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A new struggle for liberation opened three years later with the defeat of Napoleon's grande armée in Russia. As the tsarist armies began to cross their western frontiers in December 1812, the crucial question became what reception they would find among the rulers and the inhabitants of central Europe. The first state to cut its ties to Paris was Prussia. It was not the king, however, but one of his generals, Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg, who decided on his own initiative to cooperate with the Russians. Only hesitatingly and fearfully did Frederick William III then agree in February 1813 to a war against France, although public opinion in his kingdom greeted the outbreak of the conflict with enthusiasm. The other rulers of central Europe refused initially to follow the Prussian example. The members of the Confederation of the Rhine were still convinced of Napoleon's invincibility, while Austria preferred to see the combatants exhaust each other to the point at which it could play the role of mediator and arbiter. The foreign minister in Vienna, Clemens Lothar von Metternich, was afraid that the hegemony of France in central Europe might be replaced by that of Russia. He tried, therefore, to pursue a strategy of armed neutrality, hoping that he could persuade the opposing sides to accept a compromise by which an equilibrium would be maintained between Alexander I and Napoleon. This plan failed because of the obstinacy of the latter, who feared that concessions in foreign affairs would weaken his control over internal politics in France. The upshot was that in August 1813 Austria entered the conflict on the side of Russia and Prussia, and the balance of military power shifted in favour of the anti-French coalition. The faith of the secondary states in Napoleon's star began to weaken, and Bavaria became the first member to secede from the Confederation of the Rhine (October 8). One great allied victory would now suffice to bring all of Germany into the struggle against France.
That victory came on Oct. 16-19, 1813, at the Battle of Leipzig.
After four days of bitter fighting, the French army was forced
to retreat, and its domination of central Europe was finally at
an end. Before the year was out, Napoleon had withdrawn across
the Rhine. Of all his conquests in Germany, only the left bank
was still under the effective control of Paris. The Confederation
of the Rhine promptly collapsed, as its members rushed to go over
to the winning side before it was too late. The Rhineland was
also reconquered early in 1814, after the allies had launched
their invasion of France. In the course of the spring the capture
of Paris, the restoration of the Bourbons, and the conclusion
of peace in the first Treaty of Paris (May 30) ended the war of
liberation except for the episode of the Hundred Days, when Napoleon
briefly returned to power and was ultimately and finally beaten
at Waterloo. The western frontier of central Europe was to remain
essentially the same as at the time of the initial outbreak of
hostilities more than 20 years before. New state boundaries within
Germany would still have to be determined, to be sure, and the
problem of a new political organization of the nation awaited
the victorious statesmen, but the period of foreign hegemony was
over at last. The rulers of central Europe, relying partly on
the forces of innovation, partly on those of tradition, had succeeded
in freeing themselves from alien domination. Now they had to decide
what use they would make of their freedom. Would they create a
new polity of unity and liberty, which many reformers demanded,
or would they reestablish the old order of absolutism and particularism,
which the conservatives advocated? As the statesmen began to gather
in Vienna in the fall of 1814 to restore peace to a continent
ravaged by two decades of war, they pondered the problem of devising
an enduring form of government for Germany.