War of the Third Coalition

War of the Third Coalition
Part of the Napoleonic Wars and the Coalition Wars
War of the third coalitionBattle of UlmBattle of TrafalgarBattle of DürensteinBattle of SchöngrabernBattle of Austerlitz
War of the third coalition

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Left to right, top to bottom:
Battles of Ulm, Trafalgar, Durenstein, Schöngrabern and Austerlitz
Date11 April 1805 – 18 July 1806
(1 year, 3 months and 7 days)
Location
Result

French victory

Belligerents

First French Empire France

Commanders and leaders
Casualties and losses
Austrian Empire:
20,000 killed or wounded
70,000 captured
Russia:
25,000 killed or wounded
25,000 captured
Naples:
20,000 killed, wounded or captured
Total casualties:
160,000 killed, wounded or captured
France:
13,500 killed
37,000 wounded
5,000 captured
Italy:
350 killed
1,900 wounded
Spain:
1,200 killed
1,600 wounded
Bavaria:
300 killed
1,200 wounded
Total casualties:
62,050 killed, wounded or captured
Map
1000km
620miles
Waterloo
9
Hundred Days 1815:...Waterloo...
France
8
Sixth Coalition: France 1814:...Paris...
7
Sixth Coalition: Germany 1813:...Leipzig...
Russia
6
French invasion of Russia 1812:...Moscow...
Austria
5
Fifth Coalition: Austria 1809:...Wagram...
Spain
4
Peninsular War: Spain 1808...Vitoria...
Portugal
3
Peninsular War: Portugal 1807...Torres Vedras...
Prussia
2
Fourth Coalition: Prussia 1806:...Jena...
Germany
1
Third Coalition: Germany 1803:...Austerlitz...
Key:
1
Third Coalition: Germany 1803:...Austerlitz...
2
Fourth Coalition: Prussia 1806:...Jena...
3
Peninsular War: Portugal 1807...Torres Vedras...
4
Peninsular War: Spain 1808...Vitoria...
5
Fifth Coalition: Austria 1809:...Wagram...
6
French invasion of Russia 1812:...Moscow...
7
Sixth Coalition: Germany 1813:...Leipzig...
8
Sixth Coalition: France 1814:...Paris...
9
Hundred Days 1815:...Waterloo...

The War of the Third Coalition[note 1] (French: Guerre de la Troisième Coalition) was a European conflict lasting from 1805 to 1806 and was the first conflict of the Napoleonic Wars. During the war, France and its client states under Napoleon I opposed an alliance, the Third Coalition, which was made up of the United Kingdom, the Austrian Empire, the Russian Empire, Naples, Sicily, and Sweden. Prussia remained neutral during the war.

Britain had already been at war with France following the breakdown of the Peace of Amiens and remained the only country still at war with France after the Treaty of Pressburg. From 1803 to 1805, Britain stood under constant threat of a French invasion. The Royal Navy, however, secured mastery of the seas and decisively destroyed a Franco-Spanish fleet at the Battle of Trafalgar in October 1805.

The Third Coalition itself came to full fruition in 1804–05 as Napoleon's actions in Italy and Germany (notably the arrest and execution of the Duc d'Enghien) spurred Austria and Russia into joining Britain against France. The war would be determined on the continent, and the major land operations that sealed the swift French victory involved the Ulm Campaign, a large wheeling manoeuvre by the Grande Armée lasting from late August to mid-October 1805 that captured an entire Austrian army, and the decisive French victory over a combined Austro-Russian force under Alexander I of Russia at the Battle of Austerlitz in early December. Austerlitz effectively brought the Third Coalition to an end, although later there was a small side campaign against Naples, which also resulted in a decisive French victory at the Battle of Campo Tenese.

On 26 December 1805, Austria and France signed the Treaty of Pressburg, which took Austria out of both the war and the Coalition, while it reinforced the earlier treaties of Campo Formio and of Lunéville between the two powers. The treaty confirmed the Austrian cession of lands in Italy to France and in Germany to Napoleon's German allies, imposed an indemnity of 40 million francs on the defeated Habsburgs, and allowed the defeated Russian troops free passage, with their arms and equipment, through hostile territories and back to their home soil. Victory at Austerlitz also prompted Napoleon to create the Confederation of the Rhine, a collection of German client states that pledged themselves to raise an army of 63,000 men. As a direct consequence of those events, the Holy Roman Empire ceased to exist when, in 1806, Francis II abdicated the Imperial throne, becoming Francis I, Emperor of Austria. Those achievements, however, did not establish a lasting peace on the continent. Austerlitz had driven neither Russia nor Britain, whose fleet protected Sicily from a French invasion, to cease fighting. Meanwhile, Prussian worries about the growing French influence in Central Europe sparked the War of the Fourth Coalition in 1806.
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