- Tell me, uncle, it’s not for nothing
Moscow, burned by fire,
Given to the Frenchman?
After all, there were battles,
Yes, they say, even more!
No wonder all of Russia remembers
About Borodin Day!
M. Lermontov “Borodino”, 1837

battle of Borodino(in the French version - “battle on the Moscow River”, French Bataille de la Moskowa) - the largest battle Patriotic War 1812 between the Russian and French armies. The battle took place on September 7 (August 26, old style) 1812 near the village of Borodino, located 125 kilometers west of Moscow.

The battle ended with an uncertain result for both sides. French forces under Napoleon were unable to achieve a decisive victory over Russian forces under General Mikhail Kutuzov, sufficient to win the entire campaign. The subsequent retreat of the Russian army after the battle was dictated by strategic considerations and ultimately led to Napoleon's defeat.

Napoleon later wrote in his memoirs (translated by Mikhnevich):

“Of all my battles, the most terrible is the one I fought near Moscow. The French showed themselves worthy of victory, and the Russians acquired the right to be invincible... Of the fifty battles I gave, in the battle of Moscow [the French] showed the most valor and achieved the least success.

Memoirs of Kutuzov:

“The battle of the 26th was the bloodiest of all those in modern times known. We completely won the battlefield, and the enemy then retreated to the position in which he came to attack us.”

Battle of Borodino - historical facts

The Russian army was stationed 125 km from Moscow. Near the village of Borodino, Kutuzov decided to give the French a general battle. It was easy to take a strong position on the Borodino field. Fortifications, structures made of earth and logs were erected here, and artillery batteries were installed.

On August 24, French troops approached the Borodino field. The Battle of Borodino was one of the largest battles of its time. Napoleon's troops numbered 135 thousand people and 560 guns, Kutuzov had more than 120 thousand people and 620 guns.

Early in the morning of September 6 (August 26), the great Battle of Borodino began. For 6 hours, troops under the command of Bagration repelled fierce enemy attacks on the left flank. During the eighth attack, Bagration was mortally wounded. A fierce battle broke out for the center of the Russian position - Raevsky's battery. The battery changed hands several times.

At the cost of huge losses, the French managed to capture Raevsky's battery and Bagration's flashes, but Napoleon was convinced that they could not be held, and in the evening he ordered the troops to be withdrawn to their original positions. The heroic actions of the Russian troops prevented the French from reaching the Moscow road. This battle was described by M.Yu. Lermontov in the poem "Borodino".

Battle of Borodino - battle on the Moscow River, fr. Bataille de la Moskova) is the largest battle of the Patriotic War of 1812 between the Russian and French armies. It took place on September 7 (August 26, old style) 1812 near the village of Borodino (125 km west of Moscow).

The 12-hour battle, during which the French managed to capture the positions of the Russian army in the center and on the left wing, ended with the withdrawal of the French army after the cessation of hostilities to their original positions. The next day the Russian army resumed its retreat.

According to the memoirs of the French general Pele, a participant in the Battle of Borodino, Napoleon often repeated a similar phrase: “The Battle of Borodino was the most beautiful and most formidable, the French showed themselves worthy of victory, and the Russians deserved to be invincible.”

The Battle of Borodino is considered the bloodiest one-day battle in history.

How it all began

Since the beginning of the French army's invasion of the territory Russian Empire in June 1812, Russian troops were constantly retreating. The rapid advance and overwhelming numerical superiority of the French made it impossible for the commander-in-chief of the Russian army, General Barclay de Tolly, to prepare his troops for battle. The protracted retreat caused public discontent, so Alexander I removed Barclay de Tolly and appointed Infantry General Kutuzov as commander-in-chief. However, he also had to retreat in order to gain time to gather all his forces.

On August 22 (Old Style), the Russian army, retreating from Smolensk, settled down near the village of Borodino, 124 km from Moscow, where Kutuzov decided to give a general battle; it was impossible to postpone it further, since Emperor Alexander demanded that Kutuzov stop Napoleon’s advance towards Moscow. On August 24 (September 5) the battle took place at the Shevardinsky redoubt, which delayed the French troops and gave the Russians the opportunity to build fortifications in the main positions.

The number of losses of the Russian army has been repeatedly revised by historians. Various sources give different numbers:

38-45 thousand people, including 23 generals. The inscription “45 thousand” is engraved on the Main Monument on the Borodino Field, erected in 1839, and is also indicated on the 15th wall of the gallery military glory Cathedral of Christ the Savior.

