There are various errors in this video, since some of the sources contained errors. Big thank you to Konrad Anderle for pointing them out: 1. The imperial Austrian Cavallerie-Geschütz-Batterien were not a mounted artillery (Horse Artillery), but a conventional artillery: The operating crew only mounted and rode the sausage for tactical movements during the battle. Otherwise it marched alongside the gun. The Cav. 6pounder was manned with six horses, the 7pounder Cav. howitzer with four horses. A part of the ammunition was carried by pack horses. 2. There were no fundamental differences in artillery tactics between the countries at the end of the Napoleonic Wars. Large Batteries were also faced by Napoleon at Leipzig, for example. The artillery was effective when it engaged the enemy's infantry at canister range. Outside these it usually made little more than noise. Battery fire was intended to enfilade the enemy. The batteries were therefore supposed to act from the flank. Moreover, an effect was only given when the fire of several guns could be concentrated, for example around the perimeter of a battery. Then 3 canister layers of six guns were sufficient to stop an advancing enemy to force him to withdraw. Enemy infantry tried to stay out of the canister shot range as long as possible or avoid it completely. All powers employed their field artillery offensively whenever possible. To this end, the gun was advanced. Thereby one wing advanced a certain distance while the other covered it. When the distance was reached, the other wing advanced under cover of the first. The fire was directed - if necessary - against enemy ordnance. The fire was concentrated on the enemy gun on one flank of the enemy battery. This was fired upon until it was useless; then the next enemy gun was targeted. The mobility of the artillery was essentially determined by its weight. Thus, 12-pounders could hardly be maneuvered during the battle. The aiming angle for howitzers was 15° at most. Elevation beyond this resulted in rapid destruction of the gun carriage. For this purpose, powder charges of different weights were also used, which allowed different ranges. The howitzer was used to fire on the enemy's towns and covered formations. 4. In French and Austrian artillery, the tactical formation of the battery was not introduced until 1803 and 1809, respectively. Until then, there were only line and reserve artillery. These batteries existed only for the duration of the campaign. Administratively, the french and Austrian artillerymen were divided into companies, battalions and regiments. Only in the Russian and later in the Prussian Artillery introduced the battery as a tactical and administrative formation.
@-theHFGshow- Жыл бұрын
Well a very good video i notice errors when i make videos all the time. However this video is so informative
@igennem668 Жыл бұрын
1:49 1:49
@abaddou14 жыл бұрын
So, in short: artillery creates opportunities for victory, infantry achieves victory, cavalry exploits victory.
@manda604 жыл бұрын
In a nutshell, yes. Very succinct.
@robspecht95504 жыл бұрын
*politicians exploit victory
@jackthestripper73684 жыл бұрын
@@robspecht9550 Well, not on the battlefield.
@jam85394 жыл бұрын
@@robspecht9550 politicians make victory impossible
@VersusARCH4 жыл бұрын
Cavalry also discovers potential opportunities for victories (scouting), informs on them (message riders) and also chases deserters.
@MarktheRude5 жыл бұрын
Here's a idea for a video. Logistics. How do people in the rear know where the hell the guys in the front have gone, or how do they actually get there?
@b.griffin3175 жыл бұрын
A lot of horse messangers and prior planning. Some good books on the subject include Feeding Mars by Martin van Creveld and The Art of War in the Western World by Archer Jones.
@Zajuts1495 жыл бұрын
@@b.griffin317 And you followed the main road. If units went off a paved road, you'd see it clearly by the trails they'd make. Also, "march towards the sound of the gunfire";)
@gso6194 жыл бұрын
MHV: Today ve'll be taking a look at logistics during the second vorld var. Wehraboos: Oh no.
@oliverludwig61484 жыл бұрын
@@b.griffin317 i have supplying war by creveld. Didn't know he has 2 books on the subject.
@amerigo884 жыл бұрын
@metziih As a former logistics officer, I have to point out you have it all backwards. In those days, I'm pretty sure there wasn't a lot of "pushing" of supplies to the front. The usual practice was for the logistics sites (caches of food, ammunition, gunpowder, horse fodder, water, clothing, spare horses, and an aid station nearby) to be placed near a road junction the line units had to be told to find. The line units would then "pull" their (re)supply up to where it was needed. I definitely want to check out the books mentioned by @b. griffin so I won't have to speculate so much.
@fhmaxim4 жыл бұрын
This remembered me of the incident when the Mythbusters fired a cannon into a "safe" hill, but the ball actually ricocheted up and away, flying hundreds of meters into a town until it stopped inside a random house.
@DogWalkerBill4 жыл бұрын
My son visited Gettysburg and brought me a book. Something like, "The Artillery of Gettysburg." (Which was improved over Napoleonic artillery. But not that much.) Two stories I remember: (1) The altitude adjustment was by a screw crank under the rear of the barrel. As the gun fired each shot, the screw vibrated & automatically cranked a little bit, increasing the altitude of the aim. In the heat of battle, gunners often forgot to check it. After the battle a number of guns were checked and it was found the gunners were almost certainly shooting over their targets. (2) There was a hole in the top of the gun, called the thumb hole. One gunner would wear a heavy leather thumb glove and stuff his thumb down the thumb hole while the barrel was being swabbed out. During battle the barrels got red hot and the thumb gloves burned up. During Gettysburg, the thumb gloves at one Union cannon got used up. One officer was mortally wounded and shoved his naked thumb down the barrel to allow his crew to fire one last shot before they were over run! His thumb was burned to the bone and he died from his wounds. He was awarded, posthumously. a medal for bravery above and beyond the call of duty.
@DisdainusMaximus Жыл бұрын
bullshit.
@CorePathway Жыл бұрын
I’m pretty sure I can whittle a stick the diameter of my thumb, slightly tapered.
@Michael-bn1oi Жыл бұрын
They were quite a bit improved. Better shells and rifling.
