The 10 Key Battles That Made Napoleon Bonaparte

Napoleon Bonaparte. One of history’s greatest commanders or a bit overrated?
In this video, Dan Snow breaks down the pivotal battles that shaped the legendary commander’s legacy and left an indelible mark on the pages of history. From his sweeping victories at the Battle of Marengo and the Battles of Austerliz to the disastrous Russian campaign and the iconic Battle of Waterloo, Dan revisits the epic clashes, analyses the strategies, and witnesses the drama and chaos of the biggest battles that shaped Napoleon's rise and fall.
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#napoleon #movie #battles
00:00 Introduction
00:45 Siege of Toulon (1793)
04:29 Battle of the Pyramids (1798)
06:40 Battle of Marengo (1800)
08:56 Battle of Trafalgar (1805)
13:59 Battle of Austerlitz (1805)
17:12 Battle of Jena-Auerstedt (1806)
20:27 Battle of Borodino (1812)
23:43 Battle of Leipzig (1813)
26:18 Battle of Ligny (1815)
28:11 Battle of Waterloo (1815)
30:04 Conclusion
31:03 Watch Napoleon in Cinemas November 22

Пікірлер: 358

  • @Wonderwall627
    @Wonderwall6276 ай бұрын

    I would put both Rivoli and Arcole as two of his greatest victories. Not having the Italian campaign in his top ten is a big miss. Egypt is a footnote next to those.

  • @nuttygeezer708

    @nuttygeezer708

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes, interesting choices. Trafalgar didn't have any impact on the course of the war as the Grande Armee left Boulogne two months before the battle. The Royal Navy already had dominance at sea as French revolution destroyed the French navy as all the admirals were aristocrats and left the country or were dead and Spain was a declining power. Napoleon ordered Villeneuve to support the campaign by moving towards Austria where Massena was against Archdukes Charles and John but then he ignored his orders and decided to attack Nelson for no meaningful reason.

  • @anonnymousperson

    @anonnymousperson

    6 ай бұрын

    Agreed

  • @Pure_Havoc

    @Pure_Havoc

    6 ай бұрын

    agreed. Napoleon handled the battle of Rivoli so well. Most generals in history would have lost that battle. Its second right after Austerlitz. I don't know why these list always includes Egypt and Waterloo like they don't do enough research on Napoleon.

  • @pakoutac

    @pakoutac

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Pure_HavocArcole is a shitshow aswell, not a total victory but nevertheless an amazing display of composure in a deadly situation

  • @davidg1600

    @davidg1600

    6 ай бұрын

    So true, was shocked by that

  • @hanstun1
    @hanstun16 ай бұрын

    No one ever mentions that most of the army he defeated was headed by people who got that position due to a noble birth. Napoleon got there on merit.

  • @brianmoran1196

    @brianmoran1196

    6 ай бұрын

    As did his Marshals, It was like Joe Biden vs Elon musk

  • @PueSaness

    @PueSaness

    6 ай бұрын

    Well, not exactly. While it's true that in other armies you weren't allowed to rise above a certain rank if you were not noble, there was a limited sort of meritocracy in that smaller pool of talent. For example, if a noble in the Austrian army did poorly enough, he would be replaced by a noble who was expected to do better. Most of the generals Napoleon defeated in his 1796-1797 campaign in Italy were veterans who distinguished themselves and worked their way from relatively minor roles through this limited meritocracy all the way to high command. Wurmser, for example, joined the Habsburgs as a major general (the rank "major general", not the adjective "major" + "general") who commanded only a few hundred hussars. He greatly distinguished himself in the War of the Bavarian Succession, leading his hussars in multiple successful raids against the Prussian army (which was then still feared as the greatest army in Europe), capturing thousands of prisoners along the way and defending the border with the highest skill. He was promoted to Lt. Field Marshal during that war, and then, as Austria prepared to fight the Ottoman Empire in 1787, to General of Cavalry, which placed him in command of a minor army in Galicia, where he saw little action. When the French Revolutionary Wars started, Wurmser was transferred to the Rhine, where he meticulously probed the Lauterburg and Weissenburg lines, before directing the Austrian assault at the first Battle of Wissembourg in October 1793. Despite being outnumbered by the French, who also held a powerful defensive position on earthworks, Wurmer's attack succeeded. Wurmser would be eventually defeated, however, when the French returned with more men, and for this defeat he would be briefly dismissed from command. In 1795, he was posted on the Rhine when the 187,000-strong French army attacked. He fought the French at Mannheim and defeated them in battle and siege, over the month of action inflicting some 10,000 casualties on the French for only 1,000 Austrian losses. For this service, he was promoted to Field Marshal, placing him in the highest echelon of Austrian field command. He was still on the Rhine the next year to meet the new French offensive there, until the French army commanded by a certain 26-year-old Corsican thundered down the Alps into Italy, smashed the Italian and Austrian armies there, and overran the territory. He was, obviously, not so successful there, but he _did_ nearly defeat Napoleon once (before Napoleon turned the tables back on him, with interest) and he managed to hold out with a trapped army in Mantua far longer than anyone expected. Despite this ending, in the grand scheme of things, Wurmser's rise from the leader of a few hundred hussars to leading armies of tens of thousands was fairly meritocratic, justified by how the man distinguished himself multiple times across three decades in Austrian service. He just happened to meet the worst possible opponent. On the other hand, Napoleon's rise was not entirely meritocratic. While it _is_ true that Napoleon built up an impressive list of military achievements from 1793-1795, from the obvious victory at Toulon to his lesser-known function as a military planner in the French government, leading to victories at Saorgio in 1794 and Dego in 1795, it was not for _these_ achievements that he was promoted to commander-in-chief of the Army of Italy, but for 13 Vendémiaire, where he saved the Directory by firing on an angry (and armed) mob set on overthrowing the government as had happened several times already in the Revolution. Napoleon's promotion to major command was more of a political favour than a recognition of his merit. This isn't to say that the French government thought Napoleon wasn't a good commander, rather the opposite. He already had the achievements, he had already effectively de facto functioned as major command multiple times, and wherever he served, his superiors wrote back to the government not merely praising him, but _crediting_ him for their victories (ex. "It is to the ability of the General of Artillery that I owe the clever combinations which have secured our success" from Pierre Jadart Dumerbion after the Battle of Dego in 1794). The problem, however, was that even at this early stage, the government was already somewhat wary of Napoleon, who was already well-known for approaching them over and over, telling them how _they_ ought to fight the war on grand strategic levels despite his minor de jure position. Napoleon further hurt his position in 1794, where the government ordered him to take a command repressing the French rebels in the Vendée, only for Napoleon to refuse this command. The government would approach and order him to take his command in the Vendée several times, but Napoleon refused over and over in favour of wandering Paris unemployed, dependent on fortune and charity. On 15 September, Napoleon was finally officially removed from active service for this behavior. Napoleon was competent, no doubt, but his behavior had demonstrated he could not be trusted to follow orders he disagreed with, and rising to the highest ranks in the French Revolution was as or more political as it was meritocratic. When the government finally approached him to put down the royalist insurrection in Paris in October, it was more the fact that Napoleon was the only general in the area and the Directory was desperate to survive than out of faith in him. Likewise, when they gave Napoleon major command in 1796, they gave him command over the smallest, most ill-equipped, underpaid, and least important of the major French armies (also plagued low morale and stirrings of mutiny), with the expectation that he would do little with it other than provide a diversion. Instead, this resulted in Napoleon defeating seven armies, marching on Vienna, and negotiating the terms of peace on his own without consulting the French government, all in the space of twelve months. This created a considerable fuss in the government, as their political darlings had meanwhile been defeated in that same time, while the unreliable Napoleon had ended the war and made the peace on his own, propagated his achievements by creating his own personal propaganda machine independent from that of the government, and become by far the most popular figure in France. To make matters worse, Napoleon had made it clear that his rise to prominence had not made him feel any better about his superiors in the government. After his initial string of victories in Italy, the government sent a letter to Napoleon congratulating him and telling him he would be splitting his command with another French general (admittedly, a very stupid idea from a military point of view, but not stupid from a political point of view if you're trying to check Napoleon's power). Napoleon shot back in response that if the government dared to split his command, he would resign from the army and go into politics, which was a thinly veiled way of threatening the government that if _they_ tried to use their political power to undercut him, then _he_ would become a politician and remove them from their positions himself. The government backed off. Overall, Napoleon's career benefited from him being the only man the government had on hand on various occasions. If the government could turn to a more politically reliable general for 13 Vendémiaire and ignore Napoleon, they would have. If the government could replace Napoleon in Italy or split his command, they would have. If the government had a popular political favourite dramatically winning the war instead of their political favourites suffering military setbacks as Napoleon marched on Vienna and ended the war, they would have given that general all the honours Napoleon ended up with. Napoleon's military merit was obvious, but his political loyalty was dubious. Even in 1799, Napoleon was the last general Sieyes turned to for his coup, and for good reason, as immediately after the coup Napoleon politically outmaneuvered him, serving as a mediator between Daunou's camp and Sieyes' camp, with the result that the finalized Consulate was made up only of positions from either camp that favoured _Napoleon_ rather than either Sieyes or Daunou. The general, who was supposed to receive a weak position subservient to a "Grand Elector" after the coup, ended up the de facto absolute ruler of France overnight.

