1812
Grande Armée Crosses the Niemen
Six hundred thousand men - French, Polish, Italian, German - waded into Russia on a summer morning. By December, fewer than a hundred thousand would stagger back over the same river. Napoleon had met a country that traded space for time and winter for victory. The empire's long unraveling had begun.
United States Declares War
Goaded by British impressment of sailors and dreams of seizing Canada, President Madison signed a war declaration that split his own country. New England merchants cursed him. The campaigns that followed were a shambles of burned capitals and frozen forts, ending in a draw - and in American self-confidence. The Treaty of Ghent restored the status quo ante, but Americans chose to remember only the victories.
Battle of Borodino
Seventy miles west of Moscow, Kutuzov's Russians stood and let Napoleon batter them all day. Seventy thousand men fell in twelve hours; the Russians withdrew in good order. A week later Napoleon entered an empty Moscow. Borodino was his costliest victory and, in the end, his undoing. Tolstoy would recreate the battle in War and Peace, turning its chaos into the centerpiece of the greatest novel ever written.
Moscow Burns
As Napoleon's guards took up quarters in the Kremlin, fires lit by the city's departing governor ran from suburb to suburb until three-quarters of Moscow was ash. The Grande Armée sat in ruins for five weeks waiting for peace offers that never came, then turned west into the first snows.
Treaty of Bucharest
Russia ended its long war with the Ottoman Empire in time to face Napoleon, gaining Bessarabia and a breathing space. The timing was masterful - Kutuzov, the negotiator, would command the Russian army against the Grande Armee three months later. European diplomacy had a way of compressing years of suffering into convenient paragraphs.
Detroit Surrenders
General William Hull, old and panicked, surrendered Detroit and his two thousand troops to the British without firing a shot. It was one of the more humiliating moments of the War of 1812. Hull was court-martialed and sentenced to death for cowardice; the sentence was commuted. Americans learned, again, that invading Canada was harder than it sounded.