7 things you (probably) didn’t know about the Napoleonic Wars

Blackleaf

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On the eve of the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo (18th June), Jem Duducu, author of The Napoleonic Wars in 100 Facts, reveals seven things you might not have known about the 25 years (or so) of conflict…

7 things you (probably) didn’t know about the Napoleonic Wars


On the eve of the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, Jem Duducu, author of The Napoleonic Wars in 100 Facts, reveals seven things you might not have known about the 25 years (or so) of conflict…

Tuesday 2nd June 2015
Jem Duducu
BBC History Magazine


The battle of Waterloo, 1815 (1816). (The Print Collector/Print Collector/Getty Images)


The Napoleonic Wars are often seen as a clash of European powers fighting for dominance over the European continent. In many ways they were, but the Napoleonic Wars are also an example of world war before 1914. Here are seven largely forgotten facts about the Napoleonic Wars…

1) The young Napoleon showed little promise




General Bonaparte at the Bridge of Arcole on 17 November 1796​

The Bonapartes (Buonapartes in Italian) originated in Italy, but Napoleon was born into a branch of the family that moved to Corsica [an island in the Mediterranean Sea belonging to France]. The year Napoleon was born - 1769 - saw the then independent Corsican Republic conquered by France. His parents were both of minor Corsican nobility and had married young. The couple had had another son called Napoleon four years before the more famous one, but the child died in infancy. Growing up in Corsica, Napoleon’s first language was Italian, not French. However, as his family was well off (by Corsican standards), he and his brother Joseph were sent to military academies in France.

Napoleon did not fit in particularly well. While he did learn French, he spoke it with an accent that betrayed his roots, and he was teased for sounding like a peasant. Furthermore, the other boys came from well-connected and more affluent families, and while they were good at dancing, Napoleon’s skills lay in gardening. It was not a promising start for a boy who, at various times, dreamed of becoming an officer in the French navy or an artillery instructor in the Ottoman Empire. How different history would have been had he taken one of those routes.

Aged 15, Napoleon was admitted to the elite École Militaire in Paris. This was a huge honour, which turned into a disaster when his father died of stomach cancer while Napoleon was in his first year. The young cadet was now expected to be the family’s chief source of income, while at the same time attending one of the most expensive schools in France. The situation forced him to complete the two-year course in just one, and while he came only 42nd in a class of 58, graduation meant he could become a commissioned officer just after his 16th birthday.

By 1791, as war was about to break out across Europe, Napoleon, still a second lieutenant stationed in a sleepy garrison town, went on leave to see his family in Corsica. This was about as unexceptional a start to a military career as can be imagined. No one could have predicted that within 10 years Napoleon would be the most feared military commander in Europe, and later would become one of the greatest generals in history.

2) The Royal Navy attacked a city



The Royal Navy attacking Copenhagen, 1801

France was courting Denmark and Norway in 1801, and, if they could be persuaded to join the fight, it looked like Russia might also join them. The possibility that Denmark might attack the British mainland could not be contemplated – something had to be done.

Step forward Admiral Parker, who was sent to carry out some very British gunboat diplomacy (ie turn up with some warships and force a settlement). It wasn’t necessarily meant to be a shooting war. When the Royal Navy arrived, the Danish fleet was moored against the gun batteries and naval defences of the city, so a frontal assault would have been impossible.

However, Parker’s subordinate was Vice Admiral Nelson, who was just the right mix of brilliant, brave and mad. He attacked the weaker southern end of the Danish defences, which resulted in a brutal artillery duel between land and sea. Parker lacked Nelson’s grit and, on seeing the devastating effect of close-quarter cannon fire, signalled the retreat. Nelson replied with a signal that acknowledged the order, but did nothing. Instead, he lifted his telescope to his blind eye and said to his flag-captain, Thomas Foley: “You know, Foley, I only have one eye. I have the right to be blind sometimes.”

With that, he continued to press his attack. In the heat of the battle, Nelson was seen to be carefully preparing a letter for the terms of Copenhagen’s surrender – amid the roar of cannons, the screams of men and the sound of splintering wood. This forced at least one of his officers to conclude that Nelson had lost his mind, but Nelson calmly explained that if he was seen to have the time and the conditions to prepare a decent letter, it would make the Danes think they weren’t causing as much damage as they were. It was remarkable logic, and an example of the ultimate cool head under fire.

The ruse worked, and Copenhagen surrendered. Remarkably, no Royal Navy ships were sunk; however, around 1,000–1,200 British crew were either killed or wounded. The Danes suffered 50 per cent more casualties and lost three ships, including their flagship, the Dannebrog, when it exploded.

After this short but bloody encounter, the two nations agreed an armistice. Following this, Parker sailed the fleet to Sweden in an attempt to persuade it to break away from the armed neutrality league that had been set up in the Baltic, but the Swedes declined his offer.

As a result of Parker’s wavering at Copenhagen, followed by his rather lacklustre display in Sweden, he was relieved of duty, and Nelson was promoted to vice-admiral.

3) All sides understood the ‘propaganda war’


The Napoleonic Wars were not the first to use the medium of print for propaganda purposes – The Times, for example, started in 1785 as The Daily Universal Register, was not above bias. But this particular era of conflict excelled at printing scurrilous opinions and defamatory cartoons. The leaders of the age knew the power of the press. As Napoleon once said: “Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets.”

However, it wasn’t just opinion pieces that influenced; imagery was often more powerful and lingered longer. Napoleon understood this, and became known for self-aggrandisement. The famous painting of him crossing the Alps (painted by the French artist Jacques-Louis David between 1801 and 1805), for example, shows a strongly idealised view of the real crossing that Napoleon and his army made across the Alps.


