Napoleon's lightning campaign has exposed the Austrian…
October 1805 CE
Mack had completely misread the French dispositions and scattered his forces; as the French defeated each unit separately, the surviving Austrians had withdrawn toward the Ulm fortifications.
Napoleon had arrived to take personal command of close to eighty thousand men.
He had surrounded Mack's entire army at Ulm by October 16, and three days later Mack surrenders with twenty-three thousand five hundred troops, eighteen generals, sixty-five cannons, and forty standards.
Some twenty thousand escape, ten thousand have been killed or wounded, and the rest made prisoner.
About five hundred French have been killed and one thousand wounded, a low number for such a decisive battle.
In less than fifteen days the Grande Armée has neutralized sixty thousand Austrians and thirty generals.
At the surrender (known as the Convention of Ulm), Mack offers his sword and presents himself to Napoleon as "the unfortunate General Mack".
The officers are released on the condition that they not serve against France until formally exchanged for French officers captured by the Austrians, an agreement to which they will hold.
Locations
People
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Austria, Archduchy of
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Bavaria, Wittelsbach Duchy of
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Portugal, Bragança Kingdom of
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Russian Empire
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Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
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Baden, Electorate and Margravate of
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Austrian Empire
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France, (first) Empire of
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Bavaria, Kingdom of
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