@dinahnicest65253 ай бұрын
@@CorePathway There must be a reason why that wasn't standard practice. If it could work, it would have been better than sensate thumbs. Probably not airtight enough to prevent ignition from leftover sparks.
@CorePathway3 ай бұрын
@@dinahnicest6525 I think it’s because you can’t drop your thumb. And because they always did it that way. I did a lot of pushups and got written up before truly accepting the maxim of: There is a right way to do things There is a wrong way to do things And there is the ARMY way to do things. So just fugging do what we tells ya.
@ost-mann28605 жыл бұрын
Image getting shot by a wurst gun "Here lies Jacque, killed by a sausage"
@adm0iii4 жыл бұрын
That's the worst pun.
@jonathanallard21284 жыл бұрын
@@adm0iii the wurst pun?
@adm0iii4 жыл бұрын
Puns are so much better when you have to explain them. Sigh.
@jonathanallard21284 жыл бұрын
@@adm0iii It's up to the joker to write them correctly in the first place.
@adm0iii4 жыл бұрын
Explanations are so much better when you have to explain them. Sigh.
@tiberiuskirk25934 жыл бұрын
While Napoleonic battles were known for their sharp, regal uniforms I can think of no type of wound more bloody and horrific as a solid ball of iron smashing its way through a column of human flesh. Brutal stuff.
@simonnachreiner83802 жыл бұрын
I imagine crushed raspberries
@laszlokiss4832 жыл бұрын
nah its the grapeshot for me
@fluffly36062 жыл бұрын
One can imagine so much worse that the concept of severity loses meaning and you can no longer rank them. For instance, the scene from the original All Quiet on the Western Front where... (trigger warning: extreme gore) ...An already wounded French soldier trying to pull himself up on some barbed wire gets disintegrated by a near-direct hit from an explosive shell, leaving only his severed hands still clinging to the wire, is based on a real account by a German veteran.
@laszlokiss4832 жыл бұрын
@@fluffly3606 ouch
@majungasaurusaaaa Жыл бұрын
Hmm, maybe TNT and fragmentation?
@Brennan2045 жыл бұрын
To cannon, All men are equal - Napoleon
@comunistubula44244 жыл бұрын
Not if you're in a trench....
@podemosurss83164 жыл бұрын
And that's the reason why the Soviets loved heavy artillery...
@neieduardodepaula45564 жыл бұрын
@@podemosurss8316 But the soviet heavy artillery of the WW2 sucked
@quisqueyanguy1204 жыл бұрын
@@neieduardodepaula4556 Not really, their massive salvos were very effective.
@neieduardodepaula45564 жыл бұрын
@@quisqueyanguy120 No, their massive salvos were very ineffective and in most cases totally useless
@Zajuts1495 жыл бұрын
As a man who likes precision , I cannot help but to point out to you that in the syntax of the age of Napoleon, the plural of "cannon" is "cannon".
@adm0iii4 жыл бұрын
But the language has changed since then... in America. American sources use "cannons", so Bernard is free to use either.
@brannake4 жыл бұрын
That's not syntax
@BeKindToBirds3 жыл бұрын
@@adm0iii America also uses Cannon as a plural.
@adm0iii3 жыл бұрын
@@BeKindToBirds In the US, "cannons" is far more frequent.
@BeKindToBirds3 жыл бұрын
@@adm0iii They are both used in different grammar contexts. When talking about how something is equipped cannons is used. (As it was during napoleon's time) When talking about a group of cannon, cannon is used. There are many contemporary sources where a ships "cannons" are referenced. They were used differently to speak of different kinds of groupings. Cannon is still used in its same context in america today but the context doesn't come up because of the way artillery itself evolved.
@FRDOMFGTHR4 жыл бұрын
“God fights on the side with the most artillery” Napoleon
@Brennan2044 жыл бұрын
Rad Derry those weren’t unarmed civilians, those were pro-aristocrats who were attempting to throw a counter revolt to restore the monarchy. Paris was literally in chaos and plus Napoleon was just an officer, not the commander, he had at most a company of fusiliers and half a squadron of horse chasseurs
@LeeRenthlei3 жыл бұрын
best* not most
@QWERTY-gp8fd3 жыл бұрын
@@LeeRenthlei then u get roflstomped by superior airforce cuz artillery lacks mobility.
@oledshwfgk30682 жыл бұрын
that's such a funny quote.
@bobbylasley26122 жыл бұрын
Gods on the Russians side then
@galgenvogel18715 жыл бұрын
Russia is the graveyard of military horses was a lovely sentence :D
@Archangelm1275 жыл бұрын
I can't help wondering if that extends to trucks in the age of motorization/mechanization.
@galgenvogel18715 жыл бұрын
If you mean during the second world war, there it was still many horses on the side of the axis
@enlighteneddespot93595 жыл бұрын
British lost 800,000 horses in the Boer War. In terms of troops engaged and length of conflict, that is brutal
@SonsOfLorgar5 жыл бұрын
@@Archangelm127 yes.
@SSN5155 жыл бұрын
They say the number and smell of the dead horses at Gettysburg stunned them more than the dead soldiers at the end.
5 жыл бұрын
Stormtrooper helmet for firing blind! CLEVER!
@sauronmordor74944 жыл бұрын
:)
@lamwen035 жыл бұрын
Regarding your assessment of the Queen Of Battle..."Americans in 1950 rediscovered something that since Hiroshima they had forgotten: you may fly over a land forever; you may bomb it, atomize it, pulverize it and wipe it clean of life-but if you desire to defend it, protect it and keep it for civilization, you must do this on the ground, the way the Roman legions did, by putting your young men in the mud. ” ― T.R. Fehrenbach
@brandoncampanaro75714 жыл бұрын
a truth that has been known since Caesar
@oldegrunt57354 жыл бұрын
@@brandoncampanaro7571 but one that all major military powers starting belittling once airpower became a major player and started ignoring post nuclear. That it was a wrong assumption was shoved into the faces of the US/Allied forces hard was in Korea
@brandoncampanaro75714 жыл бұрын
@@oldegrunt5735 I'm never saying that airpower isnt a crucial part of winning a war im just saying that you need boots on the ground to have any lasting effect
@lamwen034 жыл бұрын
@@brandoncampanaro7571 I read another version of his statement, but it ended "but you don't own it until you can stand a 17yr. old boy with a rifle on it".