Napoleon Bonaparte crossing the Grand Saint-Bernard Pass, 20 May 1800. Found in the collection of the Musée de l'Histoire de France. (Photo by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images)

Napoleon also made sure his coronation as emperor was immortalised in oil paintings, and both he and his wife, Josephine, commissioned regal portraits of themselves in their splendid imperial robes. While Napoleon didn’t plan his own tomb, it continued the themes of power and supremacy – this time with Napoleon as an Adonis; a god among men. Brilliant general he assuredly was, but physically Napoleon was a little on the pudgy side, and had a crooked nose.

Napoleon had the twin advantages of being both a general and an absolute ruler; he was able to dictate and control the French press. Britain did not provide its monarchs and leaders with the same benefits; it had a freer press, and parliamentary democracy meant magazines could draw witheringly satirical cartoons of friend and foe alike.

For example, Napoleon’s nickname, ‘Boney’, was a British invention designed to conjure antipathy. At the time, it was thought that having some meat on your bones was a good thing; therefore, horrible old ‘Boney’ was a wraith to be feared or mocked. ‘Boney’ stood in stark contrast to the famous John Bull cartoon popularised first by British print makers. Bull was the national personification of England; a plump, down-to-earth patriot and beer lover.

Napoleon is often portrayed as compensating for his lack of stature with comically large hats and boots. But to set the record straight, Napoleon wasn’t short. This misunderstanding arose because French measurements were different to British ones, and we now know that Napoleon was a little taller than the average man of his time (although he would probably have looked diminutive standing next to someone like the Duke of Wellington).

The idea that Napoleon was short still exists to this day, all thanks to British propaganda from 200 years ago.

4) The best way to defeat Spain was to invade Argentina



'The Glorious Conquest of Buenos Ayres by the British Forces, 27th June 1806'


By 1806, Britain had been at war almost constantly for well over a decade. Its continental allies were continually being humbled by French armies, and Britain’s own contributions to the war thus far had been mainly naval victories. However, William Pitt and Sir Home Riggs Popham (the British royal naval commander) had been mulling over for a year or so ideas to weaken France’s main ally, Spain.

Spain’s South American empire was largely undefended. Trying to resist a British invasion there would take Spanish troops away from the resources that Napoleon could use in Europe. So, in short, it was decided (by Popham, without authorisation) that the best way to win a war against France in Europe was to invade Argentina in South America.

These operations were referred to as the British invasions of the Río de la Plata. Britain achieved early success when it captured Buenos Aires in 1806 – one of the key cities in the area – and held it for more than a month. When the invaders were ejected, it wasn’t thanks to the arrival of Spanish troops, but an uprising of the local population.

In 1807, the British responded by sending a larger invasion force – this time successfully storming Montevideo, where they stayed for a few months just to prove a point. Shortly afterwards, the British sent a third force back to Buenos Aires, but after heavy fighting with a combined force of Spanish soldiers standing side-by-side with the local militia, they were pushed back and suffered more than 50 per cent casualties.

The British lost this campaign. It was an ambitious plan that had assumed resistance could only be achieved by Spanish regular troops. In fact, it was the bravery of the locals that saved Río de la Plata from becoming part of the British empire.

The repercussions of this attempted invasion were unforeseen by everyone. The Spanish were, at first, overjoyed that their colonies had resisted so resolutely. However, those same colonies felt their actions had earned them the right to be considered the equal of their colonial masters in Spain.

The Spanish were, at this time, also having serious trouble with a French invasion of their own country, so could do little. By 1810, the South American colonies felt confident enough to carry out their own revolution (the May Revolution), which removed the Spanish Viceroy and set up a local government for the first time.

This led, in July 1816, to the declaration of independence for the United Provinces of South America, which later became known as Argentina. At the time, some of the ex-Spanish colonies were at war with each other but, overall, shrugging off the old colonial overlord was seen as beneficial.

The irony then was that while Britain lost the campaign, it achieved its goals of weakening Spain and distracting Spanish priorities and forces. Another irony is that today in Argentina, Britain’s actions of 1806–7 are seen as the trigger for independence, and are widely considered to have been a good thing.

5) Nobody expected the Spanish Inquisition to end


The story of the Spanish Inquisition [a tribunal established in 1478 by Catholic Monarchs Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile, intended to maintain Catholic orthodoxy in their kingdoms] is a long and complex one. However, the first area to come under its scrutiny was in 12th-century France. The more notorious version of these religious enquiries into potential heretics or apostates started in Spain in the late 15th century, and never really went away until the 19th century.

The French Revolution (which began in 1789) sparked real concerns in Spain. King Charles IV worried about how his people might regard the wealth and power not only of the monarchy, but also of the church. With this in mind, he took steps to clip the wings of the Spanish Inquisition. A number of the monolithic Catholic organisations were anathema to the enlightenment ideals of revolutionary France, and there were a number of times Napoleon (and others) dismantled century old ‘Holy Cows’ in the name of modernity.

When the French invaded Malta they had ended the Hospitallers; a religious organisation founded in the Middle Ages. Napoleon also abolished another ancient organisation, the Holy Roman Empire, the argument being that it too was a remnant of a theocratic past incompatible with a new Europe. So it should therefore come as little surprise that once the French invaded Spain, it was Joseph Bonaparte who tried to abolish the Spanish Inquisition once and for all.

However, Bonaparte was king of Spain from 1808 to 1813, which wasn't long enough to overthrow all the old ways. Consequently, by 1814 the inquisition was back in business. The last person to be killed by the Spanish Inquisition was a teacher in 1826, for suggesting so-called heretical ideas. The inquisition was officially abolished in 1834.


