French Revolutionary Wars

French Revolutionary Wars
Part of the French Revolution and Coalition Wars

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Left to right, top to bottom:
Battles of Valmy, Toulon, Fleurus, Quiberon, Arcole, Mantua, the Pyramids, the Nile, Zurich, Marengo, Hohenlinden, Ravine-à-Couleuvres
Date20 April 1792 – 27 March 1802 (1792-04-20 – 1802-03-27)
Location
Result

First Coalition: French victory

  • Peace of Basel
  • Treaty of Campo Formio

Second Coalition: French victory

Territorial
changes
  • Fall of the Kingdom of France and establishment of the French Republic
  • France annexes Piedmont and all the lands west of the Rhine
  • Establishment of the pro-French Batavian, Helvetic, Italian, and Ligurian Republics
  • Louisiana to France
  • Fall of Saint-Domingue to the Haitian Revolution
  • Other Territorial Changes
  • Belligerents

    Catholic and Royal Armies

    • Émigré armies

    Holy Roman Empire[a]

     Great Britain (1793–1801)

     United Kingdom (from 1801)[c]
    Spain (1793–1795)[b]
    Dutch Republic (1793–1795)
     Sardinia
    Old Swiss Confederacy (1798)[d]
     Naples
    Order of Saint John (1798)
    Malta (1798–1800)
    Ottoman Empire
    Portugal
     Russia (1799)
    Other Italian states[e]


    Southern Netherlands peasants
    (Peasants' War)


    Saint-Domingue rebels
    (Haitian Revolution) (1791–94)


    United States
    (Quasi-War) (1798–1800)

    Kingdom of France (until 1792)[f]
    French Republic (from 1792)

    Spain (1796–1802)[i]
    Mysore (until 1799)
    Commanders and leaders
    Prince Louis Joseph
    Jacques Cathelineau 
    Henri de la Rochejaquelein 
    Georges Cadoudal 
    Jean Chouan 
    Francis II
    Archduke Charles
    József Alvinczi
    Michael von Melas
    François Sébastien de Croix #
    Prince Josias
    Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser #
    Frederick William II #
    Charles William Ferdinand
    Prince
    William Pitt (until 1801)
    Henry Addington (from 1801)
    Horatio Nelson
    Prince Frederick
    Ralph Abercromby (DOW)
    Sidney Smith
    Charles IV (until 1795)
    Antonio Ricardos #
    Luis Firmín 
    William V
    Laurens Pieter van de Spiegel #
    William, Hereditary Prince of Orange
    Victor Amadeus III #
    Michael Colli
    Ferdinand IV
    Selim III
    Jazzar Pasha
    Murad Bey #
    Maria I
    Prince Regent John
    Miguel Pereira Forjaz
    Paul I X
    Alexander Suvorov #
    Alexander Korsakov
    Fyodor Ushakov
    Pieter Corbeels 
    Toussaint Louverture
    John Adams

    Louis XVI  (until 1792)[1]
    Jacques Pierre Brissot  (until 1793)
    Maximilien Robespierre  (1793–1794)
    Louis Philippe

    Paul Barras (1795–1799)
    Napoleon Bonaparte (from 1799)
    Robert Lindet
    Jean-Charles Pichegru
    Jean-Baptiste Jourdan
    Lazare Hoche #
    André Masséna
    Jean Lannes
    Charles François Dumouriez
    Jean Victor Moreau
    François Kellermann
    Louis Desaix 
    Jean Humbert
    Charles IV (from 1796)
    Ignacio de Álava
    Herman Willem Daendels
    Wolfe Tone 
    Jan Henryk Dąbrowski
    Tipu Sultan 
    Mir Sadiq 
    Purnaiah
    Strength
    1794:
    1,169,000[2]
    Casualties and losses

    Austrians (1792–97)
    94,700 killed in action[3]
    100,000 wounded[3]
    220,000 captured[3]
    Italian campaign of 1796–97
    27,000 allied soldiers killed[3]
    Unknown wounded
    160,000 captured[3]
    1,600 guns[3]


    3,200 killed in action (navy)[4]

    French (1792–97)
    100,000 killed in action[3]
    150,000 captured[3]
    Italian campaign of 1796–97
    45,000 killed, wounded or captured (10,000 killed)[3]


    10,000 killed in action (navy)[4]