58 thousand killed and wounded, up to 1,000 prisoners. Loss data is given here based on the report of the duty general of the 1st Army immediately after the battle, the losses of the 2nd Army are estimated historians of the XIX century is completely arbitrary in 20 thousand. These data were no longer considered reliable back in late XIX century, they are not taken into account in the ESBE, which indicates the number of losses “up to 40 thousand.” Modern historians It is believed that the report on the 1st Army also contained information about the losses of the 2nd Army, since there were no officers left in the 2nd Army responsible for the reports. According to the surviving statements from the archives of the Russian State Historical Archive, the Russian army lost killed, wounded and missing lead 39,300 people (21,766 in the 1st Army, 17,445 in the 2nd Army), but taking into account the fact that the data in the statements is incomplete for various reasons (does not include losses of the militia and Cossacks), historians increase this number to 45 thousand . Human.

Alexander I declared the Battle of Borodino as a victory. Prince Kutuzov was promoted to field marshal with an award of 100 thousand rubles. All lower ranks who were in the battle were granted five rubles each.

The Battle of Borodino is one of the bloodiest battles of the 19th century. According to the most conservative estimates of total losses, 2,500 people died on the field every hour. Some divisions lost up to 80% of their strength. The French fired 60 thousand cannon shots and almost one and a half million rifle shots. It is no coincidence that Napoleon called the battle of Borodino his greatest battle, although its results were more than modest for a great commander accustomed to victories.

The Russian army retreated, but retained its combat effectiveness and soon expelled Napoleon from Russia.

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"This day will remain an eternal monument to courage and excellent bravery Russian soldiers, where all the infantry, cavalry and artillery fought desperately. Everyone’s desire was to die on the spot and not give in to the enemy.”
M.I. Kutuzov
“Of all my battles, the most terrible is the one I fought near Moscow. The French in it showed themselves worthy of victory, and the Russians acquired the right to be invincible...”
Napoleon Bonaparte

Last year, Russia celebrated the 200th anniversary of the victory in the War of 1812 and the anniversary of the Battle of Borodino, a battle that demonstrated to the whole world the indomitable desire of the Russian soldier for victory and the willingness to fight for the Fatherland to the last drop of blood. The celebration of the 200th anniversary of the victory in the Patriotic War of 1812 included many special occasions, carrying out major military-historical reconstructions, implementing a number of educational projects, starting with a series of television programs on federal channels and ending with open lessons, dedicated to the events of 1812, in schools. The anniversary has passed, but this circumstance should not negate the need to preserve the memory of those glorious, truly epoch-making events that had a colossal influence on the course of the entire Russian Federation, making Russia one of the most influential world powers, which it remains to this day. Let us not forget about the exploits of our ancestors, accomplished on that distant day in the field near the small Russian village of Borodino, whose name has become synonymous with courage and heroism, self-sacrifice and perseverance, inherent in our soldier, who selflessly loves his great Motherland. On that day, in the words of our then enemy Napoleon Bonaparte, we “acquired the right to be invincible,” and this right remains with us to this day.



Vasily Vereshchagin
Napoleon and his marshals



Alexander Averyanov
Bagration in the Battle of Borodino. Last counterattack



Nikolay Samokish
The feat of the soldiers of General Raevsky near Saltanovka



Alexander Averyanov
Battle of Shevardino

Battle of Borodino / Image: fragment of a panorama of the Battle of Borodino

September 8 is celebrated in Russia Day of Military Glory of Russia - Day of the Battle of Borodino Russian army under the command of M.I. Kutuzova with French army(1812). It was established Federal law No. 32-FZ of March 13, 1995 “On the days of military glory and memorable dates Russia."

The Battle of Borodino (in the French version - “battle on the Moscow River”, French Bataille de la Moskowa) is the largest battle of the Patriotic War of 1812 between the Russian and French armies. The battle took place (August 26) on September 7, 1812 near the village of Borodino, located 125 kilometers west of Moscow, writes Calend.ru.

Battle of Borodino 1812


The main battle of the Patriotic War of 1812 between the Russian army under the command of General M.I. Kutuzov and the French army of Napoleon I Bonaparte took place on August 26 (September 7) near the village of Borodino near Mozhaisk, 125 km west of Moscow.