An Auto da Fe illustrated in Historia Inqisitionis, published 1692. Ritual of public penance of condemned heretics and apostates that took place under the directives of the Spanish Inquisition. (Photo by Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty Images)


6) The showdown at Waterloo was delayed due to rain




With the battles of Quatre Bras and Ligny fought on 16 June 1815, and all the main forces still in roughly the same area, it would have been safe to assume that the next clash would be on the 17th. However, there were surprises in store for everyone.

First of all, Marshall Ney, Napoleon’s right-hand man returned to Quatre Bras to fight the second round of this encounter… except that when he got there, he found that Wellington had largely moved on. The challenge then was to find the allied positions and engage. However, while a brief skirmish did take place between the British and French on the 17th, it quickly faded as the heavens opened and torrential rain lashed all the armies for hours.

A year earlier, Wellington had been in this very region, and had recognised that a ridge with a reverse slope would be the perfect defensive position for a battle, should one ever take place in the area. Now was the time, and he positioned his forces both along and behind the ridge, located near the small Belgian town of Waterloo.

Wellington spent the night at a Waterloo inn, impatiently waiting for communication from the Prussian leader Blücher. It finally came at around 2am. After that, Wellington was wide awake and spent the rest of the night consulting with his officers and sending out orders.

Blücher’s message had been delayed while he argued with his subordinate, Gneisenau, about how their forces could effectively work with Wellington’s. Blücher knew that a concentration of troops was the best bet to beat Napoleon; however, Gneisenau distrusted the British.

Meanwhile, Napoleon was unusually indecisive. Grouchy had not advanced as fast as he’d hoped, and in the middle of the night Napoleon was seen going for a walk. He sent ambiguous orders to Grouchy who, instead of coming to his aid, continued to advance towards Wavre. Napoleon bedded down in a farmhouse and, in the morning, had fine breakfast with his officers. When they expressed concerns about Wellington – the only major allied general Napoleon had yet to face on the battlefield – Napoleon admonished them by saying: “Just because you have all been beaten by Wellington, you think he's a good general. I tell you Wellington is a bad general; the English are bad troops, and this affair is nothing more than eating breakfast.”

On the morning of 18 June, Napoleon delayed the start of battle as he waited for the ground to harden after the downpour of the previous day. This, he believed, would make it easier to reposition his artillery, and would allow better conditions for cavalry movements. He gave Ney operational command and could be seen sitting in an armchair, miles from the front line. It seems that Napoleon had been, once again, struck down with illness, and his haemorrhoids made it impossible for him to remain in the saddle for the whole day.

7) Waterloo was not the final battle against France


Conflicts are messy. Therefore, it should come as no surprise that there is no neat ending to this period of warfare. Waterloo was undeniably the most pivotal battle of this campaign, and it shattered Napoleon’s authority – less than a week after the battle, Napoleon abdicated. But the fighting had been in Belgium, and the race was now on to get to the French capital to ensure an allied army was present to oversee the dismantling of Napoleonic power and the return of Louis XVIII.

The French, however, didn’t see things in quite the same way. They had around 65,000 troops in the area [25,000 others had been killed or wounded at Waterloo, and 9,000 captured], and French General Vandamme led part of that army out to meet the approaching Prussians at a small town to the south of Paris. Wellington’s forces were also on their way, so quite what Vandamme was hoping to achieve is uncertain. He might not have been able to win in the long run, but in the short term he’d be damned if he’d allow Blücher to march to the capital without a fight.

The allies had come in a southerly direction because Paris’s main defences had been constructed north of the Seine. The battle was a Prussian/French affair because Vandamme chose to attack Blücher, rather than Wellington. Battle commenced on 2 July 1815 around the town of Issy and the commanding heights of Meudon. That night a council in Paris discussed whether it was time to surrender; however, it was Davout, one of Napoleon’s most loyal and talented marshals, who dug in his heels and insisted that Vandamme should try to oust the Prussians from their position.

The next day the French attacked the Prussians (who by now had barricaded themselves in) with artillery fire. Then the French infantry advanced. After fierce fighting, the French were driven back, only to regroup and try to break the Prussians once more. This attempt also failed, and for the rest of the day the French alternated between pounding the Prussians with cannon fire and then surging forwards with an infantry assault.


Napoleon's retreat from the battle of Waterloo. Original Artwork after a painting by Steuben. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

But the French never threw everything they had into any assault. Vandamme, for reasons unknown, never fully committed to the battle, and because of this the Prussians were able to hold their positions (despite high casualties). Ultimately, the French were forced to retreat back to Paris.

The Prussians pursued Vandamme’s retreating men, and some forward units even clashed with the French rear guard in the Parisian suburbs. This was quickly followed by a unilateral French ceasefire, and by now, Wellington had linked up with Blücher. Allied negotiators met French representatives at the Palace of St Cloud, chosen as a relatively neutral location. It was here that Paris formally surrendered in a hastily created document now rather formally known as ‘The Convention of St Cloud’. Ironically, the palace was destroyed by German troops the next time the Prussians attacked Paris, in 1870.

In summary, the Napoleonic Wars are like most of history – a swirling mass of facts, with areas that simply don’t fit into an easy narrative. But they shaped the political and cultural landscapes from Egypt to Russia and from Argentina to Belgium. Today, their legacy reverberates throughout Europe and beyond.




The above facts are abridged versions taken from Jem Duducu’s The Napoleonic Wars in 100 Facts (Amberley Publishing, 2015). To find out more, click here.