  • @chrismath149

    @chrismath149

    6 ай бұрын

    Napoleon was a noblemen himself and ingretiated himself with the leadership of the Revolution (his first wife had strong connections with the Revolution). As always, when it comes to Napoleon, a simplification of history.

  • @scerpalman

    @scerpalman

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@brianmoran1196 this might be the worst analogy I've ever seen

  • @zakluck1686
    @zakluck16866 ай бұрын

    For those questioning about battles not mentioned it's almost like this video is clearly sponsored by and done to promote the new Napoleon movie and these are the battles shown in the movie, hence why they use so many clips from the movie.

  • @petertaylorarts

    @petertaylorarts

    6 ай бұрын

    There are battles here missing in the movie. Obviously this is to capture people's interests in the film and hopefully in the historic events. Have you seen the movie? Did you find the depiction of Napoleon as hilariously odd as I did? I felt he was played like Jim from Friday Night Dinner :)

  • @RodolfoGaming

    @RodolfoGaming

    6 ай бұрын

    Yep unfortunately Lodi, Arcole and Rivoli (to replace Trafalgar, Pyramids and Ligny) won't even get a mention which are likely to be his greatest victories during the italian campaign. The top 10 famous battles of Napoleon would be a more fitting title as well.

  • @shays7030

    @shays7030

    6 ай бұрын

    They made him neurotic

  • @Son0fFalse

    @Son0fFalse

    6 ай бұрын

    Are you joking, Lepzig battle of Nations would have been SOOO great to see experimental rockets, all 4 nations participating in one battle (technically 5), and see Napoleon order his first Retreat in Europe in style by blowing up his escape route....But we get waterloo...again... @@RodolfoGaming

  • @vansnyder9499

    @vansnyder9499

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm fine with that. Looking forward to the mmmmmovie

  • @Steven-jn2cw
    @Steven-jn2cw6 ай бұрын

    He was brilliant in every way, but in the end he had too many enemies.

  • @benoitpisarchick6866

    @benoitpisarchick6866

    5 ай бұрын

    especially the briton who plotted against him for decades. they were traitors and they will always be

  • @anonnymousperson
    @anonnymousperson6 ай бұрын

    Funny how this video talks more about Trafalgar than any other battle, the one battle that Napoleon was not actually in charge of.

  • @waynetaylor2784

    @waynetaylor2784

    6 ай бұрын

    Because it completely crippled Napoleon's plans more than any other battle

  • @schizophrenia6402

    @schizophrenia6402

    6 ай бұрын

    the british till this day still hate Napoleon , he had them at chokehold for over 10 years

  • @alanarmstrong6460

    @alanarmstrong6460

    6 ай бұрын

    Am English and I really respect him. The fact that he promoted through merit is amazing as UK had extensive class system then and in some ways we still do. However if I was born back then I would hated him as well.

  • @waynetaylor2784

    @waynetaylor2784

    6 ай бұрын

    In the day look at it this way in following world wars who ever controlled the air eventually won the war, and in Napoleon's days those that controlled the seas controlled everything

  • @trotskyite1

    @trotskyite1

    6 ай бұрын

    No it didn't

  • @taivo55
    @taivo556 ай бұрын

    The grand strategic maneuver at Ulm should have been included. It wasn't a tactical victory, but a major strategic one and was directly the result of Napoleon's grand plan of deception and rapid movement into the enemy's rear.

  • @shays7030

    @shays7030

    6 ай бұрын

    I agree

  • @johnmoreno9636

    @johnmoreno9636

    6 ай бұрын

    To defeat an enemy without engaging in battle is the ultimate generalship according to Sun-Tzu Art of War. Also, Snow should have talked about Napoleon's core strategems - Corp, massed artillery, hold the center, and various other strategies that made Napoleon one of the most winning generals in history. I cry when I think about the destroyed Army that went into Russia, and the resultant loss of the Napoleonic ideals.