It is considered the bloodiest one-day battle in history.

About 300 thousand people with 1,200 artillery pieces took part in this grandiose battle on both sides. At the same time, the French army had a significant numerical superiority - 130-135 thousand people against 103 thousand people in the Russian regular troops.

Prehistory

“In five years I will be the master of the world. There is only Russia left, but I will crush it.”- with these words, Napoleon and his 600,000-strong army crossed the Russian border.

Since the beginning of the invasion of the French army into the territory of the Russian Empire in June 1812, Russian troops have been constantly retreating. The rapid advance and overwhelming numerical superiority of the French made it impossible for the commander-in-chief of the Russian army, General of Infantry Barclay de Tolly, to prepare troops for battle. The prolonged retreat caused public discontent, so Emperor Alexander I dismissed Barclay de Tolly and appointed Infantry General Kutuzov as commander-in-chief.


However, the new commander-in-chief chose the path of retreat. The strategy chosen by Kutuzov was based, on the one hand, on exhausting the enemy, on the other, on waiting for reinforcements sufficient for a decisive battle with Napoleon’s army.

On August 22 (September 3), the Russian army, retreating from Smolensk, settled down near the village of Borodino, 125 km from Moscow, where Kutuzov decided to give a general battle; it was impossible to postpone it further, since Emperor Alexander demanded that Kutuzov stop the advance of Emperor Napoleon towards Moscow.

The idea of ​​the commander-in-chief of the Russian army, Kutuzov, was to inflict as many losses on the French troops as possible through active defense, change the balance of forces, and preserve Russian troops for further battles and for the complete defeat of the French army. In accordance with this plan, the battle formation of the Russian troops was built.

The battle formation of the Russian army was composed of three lines: the first contained infantry corps, the second - cavalry, and the third - reserves. The army's artillery was evenly distributed throughout the position.

The position of the Russian army on the Borodino field was about 8 km long and looked like a straight line running from the Shevardinsky redoubt on the left flank through the large battery on Red Hill, later called the Raevsky battery, the village of Borodino in the center, to the village of Maslovo on the right flank.

The right flank formed 1st Army of General Barclay de Tolly consisting of 3 infantry, 3 cavalry corps and reserves (76 thousand people, 480 guns), the front of his position was covered by the Kolocha River. The left flank was formed by a smaller number 2nd Army of General Bagration (34 thousand people, 156 guns). In addition, the left flank did not have such strong natural obstacles in front of the front as the right. The center (the height near the village of Gorki and the space up to the Raevsky battery) was occupied by the VI Infantry and III Cavalry Corps under the general command Dokhturova. A total of 13,600 men and 86 guns.

Shevardinsky battle


The prologue to the Battle of Borodino was battle for the Shevardinsky redoubt on August 24 (September 5).

Here, the day before, a pentagonal redoubt had been erected, which initially served as part of the position of the Russian left flank, and after the left flank was pushed back, it became a separate forward position. Napoleon ordered an attack on the Shevardin position - the redoubt prevented the French army from turning around.

To gain time for engineering work, Kutuzov ordered the enemy to be detained near the village of Shevardino.

The redoubt and the approaches to it were defended by the legendary 27th Neverovsky Division. Shevardino was defended by Russian troops consisting of 8,000 infantry, 4,000 cavalry with 36 guns.

French infantry and cavalry totaling over 40,000 people attacked the defenders of Shevardin.

On the morning of August 24, when the Russian position on the left was not yet equipped, the French approached it. Before the French advanced units had time to approach the village of Valuevo, Russian rangers opened fire on them.

A fierce battle broke out near the village of Shevardino. During it, it became clear that the enemy was going to deliver the main blow to the left flank of the Russian troops, which was defended by the 2nd Army under the command of Bagration.

During the stubborn battle, the Shevardinsky redoubt was almost completely destroyed.



Napoleon's Grand Army lost about 5,000 people in the Battle of Shevardin, and the Russian army suffered approximately the same losses.

The Battle of the Shevardinsky Redoubt delayed the French troops and gave the Russian troops the opportunity to gain time to complete defensive work and build fortifications on the main positions. The Shevardino battle also made it possible to clarify the grouping of forces of the French troops and the direction of their main attack.