7 surprising facts about the Napoleonic Wars on the eve of the 200th battle of Waterloo anniversary | History Extra
 
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Blackleaf

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The most predictable replies of this thread in the last week, I should say.

Not very accurate, but highly predictable.
 

Blackleaf

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This month, we celebrate the bicentenary of Waterloo, fought on June 18, 1815, the most famous military victory in Britain’s history.

Even in an age when schoolchildren learn little history beyond the two world wars, this battle retains a resonance unmatched by Crecy, Agincourt, Blenheim or indeed any other of our triumphs over the French, save Trafalgar.

So it should. Waterloo brought to an end the quarter-century of murderous European wars that had followed the 1789 French Revolution. It destroyed Bonaparte’s pretensions to rule the Continent. Thereafter, though Europe endured revolutions and local wars, a hundred years elapsed before there was another Continent-wide clash of nations.

Wellington’s triumph, allied to the coming of the Industrial Revolution, confirmed this country as the mightiest nation on Earth, ruling the greatest empire since the fall of Rome. The century that followed Waterloo was dominated by Britain.


WATERLOO: Why every Briton should savour this blood-soaked victory that France wants to pretend never happened, writes MAX HASTINGS



By Max Hastings, historian, journalist, author and editor
5 June 2015
Daily Mail
513
View comments

What true Englishman — or for that matter Scot, Irishman or Welshman —can fail to moisten an eye at the image?

On a damp June morning, across 3,000 yards of a ridge outside Brussels stood squares of red, each composed of the King’s foot soldiers and their allies, led by the greatest commander in our nation’s history, awaiting the onslaught of the armies of the French tyrant who had wrought more bloodshed and misery across Europe than any man in history before the coming of Hitler.

By nightfall, those indomitable men still held the ridge. The French were in headlong retreat, and Napoleon Bonaparte had met his nemesis. The cost was terrible, however: in some British squares heaped corpses had replaced living soldiers.


This month, we celebrate the bicentenary of Waterloo, fought on June 18, 1815, the most famous military victory in Britain’s history


Proportionately, the slaughter matched that on the first day of the Battle of the Somme a century later.

The ground between the armies was strewn with drums, colours, dead horses, shattered cannon and broken men.

The Duke of Wellington said without modesty, but justly: ‘It has been a damned nice thing — the nearest run thing you ever saw in your life ... By God! I don’t think it would have been done if I had not been there!’

This month, we celebrate the bicentenary of Waterloo, fought on June 18, 1815, the most famous military victory in Britain’s history. Tomorrow, the Daily Mail publishes a special edition describing the event.

Even in an age when schoolchildren learn little history beyond the two world wars, this battle retains a resonance unmatched by Crecy, Agincourt, Blenheim or indeed any other of our triumphs over the French, save Trafalgar.

So it should. Waterloo brought to an end the quarter-century of murderous European wars that had followed the 1789 French Revolution. It destroyed Bonaparte’s pretensions to rule the Continent. Thereafter, though Europe endured revolutions and local wars, a hundred years elapsed before there was another Continent-wide clash of nations.


Wellington’s triumph, allied to the coming of the Industrial Revolution, confirmed this country as the mightiest nation on Earth


Wellington’s triumph, allied to the coming of the Industrial Revolution, confirmed this country as the mightiest nation on Earth, ruling the greatest empire since the fall of Rome. The century that followed Waterloo was dominated by Britain.

Moreover, the incompetence with which British armies subsequently fought some small wars abroad — notably the Crimea in 1854 — served to emphasise the genius of the Iron Duke and the quality of his army which overcame the French.

Waterloo itself provides a story which everybody can understand, with a beginning, a middle and an end. It yielded a fabulous crop of anecdotage, because so many of those who took part kept diaries, wrote letters or recorded their experiences.

It began, of course, with a ball — that given by the Duchess of Richmond on 15 June which provided Byron with the inspiration for some of his most celebrated lines:

There was a sound of revelry by night
And Belgium’s Capital had gathered then
Her beauty and Her Chivalry — and bright
The lamps shone o’er fair women and brave men.


That glittering party at which so many of Wellington’s officers danced, some for the last time, enabled Thackeray’s Becky Sharp to flaunt her pink dress and green eyes in one of the most memorable scenes of his masterpiece Vanity Fair.

As the flower of the allied armies and the belles of Brussels mingled beneath the chandeliers in the richly decorated coachhouse where the Richmonds entertained, Wellington learned of the dramatic French thrust into Belgium, which threatened to divide the Prussian Army from the British.

‘Napoleon has humbugged me, by God!’, the allied commander-in-chief told the Duke of Richmond as he pored over a map in a study where the strains of the orchestra drifted through from the ballroom.

Richmond asked: ‘What do you intend doing?’ Wellington said: ‘I have ordered the army to concentrate at Quatre Bras [a strategic crossroads]; but we shall not stop him there, and if so I must fight him here.’

He passed his thumb across the area just south of Waterloo, then slipped away from the party by a side door. Two days later, some of his officers found themselves still wearing their dancing shoes as they faced the enemy on the ridge of Mont St Jean.

Waterloo was supremely Wellington’s battle. Through eight years in India, followed by seven in Spain and Portugal, the Iron Duke had shown himself Britain’s greatest captain of the age.

A master of logistics and iron disciplinarian, he was often accused of refusing to delegate, of directing every detail of his campaigns himself — and so he did.


The century that followed Waterloo in 1815 was dominated by Great Britain


He knew the mutton-headed stupidity of many of his subordinates. A British officer of the early 19th century could be relied upon to die without complaint holding a position, but it was usually fatal to allow him to think or act for himself. Wellington was disgusted one day in 1813 to see the Grenadier Guards supposedly arrayed for battle in a rain storm with their officers sheltering beneath umbrellas.

