withdraw from the battle.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=933}} During this time, Napoleon sent Merveldt, who had been captured two days earlier, back to the Allies on parole. Merveldt was given a letter to Alexander I, Francis I, and Frederick William III in which Napoleon offered to surrender to the Allies the fortresses he held along the Oder and Vistula, on the condition that the Allies allow him to withdraw to a position behind the Saale. He added that, if approved, they should sign an armistice and undertake peace negotiations. However, all three monarchs declined the offer.{{sfn|Nafziger|1996|p=191}} ====Coalition armies encircle Napoleon==== [[File:Leipzig Battle 2.svg|thumb|350px|Actions as of 18 October]] The Allies launched a huge assault from all sides, this time completely encircling Napoleon's army. In over nine hours of fighting, in which both sides suffered heavy casualties, the French troops were slowly forced back towards Leipzig. The Allies had Blücher and Charles John to the north, [[Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly|Barclay de Tolly]] and Bennigsen, and Prince [[Louis William, Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg|von Hesse-Homburg]] to the south, as well as Gyulay to the west.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=933}} ====Actions at Wachau, Lössnig (Lößnig), and Dölitz==== The Prussian 9th Brigade occupied the abandoned village of Wachau while the Austrians, with General Bianchi's Hungarians, threw the French out of Lößnig. The Austrians proceeded to give a demonstration of combined arms cooperation as Austrian cavalry attacked French infantry to give the Austrian infantry time to arrive and deploy in the attack on Dölitz, but the Young Guard threw them out. At this point, three Austrian grenadier battalions began to contest for the village with artillery support.{{sfn|napolun|2021}} ====Action at Probstheida==== [[File:A 19. magyar gyalogezred rohama a lipcsei csataban (1813).JPG|thumb|right|280px|Troops of the 19th Hungarian Regiment engaging French infantry]] The bloodiest fighting of the battle occurred in Probstheida, a village just southeast of Leipzig. Here, about 60,000 soldiers under Barclay were marching and advancing towards the village in two columns, one under von Kleist advancing through Wachau, and one under General [[Peter Wittgenstein|Wittgenstein]] advancing through Liebertwolkwitz. Barclay was pressured by the monarchs, especially Alexander I, to take the village since it was the key to the positions of Napoleon's troops, and although von Kleist opposed this, the monarchs' orders were paramount, so Barclay had to follow their orders anyway.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=933}} The French dispositions at the village, however, were heavily fortified, thanks to the high and thick garden walls that gave excellent protection for the French infantry. The defense was also strengthened with artillery and strong infantry reserves behind the village. A day earlier, the Russians had taken most of the losses incurred during the battle, so it was the Prussians who took the initiative.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=933}} Prussian [[Jäger (infantry)|jägers]] attempted to enter the village by storm but were quickly driven back. Then the artillery of both sides opened fire upon the village; despite the enormous amount of artillery that the Allies had brought with them, the more powerful French Imperial Guard artillery gradually gained the upper hand. The Prussians conducted a series of attacks against the French positions at the village, but because the French artillery repulsed each attack, their efforts were in vain. French cuirassiers, under Murat, charged upon the weakened Prussian lines and drove them back. Counter-charges by the numerous Russian cavalry saved the infantry by repeatedly driving back the French cavalry, albeit with heavy losses. The Prussians again conducted a charge upon French lines, but this charge was less successful than the first one.{{sfn|Smith|2001}} The third assault was now conducted, this time, by the Russians, commanded by General [[Nikolay Raevsky|Raevsky]], the hero of [[Battle of Borodino|Borodino]] who had arrived a few days earlier from Russia after a delay due to sickness. The assault on the village was somewhat more successful than the first two, taking the gardens and destroying several French infantry units, but it was eventually driven back by the French Imperial Guard, who had just arrived at the scene. Despite Schwarzenberg's request that Alexander send the [[Russian Imperial Guard]], the Russian emperor ordered that more assaults were to be undertaken against the village. However, despite their successful, stubborn defense, the French were now in dire straits as they were dangerously short of manpower, and thus the fighting became only a hollow tactical victory for them.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=934}} ====Actions at Paunsdorf and Schönefeld==== During that morning, Charles John and Blücher held a conference in [[Breitenfeld, Leipzig|Breitenfeld]]. It was agreed that Charles John's Army of the North would pass the [[Parthe]] River at [[Taucha]] with a reinforcement of 30,000 men drawn from Blücher's Army of Silesia. Blücher agreed to dispatch Langeron's army corps, and to renounce his rank and his rights as army commander, putting himself at the head of his Prussians.{{sfn|Nafziger|1996|p=215}} The advance of the Army of the North towards Leipzig had been slow, purportedly because Charles John had received word that Napoleon planned a renewed attack towards Berlin after his marshals' failure to take the city in the battles of [[Battle of Großbeeren|Großbeeren]] and [[Battle of Dennewitz|Dennewitz]].