@brandoncampanaro75714 жыл бұрын
@@lamwen03 that's an unfortunate truth about armys and wars, the young are the ones who fight them the old decide who won and everyone else suffers
@brunohytallo86262 жыл бұрын
The most incredible of this video is the fact i searched on YT for strategy for the game Napoleon: Total War and I come across a video with historical sources of the generals undertakings experienced at that time. Magnificent video, with a very nice historical depth.
@valdonchev72965 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this and other Napoleonic videos! I may have fallen in love with this era of warfare thanks to you, and will be making a school project about it.
@martinseguicotano73465 жыл бұрын
You should watch the videos of Epic History TV channel about the Napoleonic wars
@valdonchev72965 жыл бұрын
@@martinseguicotano7346 Thank you for the suggestion!
@cluckcluck64944 жыл бұрын
I bought a cannon yesterday, it was the WURST!
@SteveF19673 жыл бұрын
9:22 talks about guns firing blind, while showing a graphic of a Star Wars Storm Trooper. Excellent shade, sir, and very subtle!
@Account.for.Comment5 жыл бұрын
Great, I hope this is useful for Napoleon:Total War.
@JdeMonster5 жыл бұрын
NTW III mod in particular
@gareththompson27085 жыл бұрын
I have become rather fond of Scourge of War: Waterloo, and its expansions. In Napoleon: Total War you might command a small skirmish of around 2000, perhaps 2500 men (amounting to a large regiment, or perhaps a small brigade) and one or two dozen guns. In Scourge of War: Ligny (one of the Waterloo expansions) I had the awesome pleasure of commanding 90,000 Prussians and I'm not sure how many hundreds of guns across miles of battlefield (10:1 graphical scaling, so you might count 9,000 figures, although all 90,000 are accounted for in the battle mechanics). The battles are so large that it is, except for Quatre Bras, impossible to see the entire battlefield at once. Scourge of War also has correct tables of organization, with regiments subordinated to brigades, and battalions subordinated to regiments. There is a realistic fog of war, in which you cannot see anything that none of your troops can see. The effect of cannon and musket fire is also far more realistic. Melee combat is a weak point of Scourge of War, as it is with all wargames simulating this era. It does a good job of simulating the sorts of casualties that would be produced, and the rate at which they would be produced, when the units do engage in melee combat. What it gets wrong is that units should almost never actually engage in melee combat. Historically, whenever a bayonet charge is conducted (which would often be met by a countercharge) one side or the other would almost always break and flee before any bayonets actually crossed. Only on very rare occasions would the two formations actually meet, and even then the melee would only last a few seconds before one side or the other broke. For the most part the casualties would be stragglers. The effect of the bayonet is not as a casualty producing weapon, but to break the enemy's cohesion. Bayonets are very useful for driving the enemy back either to help shore up a cracking defensive line, or to seize key terrain. By breaking the enemy's cohesion you may also make them more vulnerable to other arms, such as cavalry. Anyway, that was a fairly long paragraph just to say that I am pretty disappointed that there are precisely zero games out there (that I am aware of) that accurately simulate the effect of bayonets. Another weak point of Scourge of War, again shared by most games, is that you have pretty precise and unlimited command and control of your troops. In this case HistWar: Napoleon is probably a far superior Napoleonic war simulator (although I haven't played it as much so I can't give a detailed review, I'm holding out for version 7 with 1:1 unit scaling). On the higher realism settings HistWar will simulate orders delay (the delay between you issuing the orders, and the unit for which the order is meant actually receiving a signal or runner and executing the order, if you are into more modern combat Command Ops also has an excellent orders delay system). HistWar will also simulate some fog of war over the dispositions of your own forces depending on where your commander is (again, this is on the higher realism settings, so you can easily turn it off). HistWar also has the merits of having far more battles available to play than Scourge of War does.
@republicempire4465 жыл бұрын
Account for Comment except nobody uses artillery in Multiplayer but artillery are used in NTW3 multiplayer.
@Account.for.Comment5 жыл бұрын
@@republicempire446that fine. I never play multiplayer anyway. Simply try to improve beyond beating easy difficulty.
@republicempire4465 жыл бұрын
Account for Comment that’s good. Trust me, vanilla MP is not worth it
@l4rsch5 жыл бұрын
Ofc the Austrian system is called sausage-system...
@ernstschmidt47255 жыл бұрын
and that system was about riding those sausages
@Altrantis5 жыл бұрын
I'm told Austrians call Wieners (Wiener means Viennese in German) Frankfurters. They blame Frankfurt for the atrocity against mankind that Wieners are. Was told this by an Austrian.
@lordyaromir64074 жыл бұрын
actually, the main Austrian system was the Liechtenstein one. I am not very sure, but I think the "Wurst" system was the Liechtenstein guns only equiped with the wurst seat
@ernstschmidt47254 жыл бұрын
@@lordyaromir6407 AFAIK the wurst guns were for the horse artillery but i dunno the exact relation between wurst seats and the liechtenstein artillery system
@runefjord84464 жыл бұрын
everything in german-speaking countries is called wurst, wanna talk to the head of government "wurst-minister" churches "wurst-hauses", things to put on bread? "wurst", things to eat for dinner "wurst mitt wurst" and so on...