He dispatched a galloper to the Grenadiers to deliver a caustic message: ‘Lord Wellington does not approve of the use of umbrellas during the enemy’s firing, and will not allow “the gentlemen’s sons” to make themselves ridiculous in the eyes of the army’.

He later rebuked the regiment’s colonel: ‘The Guards may, when on duty at St James’s, carry umbrellas if they please; but in the field it is not only ridiculous but unmilitary.’

As for his men, Wellington was a cool, sardonic Anglo-Irish aristocrat who thought of them much as he did of his dogs and horses — useful brutes. ‘People talk of their enlisting from fine military feeling — all stuff — no such thing. Some of our men enlist from having got bastard children — some for minor offences — many more for drink; and it really is wonderful that we should have made them the fine fellows they are.’


The ground between the armies was strewn with drums, colours, dead horses, shattered cannon and broken men


By the time Wellington reached Waterloo he was 46, and bore in his train not only the veneration of the army for his victories in Spain, but a host of stories to adorn his legend.

His personal staff feared, but also adored him. His bravery under fire attracted little notice, because this was an age when whatever the aristocracy’s depravities, their courage was taken for granted. But his unshakeable calm in crises lay at the heart of his military success.

All through the day of Waterloo, where Wellington personally placed every regiment, he rode hither and thither amid a storm of shot and shell that killed scores of men around him.

‘Standfast’, he exhorted the men of one battered square. ‘We must not be beat — what will they say in England?’

A surprising number of civilian spectators hung about the battlefield, allegedly including a commercial traveller who approached Wellington in his usual plain grey coat without realising who he was.

‘Please sir, any orders for Todd & Morrison?’, asked the little man. No’, responded the Duke, who was running short of officers to carry his orders, ‘but will you do me a service? Go to that officer and tell him to refuse a flank [to pull back a few yards].’

Even if that yarn is apocryphal, it delightfully enhances the Wellington legend, as does another story which illustrates his punctilious respect for the era’s social conventions.

An artillery officer ran to the Duke, reporting that he could clearly see Bonaparte and would call down battery fire on him. Wellington said: ‘No! No! I’ll not have it. It is not the business of commanders to fire on each other.’


The Prussians wanted Bonaparte shot, a fate he certainly merited. Once again, it was Wellington who intervened to insist that the emperor should be spared


The emperor, by contrast, was a supreme cad: he left 10,000 francs in his will to a French soldier who tried to assassinate the Duke in the streets of Paris.

At Waterloo Bonaparte obliged Wellington by committing his own army to the attack, enabling British infantry to display their foremost skill, defending a desperate position hour after hour, even as French fire ploughed through their ranks.

Ensign William Leeke was holding the colours of the 52nd Foot amidst its square. He described how a cannon ball ravaged the ranks in front of him, leaving a soldier screaming in agony from his wounds.

An officer urged him to fortitude: ‘Oh, man, don’t make a noise.’ In Leeke’s words, the hapless victim ‘instantly recollected himself, and was quiet’. That generation was forged of blood and iron.

Every family represented at Waterloo afterwards cherished a private legend. A young officer named Henry Wyndham was among the Coldstreamers who forced shut the doors of Hougoumont, the chateau that formed a vital British strongpoint, in the face of a French storming party.

Years later his niece, who deplored the draughts in their family home at Petworth House in West Sussex, observed acidly that no Wyndham had ever closed a door since Hougoumont.

When, at evening on June 18, the French attacks at last ebbed in the face of British staunchness, dreadful losses and the arrival of General Blucher’s Prussians, Wellington’s army was too exhausted by its ordeal to undertake the pursuit, which fell to Blucher’s men.

The Prussians wanted Bonaparte shot, a fate he certainly merited. Once again, it was Wellington who intervened to insist that the emperor should be spared, and merely dispatched to languish on St Helena until his death in 1821.

At nightfall after Waterloo, the Duke lay down to sleep on the floor of his headquarters, because one of his officers was dying in his bed.

Major Henry Percy of the 14th Light Dragoons reached London with the news late on June 21. After calling at 10 Downing Street to deliver Wellington’s dispatch, he was sent to St James’s Square to inform the Prince Regent, who was attending a ball given by a certain Mrs Boehm.

She was the wife of a newly-rich merchant who had attained the summit of her social ambitions by luring royalty to her party.

Just as the first quadrille was forming, in strode Major Percy, covered in dust, a captured French colour in each hand. The music stopped abruptly as he dropped on one knee before the Prince proclaiming: ‘Victory, Sir! Victory!’

Mrs Boehm bore to her grave a grudge against the man who wrecked her ball. She wrote later: ‘Well, I must say it! Of course one was very glad to think one had beaten those horrid French, and all that sort of thing. But still I always shall think it would have been far better if Henry Percy had waited quietly till the morning, instead of bursting in upon us, as he did, in such indecent haste.’


The French myth so dominates the modern battlefield of Waterloo that a casual visitor might suppose that Bonaparte had been the victor


Nobody else agreed, of course. Waterloo became celebrated as Britain’s greatest military triumph of all time, despite its appalling cost.

Around half of the 840 British officers who fought at Quatre Bras and Waterloo were killed or wounded, as were a third of all Wellington’s British cavalry.

In all he suffered 14,000 casualties, and the Prussians at least as many in the course of the campaign. Bonaparte’s army lost at least 30,000.

Scavengers ruthlessly looted the battlefield after the armies moved on, killing wounded men who lingered, and stripping corpses to the bone. So many of Europe’s dentures were provided by the dead of June 1815 that for years they were known as Waterloo teeth.