  • @ksmatch06

    @ksmatch06

    6 ай бұрын

    You look at a map of Ulm's campaign then Schwarzkopf first Gulf's campaign it 's nearly the same almost 200 years apart.

  • @taivo55

    @taivo55

    6 ай бұрын

    @@ksmatch06 It's satisfying to know that our men and women at West Point still learn from one of the masters

  • @garymoore2535

    @garymoore2535

    6 ай бұрын

    To be fair to Schwarzkopf he didn't abandon his troops and flee back to Washington on multiple occasions or lead a 600,000 strong Grand Armee to total destruction ! 😂😂😂

  • @davidhollins870
    @davidhollins8706 ай бұрын

    This is a slightly odd video: 1) Why no mention of the First Italian Campaign? It was N's first time as a commanding general and he raced across Italy to Rivoli - where he had the Austrian plans. That victory was what made his name, far more than Toulon, and it ended five years of war. 2) Napoleon did not devise divisional squares in Egypt - the Russians used them in their 18th century wars against the Turks; the Austrians also copied the tactic in the 1788-91 war with the Turks. The Egyptian campaign was a disaster and by the time Napoleon returned, Massena had saved the Republic at Second Zurich. N then stopped in Ajaccio and planted news of his land victory at Aboukir. He was propelled to the top of French politics by Sieyes, who thought he would be a sword in his overthrow of the Directory and Lucien ran the coup (this is done particularly well in the Scott film). 3) On the day of Trafalgar, Napoleon was at Ulm in Germany, which he secured using the German road system. His "peace envoy" Savary was probably trying to make contact with Rulzki, ADC to Kienmayer, who commanded the Allied advance-guard at Austerlitz. 4) Jena was just luck - it showed the shortcomings of the French system. N's plan was to attack Prussian forces around Gera - his intelligence system was failing and told him they were the main Prussian force. Then two flanking columns under Bernadotte and Davout were supposed to encircle the Prussian left. Davout ran into the main prussian army and bernadotte was left hanging as his orders were vaguely and badly set out. 5) You missed out Friedland, which secured the Peace of Tilsit with Russia and Aspern, where Napoleon was defeated for the first time. 6) Once his intelligence failed, Napoleon resorts to these frontal assaults starting at Wagram in 1809, not Borodino. 7) Far more troops were lost on the advance into Russia than on the retreat. www.researchgate.net/figure/Depiction-mapping-of-successive-loss-of-French-Army-soldiers-during-Napoleons-Russian_fig2_332227018 8) Leipzig was THE largest battle in the Napoleonic wars and history in general prior to WW1.

  • @richardloach610

    @richardloach610

    6 ай бұрын

    Blimey someone's been reading their history books

  • @davidhollins870

    @davidhollins870

    6 ай бұрын

    @@richardloach610 Well, I do write and guest podcast on the subject, so it helps!

  • @Kamfrenchie

    @Kamfrenchie

    6 ай бұрын

    2) True, but the austrians were still in the war and would encircle Massena later. 6) I dont think it's entirely clear or fair to just call these "frontal assaults", it sorts of implies simplicity/stupidity, when what can be described as a frontal assault can lead to a collapse or a brilliant victory depending on several factors. Plus, sometimes, flanking is too risky, including for the flanking force

  • @PueSaness

    @PueSaness

    6 ай бұрын

    2) The Egyptian campaign was ultimately a military failure, but it was a political success, and even militarily, it only turned into a full failure after Napoleon left. Certainly, Napoleon had calculated that the strategic situation in Egypt was not going to improve with a new war in Europe, but calling it a disaster, at least given Napoleon's tenure there, is over-exaggerating. The Pyramids, Mount Tabor, and Aboukir were devastating victories and three of Napoleon's finest moments as a tactician. Sure, Napoleon failed at Acre, and the expedition was ultimately unsuccessful, but would so too was Hannibal three times at Nola campaign in Italy, and calling the latter a disaster would be eye-rolling. The French army was in an unenviable strategic position when Napoleon left it, but it was not anywhere close to broken, and its endurance to the end of the Second Coalition (assuming France wins there regardless, which is a fair question) was completely possible. After all, despite the defeat at Acre, the result of Napoleon's Syrian and Aboukir campaigns for the Ottomans were that the twin armies meant to retake Egypt were both resoundingly defeated, ending their efforts to retake Egypt for the rest of the year. Then, a year later and after Napoleon left, the Ottomans with a newly rebuilt army tried again and were yet _again_ crushed by the French at Heliopolis. Defending Syria was one thing, but to retake Egypt the Ottomans would have to actually defeat the French in battle there, which was another question entirely if Napoleon (or even Kleber, had he not been assassinated) decided to continue the expedition. Defeating the French in those circumstances with a British expedition would be a probable argument given it was what happened in 1801, if not for the success of a British expedition in Egypt being in no way assured - only six years later in the Fraser expedition, the British sent another expedition to Egypt and were soundly defeated by Muhammad Ali's Egyptians (despite outnumbering their opponent and not even facing Muhammad Ali directly at the beginning), not even managing to penetrate past the coast. In that light, the British victory in 1801 was in no way certain, and a more vigorous French defense, as would have no doubt happened under Napoleon, would have been quite harder to dislodge. The most likely scenario for a French defeat in those circumstances would not be the British and Ottomans overrunning Egypt in 1801 or 1802, but France outright losing the war in Europe, thus making any continued French resistance in the Egypt pointless, but this would be regardless of the success or failure of the expedition _itself_ which still makes a judgement of military disaster on the particulars questionable. The comparison in that case would, again, be to the Second Punic War. Does Scipio's invasion of Africa, forcing Hannibal's evacuation from Italy (though admittedly, he had been losing ground for quite some time by then), render the Carthaginian campaign in Italy a _disaster_ on account of its failure? 4) The result at _Auerstedt_ was luck, yes, but the campaign itself was not. A Prussian victory at Auerstedt would not have forced Napoleon back with his tail behind his legs. He would have still annihilated the secondary Prussian army at Jena, and so even with a French corps mauled at Auerstedt, the victorious Prussian army there would find no respite as Napoleon turned his entire army on them. Likewise, the Prussians were against a rock and a hard place already at that point, while Napoleon was not. If Napoleon found himself defeated, he could retreat back to France. But if the Prussians were, then Napoleon was in prime position to cut off all Prussian forces west of the Oder. Neither the Prussians nor the French had good intelligence about the other, but Napoleon's plan to march through the Francoian Forest and wheel to the west threatened to cut off Prussian supply lines, while the Prussian plan (or rather, lack of it) placed their army in a sudden battle for survival where the French dictated the terms and had all the pressure and initiative. Napoleon got lucky that Davout defeated the main Prussian army for him at Auerstedt, but Napoleon's campaign plan meant he only needed to be lucky once to destroy the Prussian army, while the Prussians needed to defeat the French continuously to simply relieve the pressure. 5) Aspern was not Napoleon's first defeat. He had been defeated twice in Italy by Alvinci prior to Rivoli, and once at Acre. Aspern showed Napoleon could still be defeated after 1799, but the significance of this is arguable. While not Napoleon itself, Napoleon's army had already been humiliated a year prior at Bailen, which already shattered the myth of French invincibility. For the war as a whole, Aspern turned out to be only a passing victory, as Wagram came on its heels. Aspern encouraged the Tyroleans, but they had already been revolting (and had already defeated the French) prior to Aspern, and were crushed after Wagram anyway. Aspern is significant in that Napoleon lost many veterans and one of his best commanders, but that's a separate argument from it being Napoleon's "first" defeat. Arguably, in the grand scale of things, Aspern seems significant due to later, unrelated, unforced, and far larger errors Napoleon committed, without which the defeat at Aspern would probably be as meaningful as Ariobarzanes's fleeting success over Alexander at the Persian Gate. 6) Napoleon was ordering frontal assaults as early as Millesimo (and arguably, Toulon) in 1796, not starting with Wagram in 1809. His frontal assaults were also not primarily due to a failure of intelligence (unless you're tautologically defining everything as a failure of intelligence) but because he had specific tactical or strategic reasons for it, whether that was his assessment of what his declining army was capable of, a bid to pin his enemy, seeing his enemy as demoralized and on the verge of breaking under his pressure, or to shock his opponent and wrestle back the initiative. Now, you can say his reasoning was _incorrect_ in this or that circumstance, or argue that the older Napoleon was proportionally less creative and more prone to frontal assaults than the younger Napoleon, but to say Napoleon turned to frontal assaults simply because of a failure of intelligence is puzzling unless you're tautologically counting every incorrect military calculation as a failure of intelligence. 7) Not exactly. Depending on the source (for both battles), the Japanese victory over the Russians was Mukden in 1905 involved more men. There are also, obviously, ancient sources that claim this or that battle had a million or hundreds of thousands of men (ex. Gaugamela and Salsu), but these numbers are admittedly absurd, not taken seriously, and unconfirmable (with the possible exception of battles with a long and large archeological record like Changping, which apparently have mass graves turning up two thousand years later - at the very least, such evidence would provide a minimum based on the number of dead discovered, and a maximum based on the expected proportion extent of decay).

