Blücher ordered the Army of Silesia to advance on 13 August, before the
Truce of Pläswitz could conclude on 17 August. In a series of running fights, the Allied army beat back the confused French, who did not anticipate that the Allies would break the armistice so brazenly. These minor victories raised the morale of the inexperienced German levies. On the first day, Blücher and his
chief of staff August Neidhardt von Gneisenau became separated and did not issue orders for troop movements until late in the day, slowing down the Allied advance. The French resistance grew in intensity, the Allied night marches multiplied owing to constant combat and delays, and the weather turned atrocious. On 20 August, Blücher's men came face-to-face
Napoleon's main army at the
Bober river and beat a hasty retreat when the cheers of the French troops announced the arrival of the French
emperor. For the next five days, the Silesian Army engaged in a series of fierce and costly rearguard actions against the pursuing French forces, which were personally commanded by Napoleon. Blücher lost 6,000–8,000 men in combat on 21, 22 and 23 August, while French losses since 17 August were about the same. Blücher's army began to fall apart.
Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg's corps lost 5,000 men to
desertion. The
Landwehr militiamen deserted
en masse in entire battalions, while the Allied
corps commanders complained of the ruin befalling their army thanks to the incompetence of its
general staff. Blücher contemplated firing Gneisenau. Napoleon returned to Saxony on 23 August with the Guard,
I Corps,
VI Corps and
I Cavalry Corps to face
Schwarzenberg's
Army of Bohemia. That same day, he formed the 100,000-strong Army of the Bober under Marshal
Jacques MacDonald and ordered him to drive Blucher to east of the Katzbach then pull back to the west bank of the Bober and assume defensive positions to protect the flank of the French armies in Saxony and near
Berlin. MacDonald was also authorized to attack in case Blücher took the offensive. MacDonald did not move for 48 hours due to Marshal
Michel Ney's misunderstanding of Napoleon's summon of Ney to
Görlitz as referring to his entire three-division-strong
III Corps. Late on 24 August, Ney turned over command to
Joseph Souham, who spent 25 August moving his corps into MacDonald's line. In addition to the
III Corps, MacDonald had under his command the
V Corps,
XI Corps and
II Cavalry Corps. When Blücher on 24 August learned that Napoleon was no longer in direct command of the pursuers, he at 7 pm that day ordered his army to turn back and use cavalry reconnaissance to find the enemy on 25 August. At 11 pm on 25 August, MacDonald issued orders to move his army to the town of
Jauer the next day and defeat Blücher or drive him deeper into Silesia. MacDonald's courier reached Souham four and one-half hours late. Souham then moved his corps at 11.30 am to
Kroitsch rather than
Liegnitz, which meant that only one division from the corps would participate in the battle. ==Battle==