A gruntβs-eye report from the battlefield in the spirit of _The Red Badge of Courage_ and _All Quiet_ _on the Western Frontβ_ the only known account by a common soldier of the campaigns of Napoleonβs Grand Army between 1806 and 1813. When eighteen-year-old German stonemason Jakob Walter was con
The Diary of a Napoleonic Foot Soldier
β Scribed by Walter, Jakob
- Book ID
- 107795439
- Publisher
- Doubleday
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 316 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780307817563
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A grunts-eye report from the battlefield in the spirit of The Red Badge of Courage and All Quiet on the Western Frontthe only known account by a common soldier of the campaigns of Napoleons Grand Army between 1806 and 1813.
When eighteen-year-old German stonemason Jakob Walter was conscripted into the Grand Army of Napoleon, he had no idea of the trials that lay ahead. The long, grueling marches in Prussia and Poland sacrificed countless men to Bonapartes grand designs. And the disastrous Russian campaign tested human endurance on an epic scale. Demoralized by defeat in a war few supported or understood, deprived of ammunition and leadership, driven past reason by starvation and bitter cold, men often turned on one another, killing fellow soldiers for bread or an able horse.
Though there are numerous surviving accounts of the Napoleonic Wars written by officers, Walters is the only known memoir by a draftee, and as such is a unique and fascinating documenta compelling chronicle of a young soldiers loss of innocence as well as an eloquent and moving portrait of the profound effects of war on the men who fight it.
Professor Marc Raeff has added an Introduction to the memoirs as well as six letters home from the Russian front, previously unpublished in English, from German conscripts who served concurrently with Walter. The volume is illustrated with engravings and maps, contemporary with the manuscript, from the Russian/Soviet and East European collections of the New York Public Library.
Honest, heartfelt, deeply personal yet objective, The Diary of a Napoleonic Foot Soldier is more than an informative and absorbing historical documentit is a timeless and unforgettable account of the horrors of war.
From Publishers Weekly
Of the half - million men who invaded Russia in Napoleon's army in June 1812, barely 25,000 survived. One who did was the author of this diary, Jakob Walter (1788-1864), a German private soldier from Westphalia. First conscripted in 1806, he was recalled to duty in 1809 and again in 1812. Walter's writing is unemotional and non-interpretive; he describes straightforwardly what he experienced. The account of the 1812 campaign--Napoleon's march on Moscow and inglorious retreat--takes up three-quarters of this short volume and constitutes its most interesting portion. In a chronicle of progressive demoralization, Walter observes how the instinct for self-preservation, under the pressure of Cossack attacks and treachery by erstwhile allies, leads to savagery among Napoleon's troops. The common-soldier perspective is rare among the mass of material left by veterans of the 1812 campaign and the book will be of interest to the general reader as well as the scholar. This edition includes six short letters home by other German soldiers in the Grand Army, all less interesting than Walter's diary. Raeff is professor of Russian studies at Columbia University. Illustrated.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
More memoir than diary, this slim volume contains the reminiscences of a young German conscript into the army of Napoleon in the campaigns of 1806, 1807, 1809, and 1812-13. As such, it represents one of the few historical documents that portray the life and death of common soldiers of the period. As the army fought its way back and forth across Eastern Europe, young Walter encountered Poles, Russians, Jews, and other groups, and his descriptions of his interactions with these "others" illuminates attitudes and prejudices of German troops of the period. The firsthand description of the retreat of a starving army from Moscow and the attendant breakdown of discipline and morale will interest military historians as well. Walter's book is reminiscent of Guy Sajer's World War II memoir The Forgotten Soldier ( LJ 12/15/70) and should be popular with a similar audience; it belongs in libraries with Napoleonic history or fiction collections.-- Stanley Planton, Ohio Univ.
Chillicothe Lib.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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