    The French Revolutionary Wars (French: Guerres de la Révolution française) were a series of sweeping military conflicts resulting from the French Revolution that lasted from 1792 until 1802. They pitted France against Great Britain, Austria, Prussia, Russia, and several other countries. The wars are divided into two periods: the War of the First Coalition (1792–1797) and the War of the Second Coalition (1798–1802). Initially confined to Europe, the fighting gradually assumed a global dimension. After a decade of constant warfare and aggressive diplomacy, France had conquered territories in the Italian peninsula, the Low Countries, and the Rhineland with its very large and powerful military which had been totally mobilized for war against most of Europe with mass conscription of the vast French population. French success in these conflicts ensured military occupation and the spread of revolutionary principles over much of Europe.[5]

    As early as 1791, the other monarchies of Europe looked with outrage at the revolution and its upheavals; and they considered whether they should intervene, either in support of King Louis XVI to prevent the spread of revolution, or to take advantage of the chaos in France. Austria stationed significant troops on its French border and together with Prussia issued the Declaration of Pillnitz, which threatened severe consequences should anything happen to King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette. After Austria refused to recall its troops from the French border and to back down on the perceived threat of using force, France declared war on Austria and Prussia in the spring of 1792; both countries responded with a coordinated invasion that was turned back at the Battle of Valmy in September. This victory emboldened the National Convention to abolish the monarchy.[6] A series of victories by the French Revolutionary Army abruptly ended with defeat at Neerwinden in the spring of 1793. The French suffered additional defeats in the remainder of the year, and these difficult times allowed the Jacobins to rise to power and impose the Reign of Terror to unify the nation.

    In 1794 the situation improved dramatically for the French as huge victories at Fleurus against the Austrians and Dutch and against the Spanish at the Battle of the Black Mountain signalled the start of a new stage in the wars. By 1795, the French had captured the Austrian Netherlands and the Dutch Republic. The French also put Spain and Prussia out of the war with the Peace of Basel. A hitherto unknown general named Napoleon Bonaparte began his first campaign in Italy in April 1796. In less than a year, French armies under Napoleon destroyed the Habsburg forces and evicted them from the Italian peninsula, winning almost every battle and capturing 150,000 prisoners. With French forces marching toward Vienna, the Austrians sued for peace and agreed to the Treaty of Campo Formio on 17 October 1797, ending the First Coalition against the Republic.

    The War of the Second Coalition began in 1798 with the French invasion of Egypt, headed by Napoleon. The allies took the opportunity presented by the French effort in the Middle East to regain territories lost from the First Coalition. The war began well for the allies in Europe, where they gradually pushed the French out of Italy and invaded Switzerland – racking up victories at the battles of Magnano, Cassano, and Novi along the way. However, their efforts largely unraveled with the French victory at Zurich in September 1799, which caused Russia to drop out of the war.[7] Meanwhile, Napoleon's forces won a series of battles at the Pyramids, Mount Tabor, and Abukir but lost a crucial Siege of Acre in 1799 that turned the tide of the campaign. The perceived victories in Egypt further enhanced Napoleon's popularity back in France, and he returned to France in the autumn of 1799, but leaving the French army in a desperate situation in Egypt as the Egyptian campaign ultimately ended in failure. Furthermore, the Royal Navy had won the Battle of the Nile in 1798, further strengthening British control of the Mediterranean and weakening the French Navy for the rest of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.

    Napoleon's arrival from Egypt led to the fall of the French Directory in the Coup of 18 Brumaire, with Napoleon installing himself as consul. Napoleon then reorganized the French army and launched an assault against the Austrians in Italy during the spring of 1800. This brought a decisive French victory at the Battle of Marengo in June 1800, after which the Austrians withdrew from the peninsula once again. Another crushing French victory at Hohenlinden in Bavaria forced the Austrians to seek peace for a second time, leading to the Treaty of Lunéville in 1801. With Austria and Russia out of the war, Britain found itself increasingly isolated and agreed to the Treaty of Amiens with Napoleon's government in 1802, concluding the Revolutionary Wars. However, the lingering tensions proved too difficult to contain, and the Napoleonic Wars began over a year later with the formation of the Third Coalition, continuing the series of Coalition Wars.


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    1. ^ Collaborated with the anti-revolutionary Coalition
    2. ^ Lynn, John A. "Recalculating French Army Growth during the Grand Siecle, 1610–1715." French Historical Studies 18, no. 4 (1994): 881–906, p. 904. Only counting frontline army troops, not naval personnel, militiamen, or reserves; the National Guard alone was supposed to provide a reserve of 1,200,000 men in 1789.
    3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Clodfelter 2017, p. 100.
    4. ^ a b Clodfelter 2017, p. 103.
    5. ^ "French Revolutionary wars – Campaign of 1792 | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
    6. ^ Blanning 1996, pp. 78–79.
    7. ^ Blanning 1996, pp. 245–255.