MASTER AND COMMANDER

MASTER AND COMMANDER
ICONOGRAPHY OF GREATNESS

WELCOME TO A NEW APPRAISAL OF NAPOLEON

This blog is designed to show the real Napoleon, not the man disparaged by countless writers devoid of the facts who merely regurgitated the same misinformation either in blissful ignorance or in wilful spite.

BEHOLD A RISING STAR

BEHOLD A RISING STAR
NAPOLEON IN EGYPT

A FAMOUS HAT

A FAMOUS HAT
AHEAD OF THE REST

Thursday, 21 January 2010

DON'T BELIEVE EVERYTHING YOU READ IN THE PRESS

NAPOLEON AND THE ENGLISH PRESS GANG
0R
BONAPARTE BOMBARDED BY BLATANT BRITISH BIAS

THE SCAPEGOAT BY HOLMAN HUNT
   
DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY
OF BEN WEIDER THE INS FOUNDER
English view of Napoleon’s coup of Brumaire

“The English in general know nothing of the affairs of the Continent, particularly those of France.”
(Napoleon)*


In his lifetime Napoleon faced the most vitriolic and scabrous attacks imaginable from the British press and Establishment. No lie was too big, no exaggeration too outrageous, no defamation was beyond the pale. English gold for the sweaty palms of his would-be assassins was not enough, the Cabinet and the warmongers in Parliament wanted to ensure his political assassination as well.  Even today, this pathetic one-sidedness continues – and from people who consider themselves ‘historians’.  Correspondents and academics, some with titles and others without, seem to be writing as if they still lived in the C19th. To them it is as if the British Empire still exists. To many, truth is a mere casualty of a continuing propaganda war.

The worst thing for any leader or politician to face is ridicule, as grasping members of Parliament are finding at the moment in London.  Ridicule was heaped upon Napoleon by the British press in copious measure. McLynn states that: “the British press carried on a scurrilous campaign of defamation against the First Consul.”1  Papers claimed, for example, that Napoleon was sleeping with his stepdaughter Hortense. Then there were the highly personal and demeaning cartoons from the likes of Gillray, Napoleon appearing invariably as a dwarf.
The Plum-pudding in danger - Gillray (1805)

It was different, of course, if it was the English Establishment that was being mocked. When the cartoon showing the British National Assembly came out, the Prince Regent wanted it suppressed and paid for the plate to be destroyed.2
The British National Assembly -Gillray (1804)
Incidentally, it is very unBritish to laugh at somebody else but not be prepared to take a joke yourself. But the last thing the corrupt British Cabinet was prepared to do was extol the virtues of ‘fair play’. Napoleon rightly complained to the British ambassador Whitworth about this.  McLynn says his pompous reply was that: “press liberty was part of the traditional English freedoms and the government could not interfere; this from a creature of Pitt whose repressive ‘Two Acts’ of 1795 had silence all pro-French opinion.”3

Because of these and other cartoons, Napoleon is still thought of as ‘small’ by the vast majority of people today. He was, in fact, about 5’6” tall, the average height for a Frenchman of his time. Similarly, the ridicule continues today, if often at a more subtle level. On Dec. 5th 1977, the Daily Mail published a two-page spread on Bokassa, under the headline “Clown Imperial.” The article began: “Ex-paratrooper Jean-Bedel Bokassa followed his hero, Napoleon, on the path to imperial glory yesterday.” The paper rightly criticized the waste of money for such a poor country as the Central African Republic was in 1977, and still is today. But the subtext implies that Napoleon himself was ridiculous and a clown.

An alternate view could be, how amazing it is that a white man who died on a small island in 1821 in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, could become so respected and imitated by a black man in the centre of a completely landlocked country in a different continent 150 years later. In ‘darkest Africa’ as it was once called, the memory of Napoleon still shone.

In ‘Waking The Ghosts of Waterloo’ from The Daily Telegraph of June 13th 1987, John Keegan takes a very Anglo-centric route around the battlefield. Keegan pontificates in his usual way stating that: “Waterloo is the simplest of all battles to understand. As Wellington himself put it: ‘They (the French) just came on in the old way and we drove them off in the old way’.” The ‘we’ in this instance being the British. Amazing stuff indeed, seeing that there were less than 24,000 British soldiers at the battle against 69,000 French. Keegan does not even mention the Prussians until the very end of his article. Some 7,000 Prussians died as well. Were they knocked down crossing the road? Perhaps they fell into Victor Hugo’s ‘sunken lane’ and were never seen again?