@vanivanov95714 жыл бұрын
While grape and canister have less penetration, I think you could still expect several lines of men to be strongly affected by it. A musket shot can penetrate more than one man, so surely artillery can at least do that much?
@gwtpictgwtpict42144 жыл бұрын
Are you sure about that? A musket ball is a big slow moving piece of lead so I suspect they would generally stop in the person they hit, though if it was an arm or leg and no bone got in the way I could see them passing through and hitting someone else too. Suspect that with canister or grape the first line takes most of the hurt, with some damage to the second and possibly third line, whereas round shot could go a lot deeper into a formation. But hey, it's all guesswork, don't think a modern health and safety obsessed world would let us use black powder smooth bore muzzle loaders against a French column :-)
@armchairgeneralissimo4 жыл бұрын
@@gwtpictgwtpict4214 I'd say it depends heavily on the range the shot was fired at the poor souls in question, at 50 yards I see no reason why the shot wouldn't got right through a man if it missed their spine and come out with enough energy to wound the man behind.
@vanivanov95713 жыл бұрын
Someone tried to comment, but for some reason youtube blocked his comment. This is what I saw of it: "I think it's likely. US Civil War era cannister shot was capable of shredding entire columns with a single volley. Napoleonic era cannister, while not as powerful, would surely be capabl" I recall seeing some reports of musket shot penetrating two or more men. They certainly overpenetrate deer (never known a properly loaded ball to stop in one), so I have every expectation they did the same to humans at the time. I'd estimate a .45 70gr round to pierce up to about six bodies, personally.
@sleeperawake98185 жыл бұрын
Wow! I have been thinking about researching these 3 subjects as a part of my American Civil War interests. But you just covered it all in a manner that I understood and feed my need for sources. Brilliant
@peterfoghnielsen78314 жыл бұрын
Very interesting video, though I stumbled upon some minor inaccuracies regarding canister-shot. The can, in which the small balls are laying, tears apart right after leaving the barrel, and not after hitting the ground - though it keeps the balls closer together. The museum I work at did a livefire a few years back with canister, and the slowmo can be found here:kzbin.info/www/bejne/jHuahYKQmNmomKs As far as I remember, we had a spread of about 2 meters at 100 meters, and 4 meters at 200 meters with a 12-pounder.
@silverbladeTE4 жыл бұрын
yeah canister ALWAYS bursts on firing, often the charge breaks the containers bindings on firing but it still holds together until it leaves the barrel, it can't take that kind of shot, unless you specifically designed it to hold together...which would be tricky and expensive
@MalikCarr4 жыл бұрын
Call me impressed, that is some very tight and controlled expansion for old muzzle-loading artillery.
@DrumsTheWord5 жыл бұрын
Great Star Wars Stormtrooper reference :D I'm really enjoying your videos!
@igotnoname17614 жыл бұрын
People who played Total War Napoleon: The expert.
@Archangelm1275 жыл бұрын
IIRC siege warfare was more of an exact science during the Napoleonic era than at any other time in military history. A video about this--siege artillery, sapping, fortifications, etc--would be very interesting. :)
@alabaster60054 жыл бұрын
"Say hello to my little friend" Napoleon Bonaparte.
@Ulrich1113 жыл бұрын
More like (Ney) "Hello to my little friend." "Hello." ~Napoleon
@orthoff1234 жыл бұрын
Danke! Ein absolut klasse Video!
@simonparmar20514 жыл бұрын
The British cannon did not fire common shell as did howitzers. Instead they fired shrapnel, invented by a colonel Shrapnell. The common shell was a hollow round shot filled with gunpowder and relied upon the splinters from the casing to inflict damage. The shrapnel shell had musket balls and gunpowder mixed together. The musket balls did the damage.
@tonyduncan98524 жыл бұрын
Thanks, again, for your continued focus on all matters military.
@gracesprocket73403 жыл бұрын
The usage of shell: Bomb or common shell was used by Howitzer, Mortar and Carronades (which were *sometimes* seen on field carriages as part of the field artillery especially if a 'gun like' performance was wanted from a lighter than gun ordnance - Use in garrison and siege trains was more common though). Russian Edinorogs were early shell guns used both in naval and land service contexts. Hollow shot - Gun-Howitzer, Carronade and shell-guns - like shot, but lighter. Spherical case (invented by Mr Shrapnel) was an improved shell and improved canister round, which used a much smaller bursting charge and a filling of small shot to deliver a dense pattern of ball at ranges far in excess of the standard small case rounds, and longer than the effective ranges of large case or grape rounds. Smaller shot could be used, at longer ranges because they were efficiently carried by a large 'full bore, full weight' spherical case, and only started to lose energy like small arms shot once ejected by the bursting. They also produced a more even, denser pattern of fragments than the 'hit or miss' few large shards of the common shell. The downside was less destructive blast against material targets, and with high bursting a reduced ability to set fires. (essentially the same as a modern 'beehive' round, compared to the conventional case being canister). Carcase was also used, with a spherical case pierced with 3 to 5 holes - filled with inflammable composition and carrying this burning composition to the target.
@ansonang7810 Жыл бұрын
Napoleon is like math expert and also artillery man. This is his specialty
@emperorkraglint97923 жыл бұрын
Man, could you imagine Napolean with tech a hundred years later? I've always heard he was an artillery man and just knew well how to adopt the weapons role. Imagine putting him in a more modern setting
@FirstnameLastname-kn5sw2 жыл бұрын
Napoleon in a modern setting wouldn't be that interested in artillery as Napoleon in his own time wasn't that interested in bows and arrows
@majungasaurusaaaa Жыл бұрын
Or he'd just skip the military and go straight into politics. Seeing as using violence in a coup isn't the most effective means to get into power in a democratic country nowadays.
@emperorkraglint9792 Жыл бұрын
@majungasaurusaaaa you are right about that. The shift of focus is something to keep in mind. Coming back to this thought, it is amusing to think of other world leaders and what they would be like in other times.
