Battle of Borodino

Battle of Borodino
Part of the French invasion of Russia

The Battle of Moscow
Louis-François Lejeune, 1822
Date7 September 1812
Location
Result See § Aftermath
Territorial
changes
French occupation of Moscow
Belligerents
 Russia
Commanders and leaders
Napoleon I
L.-N. Davout (WIA)
Auguste J.-G. de Caulaincourt 
Michel Ney
Joachim Murat
Eugène de Beauharnais
Józef A. Poniatowski
Mikhail Kutuzov
Michael A. Barclay de Tolly
Pyotr Bagration (DOW)
Karl W. von Toll
Aleksey Yermolov
Nikolay Tuchkov (DOW)
Nikolay Raevsky
Matvei Platov
Fyodor Uvarov
Strength
  • 103,000–135,000
  •  • approx. 109,500 engaged
...see § Opposing forces
  • 125,000–160,000
  •  • approx. 122,200 engaged, including 10,000 irregulars
...see § Opposing forces
Casualties and losses
30,000–42,000 killed, wounded or missing
50 generals
...see § Casualties
40,000–53,000 killed, wounded or missing
29 generals
...see § Casualties
330km
205miles
15
Pultusk
14
Gorodeczno
13
Drohiczyn
12
Tauroggen
11
Riga
10
Tilsit
9
Warsaw
8
Berezina
7
Maloyaroslavets
6
Moscow
5
Borodino
4
Smolensk
3
Vitebsk
2
Vilna
1
Kowno
  current battle
  Prussian corps
  Napoleon
  Austrian corps

The Battle of Borodino or the Battle of Moscow took place on the outskirts of Moscow near the village of Borodino on 7 September 1812, during Napoleon's invasion of Russia. The Grande Armée fought against the Imperial Russian Army.

After the Russian retreat at the Battle of Smolensk, the road to Moscow lay open. Napoleon fought against General Mikhail Kutuzov, whom the Emperor Alexander I had appointed to replace Barclay de Tolly on 29 August after Smolensk was razed and captured by the French and Polish forces. Approximately a quarter of a million soldiers were involved in the battle, and it was the bloodiest single day of the Napoleonic Wars. In the battle, up to 50 French generals and marshals were dead or wounded, as well as 29 Russian generals; hence Sir Robert Wilson referred to it as the Battle of the Generals.

After the Battle of Borodino, Napoleon remained on the battlefield with his army; the Imperial Russian forces retreated southwards. What followed was the French occupation of Moscow, while the retreating Russians resorted to scorched earth tactics to trap Napoleon and his men within their own largest city. The main results of the battle were that Napoleon managed to take the Russian strong but unfinished defensive positions: the redoubt and the flèches, though he was unable to end the war as he hoped. In particular, Napoleon's reluctance to deploy his Imperial Guard, as he wished to negotiate with Alexander to make him re-join against the British, has been widely criticized by historians as a large blunder, as it allowed the Russian army to retreat into territory increasingly hostile to the French.