All the wounded horses were sold at auction in Belgium, and a dozen of the worst cases were bought by the famous surgeon Sir Astley Cooper and shipped to England.

He nursed them with such devotion — removing bullets and grapeshot, sewing up their wounds — that almost all survived, delighting him as they roamed his country park for years afterwards, sometimes forming into lines, charging and retreating of their own accord in emulation of their deeds at Waterloo.

Today, the French perversely revere Bonaparte as if he had been their deliverer, rather than the architect of their national ruin. The French myth so dominates the modern battlefield of Waterloo that a casual visitor might suppose that Bonaparte had been the victor.

President Francois Hollande has vetoed the issue of a 2015 commemorative euro coin, on the grounds that it would upset his countrymen.

As for the British, on June 18 the 9th Duke of Wellington is giving a Waterloo dinner at Apsley House, in the room in which for years on the anniversary his great forbear entertained his surviving officers. There are to be re-enactments and commemorations outside Brussels and in London.

Cynics say that, even had the French emperor defeated Wellington at Waterloo, his doom was anyway sealed, because a vast Russian army was on its way to join the Prussians, which would have settled the emperor’s hash. That, however, is a mere spoilsports’ might-have-been.

One of the Duke’s many female admirers, Lady Shelley, once put it to him that he had been caught by surprise by Bonaparte’s attack at Quatre Bras, three days before Waterloo. He replied with a shrug. ‘Supposing I was surprised: I won the battle and what could you have had more?’ What indeed?

On this happy anniversary, heed no nonsense about either the supposed grandeur of Napoleon or the shortcomings of Wellington.

The Duke was the greatest soldier in Britain’s history, and an irresistible personality to boot. His victory at Waterloo was one of the most brilliant moments in our heritage, and we should celebrate it with full and proud hearts.


Royal Navy frigate HMS Iron Duke, named after the victor of Waterloo



READERS' COMMENTS


Steve, Orewa, NZ, 2 days ago
One time plus Blenheim, Quebec, Salamanca, Crecy, Poitiers Agincourt, Battle of the Nile, Trafalgar, just a few and that's not to mention the English army under Henry the fifth taking and occupying Paris for 15 years, or the British saving the French from the Germans twice.
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Edit public profile, Midlands, United Kingdom, 2 days ago
Celebrate our achievements please people. No one else will. Long may they kick the country that built the World, because as long as the World is there, it was built, rightly or wrongly, by the British.
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Thibeault de Blois, blois, France, 2 days ago
France should celebrate Orleans,Castillon, Patay, Formigny. Nous sommes voué à nous combattre.

In reply:

Rabmac1, Cambs, United Kingdom, 2 days ago
I appreciate that from a Frenchman, having been beaten by Britain over and over and over again, not to mention the times the UK has saved you over and over and over again, I am surprised that you would rather form a Federation with our Beloved German 'friends', but your country always was and always will be cowards. The UK will never surrender to EU rule, which Napoleon tried so hard to achieve. In the end-game, the British will raise the Flag of Freedom again, we will Never be conquered by Europe.
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Meridian, Nantwich, United Kingdom, 2 days ago
School children's focus on the two world wars is directed by the EU. Mind control, because, of course, it is only the EU that has preserved peace in Europe for the last seventy years. The kids need to be thankful. They show their gratitude by being unable to imagine life as a sovereign nation. Job done. (The EU referendum is really only for those aged 45+, as those under 30 years of age have been conditioned to accept the EU as the way of life)
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Ryan Lege, Vicenza, Italy, 2 days ago
Complete nonsense!!!! I am not going to just arbitrarily adore Wellington or the British because this author of this article says so. Napoleon did more good for Europe than the British ever did. The British were about the status quo, not progress or improvement for the average person. Napoleon was, and would have improved many peoples lives had he been the victor.

In reply:

Tarleton, Durham, United Kingdom, 2 days ago
Britain was admired by Europeans as the beacon of liberty and the engine of scientific and social progress. Napoleon was a grasping tyrant loathed by the same people of Europe for his oppression, tax-gathering and war-mongering.

Rabmac1, Cambs, United Kingdom, 2 days ago
Is it true that most Italian vehicles, especially tanks, were made with more reverse gears than forward....an old joke but so very true.
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Gerry1, Shaftesbury, 2 days ago
If Napoleon was so decisively beaten by the Russians, Prussians, Austrians and Swedes, how was he able to reassemble an army that was good enough to beat the Prussians at first contact in June 1815 and inflict massive casualties on Wellington's combined forces at Waterloo. If you know the ground, Wellington's eye for an ideal defensive position to make a stand illustrates his supreme professionalism.
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j.ryan, virginia beach, United States, 3 days ago
I must agree with the author. I visited Waterloo in Sept. 2010 and remarked on my camcorder that it as obvious that Napoleon had won the battle.In the museum the British and their allies were barely there and the Prussians were not mentioned at all.
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carl-synical, Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom, 3 days ago
The Battle of Waterloo is just another example of the British lion making his stand against tyranny and oppression. Today's politicians could well use this as an example of how we should behave when threatened by people who wish us harm and to change our way of life! People also seem to forget that the 19th century and the reign of Queen Victoria also led to Pax Britannica. A period of relative peace in the world.





So what really defeated Napoleon? British pluck... or his PILES? The story of France's greatest-ever national hero

Britain spent £1.5 billion fighting him through the 18th and 19th centuries

Napoleon went to military academy at nine and was a general at 24

He seized power in a military coup in 1799 and declared himself Emperor


By Roger Lewis for the Daily Mail
5 June 2015



HOW THE FRENCH WON WATERLOO (OR THINK THEY DID)
by Stephen Clarke
(Century £14.99)


How typical of the French, who think Jerry Lewis hysterical and unshaven armpits erotic, to carry on maintaining that Napoleon, not Wellington, was the victor at Waterloo.

