Position According to
Carl von Clausewitz, although the Russian left was on marginally higher ground, this was but a superficial matter and did not provide much of a defensive advantage. The positioning of the Russian right was such that for the French the left seemed an obvious choice. The Russian position at Borodino consisted of a series of disconnected earthworks running in an arc from the
Moskva River on the right, along its tributary, the Kolocha (whose steep banks added to the defense), and towards the village of Utitsa on the left. Thick woods interspersed along the Russian left and center (on the French side of the Kolocha) made the deployment and control of French forces difficult, aiding the defenders. The Russian center was defended by the Raevsky Redoubt, a massive open-backed earthwork mounting nineteen 12-pounder cannons with a clear field of fire all the way to the Kolocha's banks. Kutuzov was very concerned the French might take the New Smolensk Road around his positions and on to Moscow, so he placed the more powerful 1st Army under Barclay on the right, in positions which were already strong and virtually unassailable by the French. The 2nd Army under Bagration was expected to hold the left. The fall of Shevardino unanchored the Russian left flank but Kutuzov did nothing to change these initial dispositions despite the repeated pleas of his generals to redeploy their forces. Thus, when the action began and became a defensive rather than an offensive battle for the Russians, their heavy preponderance in artillery was wasted on a right wing that would never be attacked, while the French artillery did much to help win the battle. Colonel
Karl Wilhelm von Toll and others would make attempts to cover up their mistakes in this deployment and later attempts by historians would compound the issue. Indeed, Clausewitz also complained about Toll's dispositions being so narrow and deep that needless losses were incurred from artillery fire. The Russian position therefore was just about long with about 80,000 of the 1st Army on the right and 34,000 of the
2nd Army on the left.
Bagration's attacking at Borodino The first area of operations was on the
Bagration, as was predicted by both Barclay de Tolly and Bagration. Napoleon, commanding the French forces, made errors similar to his Russian adversary, deploying his forces inefficiently and failing to exploit the weaknesses in the Russian line. Despite Marshal Davout's suggestion of a maneuver to outflank the weak Russian left, the Emperor instead ordered Davout's First Corps to move directly into the teeth of the defense, while the flanking maneuver was left to the weak Fifth Corps of Prince Poniatowski. The initial French attack was aimed at seizing three Russian positions collectively known as the Bagration , three arrowhead-shaped, open-backed earthworks which arced out to the left in front of the Kolocha stream. These positions helped support the Russian left, which had no terrain advantages. There was much to be desired in the construction of the flèches, one officer noting the ditches were much too shallow, the
embrasures open to the ground, making them easy to enter, and they were much too wide, exposing infantry inside them. The were supported by artillery from the village of Semyanovskaya, whose elevation dominated the other side of the Kolocha. 's heavy cavalry squares of Russian guards to the left of Semyanovskaya (background) to support
Ney's attack. Detail from the
Borodino Panorama by
Franz Roubaud, 1912 The battle began at 06:00 with the opening of the 102-gun French
grand battery against the Russian center. Davout sent Compans's Division against the southernmost of the , with
Dessaix's Division echeloned out to the left. They were opposed by
Vorontsov's and
Neverovsky's divisions. When Compans exited the woods on the far bank of the Kolocha, he was hit by massed Russian cannon fire; both Compans and Dessaix were wounded, but the French continued their assault. General
Caulaincourt ordered
Watier's cuirassier division to lead the assault. Barclay saw Beauharnais' preparations for the assault and attempted to counter it, moving his forces against them. The French artillery, however, began bombarding the assembling force even as it gathered. Caulaincourt led Watier's cuirassiers in an assault on the opening at the back of the redoubt; he was killed as the charge was beaten off by fierce Russian musketry. General
Thielmann then led eight Saxon and two Polish cavalry squadrons against the rear of the redoubt, while officers and sergeants of his command actually forced their horses through the redoubt's embrasures, sowing confusion amongst the defenders and allowing the French cavalry and infantry to take the position. The battle had all but ended, with both sides so exhausted that only the artillery was still at work. At 15:30, the Raevsky redoubt fell with most of the 24th Division's troops. General Likhachyov was captured by the French. However, the French attempts to break through further were thwarted by the
Russian Guard Cavalry, which charged and repelled the French assault. In this assault, cavalry general
Grouchy was wounded when his units tried to break through the Russians, whilst Barclay and his retinue took part in the fight and was forced to draw his sword in self-defense.