Keegan says: “Blücher, whose troops’ arrival on the left as the day closed had robbed Napoleon of all chance of victory.”  Let us look at this ‘as the day closed’ remark. The battle was fought on June 18th at the height of summer, albeit a very wet and stormy one, when daylight would have ended around 10pm. The end of a summer’s day is therefore around 9-30 when the sun goes down. Let us be generous and allow it to be 8pm ‘as the day closed.’ Napoleon wrote of the same events: “It was 4 o’clock. Victory ought from then on to have been assured; but General Bülow’s corps carried out its powerful diversion at this moment. From 2 o’clock in the afternoon onwards General Daumont had reported that General Bülow was debouching in three columns, and that the French chasseurs were keeping up their fire all the while they were retiring before the enemy, which seemed to him very numerous. He estimated them at more than 40,000.”4

Napoleon goes on: “The French army, 69,000 strong, which at 7.00pm had gained a victory over an army of 120,000 men, held half the Anglo-Dutch battlefield, and had repulsed General Bülow’s corps, saw victory snatched from it by the arrival of General Blücher with 30,000 fresh troops, a reinforcement which brought the Allied army in the line up to nearly 150,000 men, that is two and a half to one.”5  Not a mention of all this in Keegan’s account.

With the necessity of fending off the newly arriving Prussians and with many of his men already committed at Hougoument and La Haye Sainte, Napoleon only had cavalry to attack Wellington. David Hamilton Williams says: “The time was approximately 3-30p.m…Napoleon himself ordered the grand Battery to intensify its fire on the English centre….”6 He later quotes from Ensign Gronow of the 1st Foot Guards who was at the receiving end of the great French cavalry charges: “At four o’ clock our square was a perfect hospital, being full of dead, dying, and mutilated soldiers.”7 Had Bülow not taken some of the pressure from Wellington, let alone the succour afforded by the arrival of Blücher’s men, history would have been very different.

Keegan implies it was all over by 7pm but David Chandler adds a rider to all this: “the Young Guard contrived to retain some hold over Placenoit until 9pm. The fighting withdrawal of the Old Guard was a model of valour and cool determination.”8 The film ‘Waterloo’ with Rod Steger is a keeganesque tour de force – with the actions of the Prussians almost airbrushed out of the script. Chandler also tells how earlier: “the ‘oldest of the old’, the 1st/2nd Grenadiers and the 1st/2nd Chasseurs of the Old Guard swept into Placenoit with the bayonet amidst a storm of rain and expelled all of fourteen Prussian battalions in very short order.”9 That did not appear in the film Waterloo. It is a slur on the memory of The Immortals to imply that they ‘all ran’ at Waterloo.

In the book ‘Great Military Leaders And Campaigns’ edited by Jeremy Black, below the title to a chapter on the ‘Duke of Wellington’ it adds: “British Victor over Napoleon.”10  It never credits Blücher at the same time. No partisanship there then. It also states that after the battle: “Within days, Napoleon had abdicated again, ending the war he had so recklessly revived.”11 This is an absolute lie and it shows the ‘historians’ who wrote this chapter to be unworthy of the name. One of the first things Napoleon did upon returning to power in 1815 was to write to the Allies asking for peace. His letter to the Prince Regent was never even opened let alone passed on to that rotund imbecile. As an Englishman one despairs at compatriots who have to lie about the past in order to promote their own twisted agendas. Black and his team should be thoroughly ashamed of themselves. Theirs is little more than the dark art of ‘spin’.

The truth was somewhat different: “In a personal letter, Napoleon attempted to convince the sovereigns of Europe that the Ancien Régime no longer suited the French nation:
“The Bourbons no longer wished to associate themselves
with French beliefs or manners. France had to separate
 itself from them. Its voice called for a liberator…Enough
 glory has already decorated the flags of various nations.
Great successes have usually been followed by great reverses.
A better arena is open today to sovereigns, and I am the first to enter it.
The only response to this peace offering was the formation of the Seventh Coalition…”12

The arrogant Allies, determined to snuff out equality and restore privilege, ganged up as they had with six previous coalitions to destroy the one person who had given equality of opportunity to every man throughout his former empire.