@ansonang7810 Жыл бұрын
He'll loose from AI and computers he has to learn these first and go back to school stuff in school as what he knows outdated. Delays him 5-6yrs in knowledge, he also has to form army or run as politician and win another 4 yrs depends on election dates. Buy equipment and produce them , retrain army 1-2 yrs may be. He might dominate Europe fear Russian winter. He will surely use nukes name him Hitler in media.
@Noah-rc3ip Жыл бұрын
@@majungasaurusaaaa we shall see. I think our peaceful era will not last. The power imbalance is less in favor of establishment. The sons and daughters of previous leaders are inbred weirdos these days, and insurgents are engineers making digital weapons in garages.
@napoleoncorneliusscipio51414 жыл бұрын
After watching this, of the three military tactics videos you created. I feel like taking on all of Europe.
@jimboslicem12944 жыл бұрын
Great video. God can you imagine having to get so close in lines knowing the cannon will bear down on you with that grape, cannister shot. The fact that we fought like that is straight out of a nightmare.
@isaiahcampbell4884 жыл бұрын
It's kind of strang, if you look at the losses commanders were willing to accept before retreating from the field it was actually a very low percentage. To have two bodies of infantry at that time fighting each other is comparable to two professional boxers in a match today but neither one committing to anything more than light jabs, with many of those jabs missing. The whole purposes of that form of combat was unit preservation from a military doctrine standpoint. Sure you could inflict high damage to enemy units but you would loose most of yours as well so why bother. This is somewhat reflected in the stats he gave in the infantry combat video on the number of wounds treated from bayonets. I think it was down in the single digits. It was very much about breaking the enemy's morale. Sorry for the rant.
@armchairgeneralissimo4 жыл бұрын
Machineguns and accurate rifles with magazines eventually put an end to that nightmare and formed their own kind of nightmares.
@ModellingforAdvantage5 жыл бұрын
Nice to see some more Napoleonic content. Thanks.
@mikhailv67tv3 жыл бұрын
The detail to which Bernard goes to is brilliant. Notice how the pronunciation police give Bernard a free pass, cause which ever word his Austrian accent murders is fabulous to the ear.
@dzelman4444 жыл бұрын
Oh and organization... woof this was fun. Rothenberg touches on it, Kiley goes deeper on it. Companies were PURELY organizational in Napoleon's armies. Batteries with both semi-permanent tactical units and very temporary tactical groupings. So you might have a battery of guns from 3 or 4 companies brigaded together into a battery (like the 100 gun monster at Wagram) under a general. This was also rough no artillery officers. A company had 2 captains, a battery tended to have just 1, the other would be in charge of trains or seconded to staff. No majors, 1 colonel for the regiment, but he would normally be way back at the school doing admin. And other than Drouot, Marmont, and Napoleon himself, very few generals came from the artillery as there were lots of captains and not much else.
@haroldhenderson28244 жыл бұрын
Foot soldiers are "cannon fodder". Cannon and cavalry may neutralize an area, but occupying it requires boots.
@Juntasification4 жыл бұрын
Well infantry is there, just to give us artillery men time to zero-in and destroy the enemy. I'm sorry. That´s just the way it is. Both are needed, but I´m safer. Atleast until airstrikes and counter-artillery fire :)
@RodolfoGaming2 жыл бұрын
There's a balance but every branch of the military needed another to cover the other one. Artillery protect infantry, infantry protects cavalry, cavalry protects artillery. So essentially the more casualties the less you could protect each other especially is a particular branch took more casualties proportionately
@HeronPoint2021 Жыл бұрын
My mare's pedigree went back to 1743 and the founding of the Prussian Stud farm by Franz Wilhelm. She and the other prussian horses were expected to be good rides, jumpers, but also pull wagons and plow during peacetime. Her gaskins were the best I'd every seen. She had studs in her pedigree that were both Olympic jumpers AND Olympic dressage competitors. Her hooves were also very, very good: carved like butter. Horses also had to be what we call "bomb proof" and not jittered by cannons going off!! A complete package. her pedigree is longer than most people's.
@CanadisX5 жыл бұрын
-50% Fat. God, you had me at this point already xD
@adm0iii4 жыл бұрын
Also, organic artillery is actually a thing. Non-GMO artillery is probably coming soon.
@frontenac5083 Жыл бұрын
*3:13** Angle of 20 to 40 degreeS (plural!)*
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Жыл бұрын
Bussi auf Bauchi
@matthewriley4935 Жыл бұрын
One of my favourite quotes from Friederich der Große: Artillery adds dignity to what would otherwise be an ugly brawl.
@fortusvictus8297 Жыл бұрын
It is interesting how comparatively minor changes in technology and training changed tactics. We could call the American Civil War an Napoleonic era war, however, counter battery fire was most certainly a thing and decisive in several large engagements. Partly due to increased number of rifled guns but mainly due to increased detail of firing tables and crew training. By late war the ammunition was so advanced (impact fuses and such) that the total numbers of guns brought along with field armies was reduced to ease supply lines. (early in the war a ratio of 3 guns per 1k infantry was doctrine, by the end of the war that was down to about 1.5 guns)
@leoniscsem Жыл бұрын
Hahaha, that skull jack-in-the-box at minute 05:00 is hilarious!
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Жыл бұрын
Thanks 😊
@HeroHoundoom4 жыл бұрын
"To cannon all men are equal." -Napoleon I Bonaparte.
@stevenkenny12005 жыл бұрын
Your research and attention to detail is excellent
@LOLERXP3 жыл бұрын
Your videos are amazing
@derekwhite88444 жыл бұрын
That was a good vid bro excellent work. I love the napolean wars
@kellybreen55264 жыл бұрын
You should mention aiming posts which are still used today. By aiming off the posts which are situated behind the guns at 50 and 100 yards smoke is less of a factor. This also allows accurate firing from a reversed slope. The crew is given range and direction. They spin the sight then move the trails till the sight lines up with the posts. This way they can aim at the target without actually having to see the target. Howitzers intentionally have lower velocity projectiles to enhance airburst and also to drop shells over walls, into trenches or to hit rear areas. Don't be afraid of imperial measurements. It's funny how you spec out the 6 pounder in metric.
