The Grande Armée had shrunk further on…
December 1812 CE
According to the popular legend only about twenty-two thousand of Napoleon's men survived the Russian campaign.
However, some sources say that no more than three hundred and eighty thousand soldiers were killed.
The difference can be explained by up to one hundred thousand French prisoners in Russian hands (mentioned by Eugen Tarlé, and released in 1814) and more than eighty thousand (including all wing-armies, not only the rest of the "main army" under Napoleon's direct command) returning troops (mentioned by German military historians).
Most of the Prussian contingent survives thanks to the Convention of Tauroggen and almost the whole Austrian contingent under Schwarzenberg withdraws successfully.
The Russians will form the Russian-German Legion from other German prisoners and deserters.
Russian casualties in the few open battles are comparable to the French losses but civilian losses along the devastated campaign route are much higher than the military casualties.
In total, despite earlier estimates giving figures of several million dead, around one million were killed including civilians—fairly evenly split between the French and Russians.
Military losses amount to three hundred thousand French, about seventy two thousand Poles, fifty thousand Italians, eighty thousand Germans, sixty-one thousand from other nations.
As well as the loss of human life the French have also lost some two hundred thousand horses and over one thousand artillery pieces.
The losses of the Russian armies are difficult to assess.
The nineteenth-century historian Michael Bogdanovich assessed reinforcements of the Russian armies during the war using the Military Registry archives of the General Staff.
According to this the reinforcements totaled one hundred and thirty-four thousand men.
The main army at the time of capture of Vilnius in December has seventy thousand men, whereas its number at the start of the invasion had been about one hundred and fifty thousand.
Thus, total losses would come to two hundred and ten thousand men.
Of these about forty thousand return to duty.
Losses of the formations operating in secondary areas of operations as well as losses in militia units are about forty thousand.
Thus, he will come up with the number of two hundred and ten thousand men and militiamen.
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Poles (West Slavs)
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Austria, Archduchy of
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Baltic Germans
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Denmark-Norway, Kingdom of
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Russian Empire
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Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
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