{{sfn|Nafziger|1996|p=216}} [[File:Baschkiren gegen Franzosen.jpg|thumb|French soldiers in skirmish with [[Bashkirs]] and [[Cossacks]]]] General [[Matvei Platov|Platov]]'s Russian heavy artillery began to fire on the Saxons around Paunsdorf. Langeron placed pontoon bridges over the Parthe River and a flying bridge via Mockau. Large masses of troops had now moved to the east bank of the river. Meanwhile, Russian and Austrian forces began attacking French and Saxon positions in Paunsdorf, but after counterattacks by French infantry and deadly canister shots from Franco-Saxon batteries, were driven back. After their withdrawal, the Allied troops were pursued by French infantry before being counterattacked by Austrian [[hussar]] cavalry, in turn driving the French back. The town itself was still held by five Franco-Saxon battalions. Captain Bogue of the British Rocket Brigade, advanced with his unit and began firing Congreve rockets into the town, causing the defenders to fall back in disorder. Bogue, seizing the moment, charged at the head of his escort squadron of cavalry. This small force was in turn being driven out of Paunsdorf, but a barrage of rockets fired in close support{{sfn|Brett-James|1970|pp=186–187}} again caused the French troops to break ranks.{{sfn|Van Riper|2007|p=16}} The French fell back to Sellerhausen pursued by two Prussian battalions, while the Rocket Brigade formed on the left of a Russian battery and began firing on the retreating columns, causing near-panic. At this time, Captain Bogue was shot in the head and killed by a skirmisher.{{sfn|Brett-James|1970|pp=186–187}} Shortly after, the reserve French [[Imperial Guard (Napoleon I)|Young and Old Guard]] drove the Allies out of Paunsdorf again, but eventually Ney judged the position untenable and ordered a withdrawal.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=934}}{{sfn|Fuller|2011|p=481}} More heavy fighting occurred in [[Leipzig-Schönefeld|Schönefeld]]. Allied troops repeatedly assaulted French positions there, but were forced back. French infantry attacks on Allied positions produced similar results. Repeated assaults by Russian musketeers and grenadiers under Langeron finally drove the French out of Schönefeld. The heavy fighting in Paunsdorf and Schönefeld set both villages on fire.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=934}} ====Sweden fully participates==== [[File:Assault of Leipzig.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Swedish troops assaulting Leipzig]] In the meantime, at the behest of his officers, who felt embarrassed that they had not participated in the battle, Charles John gave the order for his light infantry to participate in the final assault on Leipzig itself. The Swedish jägers performed very well,{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=934}} losing only 35 men dead and 173 wounded while capturing 647 French prisoners.{{sfn|Vegesack|1850|p=145}}{{sfn|Mankell|1866|p=46}} ====Action at Lindenau==== On the western front, the French IV Corps under Bertrand finally drove the Austrian III Corps under Gyulay away from Lindenau.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=934}} This broke the encirclement which the Allied forces earlier had made against the ''Grande Armée'', clearing the way for its retreat which would take place later the next day.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=934}} ====Pro-Napoleonic Germans defect to the Coalition==== During the fighting, 5,400 Saxons of General [[Jean Reynier|Reynier]]'s VII Corps defected to the Coalition, specifically Charles John's Army of the North due to the esteem the Saxons had for the former French marshal. Four years prior, Charles John, while still a Marshal of the French Empire, had commanded the wholly Saxon IX Corps during the [[Battle of Wagram]] where his mild and courteous behavior toward them in the weeks prior, along with a controversial Order of the Day praising their courage after the battle, greatly endeared Charles John to them.{{sfn|Barton|2016}}{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=934}} At first, French officers saw the Saxons' rushing towards the advancing Prussians as a charge, but treachery became evident as they saw the Saxons asking the Prussians to join with them for the impending assault. Reynier himself witnessed this, and he rallied the remaining Saxons at his disposal, but to no avail, because Württemberg's cavalry also deserted from the French, forcing the French line in Paunsdorf to fall back. ====The ''Grande Armée'' begins to retreat==== The battle during the day of 18 October was one of [[attrition warfare|attrition]]. French troops held on to their respective positions, but were steadily being worn out and depleted by fierce and intensifying Allied attacks throughout the day. The French artillery had only 20,000 rounds left.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=936}} Later that night, Napoleon was treating the battle as a lost cause.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=935}} At this time, he promoted Poniatowski to the rank of ''[[Marshal of the Empire|Maréchal d'Empire]]'', the only foreigner of all his marshals who was given this title, and the latter swore that he would fight to the last stand, which he did.{{sfn|Bowden|1990|p=191}} After this, the emperor began to stage the retreat for the ''Grande Armée'' westward across the [[White Elster]] River.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=935}} During the night the French army had been ordered to withdraw silently from [[Connewitz]], Probstheida, Stotteritz, Volkmansdorf, and Reudnitz, all to cross the river via Leipzig and the single bridge in the river. Those in Lindenau were to move to Weissenfels. Weak rear guards occupied the villages in order to conceal the retreat, and support troops were placed in the outer suburbs by the wind mills and near the walls of the city. The garden and cemetery walls by the [[Leipzig City Gates|Grimma Gate]] were pierced with loopholes as well as the gates themselves. Skirmishers were posted in the farm houses, in the brush, in the parks, and everywhere possible. Leipzig was to be occupied by Reynier's VII Corps, Poniatowski's VIII Corps and MacDonald's XI Corps.{{sfn|Chandler|1966|p=935}} They were ordered to hold it for a day or a bit longer, in order to allow the rest of the army, its artillery, and its equipment sufficient time to evacuate. The Allied cavalry advance posts were ordered to attack without relief the French advanced posts during the night to determine whether or not the French were attempting to withdraw. However, they failed to realize that the French were, in fact, pulling out from the battle area. Therefore, the evacuation continued throughout the night.{{sfn|Nafziger|1996|pp=233–234}}
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