It was established that the main enemy forces were concentrating in the Shevardin area against the center and left flank of the Russian army. On the same day, Kutuzov sent Tuchkov’s 3rd Corps to the left flank, secretly positioning it in the Utitsa area. And in the area of ​​the Bagration flushes, a reliable defense was created. The 2nd Free Grenadier Division of General M. S. Vorontsov occupied the fortifications directly, and the 27th Infantry Division of General D. P. Neverovsky stood in the second line behind the fortifications.

Battle of Borodino

On the eve of the great battle

25-th of August There were no active hostilities in the Borodino field area. Both armies were preparing for a decisive, general battle, conducting reconnaissance and building field fortifications. On a small hill to the southwest of the village of Semenovskoye, three fortifications were built, called “Bagration’s flushes”.

According to ancient tradition, the Russian army prepared for a decisive battle as if it were a holiday. The soldiers washed, shaved, put on clean linen, confessed, etc.



Emperor Napoleon Bonoparte on August 25 (September 6) personally reconnoitred the area of ​​the future battle and, having discovered the weakness of the left flank of the Russian army, decided to strike the main blow against it. Accordingly, he developed a battle plan. First of all, the task was to capture the left bank of the Kolocha River, for which it was necessary to capture Borodino. This maneuver, according to Napoleon, was supposed to divert the attention of the Russians from the direction of the main attack. Then transfer the main forces of the French army to the right bank of the Kolocha and, relying on Borodino, which has become like an axis of approach, push Kutuzov’s army with the right wing into the corner formed by the confluence of the Kolocha with the Moscow River and destroy it.


To accomplish the task, Napoleon began to concentrate his main forces (up to 95 thousand) in the area of ​​the Shevardinsky redoubt on the evening of August 25 (September 6). The total number of French troops in front of the 2nd Army front reached 115 thousand.


Thus, Napoleon's plan pursued the decisive goal of destroying the entire Russian army in a general battle. Napoleon had no doubt about victory, the confidence of which he expressed in words at sunrise on August 26 """This is the sun of Austerlitz""!"

On the eve of the battle, Napoleon's famous order was read to the French soldiers: “Warriors! This is the battle you so desired. Victory depends on you. We need it; she will give us everything we need, comfortable apartments and a quick return to our homeland. Act as you acted at Austerlitz, Friedland, Vitebsk and Smolensk. May later posterity proudly remember your exploits to this day. Let it be said about each of you: he was in the great battle near Moscow!”

The Great Battle Begins


M.I. Kutuzov at the command post on the day of the Battle of Borodino

The Battle of Borodino began at 5 a.m., on the day of the Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God, on the day when Russia celebrates the salvation of Moscow from the invasion of Tamerlane in 1395.

The decisive battles took place over Bagration's flushes and Raevsky's battery, which the French managed to capture at the cost of heavy losses.


Battle scheme

Bagration's flushes


At 5:30 am on August 26 (September 7), 1812 More than 100 French guns began shelling the positions of the left flank. Napoleon unleashed the main blow on the left flank, trying from the very beginning of the battle to turn the tide in his favor.


At 6 o'clock in the morning after a short cannonade, the French began an attack on Bagration's flushes ( flushes called field fortifications, which consisted of two faces 20-30 m long each under acute angle, the corner with its apex was facing the enemy). But they came under grapeshot fire and were driven back by a flank attack by the rangers.


Averyanov. Battle for Bagration's flushes

At 8 o'clock in the morning The French repeated the attack and captured the southern flush.
For the 3rd attack, Napoleon strengthened the attacking forces with 3 more infantry divisions, 3 cavalry corps (up to 35,000 people) and artillery, bringing its number to 160 guns. They were opposed by about 20,000 Russian troops with 108 guns.


Evgeny Korneev. His Majesty's Cuirassiers. Battle of the brigade of Major General N. M. Borozdin

After strong artillery preparation, the French managed to break into the southern flush and into the gaps between the flushes. Around 10 o'clock in the morning the flushes were captured by the French.

Then Bagration led a general counterattack, as a result of which the flushes were repulsed and the French were thrown back to their original line.

By 10 o'clock in the morning the entire field above Borodino was already covered with thick smoke.

IN 11 o'clock in the morning Napoleon threw about 45 thousand infantry and cavalry, and almost 400 guns into the new 4th attack against the flushes. The Russian troops had about 300 guns, and were 2 times inferior in number to the enemy. As a result of this attack, the 2nd Combined Grenadier Division of M.S. Vorontsov, which took part in the Battle of Shevardin and withstood the 3rd attack on the flushes, retained about 300 people out of 4,000.

