The city of
Hamburg was one of the most powerful
fortresses east of the
Rhine. After being freed from Napoleonic rule by advancing
Cossacks and other following allied troops it was once more occupied by
Marshal Davout's French XIII Corps on 28 May 1813, at the height of the campaign for
Germany in the
Napoleonic Wars, or the
War of the Sixth Coalition from French rule and occupation. Ordered to hold the city at all costs, Davout launched a characteristically energetic campaign against a similar numbered Army of the North made up of
Prussian and allied troops under the command of
Count von Wallmoden-Gimborn, winning a number of minor engagements. Neither force was decidedly superior and the war ground to a halt and resulted in a rather stable front line between Lübeck and Lauenburg and further south along the Elbe river, even after the end of the cease-fire of the summer 1813. In October 1813 a French column's movement towards
Dannenberg resulted in the only major engagement in the North of Germany, the
Battle of the Göhrde. The defeated French troops retreated back to Hamburg.
Despite steadily shrinking manpower, food and ammunition supplies, Davout's forces displayed no signs of abandoning Hamburg. When French armies withdrew west after the lost
Battle of Leipzig at the end of the year, and the Allies deployed a large portion of
Bernadotte's Russo-Swedish army to watch the city during the 1814 campaign for
France. Davout was still in control of Hamburg when the
War of the......
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