V Cavalry Corps (Grande Armée)

V Cavalry Corps (Grande Armée)
Active 18131814
Country France First French Empire
Branch Army
Type Cavalry Corps
Size Three cavalry divisions
Engagements Napoleonic Wars
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Samuel-François Lhéritier
Pierre Claude Pajol
Édouard Jean Baptiste Milhaud

The V Cavalry Corps (Grande Armée) was a French military formation that existed during the Napoleonic Wars. The corps was created in 1813 and fought until 1814. Emperor Napoleon first organized the corps during the summer armistice in 1813 and it fought at Dresden and Leipzig. Samuel-François Lhéritier led the corps at first but was replaced by Pierre Claude Pajol. After Pajol was wounded at Leipzig, Édouard Jean Baptiste Milhaud commanded the corps at Hanau in 1813, and at Brienne, La Rothière, Mormant, Fère-Champenoise, and Paris in 1814.

History

1813

After the disastrous French invasion of Russia, Napoleon had to rebuild his armies in Germany. By 1 May 1813 the French emperor was ready to lead an army numbering 226,177 troops and 457 artillery pieces. However, his cavalry was its weakest element. Between mid-April and 1 May, it was organized into the I Cavalry Corps with 3,515 officers and men, the II Cavalry Corps with 3,293 sabers, and the III Cavalry Corps with 3,895 troopers.[1] On 25 March, General of Brigade Jean Antoine de Collaert was assigned to lead the 1st Brigade of General of Division Samuel-François Lhéritier's 4th Cavalry Division in General of Division Jean-Toussaint Arrighi de Casanova's III Cavalry Corps. After a reorganization, the division became part of the V Cavalry Corps on 10 August. From that day until 5 October, Collaert became the acting commander of the 5th Dragoon Division.[2]

Color print of two cavalrymen riding brown horses. Both dragoons wear white gloves and dark green coats open in front to show a white waistcoat. The trooper on the right has a bearskin hat, gray breeches, and orange-yellow regimental facings; the one on the left sports a brass dragoon helmet, white breeches, and madder red facings.
Two V Cavalry Corps divisions were made up of dragoons, shown here.

The summer armistice ended on 17 August 1813.[3] At this time, Lhéritier commanded the V Cavalry Corps which counted about 4,000 horsemen in 20 squadrons supported by six guns.[4] In its initial disposition, Lhéritier's corps was posted near Dresden together with the XIV Corps under Marshal Laurent Gouvion Saint-Cyr.[5] As the Allied Army of Bohemia advanced from the south, the V Cavalry Corps covered the left flank during Saint-Cyr's fighting withdrawal. On 25 August, Lhéritier lost three guns in a skirmish with Russian cavalry outside Dresden.[6]

Black and white print shows a round-faced man in an early 1800s military uniform, with high collar and much gold braid.
Samuel François Lhéritier

Lhéritier's corps was present during the Battle of Dresden on 26 and 27 August 1813. Its three divisions were led by Generals of Brigade Stanislaw Klicki, Collaert, and Auguste Étienne Lamotte. Klicki led the 9th Light Cavalry Division, Collaert directed the 5th Dragoon Division, and Lamotte commanded the 6th Dragoon Division. Meanwhile, Pierre Claude Pajol led the 10th Light Cavalry Division which belonged to Saint-Cyr's corps. Pajol's division counted four squadrons each of French, Italians, and Poles.[7] On the 26th, Pajol appears to have taken command of Lhéritier's corps as well as his own division because one authority states that he controlled 46 cavalry squadrons while I Cavalry Corps commander General of Division Victor de Fay de La Tour-Maubourg directed 78 more. This mass of cavalry was deployed to the east of Dresden in the Friederichstadt suburb.[8] Yet the same source assigned only 68 squadrons to La Tour-Maubourg and Pajol for the action on the 27th.[9] Beginning at 6:00 AM, the cavalry supported by Marshal Claude Perrin Victor's II Corps advance against the outnumbered Austrian left wing. The attack was a complete success and by 2:00 PM the Austrian defenders were almost annihilated, losing 15,000 prisoners.[10] Of the V Cavalry Corps, only the 26th and 27th Chasseurs à Cheval and 19th Dragoon Regiments were engaged.[11]

On 26 September 1813, the V Cavalry Corps, still under Lhéritier, was posted at Grossenhain.[12] On 2 October, the corps was placed under the orders of Marshal Joachim Murat along with the II, V, and VIII Corps. Murat was ordered to Freiberg to defend against another advance by the Allied Bohemian Army.[13] On the 14th Murat stood to fight south of Leipzig at Liebertwolkwitz with 32,400 infantry, 9,800 cavalry, and 156 guns. The contending forces included Murat's command plus the IV Cavalry Corps and one division of the I Cavalry Corps. The outcome was a drawn battle in which both sides held their positions. The V Cavalry Corps, now under the command of Pajol, was so badly "knocked about" that it was temporarily out of action.[14]

At the Battle of Leipzig on 1619 October, Pajol led 5,000 troopers and 11 guns in three divisions under Generals of Division Jacques Gervais, baron Subervie, Lhéritier, and Édouard Jean Baptiste Milhaud. Subervie led the 9th Light Cavalry Division, Lhéritier directed the 5th Heavy Cavalry Division, and Milhaud commanded the 6th Heavy Cavalry Division. See Order of Battle: Leipzig 1813.[15] Early on the 16th the I and V Cavalry Corps and the Imperial Guard cavalry were placed in reserve in the southern sector.[16] On the 18th the V Cavalry Corps supported the II Corps to the south of Leipzig.[17] At 4:00 PM on 18 October, the I, III, and V Cavalry Corps were withdrawn from the battlefield.[18] Pajol was among the many wounded[19] and was replaced by Milhaud in command of the corps.[20]