Then within an hour there were 3 more attacks from French troops, which were repulsed.


At 12 noon , during the 8th attack, Bagration, seeing that the artillery of the flushes could not stop the movement of the French columns, led a general counterattack of the left wing, the total number of troops of which was approximately only 20 thousand people against 40 thousand from the enemy. A brutal hand-to-hand battle ensued, which lasted about an hour. During this time, the masses of French troops were thrown back to the Utitsky forest and were on the verge of defeat. The advantage leaned towards the side of the Russian troops, but during the transition to a counterattack, Bagration, wounded by a fragment of a cannonball in the thigh, fell from his horse and was taken from the battlefield. The news of Bagration's injury instantly spread through the ranks of the Russian troops and undermined the morale of the Russian soldiers. Russian troops began to retreat. ( Note Bagration died of blood poisoning on September 12 (25), 1812)


After this, General D.S. took command of the left flank. Dokhturov. The French troops were bled dry and unable to attack. The Russian troops were greatly weakened, but they retained their combat capability, which was revealed during the repulsion of an attack by fresh French forces on Semyonovskoye.

In total, about 60,000 French troops took part in the battles for the flushes, of which about 30,000 were lost, about half in the 8th attack.

The French fought fiercely in the battles for the flushes, but all their attacks, except the last one, were repelled by the significantly smaller Russian forces. By concentrating forces on the right flank, Napoleon ensured a 2-3-fold numerical superiority in the battles for flushes, thanks to which, and also due to the wounding of Bagration, the French still managed to push the left wing of the Russian army to a distance of about 1 km. This success did not lead to the decisive result that Napoleon had hoped for.

Direction of the main attack " Great Army"moved from the left flank to the center of the Russian line, to the Kurgan battery.

Battery Raevsky


The last battles of the Borodino battle in the evening took place at the battery of the Raevsky and Utitsky mounds.

The high mound, located in the center of the Russian position, dominated the surrounding area. A battery was installed on it, which at the beginning of the battle had 18 guns. The defense of the battery was entrusted to the 7th Infantry Corps under Lieutenant General N.N. Raevsky, consisting of 11 thousand bayonets.

At about 9 o'clock in the morning, in the midst of the battle for Bagration's flushes, the French launched their first attack on Raevsky's battery.A bloody battle took place at the battery.

The losses on both sides were enormous. A number of units on both sides lost most of their personnel. General Raevsky's corps lost over 6 thousand people. And, for example, the French infantry regiment Bonamy retained 300 out of 4,100 people in its ranks after the battle for Raevsky’s battery. For these losses, Raevsky’s battery received the nickname “the grave of the French cavalry” from the French. At the cost of huge losses (the commander of the French cavalry, the general and his comrades fell at Kurgan Heights), French troops stormed Raevsky's battery at 4 o'clock in the afternoon.

However, the capture of Kurgan Heights did not lead to a decrease in the stability of the Russian center. The same applies to flushes, which were only defensive structures positions of the left flank of the Russian army.

End of the battle


Vereshchagin. The end of the Battle of Borodino

After the French troops occupied the Raevsky battery, the battle began to subside. On the left flank, the French carried out ineffective attacks against Dokhturov's 2nd Army. In the center and on the right flank, matters were limited to artillery fire until 7 p.m.


V.V. Vereshchagina. The end of the Battle of Borodino

On the evening of August 26, at 18 o'clock, the Battle of Borodino ended. The attacks stopped along the entire front. Until nightfall, only artillery fire and rifle fire continued in the advanced Jaeger chains.

Results of the Battle of Borodino

What were the results of this bloodiest of battles? Very sad for Napoleon, because there was no victory here, which all those close to him had been waiting in vain for the whole day. Napoleon was disappointed with the results of the battle: the “Great Army” was able to force the Russian troops on the left flank and center to retreat only 1–1.5 km. The Russian army maintained the integrity of the position and its communications, repelled many French attacks, and itself counterattacked. The artillery duel, for all its duration and fierceness, did not give advantages to either the French or the Russians. French troops captured the main strongholds of the Russian army - the Raevsky battery and the Semyonov flushes. But the fortifications on them were almost completely destroyed, and by the end of the battle Napoleon ordered them to be abandoned and the troops to be withdrawn to their original positions. Few prisoners were captured (as well as guns); Russian soldiers took with them most of their wounded comrades. The general battle turned out to be not a new Austerlitz, but a bloody battle with unclear results.