Indeed, as Stephen Clarke demonstrates in this cheeky book, they have spent two whole centuries ‘indulging in outrageous denial’ — even in 2001, the Prime Minister of France was arguing that Napoleon’s ‘defeat shines with the aura of victory’.

Despite the fact that, as night fell on June 18, 1815, it was Napoleon who fled the field of battle and ended up exiled 2,000 miles away on the island of St Helena, his countrymen will persist in believing he remains ‘the very essence of heroism. Napoleon is a figure the French should be proud to venerate for the rest of time’ — and, as an instantly recognisable icon, in 2015, Napoleon is ‘well on his way to being bigger than Mickey Mouse’. Or so the French reckon.


Napoleon went to military academy at nine and was a general at 24. He seized power in a military coup in 1799 and declared himself Emperor

We must feel relieved the Germans never felt this way about Hitler, yet in the immediate decades following Waterloo, Balzac, Stendhal and Victor Hugo wrote novels containing worshipful passages about Napoleon as a force of destiny.

Beethoven composed his Eroica symphony. Numerous painters came up with dramatic battle vistas, with the French army attacking panicking British redcoats. To this day, at the official museum at Waterloo itself, the exhibition is dominated by portrait after portrait of a defiant-looking Napoleon.

Just about the only people to riposte, as far as I can tell, were George Orwell, who named the Stalinist pig in Animal Farm Napoleon, and Warden Hodges in Dad’s Army, who sneers at Captain Mainwaring for acting like Napoleon.

Other than that, over in Paris they put up the Arc de Triomphe in 1836 and, a few years later, ceremoniously shipped Napoleon’s corpse back from St Helena, where it had been sealed in three coffins of lead, walnut and iron. It took 43 soldiers to lift the sarcophagus out of the grave. Reinterred at Les Invalides, Napoleon was ‘enshrined in what is still today the biggest and most-visited tomb in Paris’. Queen Victoria went to pay her respects in 1855.

To the French, clearly, Napoleon is so esteemed that his name simply cannot be associated ‘with anything as shameful as defeat’. But what a pest he was. Britain spent £1.5 billion on fighting him throughout the 18th and early 19th centuries — a debt that wasn’t paid off until 1906.

Napoleon, who went to a military academy at the age of nine and was a general at 24, never wanted peace. He seized power in a military coup in 1799 and, having declared himself Emperor, was always waging war against Britain, Austria, Italy, Russia and even Egypt. ‘Napoleon’s favourite political tools,’ says Clarke, ‘were hot lead and cold steel.’

The proto-Nazi philosopher Nietzsche admired Napoleon for having invented the concept of a scientific ‘total war’ and, in 1813, having escaped from Elba, he raised a force of 200,000 men and got the factories manufacturing 40,000 rifles a month, each with a hand-forged barrel.

The Emperor was followed around his many battlefields by an entourage bearing luxurious and customised equipment: a tent with green, silk curtains, a wardrobe of 50 identical beaver-skin bicorn hats, monogrammed crockery, chairs, desks, tables and ‘even a folding bidet’.

The latter ingenious item of furniture may be a vital clue to what happened at Waterloo. Evidence suggests that, on the day of the battle, Napoleon suffered ‘atrocious pains’ from his chronic and inflamed haemorrhoids.

And if what Clarke calls ‘posterior tenderness’ was to blame for the crushing of Napoleon, no wonder the French won’t have it — they’d be the laughing stock of all time if the Emperor had literally been caught with his trousers down, the doctors applying hot compresses.

Fate was playing other tricks. Napoleon was also poisoning himself by taking arsenic ‘as a treatment for baldness’.

Then it started raining, hindering the delivery of supplies and depriving the soldiers of regular nourishment. The paths and tracks around Waterloo were ‘covered by black mud that had been diluted and turned into ink’. Cartridges, powder and ammunition, stored in backpacks, got wet.

Napoleon had wanted to attack the British lines at 9am, but the conditions made him delay until 11.30, which gave General Blucher and our Prussian allies extra time to march to Wellington’s aid.

All was quickly chaos. People trying to shift supply wagons recalled ‘the sound of the wheels crushing the skulls of soldiers whose brains and tattered flesh spread hideously across the road’.

Sending large numbers of men to an almost certain death didn’t worry Napoleon in the slightest. ‘A man like me cares little about the lives of a million men,’ he stated — his personality already collapsing on the altar of megalomania.

The carnage was sickening. ‘Horses were disembowelled as they passed, and the unsaddled cavalrymen were mostly bayoneted as they lay helplessly on the ground.’

The British loaded their cannon with grapeshot, lumps of hot metal exploding in a scatter-pattern, ‘killing or maiming far more efficiently than a single cannonball’.

Wellington, however, had the advantage of having positioned his troops on top of a ridge, behind which he could conceal further reinforcements.

Blucher’s arrival was a turning point and, meanwhile, Napoleon’s own generals were mutinying or failing to carry out orders. Clarke says Napoleon’s officers were ‘soft, indecisive and unwilling to attack’. One, Jean-Baptiste d’Erlon, later ‘opened a brasserie near Munich’.

Even as he was being bundled away to safety, Napoleon did not concede defeat. ‘All is not lost!’ he hollered. ‘There is still time to save the situation!’ I was reminded of the Black Knight in Monty Python And The Holy Grail: ‘I’m invincible!’ he yells, even after his arms have been lopped off.