  • @MS-io6kl

    @MS-io6kl

    6 ай бұрын

    That'snot quite correct. The Battle of Mudken in the Russo Japanese War was about the same size if nor slightly bigger.

  • @williamrobinson7435
    @williamrobinson74356 ай бұрын

    Really good. I realise, as some have said, that there were other battles, but this is a wonderfully done precis of N's rise & fall. Pacy and full of detail, one to revisit. I like the way that the role of the navy is contextualised. Brilliantly compiled, edited and presented. Impressive. ⭐👍

  • @osscouter
    @osscouter6 ай бұрын

    If Napoleon understood the effect that the Tambora eruption would have on global climate, he might have changed his strategy or his tactics. oceans of mud had an extreme negative effect on cavalry and artillery. 1815 was, after all, the "year without a summer".

  • @rodeastell3615
    @rodeastell36156 ай бұрын

    Great video ... thanks for posting

  • @sethikavihas2295
    @sethikavihas22956 ай бұрын

    Nice presentation as always.

  • @aliensojourner
    @aliensojourner6 ай бұрын

    Excellent presentation!

  • @benjaminrush4443
    @benjaminrush44436 ай бұрын

    Great Documentary. Thanks.

  • @thebiglebowski4309
    @thebiglebowski43096 ай бұрын

    Great episode..loved it. What about the Peninsula Wars...

  • @jackleonard109
    @jackleonard1096 ай бұрын

    Super video Dan. Watched the film it last night and it has inspired me to learn more about the man and his campaign record. Thanks for the insight!

  • @Jayjay-qe6um
    @Jayjay-qe6um6 ай бұрын

    The French dish chicken Marengo was named in honour of Napoleon's victory of the Battle of Morengo. A minor planet 3455 Borodino, discovered by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Stepanovich Chernykh in 1977, was named after the village of Borodino.

  • @dennisjk768
    @dennisjk7686 ай бұрын

    The title is incorrect. True title is: "The Battles that made Napoleon that are featured in the Ridley Scott movie"

  • @Tusinosi
    @Tusinosi3 ай бұрын

    Great job

  • @TheHistoryUnderground
    @TheHistoryUnderground6 ай бұрын

    Great video that will help fill in a lot of gaps that may have been left by the movie.

  • @kevindarke7646
    @kevindarke76466 ай бұрын

    Toulon, Rivoli, Pyramids, Marengo, Austerlitz, Jena and Auerstedt , Friedland , Wagram , Borodino, Leipzig, Waterloo

  • @andresdiaz2737

    @andresdiaz2737

    5 ай бұрын

    Aspern-Essling, Eylau, Smolensk, Berezina, Somosierra.

  • @brittking3990

    @brittking3990

    Ай бұрын

    Don’t forget the Alamo too.

  • @vansnyder9499
    @vansnyder94996 ай бұрын

    Thanks, Dan. Great prelude to the movie for me. I also hope you got PAID, brother. I can't think of many content providers who deserve to get paid as much as you.

  • @davidsullivan7743
    @davidsullivan77435 ай бұрын

    I've recently seen Ridley Scott's Napoleon and masterful is hardly the word I would use to describe his depiction of the battles. In fact I would say his Waterloo was risible. Yes it was visceral but you could film Agincourt for example with machine guns & tanks and that would be visceral as well. It would be ludicrous too. Scott's Waterloo had little touches that showed he had done some research i.e. the elm tree, Wellington denying permission to shoot at Napoleon ( switching it to a rifleman was a nice nod to Rifleman Plunkett) & the images of the infantry squares were obviously influenced by the painting of the 28th at Quatre Bras. However he completely ignores virtually every single key aspect of the battle. He has Wellington commanding an English army when it was an allied army comprising British, Dutch/Bellgian and German troops. He totally erases Hougoumont, La Haye, Papelotte and Plancenoit. He has British advancing downhill towards the French cavalry when famously it was a reverse slope defence. He then has Blucher arriving fron the west when in fact he came from the opposite direction and most ridiculously of all he has French infantry being ordered out of their trenches & told to " go over the top "! I don't think I've seen a worse depiction of a famous battle since Mel Gibson's Braveheart with his version of Stirling Bridge that had neither river or even a bridge

  • @MTGeomancer
    @MTGeomancer6 ай бұрын

    When you do a sponsored video you really should disclose that upfront.