Utitsa The third area of operations was around the village of Utitsa. The village was at the southern end of the Russian positions and lay along the old Smolensk road. It was rightly perceived as a potential weak point in the defense as a march along the road could turn the entire position at Borodino. Despite such concerns, the area was a tangle of rough country thickly covered in heavy brush well suited for deploying light infantry. The forest was dense, the ground marshy, and Russian Jaegers were deployed there in some numbers. Russian General
Nikolay Tuchkov had some 23,000 troops but half were untrained
Opolchenye (militia) armed only with pikes and axes and not ready for deployment. Poniatowski had about 10,000 soldiers, all trained and eager to fight, but his first attempt did not go well. It was at once realized the massed troops and artillery could not move through the forest against Jaeger opposition, so they had to reverse to Yelnya and then move eastward. Tuchkov had deployed his 1st Grenadier Division in line, backing it with the 3rd division in battalion columns. Some four regiments were called away to help defend the redoubts under attack and another two regiments were deployed in the Utitsa woods, weakening the position. The Polish contingent contested control of Utitsa village and
mound, capturing them with their first attempt. Tuchkov later ejected the French forces from both by 08:00, and was mortally wounded while leading this counter-attack. General
Jean-Andoche Junot led the Westphalians to join the attack and again captured the village, which was set on fire by the Russians. After the village's capture, Russians and Poles continued to skirmish and cannonade for the rest of the day without much progress. The heavy
undergrowth greatly hindered Poniatowski's efforts but eventually he came near cutting off the Russian left from the rest of the Russian forces. General Barclay sent help in the form of
Karl Gustav von Baggovut with
Pyotr Konovnitsyn in support. The latter asked Kutuzov for reinforcements, but he refused, fearing for the redoubt sector. Baggovut took command of the Russian left flank in place of the wounded Tuchkov. Any hope of real progress by the Poles was lost.
Napoleon's refusal to commit the Guard Towards 15:00, after hours of resistance, the Russian army was in dire straits, but the French forces were exhausted and had neither the necessary stamina nor will to carry out another assault. Both armies were exhausted after the battle and the Russians withdrew from the field the following day. Borodino represented the last Russian effort at stopping the French advance on Moscow, which fell a week later. At this crucial juncture, Murat's
chief of staff, General
Augustin Daniel Belliard, rode straight to the Emperor's Headquarters and, according to General
Ségur who wrote an account of the campaign, told him the Russian line was breached, the road to
Mozhaysk behind the Russian line was visible through the gaping hole the French attack had pierced, an enormous crowd of runaways and vehicles were hastily retreating, and a final push would be enough to decide the fate of the Russian army and the war. Generals
Daru,
Dumas and
Marshal Louis Alexandre Berthier also joined in and told the Emperor everyone thought the time had come for the
Guard to be committed to battle. Given the ferocity of the Russian defense, everyone was aware such a move would cost the lives of thousands of Guards, but it was thought the presence of this prestigious unit would bolster the morale of the entire army for a final decisive push. A notable exception was Marshal
Bessières, commander of the Guard cavalry, who was one of the very few senior generals to strongly advise against the intervention of the Guard. As the general staff were discussing the matter, General
Rapp, a senior to the Emperor, was being brought from the field of battle, having been wounded in action. Rapp immediately recommended to the Emperor the Guard be deployed for action and the Emperor is said to have retorted: "I will most definitely not; I do not want to have it blown up. I am certain of winning the battle without its intervention." Determined not to commit this valuable final reserve so far away from France, Napoleon rejected another such request, this time from Marshal
Ney. Instead, he called the commander of the "
Young Guard", Marshal
Mortier, and instructed him to guard the field of battle without moving forward or backward, while at the same time unleashing a massive cannonade with his 400 guns. ==End of the battle==