@davidclark7758 Жыл бұрын
Spin the sight? please explain. Are you trying to explain indirect fires as well? Before correcting someone on imperial measurements make sure you understand gunnery, This youtuber did bloody well @MilitaryHistoryVisualized
@kellybreen5526 Жыл бұрын
@@davidclark7758 I was a Bombardier with 11RCA for 9 years. Battleschool 2RCHA Petawawa class of 93. I have a basic working knowledge of howitzers, and know which end is the more dangerous. I wasn’t criticising. I was trying to add to his knowledge. Which is why I watched liked and subscribed to his channel. To explain what I mean by spinning the sight, the sight is independent of the barrel. How aiming posts work is you have two posts run out to a certain distance. We ran out about 50 running paces and 100 running paces. We then moved the closer of the two so that the gun commander could only see one post. The sight was then turned and aimed at the post. This is zeroing. Now the gun can be turned to an angle accurately. The compass is broken down to 4800 mils. So for example if the order comes down that there is a target X yards to the right and a range of Y yards forward the calculation can be made that the gun has to be turned a certain number of miles to the right. The sight is adjusted that many mils then the barrel is traversed until the sight is pointing at the aiming post. This revolutionised gunnery. It allowed hidden guns to fire accurately from the reverse slopes of hills which allowed the guns to provide firepower to the battlefield in relative safety. Also it is appropriate to describe guns as the manufacturer intended. So a 25 pounder is NOT an 87 mm or even a 3.7” gun. A 75mm is NOT a 2.96” and a 4” is NOT a 102 mm. Those may be the correct conversions but the guns should be called by their correct names. So says St. Barbara. If you don’t know who she is look it up.
@davidclark7758 Жыл бұрын
@@kellybreen5526 Bomb you made many assumptions. But think your sight may be beyond this period of time. UBIQUE
@kellybreen5526 Жыл бұрын
@@davidclark7758 Nope Aiming posts and indirect fire were developed during the Seven Years War. Perhaps perfected in the Great War, but since the battlefield became digitised in the early 2000’s I have more in common with a 1916 Tommy Adkins than a warrior of today. I am an an anachronistic curmudgeon but at least have the sense to know it. A quick check reveals that indirect fire goes back to archery (of course!) but the first documentation goes back to Burgundians using firing tabes in the 16th century and at that time it was described as “normal practise”. So it is even older than I thought. In class they said the frogs invented the use of aiming posts in the mid 1700’s. Those were the words of the instructor so don’t shit on me for being accurate. We were learning to fight and didn’t give a crap about political correctness.
@davidclark7758 Жыл бұрын
@@kellybreen5526 The correction was on the sighting system for the time period and the drill not the indirect role. Which gun in that Era had a sight that was rotatable Also if your instructor taught you 4800Mils for azimuth then explain?
@Ralphieboy4 жыл бұрын
"One issue was gun depression." - just sprinkle some Prozac in with the gunpowder and blow your troubles away!
@PatBatemanAtDorsia4 жыл бұрын
Another idea for a video: Military organization/administrative/supply/logistics work - how is everything streamlined so orders are delivered, supply moved, etc. All the behind the scenes work before the battle or war starts. I.E. planning.
@isaiahcampbell4884 жыл бұрын
This would be very neat from different standpoints. One I would like to see would be an evolution of what we think of as supply chains. Another that would be neat would be how to supply different things like full divions in Europe as well as things like expeditions that took place hundreds of miles away from "civilization" in things like the early American west or the colonization of Africa.
@TumbleweedMK4 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making these!
@DartXL Жыл бұрын
The French were very fond of ricochet firing in WWI as well. Shells fired with maximum charge on a low trajectory and bouncing off the ground with a delayed fuse would explode right over the target or over a trench, and in this way the 75mm French cannon did considerable damage even to entrenched enemy troops. This was called an "axe blow", and the melinite explosives left traces in the form of charred heads. For some reason, few people bring this up when berating French artillery as weak compared to German artillery. But I found mention of this fact in a book by Colonel Ignatiev, who was the Russian attaché to the French army.
@metalmadsen4 жыл бұрын
This was amazing! Thank you.
@HistoryGameV5 жыл бұрын
Love the blindfiring icon.^^
@MrDirigible5 жыл бұрын
Only Storm troopers are that precise...
@CanadisX5 жыл бұрын
@@MrDirigible yeah but "[one] can't see a bloody thing in these" ;)
@Rubbseh4 жыл бұрын
I love the Pictogram to represent "Firing blind" - a Stormtrooper. Genius. Very good video!
@ClamTheClammy5 жыл бұрын
When you said guns have depression, I felt that. If they need someone to talk to just refer them to me.
@kerriwilson77324 жыл бұрын
Jolo Tuzon If they need someone to talk to, just point them my way?
@adm0iii4 жыл бұрын
Depression makes people aim low.
@davidk62695 жыл бұрын
Please address Napoleonic artillery tactics for dealing with an enemy sheltering behind a reverse-slope on wet/muddy ground.
@bugfighter59495 жыл бұрын
Too soon
@olanordmann27435 жыл бұрын
Howitzer, mortar or rockets I suppose. Nice reference though.
@gwtpictgwtpict42144 жыл бұрын
Sir Arthur Wellesley laughs quietly to himself. Lie down lads.
@TheManofthecross4 жыл бұрын
GWTPict GWTPict *then carcass and quick lime shoot is used* nope try again you fools get smoked out of there with those shells
@gwtpictgwtpict42144 жыл бұрын
@@TheManofthecross You're lobbing rounds over a ridge line that you can't see past. Not saying that you won't do some damage, but good luck with being much more than an irritant.
