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The end of Napoleon’s reign in France came at the cost of thousands of

lives far from home at Leipzig. French lives had been lost before in battle--why did this battle finally end Napoleon’s rule of France?
Several of Napoleon’s enemies combined their forces at Leipzig to defeat him.
Napoleon was seen by his troops as an unfit military leader after the loss at Russia.
The leaders of Napoleon’s army were fearful of yet another defeat, so they did not fight as fiercely.
His army was weakened by their defeat in Russia, and they were greatly outnumbered at Leipzig.

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

D

Step-by-step explanation:

Before the Battle at Leipzig, Napoleon had lost thousands of lives in Russia trying to capture that country. It had been a miserable loss and Napoleon had left what was left of his army to fend for themselves and make their own way home. Having lost most of his army and outnumbered three to one at Leipzig, the rule of Napoleon came to an end.

User Ukanth
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The correct answer is D his army was weakened by their defeat in Russia and they were greatly outnumbered at Leipzig
User Ivanmoskalev
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