  • @Wonderwall627

    @Wonderwall627

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah it's too bad this skips over some crucial battles and highlights some much less relevant ones

  • @hydroplaneing

    @hydroplaneing

    6 ай бұрын

    Almost ALL KZread videos have sponsors. Sponsors pay the creators money so they can have housing, food, video equipment and research time. That way you and I don't have to Venmo creators money so that they can keep giving us such wonderful content. I'm surprised that anyone doesn't know this!

  • @RodolfoGaming

    @RodolfoGaming

    6 ай бұрын

    second this, Dan is out here earning a paycheck.

  • @MTGeomancer

    @MTGeomancer

    6 ай бұрын

    @@hydroplaneing There is a big difference between a sponsored video, and a video with an baked in ad segment. I'm surprised that anyone doesn't know this!

  • @hydroplaneing

    @hydroplaneing

    6 ай бұрын

    @@MTGeomancerI assume any "free" content has sponsors and don't waste time complaining about it. Sponsors are sponsors no matter how they come: a nuisance we have to put up with. Heck, you can have an 30 minute ad on TV that has sponsors!

  • @brianwagner7990
    @brianwagner79905 ай бұрын

    This video is way better than the one Ridley Scott did.

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid35876 ай бұрын

    A fantastic historical coverage video about Napoleon Bonaparte l10 key 🔑 figures] thank you( history Hit 👍🏻🙏) channel for sharing

  • @ageingviking5587
    @ageingviking55876 ай бұрын

    Great stuff HH . I want to nominate Dan Snow for whatever award historians get . 🙂

  • @katherinecollins4685
    @katherinecollins46855 ай бұрын

    Very interesting

  • @samuel_iv
    @samuel_iv6 ай бұрын

    amazing video!

  • @albertovaldes5181
    @albertovaldes51816 ай бұрын

    I see Dan Snow I click video

  • @themangix357
    @themangix3576 ай бұрын

    Man gotta love Napoleon. His reign didn't last long at all, but he sure left this world with a bang! Equal to his fellow tragic legends like Caesar, Alexander, Patton, and Genghis Khan. Truly one of history's greatest!

  • @DalgarIOM

    @DalgarIOM

    6 ай бұрын

    He was a terrible person, its easy to appreciate his accomplishments but to love him seems odd

  • @GrandMarshalGarithos

    @GrandMarshalGarithos

    6 ай бұрын

    Surely you mean hate? The man was a tyrant who killed up to millions.

  • @Son0fFalse

    @Son0fFalse

    6 ай бұрын

    Spoken like a loving Kutuzov fanboy. It's is undeniable how much troops were lost in advancing to Russia to start a domino effect that would lead to Napoleon downward spiral. @@DalgarIOM

  • @lemon__j
    @lemon__j6 ай бұрын

    Here we go.

  • @MrSirCadian
    @MrSirCadian6 ай бұрын

    Dan Snow a few weeks ago: "He came from nothing and conquered everything". Err think not mate, inaccurate tagline just looking to conquer the Box Office, not a fan. Ridley Scott: Please accept our apologies $$$ Dan Snow (now): Go and see this masterful film

  • @docgeri
    @docgeri6 ай бұрын

    Is this the guy from 20th century battlefields? That show kicked ass

  • @onlyme219
    @onlyme2196 ай бұрын

    love this sh!t 👍🙂

  • @TsarNicholasII5437
    @TsarNicholasII54375 ай бұрын

    Only a brit would ever dare to claim that Napoleon was overrated

  • @ReadySetMoses
    @ReadySetMoses6 ай бұрын

    Definitely not overrated!

  • @jdghok

    @jdghok

    6 ай бұрын

    Agreed 👌🏻

  • @abbofun9022

    @abbofun9022

    6 ай бұрын

    Even asking the question is already a bit ridiculous

  • @hbullock

    @hbullock

    6 ай бұрын

    A British guy, questioning Napolean's preeminence...what a shocker. lol

  • @CB-fz3li

    @CB-fz3li

    6 ай бұрын

    @@hbullock Napolean gifted the 19th century to the British. As an Englishman he is alright with me.

  • @patriotalways4811

    @patriotalways4811

    6 ай бұрын

    @@hbullockLOL! 🤣

  • @kenbattor6350
    @kenbattor63506 ай бұрын

    The French government wanted Napoleon to go to Egypt to get him out of the way.

  • @philipamos4333
    @philipamos43336 ай бұрын

    The famous battle of Waterloo!

  • @KnowledgeWisdomLife
    @KnowledgeWisdomLife6 ай бұрын

    Each battle was a pivotal moment, altering the course of European history.

  • @thetragicschoolbuspodcast
    @thetragicschoolbuspodcast2 ай бұрын

    I was just in Egypt... I couldn't imagine walking around in woolen coats and frocks with no air conditioning, let alone go to battle in it. Hats off to anyone there before 1902.

  • @IlRyanWilsonlI
    @IlRyanWilsonlI6 ай бұрын

    Didnt even mention the battle between Napoleons right hand and left nipple. Longest battle of his life lol

  • @thecrimsonbubbles
    @thecrimsonbubbles6 ай бұрын

    More story around each of these battles than for any one of the battles in Napoleon (2023)

  • @TheSpritz0
    @TheSpritz06 ай бұрын

    What is HIGHLY underrated is both Austria and Prussia being able to regroup time after time to confront Napoleon’s Army!!!

  • @MS-io6kl
    @MS-io6kl6 ай бұрын

    The problem with this list is that limiting it to ten battles is a bit limiting. I would expand it to 15 and add the Battle of the Nile which doomed Napoleons Egyptian campaign, Aspern his first proper battlefield defeat, Rivoli and/or Arcole should probably be included as well as at least one Battle of the peninsular campaign. Limiting the list to ten battles I would swap out the Pyramids for the Nile and Jena for Aspern.

