03447nam 22004573 450 991016407700332120230725063646.01-908692-81-2(CKB)3710000001057009(MiAaPQ)EBC4807699(Au-PeEL)EBL4807699(CaPaEBR)ebr11348405(OCoLC)974593592(BIP)059099008(EXLCZ)99371000000105700920210901d2011 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Ulm Campaign - 1805San Francisco :Wagram Press,2011.©2011.1 online resource (115 pages)The Special Campaigns Series ;v.12Intro -- CHAPTER I -- THE AUSTRIAN ARMY -- CHAPTER II -- THE FRENCH ARMY -- CHAPTER III -- POLITICAL FACTORS INFLUENCING AUSTRIAN OPERATIONS -- CHAPTER IV -- THE MARCH FROM BOULOGNE TO THE RHINE -- The Grand Army -- CHAPTER V -- FROM THE RHINE TO THE DANUBE -- CHAPTER VI -- AUSTRIAN OPERATIONS FROM THE PASSAGE OF THE DANUBE TO THE BATTLE OF ELCHINGEN -- CHAPTER VII -- THE FRENCH MOVEMENTS FROM THE 6TH OCTOBER TO THE BATTLE OF ELCHINGEN -- CHAPTER VIII -- FROM THE BATTLE OF ELCHINGEN TO THE CAPITULATION OF ULM -- CHAPTER IX -- CONCLUSION.Colonel Maude, wrote a number of works on the Napoleonic period, and although they were published out of the chronological order of the campaigns, Leipzig(1813), Jena (1806) and Ulm (1805), they formed an unbroken stream of commentary as to the methods of the world's greatest general, Napoleon. In this volume, Colonel Maude follows Napoleon as he sets out with his finest Grande Armée, from the camp of Boulogne where they have been well-drilled and trained, to oppose the Austrians for a further round of hostilities which had only really been suspended briefly between 1800-1805. The basic premise of the series of books was that "Napoleon did in fact possess during his later years a fixed method in strategy, which he invariably followed whenever topographical conditions permitted. This method enabled him to be absolutely certain of accumulating at the decisive point of the battlefield a crushing numerical superiority, no matter what plans his opponents might have formed;" It was the opening of the 1805 campaign that truly showed what Napoleon had learnt since his initial campaigns in Italy on a vast scale, now the corps d'armée he commanded dwarfed the entire armies of previous wars. His articulated, co-ordinated march through and round the Black Forest, stumped the veteran commander of the Austrian forward army, the "unfortunate Mack", and despite some less than sterling work by some of his subordinates netted an entire army into the "bag". Some of Napoleon's troops would found a new way of fighting, that he made "war using our feet".A fascinating book, in an excellent series.The Special Campaigns SeriesSpecial Campaigns Series 940.27Maude C.B., late R.E. , Colonel Frederic Natusch1371119Publishing Pickle Partners1077764Pickle Partners Publishing Staff,clbMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910164077003321The Ulm Campaign - 18053399920UNINA