The Campaign of 1812
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Beschrijving
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The Campaign of 1812 is Carl von Clausewitz's penetrating account of Napoleon's invasion of Russia, a catastrophe whose scale transformed European warfare and politics. Combining eyewitness memory, documentary analysis, and strategic reflection, the work moves beyond narrative chronicle to examine command decisions, logistics, morale, geography, and the corrosive effects of distance and climate. Its style is sober, compressed, and analytical, belonging to the tradition of military history while anticipating the theoretical rigor of On War. Clausewitz wrote with unusual authority: a Prussian officer shaped by the humiliations of 1806, he entered Russian service when Prussia was compelled into Napoleon's alliance. His experience during the campaign, coupled with his later role as a reforming military thinker, gave him both proximity and detachment. The book reflects a mind intent on understanding not merely what happened, but why vast power could collapse under the pressures of friction, uncertainty, and political miscalculation. This volume is recommended to readers of military history, Napoleonic studies, and political strategy. It rewards those seeking a concise yet profound interpretation of 1812, illuminating both the Russian campaign and Clausewitz's enduring vision of war as a human, political, and contingent enterprise.
The Campaign of 1812 is Carl von Clausewitz's penetrating account of Napoleon's invasion of Russia, a catastrophe whose scale transformed European warfare and politics. Combining eyewitness memory, documentary analysis, and strategic reflection, the work moves beyond narrative chronicle to examine command decisions, logistics, morale, geography, and the corrosive effects of distance and climate. Its style is sober, compressed, and analytical, belonging to the tradition of military history while anticipating the theoretical rigor of On War. Clausewitz wrote with unusual authority: a Prussian officer shaped by the humiliations of 1806, he entered Russian service when Prussia was compelled into Napoleon's alliance. His experience during the campaign, coupled with his later role as a reforming military thinker, gave him both proximity and detachment. The book reflects a mind intent on understanding not merely what happened, but why vast power could collapse under the pressures of friction, uncertainty, and political miscalculation. This volume is recommended to readers of military history, Napoleonic studies, and political strategy. It rewards those seeking a concise yet profound interpretation of 1812, illuminating both the Russian campaign and Clausewitz's enduring vision of war as a human, political, and contingent enterprise.
AmazonPagina's: 108, Paperback, Sharp Ink
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