  • @johnmoreno9636

    @johnmoreno9636

    6 ай бұрын

    Every Napoleonic list seems to always include the Battle of the Pyramids. But I agree. Napoleon fought 61 battles, many of which were decisive. 10 do not do Napoleon justice. I have a suspicion he picked the battles found in the Napoleon movie, since they are a sponsor of the video.

  • @Cry.For.Ukraine
    @Cry.For.Ukraine6 ай бұрын

    I was hoping that you would cover the Battle of Borodino. I was at the site of the battle, and when I closed my eyes I could imagine the utter chaos, the screaming, the gunfire. It was one of the most stirring and poignant moments in my life.

  • @johnmichalski5981

    @johnmichalski5981

    6 ай бұрын

    He did talk about the battle extensively, and described how Bonaparte lost a third of his Grande Armee at Borodino (which was why the French army "lost more men in the advance into Russia than the retreat").

  • @CharlesNike

    @CharlesNike

    6 ай бұрын

    Hello, I'm Charles Nike Watching from Florida Jacksonville USA. I'm sorry if I may appear intrusive I just want to let you know I didn't know this kind of beauty 😍 still exist, What's your name and where are you watching from?

  • @user-wy9ds5mf4q
    @user-wy9ds5mf4q20 күн бұрын

    Interesting 🧐

  • @Belhagays
    @Belhagays6 ай бұрын

    Napoleons fleet was larger in trafalgar is half the truth. They were beaten already by plague and almost badly manned with new recruits. Nelsons gamble won't be successful if Napoleons fleet was in good condition as the wind was against him

  • @adamdudley8736
    @adamdudley87366 ай бұрын

    My boy Dan going grey😳

  • @redhausser7492
    @redhausser74926 ай бұрын

    I would've loved to see Aspern or Wagram, but I guess that, while large and bloody battles, they aren't as relevant to the large strategic scene as Austerlitz and Borodino.

  • @Steven-jn2cw
    @Steven-jn2cw6 ай бұрын

    You didn't Include much from his Italian campaign which was arguably some of his best and Napoleon was not part of Trafalgar

  • @TheRealDarrylStrawberry
    @TheRealDarrylStrawberry6 ай бұрын

    This video is 10x better than that new Ridley Scott garbage.

  • @waynetaylor2784
    @waynetaylor27846 ай бұрын

    The 3 victories of Nelson Nile Copenhagen Trafalgar

  • @tibsky1396

    @tibsky1396

    6 ай бұрын

    Perhaps, in a video "The Key Battles That Made Admiral Nelson".

  • @RodolfoGaming

    @RodolfoGaming

    6 ай бұрын

    @@tibsky1396 exactly what i was thinking

  • @louaceveu1925
    @louaceveu19256 ай бұрын

    Trafalgar was lost due to two reasons: Villeneuve was an inexperienced admiral and the British changed the way to do the battle charging frontally the French-Spanish fleet breaking the Code of Honor of maritime battles at the time. Both fleets will place their ships parallel and their exchange fire and possible assault on enemy ships. The biggest miscalculation of Napoleon was Spain, the beginning of his demise.

  • @patriotalways4811
    @patriotalways48116 ай бұрын

    Had it not been for the timely arrival of General Desaix and his division it may have been a disaster for Bonaparte. As it was Desaix was killed leading the glorious counterattack and Bonaparte did not have to share the spoils of victory with anyone.

  • @Kamfrenchie

    @Kamfrenchie

    6 ай бұрын

    Well, desaix was under Bonaparte's order. And it's not like Napoleon didn't have plenty of glory to begin with, or that he was ungrateful towards his good generals

  • @pierpiero
    @pierpiero6 ай бұрын

    "You british think you are better just bc you had boats"

  • @tisse90
    @tisse906 ай бұрын

    Why is there not a movie about Wellington?

  • @Son0fFalse

    @Son0fFalse

    6 ай бұрын

    There is, the lines of Wellington... I am sure there are others. John Malkovich plays Wellignton in that film

  • @nitemunky76
    @nitemunky766 ай бұрын

    This video has more accuracy and is a more interesting watch than the actual movie...

  • @toteZitrone
    @toteZitrone5 ай бұрын

    I do not get this. I pay for History Hit, but jet I can't find this video in their library. Overall it seems almost more convenient to follow and organize their productions on KZread. Anyone else having the same issues?

  • @bigbaba1111
    @bigbaba11116 ай бұрын

    Thanks mate, but I miss the battle of Rivoli. It was insane. His right flank? Gone. His left? Retreating. His center? Crumbling. His rear? Attacked by an enemy column. And yet, he managed to beat Alvinci soundly.

  • @danielconde13
    @danielconde136 ай бұрын

    Title says "Battles that made Napoleon Bonaparte". Napoleon wasn't in Trafalgar, so we're gonna skip that one entirely - it did prevent him from invading the UK, but then the title is misleading. The Battle of the Pyramids is part of a failed campaign that brought no military gain whatsoever. My list of make it or break it battles for Napoleon, with him in command (in chronological order): 1 - Toulon (First and impactful victory) 2 - Rivoli (sealed the fate of his first campaign, under near defeat circumstances) 3 - Marengo (brilliant near defeat turned victory, practically sealed the fate of the Second Coalition, consolidated his new First Consul position in France) 4 - Austerlitz (masterpiece, knocked Austria off) 5 - Jena-Auerstedt (Prussia smashed, large credits to Marshall Davout however) 6 - Eylau (the "massacre without results", defeat nearly avoided) 7 - Friedland (revenge over the Russians, ended the Fourth Coalition) 8 - Wagram (revenge over the Austrians, for his double loss - defeat at Aspern-Essling, loss of personal friend Marshall Lannes - last victorious battle of his last victorious campaign) 9 - Borodino (bloodiest day of the Napoleonic Wars, paved the way to Moscow and catastrophe) 10 - Leipzig (climatic clash, three days battle, and Napoleon cornered against the wall) 11 - Six Day's Campaign (as a whole, although ending in defeat and abdication, it saw Napoleon himself in the thick of battle, aiming cannons, and imposing several defeats against all odds) 12 - Waterloo (The End)

  • @margaretjones777

    @margaretjones777

    6 ай бұрын

    Trafalgar did a great deal more than prevent Napoleon from invading Britain. On the one hand, it deprived Napoleon of his overseas empire, trashed France's maritime trade and ruined the French economy, thereby constraining Napoleon's ability to maintain his military machine. On the other hand, Trafalgar allowed Britain to monopolize global trade, massively enriching it and enabling it to fully fund its allies, who were thereafter able to outmatch Napoleon in terms of equipment and manpower. It might be boring, but wars are decided by economics, and it was France's economic weakness which doomed Napoleon to defeat. Put bluntly, he couldn't afford enough allies, enough men, enough guns, enough horses or enough food; and no amount of tactical brilliance could ever offset this disadvantage. In the final analysis, the war swung this way and that, with victories and defeats, and yet more victories and defeats, until France finally ran out of money and was facing starvation - and it was Trafalgar, more than any other battle, which caused this to happen.