@EokaBeamer6911 ай бұрын
I love this channel.
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized11 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@dougsundseth6904 Жыл бұрын
In addition to the issue of barrel depression, another reason to avoid some prominences was that with altitude you get less ricochet. The balls tend to bury on first contact with the ground unless the shot trajectory is quite close to being parallel with the ground.
@machfiver7532 жыл бұрын
I love your icons. Especially the jack in the box lol
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@simonschneider5913 Жыл бұрын
that line about the graveyard of military horses is just so funny!
@rickholder7799 Жыл бұрын
Great videos! Thank you for all your hard work
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Жыл бұрын
Glad you like them!
@mitutoyo342 жыл бұрын
Wow you have done an extensive research and presentation . thank you for sharing!
@The_Viscount5 жыл бұрын
If you make it back to the USA, see about visiting Historic Fort Snelling in Minnesota. It's an 1819 fortification that's been restored to close to the original configuration. We talk about life at the time, and fire demonstrations for the napoleonic era USAA canons and muskets.
@Irrenhaus12345 жыл бұрын
"Spreads the load immediately" you and me both mr non canister shot, you and me both
@BeKindToBirds3 жыл бұрын
Napoleon's tactics became the foundation of all modern artillery. Such that the us army officer ringgold was merely doing what napoleon already had done with mobility, he merely formalized it into the US artillery doctrine.
@erikgranqvist36804 жыл бұрын
The lenght of a battle would effect the number of shots with the guns rather much. You could not pound to your hearts connent with a muzzle loaded gun without keeping pace to avoid overheating. If the guns went too hot, it could set off the gun powder while loading the gun, wish would be very bad. Overheating a gun would also increase wear - excessive wear due to hot barrels are a thing even today. Basically, they could pound away for a number of shots. But after a while, the guns would need to take a break to allow them to cool down a bit.
@kellybreen55264 жыл бұрын
Generally you see a water bucket hanging on the gun. The gun was swabbed out and this cooled it. Black powder is much colder than today's propellants and black powder of 200 years ago is colder than what is being passed off as black powder today. The time it took to load the gun allowed for a lot of cooling to occur. It was a multi step process. Fire, swab, scale out the barrel to remove any debris from the charge bag, swab (again), add the charge bag, add the wadding, load the projectile, penetrate the charge through the touch hole, prime, and (finally) fire.
@danielkohli15424 жыл бұрын
The gun tubes of that time have enough material in them to make over heating a none issue, even with the sun shining on it during the action.
@erikgranqvist36804 жыл бұрын
@@danielkohli1542 you could be right. All I know is that in a history book I have about one of the war between Sweden and Denmark, overheating was said to be an issue. And I know for a fact that heating up barrels can be an issue on some modern guns. I do not have actual first hand experience of antique guns.
@danielkohli15424 жыл бұрын
Just as a warning, I have very limited (as in American civil war reenacting) experience with the type of artillery mentioned in the video, and none with modern artillery and metallurgy With the reasons listed above, I suggest take my information with a grain of salt.
@nocomment32944 жыл бұрын
A history teacher told us the use of artillery during a day of battle did not only cause large amounts of smoke but could also cause windy / stormy micro-climate under the right conditions. That is unclear how these windy weather conditions came to be but was something that occurred quiet frequently in prolonged battles entered around artillery units, creating more difficult combat conditions as the battle went on. Wondered if you read something about it or if it is an outdated theory.
@isaiahcampbell4884 жыл бұрын
You have given me something to look up. Thanks!
@JaM-R2TR44 жыл бұрын
Firing blind = Stormtrooper :D i died there, well played!
@sapperjaeger3 жыл бұрын
Faszinierend... einiges Neues gelernt!
@richardcharay77883 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, very informative. Thanks!
@johnminehan11484 жыл бұрын
Commander's intent for fire support in strongly effected by rounds available, as Porter Alexander discovered at Gettysburg, some decades after this..
@VRichardsn4 жыл бұрын
9:30 I am betting this from the battle of Friedland. The French artillery executed an interesting fire and manouver attack, by firing and moving their guns in succession, ever closer to the Russian lines. Quite a display.
@marschallblucher61974 жыл бұрын
Wasn't their a sort of rocket artillery? Or was that used after the war? I've seen it in Paintings and games but was it really a thing?
@reym_82294 жыл бұрын
Google "congreve rocket", from what I have quickly read about it it was: -A british invention made in 1804 (inspired from similar weapons in india). -Mainly used in the navy but still in small number and even less in the ground army, it was deployed for sieges. -Was rarely truly effective (which is why the ground army didn't bother with it). -Mainly saw action in the peninsula war (1810) and the war of 1812.
@dimesonhiseyes91344 жыл бұрын
Just for reference. The black bulls eye on a modern 1000 yard rifle Target is 6' in diameter. The scoring section is much smaller but that black bulls eye is that big just so that the shooter can actually see the target. Shooting at 1000 is really kinda crazy. If you can shoot 2,3,4 inches at 100yards your shit will be 20, 30, 40 inches off at 1000 in perfect conditions and does not account for things such as rotation of the earth, elevation change, transition from super Sonic to sub Sonic velocity and the destabilizing effect that has.
@gwtpictgwtpict42144 жыл бұрын
We're discussing Napoleonic war black powder weapons here. Supersonic munitions just aren't happening.
@robkunkel8833 Жыл бұрын
Horses must have been an incredible issue. Imagine all the animals needed to fight any battle!
@podemosurss83164 жыл бұрын
9:08 The Spanish artillery manual was similar on this, but more on terms of "visual range" and "estimated range and position".
