Waterloo campaign: Quatre Bras to Waterloo

Waterloo campaign: Quatre Bras to Waterloo
Part of The Waterloo campaign
Part of Belgium engraved by J. Kirkwood
A portion of Belgium with some places marked in colour to indicate the initial deployments of the armies just before the commencement of hostilities on 15 June 1815: red Anglo-allied, green Prussian, blue French
Date17 June 1815
Location
From Quatre Bras through Genappe to Waterloo in, Belgium
Result The Anglo-allied army retreats and the French advance
Belligerents
France France Seventh Coalition:
 United Kingdom
 Netherlands
Kingdom of Prussia Prussia
Hanover
 Nassau
Brunswick
Commanders and leaders
Napoleon, Marshal Ney Duke of Wellington and Earl of Uxbridge
Strength
French Army order of battle Anglo-allied army order of battle

After the fighting at Quatre Bras (16 June 1815) the two opposing commanders Marshal Ney and the Duke of Wellington initially held their ground while they obtained information about what had happened at the larger Battle of Ligny. They received intelligence that the Prussian army under the command of Prince Blücher had been defeated by the French Army of the North under the command of Napoleon Bonaparte.

Upon receiving this news Wellington organised the retreat of the Anglo-allied army to a place he had identified a year before as the best place in Belgium for him to be able to employ his reverse slope tactics when fighting a major battle: the escarpment close to the village of Waterloo.

On the 17th, aided by thunderstorms and torrential rain and before the arrival of Napoleon, Wellington's army successfully extricated itself from Quatre Bras and passed through the defile of Genappe. The infantry marched ahead and were screened by a large cavalry rearguard. The French harried Wellington's army, but were unable to inflict any substantial casualties before night fell and Wellington's men were ensconced in bivouacs on the plain of Mont-Saint-Jean.


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