Perhaps, in tactical terms, the Battle of Borodino was another victory for Napoleon - he forced the Russian army to retreat and give up Moscow. However, in strategic terms, it was a victory for Kutuzov and the Russian army. A radical change occurred in the campaign of 1812. The Russian army survived the battle with the strongest enemy and its fighting spirit only grew stronger. Soon its numbers and material resources will be restored. Napoleon's army lost heart, lost the ability to win, the aura of invincibility. Further events will only confirm the correctness of the words of the military theorist Carl Clausewitz, who noted that “victory lies not simply in capturing the battlefield, but in the physical and moral defeat of the enemy forces.”

Later, while in exile, the defeated French Emperor Napoleon admitted: “Of all my battles, the most terrible was the one I fought near Moscow. The French showed themselves worthy of winning, and the Russians showed themselves worthy of being called invincible.”

The number of losses of the Russian army in the Battle of Borodino amounted to 44-45 thousand people. The French, according to some estimates, lost about 40-60 thousand people. The losses were especially heavy in command staff: in the Russian army 4 generals were killed and mortally wounded, 23 generals were wounded and shell-shocked; In the Great Army, 12 generals were killed and died of wounds, one marshal and 38 generals were wounded.

The Battle of Borodino is one of the bloodiest battles of the 19th century and the bloodiest of all that came before it. Conservative estimates of total casualties indicate that 2,500 people died on the field every hour. It is no coincidence that Napoleon called the Battle of Borodino his greatest battle, although its results were more than modest for a great commander accustomed to victories.

The main achievement of the general battle of Borodino was that Napoleon failed to defeat the Russian army. But first of all, the Borodino field became the cemetery of the French dream, that selfless faith of the French people in the star of their emperor, in his personal genius, which lay at the basis of all the achievements of the French Empire.

On October 3, 1812, the English newspapers “Courier” and “Times” published a report from the English ambassador Katkar from St. Petersburg, in which he reported that his army Imperial Majesty Alexander I was victorious in the most stubborn battle of Borodino. During October, The Times wrote about the Battle of Borodino eight times, calling the day of the battle "a grand memorable day in Russian history" and "Bonaparte's fatal battle." The British ambassador and the press did not consider the retreat after the battle and the abandonment of Moscow as a result of the battle, understanding the influence on these events of the unfavorable strategic situation for Russia.

For Borodino, Kutuzov received the rank of field marshal and 100 thousand rubles. The tsar granted Bagration 50 thousand rubles. For participation in the Battle of Borodino, each soldier was given 5 silver rubles.

The significance of the Battle of Borodino in the minds of the Russian people

The Battle of Borodino continues to occupy an important place in the historical consciousness of very broad layers of Russian society. Today, along with similar great pages of Russian history, it is being falsified by the camp of Russophobic-minded figures who position themselves as “historians.” By distorting reality and forgeries in custom-made publications, at any cost, regardless of reality, they are trying to convey to wide circles the idea of ​​a tactical victory for the French with fewer losses and that the Battle of Borodino was not a triumph of Russian weapons.This happens because the Battle of Borodino, as an event in which the strength of the spirit of the Russian people was manifested, is one of the cornerstones that shape Russia in the consciousness modern society precisely as a great power. By loosening these bricks throughout modern history Russia is engaged in Russophobic propaganda.

Materials prepared by Sergei Shulyak, fragments of paintings by Russian artists and panoramas of the Battle of Borodino were used.

After the withdrawal of the Russian army from near Smolensk, the commander-in-chief, infantry general Mikhail Illarionovich Kutuzov, decided, relying on a pre-selected position (near the village of Borodino, located 124 kilometers west of Moscow), to give the French army a general battle in order to inflict as much damage as possible on it and stop the offensive to Moscow. Napoleon I's goal in the Battle of Borodino was to defeat the Russian army, capture Moscow and force Russia to conclude peace on terms favorable to itself.

The position of the Russian army on the Borodino field along the front and up to 7 kilometers in depth. Its right flank adjoined the Moscow River, its left flank adjoined a difficult forest, its center rested on the Kurganaya heights, covered from the west by the Semenovsky stream.

The forest and bushes in the rear of the position made it possible to secretly position troops and maneuver reserves.