‘What are you going to do?’ asks King Arthur, incredulously. ‘Bleed on me?’

But the Black Knight is undaunted: ‘Come back here and take what’s coming to you. I’ll bite your legs off!’

When the surviving French were told Waterloo had been lost, they looked at the victors and shouted ‘Merde!’ They have been saying ‘Merde!’ now for 200 years, convinced that ‘Waterloo is nothing more than a minor blemish on Napoleon’s glorious record’.

‘French presidents . . . even live and work in his former palace, surrounded by his furniture’ — including the famous folding bidet, one wonders?
 
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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Britain's first memorial remembering soldiers who died fighting the Battle of Waterloo has been unveiled at the central London station named after the battle.

It marks the 200th anniversary of the battle which saw allied forces conquer the French emperor Napoleon.

The 9th Duke of Wellington, a descendant of the British military leader who won the battle, unveiled the enlarged campaign medal memorial.

Relatives of soldiers killed in the battle were among those attending.

With over 94 million passenger entries and exits between April 2011 and March 2012, Waterloo is Britain's busiest railway station by passenger usage and one of the busiest in Europe.

Eurostar trains to and from Lille, Calais, Paris and Brussels departed from, and arrived at, the station between from 1994 until 2007, when they were transferred to St Pancras International three miles away.

Yes, those French travelling to Britain by rail got off their trains at the station named after a battle in which they were stuffed by the British.


Battle of Waterloo memorial unveiled at London station


10 June 2015
BBC News


Relatives of soldiers killed in the battle were among those attending


Britain's first memorial remembering soldiers who died fighting the Battle of Waterloo has been unveiled at the central London station.

It marks the 200th anniversary of the battle which saw allied forces conquer the French emperor Napoleon.

The 9th Duke of Wellington, a descendant of the British military leader who won the battle, unveiled the enlarged campaign medal memorial.

Relatives of soldiers killed in the battle were among those attending.

In total, 24,000 troops died on 18 June 1815, in a fight which ended two decades of war.

'Important battle'



London's memorial is a scaled-up replica of the Waterloo campaign medal, the first to be given to every soldier present at the battle, irrespective of their rank.

Amanda Townshend, 57, from Sussex, was at the unveiling. Her great-great-great grandfather, Captain Purefoy Lockwood, had part of his head blown off by a musket ball during the fight.

He later had a silver plate with the word "bombproof" written on it placed over the wound.

"I think it is marvellous to be able to honour soldiers who, as they do now, give their lives for their country," she said.

"And this was such an important battle."


Re-enactors dressed as soldiers from the era of the Battle of Waterloo travel on an escalator after attending a memorial unveiling at Waterloo Station in London, Wednesday, June 10, 2015. The new war memorial honours all of the allied forces who fought at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. The centrepiece is a giant replica of the reverse of the Waterloo Campaign medal. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)


Bugler Lance Corporal Nick Walkley of the Band of the Welsh Guards salutes after playing the last post alongside the new memorial after it was unveiled at Waterloo Station in London, Wednesday, June 10, 2015. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)


Bugler Lance Corporal Nick Walkley of the Band of the Welsh Guards plays a bugle found on the body of a bugler at the Battle of Waterloo, after the new memorial was unveiled at Waterloo Station in London, Wednesday, June 10, 2015. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)


The 9th Duke of Wellington, a descendant of the British military leader - the 1st Duke of Wellington - who won the battle, stands alongside a new memorial after unveiling it at Waterloo Station in London, Wednesday, June 10, 2015. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)


Waterloo station





Battle of Waterloo memorial unveiled at London station - BBC News
 
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MHz

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. . . and then she stopped fighting as soon as the EU bankers took over the Bank of England. That isn't even blow-back.
 

EagleSmack

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The Prussians smashed into the French flank and drove them from the field. The brits sat on their hill while the Prince of Orange fought off the French attacks.
 

Blackleaf

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The Prussians smashed into the French flank and drove them from the field. The brits sat on their hill while the Prince of Orange fought off the French attacks.


Napoleon failed to destroy the British like he thought they would. They just stood their ground and valiantly absorbed wave after wave of attack. The British have traditionally been good at that (see Rorke's Drift, 1879).

Also, it wasn't Blucher who drove the French off the field. It was Wellington.
 

EagleSmack

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The Prince of Orange absorbed the French attacks... the Prussians drove the French from the field.

Wellington FINALLY moved forward when he saw the French breaking. The hard work was done by others willing to attack instead of sit tight and wait.
 

Blackleaf

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The Prince of Orange absorbed the French attacks... the Prussians drove the French from the field.

The Prince of Orange was a useless commander, mocked by the British. The British only had them in their ranks to please his dad.

Wellington FINALLY moved forward when he saw the French breaking. The hard work was done by others willing to attack instead of sit tight and wait.
The hard work was done by the British, who had spent hours and hours absorbing wave after wave of Frog attacks.

Also, it was Lord Uxbridge, Wellington's cavalry commander, who first weakened Boney's line, before the Prussians even turned up. When Boney's men started advancing towards the British, the British cavalry charged and hit the French infantry, slicing through the soldiers on the ground and brutally weakening Boney's line.

Eventually, the French broke through the British front line. When the French reached the ridge, Wellington gave the order to stand and fire. His men fired at almost point blank range – muskets tore through the French soldiers, forcing them back.

It was only at this point, after the British managed to force the French back, that the Prussians turned up on the scene.
 

EagleSmack

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Uxbridge wasted his cavalry. After getting run down by French Lancers they were combat ineffective.

The Grand Monument to the Prince of Orange!