After the
Battle of Czarnowo on 23 December 1806 and the bloody battles of
Pułtusk and
Gołymin on 26 December, the opposing Russian and French armies went into winter quarters. Emperor
Napoleon wanted time to reorganize the Grande Armée's logistical arrangements after their long autumn campaign. In addition, his veteran French troops had expressed displeasure at having to fight in Poland during the harsh winter weather. In late 1806,
Field Marshal Mikhail Kamensky's Russian army in Poland constituted two major wings under Generals Bennigsen and
Friedrich Wilhelm von Buxhoeveden (Buxhöwden). Bennigsen commanded
Lieutenant General Alexander Ivanovich Ostermann-Tolstoy's 2nd Division, Lieutenant General
Fabian Gottlieb von Osten-Sacken's 3rd Division, Lieutenant General
Dmitry Golitsyn's 4th Division, and Lieutenant General Alexander Karlovich Sedmoratsky's 6th Division. The initial strength of Bennigsen's force, before the December battles, was 49,000 infantry, 11,000 regular cavalry, 4,000 cossacks, 2,700 artillerymen, 900 pioneers, and 276 guns. Of these, from 55,000 to 60,000 were able to take the field. Buxhöwden led Lieutenant General
Nikolay Tuchkov's 5th Division, Lieutenant General
Dmitry Dokhturov's 7th Division, Lieutenant General
Peter Kirillovich Essen's 8th Division, and Lieutenant General Heinrich Reinhold von Anrep's 14th Division. Buxhöwden's four divisions fought at the
Battle of Austerlitz on 2 December 1805 and had not made up all the losses suffered at that engagement. Consequently, his troops numbered only 29,000 infantry, 7,000 cavalry, 1,200 gunners, and 216 artillery pieces in December 1806. Not counting garrisons, the Prussians could put only 6,000 men into the field in that month. In 1806, the Russian field army consisted of 18 divisions. Each division included six 3-battalion infantry regiments, ten squadrons of heavy cavalry, ten squadrons of light cavalry, two heavy foot artillery batteries, three light foot artillery batteries, and one horse artillery battery. Since the foot batteries contained 14 guns apiece and the horse batteries 12 guns, each Russian division nominally controlled as many as 82 field pieces. Typically, the heavy batteries were made up of eight 12-pound cannons, four heavy howitzers, and two light howitzers. The light batteries had the same establishment except that they substituted 6- for 12-pound cannons. Horse batteries were entirely formed from 6-pound cannons. "Old and worn out in body and mind", the 75-year-old Marshal Kamensky exhibited clear signs that he was no longer fit to command. Around the time
Pułtusk was fought, Kamensky left the front. The next day, he appeared in the streets of
Grodno without his shirt on and called for a surgeon. Pointing out his many wounds, he demanded that the doctor give him a written statement that he was no longer able to serve. During December, his two lieutenants, of whom Buxhöwden was senior, began to intrigue against one another for the army command. After Pułtusk and
Gołymin, the 8th and 14th Divisions remained with Bennigsen, who was not anxious to return them to their rightful wing commander. On 1 January 1807, Bennigsen's wing lay at
Nowogród on the south bank of the ice-floe choked
Narew River, while Buxhöwden's wing was to the northeast on the north bank. Around this time, Kamensky appeared at the front but his orders were ignored and he permanently withdrew from the campaign. His unstable and violent temperament eventually led to his murder at the hands of a peasant. Napoleon deployed his corps in a wide arc on the east side of the
Vistula River covering
Warsaw. He posited Bernadotte's I Corps on the left flank with headquarters at
Osterode (Ostróda). In order from left to right came Marshal
Michel Ney's VI Corps at
Mława, Marshal
Nicolas Soult's IV Corps at Gołymin, Marshal
Louis-Nicolas Davout's III Corps at Pułtusk, and Marshal
Jean Lannes at
Serock. Marshal
Pierre Augereau's VII Corps stood in a reserve position behind the arc at
Płońsk. Marshal
Joachim Murat's Reserve Cavalry took up winter quarters in districts to the rear except for
General of Division Louis Michel Antoine Sahuc's 4th Dragoon Division, which reported to Bernadotte, and General of Division
Antoine Lasalle's Light Cavalry Division which patrolled Soult's front. ==Russian offensive==