During the retreat after Leipzig, Milhaud and Lhéritier led the 15th and 18th Dragoons in action at Eckartsberga on 22 October. The French successfully parried an attempt by Feldzeugmeister Ignaz Gyulai's III Armeekorps to cut off their escape route.[21] The 19th and 20th Dragoons and the 14th and 27th Chasseurs à Cheval from the V Cavalry Corps participated in the Battle of Hanau on 3031 October.[22] By late November, Milhaud's V Cavalry Corps covered the Left Bank of the Rhine from Mainz in the north to near Landau in the south. The corps numbered 3,973 horsemen of whom 300 patrolled the river every day between Mainz and Worms.[23]

1814

Black and white profile of a man with heavy eyebrows. He is in civilian dress but his coat has several medals.
Édouard Milhaud

By the end of January 1814, Allied columns brushed aside the weak forces defending the borders and invaded France. Napoleon resolved to move against them with the Imperial Guard, II and VI Corps and the I and V Cavalry Corps, a total of 33,000 infantry and 8,000 cavalry.[24] In a clash at Saint-Dizier on 27 January, 2,100 troopers belonging to Milhaud's cavalry defeated 1,500 men of the Russian 2nd Hussar Division. The French units involved in the skirmish were the 5th Chevau-Léger Lancers, the 10th and 26th Chasseurs à Cheval, and the 2nd, 11th, 13th, and 19th Dragoons.[25] At the Battle of Brienne on 29 January, the V Cavalry Corps led the attack. In overall command of the cavalry, General of Division Emmanuel Grouchy placed General of Division Hippolyte Piré with the light cavalry division on the left, Lhéritier's dragoons in the center, and some Imperial Guard cavalry on the right. Before 3:00 PM, the horsemen swept forward, driving back Pyotr Pahlen's Russian cavalry. In their pursuit, the dragoon divisions of Lhéritier and General of Division André Louis Briche came across three Russian battalions in square and were repulsed. The cavalry was then shifted to cover the French right flank during the remainder of the combat.[26] The corps also fought at the Battle of La Rothière on 1 February. Late in the day, Napoleon threw in Milhaud's corps to cover the disengagement of his outumbered and defeated army.[27]

On 6 February 1814, Marshal Jacques MacDonald reported that his cavalry was in a bad state. He wrote that the V Cavalry Corps counted 800 sabers which was half their nominal strength. The III Cavalry Corps numbered only 500 while the II Cavalry Corps had between 800 and 900 troopers. On the 10th, the III and V Cavalry Corps and General of Division Antoine-Louis Decrest de Saint-Germain massed at Meaux to cover a river crossing. The combined force was 2,000 horsemen and five guns.[28] Milhaud led the divisions of Piré and Briche at the Battle of Mormant on 17 February. Lhéritier's division was transferred to the newly formed VI Cavalry Corps at this time.[29] Milhaud's V Cavalry Corps participated in the Battle of Fère-Champenoise on 25 March, including the 23rd Chasseurs à Cheval and the 5th, 6th, 21st, 25th, and 26th Dragoons.[30] The 6th Dragoon Division fought under the command of General of Division Nicolas-François Roussel d'Hurbal at the Battle of Paris on 30 March.[31]

Orders of Battle

Leipzig 1813

Black and white print of a man with mutton chops, round eyes and wavy hair. He wears a high-collared military uniform with much braid.
Pierre Claude Pajol

V Cavalry Corps: General of Division Pierre Claude Pajol (5,000)

Sources:

Notes

  1. Maude, Frederic Natusch (1908). The Leipzig Campaign 1813. New York: The Macmillan Co. p. 86.
  2. Van Uythoven, Geert. "Collaert, Jean Marie Antoine Philippe Baron de". Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  3. Petre, F. Loraine (1912). Napoleon's Last Campaign in Germany, 1813. New York: John Lane Company. Retrieved 5 October 1813. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  4. Maude (1908), p. 148
  5. Petre (1912), p. 172
  6. Petre (1912), p. 192
  7. "Battle of Dresden 26-27 August 1813". napolun.com. Retrieved 6 October 2013.
  8. Petre (1912), p. 203
  9. Petre (1912), p. 212
  10. Petre (1912), pp. 218-221
  11. Smith, Digby (1998). The Napoleonic Wars Data Book. London: Greenhill. p. 444. ISBN 1-85367-276-9.
  12. Petre (1912), p. 293
  13. Petre (1912), p. 300
  14. Petre (1912), p. 318-319
  15. Smith (1998), p. 463
  16. Petre (1912), p. 330
  17. Petre (1912), p. 354
  18. Petre (1912), p. 368
  19. Petre (1912), p. 384
  20. Chandler, David G. (1979). Dictionary of the Napoleonic Wars. New York, N.Y.: Macmillan. p. 280. ISBN 0-02-523670-9.
  21. Smith (1998), p. 472
  22. Smith (1998), p. 474
  23. Leggiere, Michael (2007). The Fall of Napoleon: Volume 1, The Allied Invasion of France, 1813–1814. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. pp. 104–105. Retrieved 6 October 2013.
  24. Weil, Maurice (2012). "The Campaign of 1814: Chapter 6, Part 1". The Napoleon Series. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  25. Smith (1998), p. 490
  26. Weil, Maurice (2012). "The Campaign of 1814: Chapter 6, Part 3". The Napoleon Series. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  27. Chandler, David G. (1966). The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York, N.Y.: Macmillan. p. 962.
  28. Weil, Maurice (2012). "The Campaign of 1814: Chapter 8, Part 2". The Napoleon Series. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  29. Smith (1998), p. 498
  30. Smith (1998), p. 514
  31. Smith (1998), p. 515

References

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