  • @davidpreece1188
    @davidpreece11886 ай бұрын

    We're still talking about Austerlitz and ponds? Despite recent digs suggesting hardly anyone drowned in them?

  • @joshuawright8441
    @joshuawright84416 ай бұрын

    Dan - Did you watch the film before recommending we go see it?

  • @josephszymanik9609
    @josephszymanik96096 ай бұрын

    No mention of Eylau

  • @TheWitchfinderGenral
    @TheWitchfinderGenral6 ай бұрын

    I watched Ridley Scott's Napoleon, and I was pretty disappointed. It's impossible to do justice Napoleon's life in three hours, and certainly not with Ridley "Were you there?" Scott directing.

  • @metoo7557
    @metoo75576 ай бұрын

    I wouldn't call him over rated at all, he spear headed the mixed group formations, so the battalions(?) were like little armies that were able to function on their own without having to wait for a particular set of soldiers (engineers or what have you). Napoleon is one of the best military commanders, up until age caught up with him.

  • @kaiser2903
    @kaiser29036 ай бұрын

    The firing on the retreating allied troops across the frozen lakes at Austerlitz never happened. At least no evidence was ever found on the actual battlefield and no contemporary sources who were there mention it.

  • @johnmoreno9636

    @johnmoreno9636

    6 ай бұрын

    I can not figure out why Ridley Scott several times would portray events that did not happen, like Napoleon leading cavalry charges or trenches at Waterloo. The two "historical consultants" listed in the credits should be embarrassed. If Scott got obvious things wrong, one wonders how accurate he was about Josephine.

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman61012 ай бұрын

    Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher. 21st December 1742 - 12th September 1819. (aged 76). Years of Service 1758 - 1815. The Royal Prussian Army (1701-1919.

  • @robnewman6101

    @robnewman6101

    2 ай бұрын

    1970 Waterloo Historical Drama Epic Movie. Marshal Blucher! I have ordered to retreat. Retreat?! I am 72 & a proud soldier! This Steel is my word! I am too old to brake it. If Wellington runs for the coast, none of us will get home to Berlin. I do not trust the British.

  • @murkyseb
    @murkyseb6 ай бұрын

    Armies always invade Russian with the mindset of “it’ll be cold but it won’t be that cold”. Then they get there and they think “shit it’s really fucking cold”

  • @shays7030

    @shays7030

    6 ай бұрын

    🤣🤣…🥶

  • @artawhirler

    @artawhirler

    6 ай бұрын

    This is why Russia has never been invaded by Minnesotans. We know better. 😅

  • @dontforgethistory_official
    @dontforgethistory_official6 ай бұрын

    No italian campaign???

  • @11DNA11
    @11DNA115 ай бұрын

    A BIT OVERRATED?! He's THE best commander of armies in human history. No one could take Napoleon on 1v1. He'd just destroy whoever was against him. Only one who could come close to the brilliance of Napoleon Bonaparte, is Subutai...

  • @Kamfrenchie
    @Kamfrenchie6 ай бұрын

    I should have known a british Historian would spend more time on trafalgar than other battles :D, a battle where Napoleon wasn't. Love you british friends !

  • @DressedForDrowning
    @DressedForDrowning6 ай бұрын

    It's always Beethoven in Napoleon documentary.

  • @taivo55

    @taivo55

    6 ай бұрын

    Because Beethoven's Third was written to honor Napoleon. Beethoven switched the title of the Third, after it was already finished, to Eroica only after Napoleon had crowned himself Emperor.

  • @DressedForDrowning

    @DressedForDrowning

    6 ай бұрын

    @@taivo55 Beethoven realized that he was a dictator, not a savior. But that's not the point. It seems the Beethoven music fits perfectly to Napoleon's life. I heard it in many Napoleon documentaries. BTW To me it makes perfect sense to put a funeral march into the 2nd movement of the Eroica. And for you?

  • @taivo55

    @taivo55

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@DressedForDrowning Most rulers in that age were dictators to one extent or another, but I think that Beethoven's major objection was the taking of such a charged title as "emperor" with its anti-revolutionary implications of hereditary privilege. It is, of course, one of Beethoven's masterworks (an odd number, of course, LOL).

  • @thearthritisgamer946
    @thearthritisgamer9466 ай бұрын

    "Ever think about the French Empire?" 😂

  • @stevec7770

    @stevec7770

    6 ай бұрын

    Everyday I think about the French Empire

  • @NordicTG
    @NordicTG6 ай бұрын

    What if I told you Napoleon didnt care much about the Revolution & didnt like seeing the Royals heads Chop up & didnt like the bloodbath of the Revoulution, but indeed was happy it helpt him to climb higher for his own Personal Goals, wouldn t have happend during the French Royalist Goverment so. The Movie Napoleon catches two great moments of his Career "Toulon & Austerlitz"

  • @tomrastrick1783
    @tomrastrick17832 ай бұрын

    “The British Royal Navy” Surely Just “Royal Navy” there is only one.

  • @stevenschultz9637
    @stevenschultz96375 ай бұрын

    22:38 I believe Napoleon lost a bit more than 10% of his forces

  • @replaygeorge
    @replaygeorge6 ай бұрын

    I love your videos, but the film is not something I would recommend. Bottom line of the film is "Napoleon was nothing without Josephine". When they separate, Napoleon starts losing battles, gets exiled, and when she finally dies, he is defeated. Also, in the beginning I didn't feel like I was watching a young, ambitious, fiery Corsican trying to prove himself, but a jaded stoic like middle aged officer trying to survive one more assignment.

  • @steb4205
    @steb42056 ай бұрын

    Too many adverts KZread

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    6 ай бұрын

    STOP SPAMMING

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman61012 ай бұрын

    To Wellington & Blucher. The Winners & Heros of the day at The Battle of Waterloo in 1815. To Wellington & Blucher. 😊🍾🥂🍻🎉🎊🎈⭐⭐👑💂‍♂️🇬🇧🤝🇷🇺👑🦅

  • @quangvule262
    @quangvule2623 ай бұрын

    "A bit overrated" I am glad I am not the only one to think that

  • @Russia-bullies
    @Russia-bullies6 ай бұрын

    You should feature the Russo-Ukrainian War.