The position was strengthened by fortifications: at the tip of the right flank, near the forest, facing the Moscow River, three flushes were built (field fortification in the form obtuse angle, with its apex facing the enemy); near the village of Gorki, on the new Smolensk road, there are two batteries, one higher than the other, one with three guns, the other with nine; in the center of the position, at a height, there is a large lunette (a field fortification open from the rear, consisting of side ramparts and a ditch in front), armed with 18 guns, (later called the Raevsky battery); ahead and south of the village of Semenovskaya - three flushes (Bagration flushes); the village of Borodino, on the left bank of the Kolocha, was put into a defensive position; A pentagonal redoubt (closed rectangular, polygonal or round field fortification with an external ditch and parapet) for 12 guns was built on Shevardinsky Hill.

Napoleon achieved some success in the Battle of Borodino, but did not solve his main task - to defeat the Russian army in a general battle. Kutuzov contrasted Napoleonic strategy of a general battle with a different, higher form of struggle - achieving victory through a series of battles united by one plan.

In the Battle of Borodino, the Russian army showed examples of tactical art: maneuver by reserves from the depths and along the front, successful use of cavalry for operations on the flank, tenacity and active defense, continuous counterattacks in the interaction of infantry, cavalry and artillery. The enemy was forced to conduct frontal attacks. The battle turned into a frontal clash, in which Napoleon's chances for a decisive victory over the Russian army were reduced to zero.

The Battle of Borodino did not lead to an immediate turning point in the course of the war, but it radically changed the course of the war. To successfully complete it, it took time to make up for losses and prepare a reserve. Only about 1.5 months passed when the Russian army, led by Kutuzov, was able to begin expelling enemy forces from Russia.

Every year on the first Sunday of September, the anniversary of the Battle of Borodino is widely celebrated on the Borodino field (Mozhaisk district of the Moscow region). The culmination of the holiday is the military-historical reconstruction of episodes of the Battle of Borodino on the parade ground west of the village of Borodino. More than a thousand military history buffs, who made their own uniforms, equipment and weapons of the 1812 era, unite into the “Russian” and “French” armies. At the same time, they demonstrate combat tactics, knowledge of the military regulations of that time, and mastery of firearms and bladed weapons. The spectacle ends with a parade of military history clubs and awards for those who distinguished themselves in the battle.

On this day, more than 100 thousand people from Russia and foreign countries, interested military history era of the Napoleonic wars.

(Additional

The Russian army under the command of M.I. Kutuzov with the French army (1812).

The Battle of Borodino is the largest battle of the Patriotic War of 1812. In France, this battle is called the Battle of the Moscow River.

Starting the war, Napoleon planned a general battle along the border, but the retreating Russian army lured him far from the border. After leaving the city of Smolensk, the Russian army retreated to Moscow.

The commander-in-chief of the Russian army, Mikhail Golenishchev-Kutuzov, decided to block Napoleon’s path to Moscow and give a general battle to the French near the village of Borodino, located 124 km west of Moscow.

The position of the Russian army on the Borodino field occupied 8 km along the front and up to 7 km in depth. Its right flank adjoined the Moscow River, the left - to a difficult forest, the center rested on the Kurganaya heights, covered from the west by the Semenovsky stream. The forest and bushes in the rear of the position made it possible to secretly position troops and maneuver reserves. The position provided good review and artillery shelling.

Napoleon later wrote in his memoirs (translated by Mikhnevich):

“Of all my battles, the most terrible is the one I fought near Moscow. The French showed themselves worthy of victory in it, and the Russians acquired the right to be invincible... Of the fifty battles I fought, in the battle of Moscow [the French] showed the most valor and the least success was achieved."

Kutuzov in his memoirs assessed the Battle of Borodino as follows: “The battle of the 26th was the bloodiest of all those known in modern times. We completely won the battlefield, and the enemy then retreated to the position in which he came to attack us.”

Alexander I declared the Battle of Borodino as a victory. Prince Kutuzov was promoted to field marshal with an award of 100 thousand rubles. All lower ranks who were in the battle were granted 5 rubles each.

The Battle of Borodino did not lead to an immediate turning point in the course of the war, but it radically changed the course of the war. To successfully complete it, it took time to make up for losses and prepare a reserve. Only about 1.5 months passed when the Russian army, led by Kutuzov, was able to begin expelling enemy forces from Russia.

The material was prepared based on information from open sources