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Napoleon is back to Russia: The reconstruction of the Borodino battlefield

Nevsky

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On the first weekdays of September, a historical reenactment of the battle of Borodino is held 125 km from Moscow. Two days of the year, thousands of people gather here and trade clothes for uniforms, cars for horses, apartments for battlefield tents, the 21st century for 1812.

Napoleon called it a battle of giants. “The French have proved worthy of victory and the Russians earned the right not to be defeated,” the French Emperor said.


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Borodino, where the Russian and French armies clashed on Sept. 7, 1812, is known throughout the world by the incomparable description of the battle in Leo Tolstoy’s 'War and Peace'. In Russia, however, the battlefield has achieved an almost spiritual significance, and has been preserved as a national shrine.

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Two days of clanking swords, firing canons, hundreds of horses, tons of armor and pure fun for spectators. The cavalry, infantry and artillery were all identical reproductions of what’s written in the chronicles about the most famous battle of Napoleon’s disastrous invasion of Russia.

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The real battle lasted 12 hours, and left over 45,000 Russian soldiers dead and around 30,000 dead on the French side.

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Initially outnumbered by the French, the two Russian armies retreated, avoiding major battles. They eventually joined forces at Smolensk, where Field Marshal Kutuzov took command over the Russian forces.
The bloodiest battle was fought on Sept. 7 at Borodino, a little more than 60 miles west of Moscow.

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In French history the Battle of Borodino is known as the Battle of the Moskva River, although the river here is very narrow. In the region of Borodino, it is more like a rivulet overgrown with willows along the banks.

Historians are still engaged in the debates about the significance of the Battle of Borodino. On the one hand, after the battle the Supreme Commander of the Russian Army Mikhail Kutuzov gave an order to retreat and to leave Moscow. And on the other, that event became the turning point of the war, when the might of the French army was undermined for the first time.

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http://rbth.com/multimedia/pictures/2016/09/14/borodino_629835

@Vergennes
 
Given the prevailing situation I think Kutusov did a pretty admirable job.

Certainly was a pragmatic fellow in the patient wait+scorched earth policy he employed after this massive but indecisive battle. Give the French nothing for free and preserve the Russian army for when the advantage was more pressing to be employed. Can't really fault him there.
 
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