  • @azzy221
    @azzy2216 ай бұрын

    No spoiler warning for the film!

  • @AndyTaken
    @AndyTaken6 ай бұрын

    21:42 how is 30k men a 3rd of his army? You started by stating he had a force of 700k I'm not even great with maths and I can say without a doubt that is nowhere close to a 3rd.

  • @igorbednarski8048

    @igorbednarski8048

    6 ай бұрын

    The entire force that invaded Russia was 700k, 30k was a third of the army that took part in the battle of Borodino - first of all, the French forces suffered horrendous casualties during the campaign so they had a force nowhere near 700k by the time of Borodino. Secondly, only a part of the remaining French forces took part in the battle.

  • @juliendunand6409
    @juliendunand640927 күн бұрын

    Friedland ? Arcole ? Rivoli ?

  • @IronRangeOutlawBrigade
    @IronRangeOutlawBrigade6 ай бұрын

    Napoleon with a British slant

  • @btokarski82
    @btokarski826 ай бұрын

    the napolean movie (2023) was horrible. The movie Waterloo, made almost 50 years ago without any CGI runs laps around it. Its sad. I hope another director/screen writer can make another one that does this world period more justice

  • @johnpaulkane6153
    @johnpaulkane61536 ай бұрын

    Napoleon envy

  • @JohnReedy07163
    @JohnReedy071636 ай бұрын

    Puts Jena-Auerstadt a Napoleon loss on the list but not Friedland which got the Russians to Capitulate? Weird choice

  • @mrtomcruise5192
    @mrtomcruise51926 ай бұрын

    I read napoleon was allergic to reddish and swedes

  • @cme1713
    @cme1713Ай бұрын

    new film, Jean-Jacques Dessalines: The Man Who Defeated Napoleon Bonaparte.

  • @The-Music-Archive
    @The-Music-Archive6 ай бұрын

    where is colonel kuthaiba, I want him to feed me kernels of kuthaiba. Yung kuthaiba.

  • @rubasznycichowlaz
    @rubasznycichowlaz6 ай бұрын

    ummm, I don't think that Napoleon commanded at Trafalgar...

  • @francoisbernard6866
    @francoisbernard68666 ай бұрын

    Please be honest when you inform figures. 7 millions is the top of the estimation. Historians hesitate between 3 and 7 millions ! Napoleon always looked for peace, but the scared old fashionned royalist countries, like Great Britain, scared by French Revolution ideas, always refused and formed agressive coalitions !!!

  • @matthewmckever2312
    @matthewmckever23126 ай бұрын

    😮 why did Napoleon not wait out the winter in Moscow?

  • @zowaeh1829

    @zowaeh1829

    6 ай бұрын

    His supply lines were incredibly stretched out and weak by that point. If he had stayed in Moscow, the Russians would have most likely regrouped and surround him. He had no choice but to pull back.

  • @raylaylin4229

    @raylaylin4229

    6 ай бұрын

    Much of Moscow aside from the Kremlin had been burnt to the ground. His army would not have been able to live off the land.

  • @matthewmckever2312

    @matthewmckever2312

    6 ай бұрын

    @@raylaylin4229 I suppose in retrospect anything sounds better than what they did. March into cold death with no food or shore up what remains of a destroyed city and live off the remaining citizens while waiting to be laid under seige. No good choices left.

  • @matthewmckever2312

    @matthewmckever2312

    6 ай бұрын

    @@zowaeh1829 It's one of those hindsight things, you always think theres somewhere to go or to get back from but you do that enough times you realise that wherever you go there you are. Think I would have deserted and married a Russian girl rather than turn around and do the same journey back but in winter without food. But theres that hindsight thing again.

  • @johnmoreno9636

    @johnmoreno9636

    6 ай бұрын

    @@matthewmckever2312 Assuming the Cossacks did not find you first. Nobody gives credit to the Russian Army. Napoleon did set aside supply depots. But the Russian Army blocked Napoleon and captured them - thus making him retrace his steps over desolate terrain.

  • @whya2ndaccount
    @whya2ndaccount6 ай бұрын

    Sorry, but you aren't persuading me to watch Ridley Scott's nightmare. I'm sticking with Sergei Bondarchuk's 1966 "War and Peace" and his 1970 "Waterloo".

  • @matthewmckever2312
    @matthewmckever23126 ай бұрын

    Waterloo? Wasnt that a painting of the charge of the light brigade. Hey mine is not to reason why.😮

  • @jamesevans2191

    @jamesevans2191

    6 ай бұрын

    No, that’s not the light brigade, they wore blue

  • @matthewmckever2312

    @matthewmckever2312

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jamesevans2191 Oh hey ta, I always made that inevitable connection with a red uniform and that painting is used so often so randomly. Did the heavy brigade wear blue as well ? I'll check. Thanks man.

  • @artawhirler

    @artawhirler

    6 ай бұрын

    The painting does indeed depict Waterloo. It's called "The Charge of the Scots Greys" and the painter was a woman, but I forget her name.

  • @hammerecords
    @hammerecords6 ай бұрын

    This 30 minute video tells you much more than what you get in a so called 3 hour epic.

  • @bunburyodo
    @bunburyodo6 ай бұрын

    As Stephen Fry said, Napoleon and the French army were the best in Europe, until the British "got the cane out of the cupboard and gave them a damn good thrashing!".

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    6 ай бұрын

    *KEYBOARD WARRIOR*

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    6 ай бұрын

    🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    6 ай бұрын

    *R34ARD*

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    6 ай бұрын

    🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪

  • @user-nm6sr7gt1x

    @user-nm6sr7gt1x

    6 ай бұрын

    Calling yourself out?@@frontenac5083

  • @benoitpisarchick6866
    @benoitpisarchick68665 ай бұрын

    briton blablabla the most crucial point of this you never mentionned is that most of the battles were imposed to France by England through 7coalitions! Napoleon (France) was struggling and kicked asses 1 vs 3 to 8 adversaries. He wins 57 battles and lost 2 battles (leipzig waterloo)! not single brit general is able to show the same score ! ;^) Clausewitz the Great Strategist of Wars called him The God of War! and if brits put him on exile so far it's not because he was an average leader...You can try to diminish his glory as much as you want, every military academy in the world knows he is -of course- the Greatest General that ever lived!

  • @Krisdt8
    @Krisdt86 ай бұрын

    And not one of them was shown in "Josephine". sorry I mean "Napoleon".....