The Battle of Austerlitz (2 December 1805), also known as the Battle of the Three Emperors, was one of the most important military engagements of the Napoleonic Wars. The battle occurred near the town of Austerlitz in the Austrian Empire (now Slavkov u Brna in the Czech Republic). Around 158,000 troops were involved, of which around 24,000 were killed or wounded. The battle is often cited by military historians as one of Napoleon's tactical masterpieces….
Napoleon:
“There is a movement in engagements when the least manoeuvre is decisive and gives a victory; it is the one drop of water which makes the vessel run over.…”
Count Yorck von Wartenburg :
“Napoleon did not, after all, vanquish his enemies so much by the battles of Ulm and Jena, however disastrous these were, as by his incredible marches.”
Honoré de Balzac, Louis Lambert, 1832:
“When I read the story of the Battle of Austerlitz I saw every incident. The roar of the cannon, the cries of the fighting men rang in my ears and made my inmost self quiver.”
Alistair Horne, "How Far From Austerlitz?: Napoleon 1805-1815", 1996 :
"...If Austerlitz raised Napoleon to the pinnacle of his success, it also turned his head and filled it with the delusion that no force or combination of forces could now stop him conquering the world. On the Pratzen Heights were born the seeds of his ultimate destruction.
Summing up on the ‘dazzling glory’ of Austerlitz, (Adolphe) Thiers was to write a generation later:
A campaign of three months, instead of a war of several years, as it had first been feared, the Continent disarmed, the French Empire extended to limits which it ought never to have passed, a dazzling glory added to our arms, public and private credit miraculously restored, new prospects of peace and prosperity opened to the nation.… For calm and reflective minds, if any such were left in presence of these events, there was but one subject for fear – the inconstancy of Fortune, and what is still more to be dreaded, the weakness of the human mind, which sometimes bears adversity without quailing and rarely prosperity without committing great faults...."
Claudia Cardinale in "Austerlitz", 1960

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