@glebovskimalcovich2075 жыл бұрын
There was also another type of artillery, Unicorns. That was basicly universal gun wich could fire all types of ammunition cannonball, shells, canister e.t.c.
@ernstschmidt47255 жыл бұрын
i thought those guns were russian sekrit dokumintz
@glebovskimalcovich2075 жыл бұрын
@@ernstschmidt4725 I dont know did some one use it except russians, but it was very effective and inovative gun for its time.
@wezab3 жыл бұрын
As per usual a very good and informative presentation. However there is one point you did not mention with regards to weight of shot used by the various national units. That is, of course, during the Napoleonic wars only the French used the metric system as demonstrated by the weight divisions given to the guns. However, what people might not realise is the fact that each nation had a different weight for a designated weight class. So a six pound shot did not mean that it was the same weight for Spanish, British, Austrian, Prussian or Russian artillery. According to the table I have in my Osprey book, the British 6lb ball was the lightest while the Russian was the heaviest. This means that the artillery pieces themselves would have to vary in weight in order that the barrels firing the shot could deal with the projectile charge, shot weight and compression developed to propel the ball. All of this impacted on movement of the pieces of course. Also, as you explained, in many cases it only took four men to fire a gun. However the extra bodies were needed to move the gun. Especially in Europe where the ground was more than likely soft from rain or prevailing weather conditions. Even in static firing positions, troops would be required to reposition the guns after each shot due to recoil. I thought you might have mentioned the tactics used by various forces to cope with artillery fire. For example, Wellington had developed an all round strategy to deal with the French before even the first battle he had with them. For the infantry this meant using the reverse slopes of a hill to protect his troops from French shot. This tactic applied to British allies such as the Portuguese and meant the French gunnery was ineffective. What I do not know is how the French or other nations dealt with this issue. Though I would note at Waterloo the Belgian infantry was deployed on the forward slope of the valley and were badly mauled by the Grand Battery to the point where they broke within the first half hour. And who could blame them. The Osprey Men At Arms book I used for my gaming also disputes the use of draught horses for horse artillery. The British system used riders and large Arabian's in the train to keep up with the cavalry. Though I do think seeing something like Clydesdales in full gallop would have been spectacular though. This point is supported by the animals used by the horse artillery units today. In the British army, the display teams still used horses to tow and set up guns for military parades today and they are definitely not draught horses.
@kumardias93484 жыл бұрын
Really well researched video
@conlaiarla4 жыл бұрын
Is this a ghost channel for Herr Gaston Glock ? Such precise information.
@michaeldenesyk3195 Жыл бұрын
The Russian Licorne was a gun/howitzer that could fire shell and solid shot. They were very effective
@19Koty964 жыл бұрын
Note, Howitzers _started off_ as open-field weapons, in 1400s. Then moved to sieges. Then back to field. Then to indirect, long-distance support.
@jakeromm89434 жыл бұрын
Hey mhv that was a great pun you used with your icon to denote the cannon blind fireing with a stormtrooper helmet hilarious
@SNOUPS44 жыл бұрын
12:20 "grandes batteries" mit einem S am Ende von "grandes" (Plural)*
@malafunkshun8086 Жыл бұрын
This one’s also very useful for understanding American Civil War artillery tactics (even with the technological changes happening during that War). Aloha 😊🤙🏼👏🏼
@matheusimon73163 жыл бұрын
I really think this channel could make more videos like this, topics besides WWII
@MilitaryHistoryVisualized3 жыл бұрын
they take longer and when it comes to WW2 I produce in some cases stuff that is actually "new research" not just a "rehashing" existing literature.
@philRminiatures4 жыл бұрын
Informative and very nicely done...Congrats from France!👍
@veronicalogotheti11627 ай бұрын
Thank you
@faramund98652 жыл бұрын
Funny how American Civil War was still Napoleonic tactics. Almost everything you mentioned applies there. The 6-8 pieces per battery, the round types, the smoke, the horses and so forth.
@maciejniedzielski74965 жыл бұрын
Le Soleil d'Austerlitz...
@davidr10373 жыл бұрын
Loved it👍👍👍
@JonatasMonte4 жыл бұрын
You place them in streets and wait for the infantry line to come it. -Napoleon Total War.
@FayazAhmad-yl6spFZ3 жыл бұрын
Informative video thanks.
@Skycommando5 жыл бұрын
Lovely video, bud
@andrewcarter7503 Жыл бұрын
Interesting video, thanks. Such a lot of thought and ingenuity went into killing fellow man. I sae a video about HMS Victory. Apparently one broadside from HMS Victory fired more weight of shot than all the cannons Wellington had at his disposal at Waterloo. Must have been a hell of a thing to be on the receiving end of that.
@domsanchez148 Жыл бұрын
That is complete nonsense. One broadside would be the equivalent to about 50 rounds. Wellington had 3 times that many guns at Waterloo.
@derpityherpdd Жыл бұрын
The guns at waterloo were pea shooters compared to the heavy guns on a first rate man of war@@domsanchez148
@christopherwebber3804 Жыл бұрын
Very little mention of combined arms artillery tactics, i.e. the cavalry would force the infantry into square, then the squares would be pounded by artillery. The square was a good defensive formation but not very mobile and a good target. It would seem that artillery did more damage to French columns than to infantry in line, so I suppose the French opponents had relatively ineffective cannon fire.
@christopherwebber3804 Жыл бұрын
I had always thought that Hollywood depictions of Napoleonic battles were fantasy because they show lots of explosions, and no cannon balls. This seems to say that a lot of explosions were possible.
@darthcalanil53335 жыл бұрын
Wait... The Wurst 🌭 seat?! Is it Bratwurst or Currywurst? 🤣 Is it served with Beer? Are we still talking about France? 😅
@im80155 жыл бұрын
That system was the wurst system ever... :-)
@davidbrennan6604 жыл бұрын
Currywurst has its own strong Artillery/chemical warfare capability.