French Revolutionary Wars in the
4th Hussars in 1792'' by
Adolphe Brune, 1834 Life as a
civil servant did not suit Ney, and he enlisted in the Colonel-General Hussar Regiment in 1787. Later in 1799, Ney commanded cavalry in the armies of Switzerland and the Danube. At
Winterthur, Ney received wounds in the thigh and wrist. After recovering he fought at
Hohenlinden under General
Jean Victor Marie Moreau in December 1800. From September 1802, Ney commanded French troops in Switzerland and performed diplomatic duties.
Napoleonic Wars On 19 May 1804, Ney received his marshal's
baton, emblematic of his status as a
Marshal of the Empire, the Napoleonic era's equivalent of
Marshal of France. In November 1805, Ney invaded Tyrol, capturing
Innsbruck from
Archduke John. In the 1806 campaign, Ney fought at
Jena and then occupied Erfurt. Later in the campaign, Ney successfully
besieged Magdeburg. In the 1807 campaign, Ney arrived with reinforcements in time to save Napoleon from defeat at
Eylau. Later in the campaign, Ney fought at
Güttstadt and commanded the right wing at
Friedland. On 6June 1808, Ney was made
Duke of Elchingen. Ney engaged
Wellington's forces in a series of
rearguard actions (
Pombal,
Redinha,
Casal Novo, and
Foz de Arouce) through which he managed to delay the pursuing Coalition forces long enough to allow the main French force to retreat in 1811. He was ultimately removed from his command for insubordination. The terrible defeat of the III Corps was thorough enough to induce the chivalrous Miloradovich to extend another honorable surrender to Ney. In the early evening during a heavy fog Ney decided to draw back with 3,000 men. Ney escaped passing around the Russian at Mankovo, following the brook Losvinka for two hours, about 13 km north. At midnight he was informed that the enemy was approaching. In the middle of the night Ney decided to cross the
Dnieper, supposedly near the remote hamlet
Alekseyevka at a spot which could be used in summer to cross the river but with an almost vertical slope. Ney literally got down on all fours. One by one, but not without heavy losses, leaving guns, horses, part of the
detachment and wounded who could not go on. In the previous 24 hours, 3,000 armed men and 4,000 stragglers had either died or strayed from its ranks. Armand de Briqueville increased the number of abandoned cannons to 6 and increases the number of people who cross to 5–6000.
Hundred Days 's
Panorama of the Battle of Waterloo When he heard of Napoleon's return to France, Ney, determined to keep France at peace and to show his loyalty to Louis XVIII, organized a force to stop Napoleon's march on Paris. Ney also pledged to bring Napoleon back alive in an iron cage. Aware of Ney's plans, Napoleon sent him a letter which said, in part, "I shall receive you as I did after the
Battle of the Moskowa." On 14 March, on the main square in
Lons-le-Saulnier (Jura) Ney joined Napoleon with a small army of 6,000 men. Ney's reconciliation with Napoleon was a body blow to the monarchy's hopes of retaining control of the army and with it, France, and the King abandoned Paris just two days after Ney's 'treason' became known in the capital. On 15 June 1815, Napoleon appointed Ney as commander of the left wing of the Army of the North. On 16 June, Napoleon's forces split up into two wings to fight two separate battles simultaneously. Ney attacked the Duke of Wellington at
Quatre Bras (and received criticism for attacking slowly) while Napoleon attacked Marshal
Blücher's Prussians at
Ligny. Although Ney was criticized for not capturing Quatre Bras early, there is still debate as to what time Napoleon actually ordered Ney to capture the town. At Ligny, Napoleon ordered General
Jean-Baptiste d'Erlon to move his corps (on Napoleon's left and Ney's right at the time) to the Prussians' rear in order to cut off their line of retreat. D'Erlon began to move into position, but suddenly stopped and began moving away, much to the surprise and horror of Napoleon. The reason for the sudden change in movement is that Ney had ordered d'Erlon to come to his aid at Quatre Bras. Without d'Erlon's corps blocking the Prussians' line of retreat, the French victory at Ligny was not complete, and the Prussians were not routed. At
Waterloo on 18 June, Ney again commanded the left wing of the army. At around 3:30 p.m., Ney ordered a mass cavalry charge against the Anglo-Allied lines. Ney's cavalry overran the enemy cannons but found the infantry formed in cavalry-proof
square formations which – without infantry or artillery support – he failed to break. The action earned Ney criticism, and some argue that it led to Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo. It was as though Ney was seeking death, but death did not want him, as many observers reported. == Trial and execution ==