The Daily Telegraph contained a book review by Nigel Nicolson on Sept. 3rd 1988.  Dorothy Carrington had just had published her book ‘Napoleon and his parents’. The title appeared as follows:
‘Nigel Nicholson on a monster’s boyhood
Nappy days’
Nicholson is a bigot of the first order who writes splenetically whenever he mentions Napoleon. One fears he is about to have a heart attack at the mere hint of his name. To call Napoleon a ‘monster’ is pathetic. Nelson murdered Caracciollo at Naples, yet he is a British ‘hero’ with a huge monument to his name in the centre of London. Canning ordered the British navy to attack neutral Copenhagen in 1807 and murdered dozens of innocent, peaceful civilians in a terror campaign, yet he is written of as a ‘British statesman’ in the British press.

In English a ‘nappy’ means the same as a diaper – yet another crude and asinine attempt to belittle Napoleon. Certainly Nicholson is an expert on its contents. In his diatribe ‘Napoleon 1812’ 13 – a supposed ‘history’ book, his Napoleon can barely walk upright without dragging his knuckles on the ground. On page 9 he tosses a hand grenade into Napoleon’s reputation with lines like: “Both Napoleon and Hitler controlled continental Europe.” And on page 8 he states: “He did not await the first attack; he was always the aggressor.” Which is a palpable and inexcusable lie. France was attacked in 1805, 1806, 1807,1809, 1813, 1814 and 1815. And even during the Peace of Amiens the terms of which Britain ignored, the Cabinet allowed d’Artois and the Bourbons to plan further terrorist attempts upon Napoleon’s life – paid for with British gold. Writers like Nicholson further tarnish the good name of their own country by spouting such utter nonsense.

Only a most bigoted person would compare Napoleon with Hitler. Napoleon gave the Jews rights throughout his empire and was the first person to suggest that they be given territory of their own in the Holy Land. Napoleon allowed all religions freedom of worship and put an end to the internecine religious wars in France. Nicolson adds on page 178: “ he no longer seemed the liberator of nations but their oppressor. He was the enemy of the entire world. Even the United States, fighting against England, considered him a tyrant.”
The ‘enemy of the entire world’. How can anyone take Nicholson seriously when he speaks such drivel as this? Furthermore, thanks to the British navy attacking any ship it liked at sea, neutral or not, Napoleon sold indefensible Louisiana to the States in 1803. It was the largest ever peaceful transfer of territory in the history of the world.  Yet Nicholson says the Americans hated Napoleon. So why did they go to war with the British in 1812? They did so because the same arrogance that caused England to lose its American Colonies still prevailed - only Britain was allowed to bully every other mercantile nation in the world and board their shipping.

Nicholson almost drools when he quotes Thiers on page 130 concerning the retreat from Moscow: “ He saw nothing of the retreat, and didn’t want to see it because he would have been brought face to face with the consequences of his mistakes.  He preferred to deny them…He should have been on horseback all day supervising the passage of rivers and sustaining morale…” Anyone who bothers to read Bourgogne’s ‘Retreat from Moscow’ and Coignet’s memoirs will see that that is exactly what Napoleon was doing – except that he was on foot amongst his men, as even the Emperor did not have a horse due to the freezing cold. And after flogging Napoleon with the words of others Nicholson admits: “These judgments are harsh.” In the index to his book there is only one mention of Bourgogne, the account par excellence of this campaign, and none of Coignet yet he quotes the unreliable Segur many times. Bourgogne is full of praise for the inspiration and morale-boosting of his Emperor – perhaps that’s why Nicholson virtually ignores him.

On January 22nd 1989, the Sunday Telegraph published ‘Revolution Most Foul’ about the French Revolution two hundred years before. Peter Vansittart comments: “…Napoleon remarking to Metternich that a man like himself does not worry about a million deaths. Surveying a pile of battle corpses, he was as reassuring as Danton after the Massacres: “Small change, small change! A night in Paris will repair all this!” No advance here on the Fredericks, Catherines, and Pitts, let alone on Wellington, who wept over the Waterloo casualties.”

Metternich was an aristocrat who despised Napoleon and wanted to preserve the privileges of his class, he is hardly a favourable witness. Napoleon did sometimes make glib remarks, in poor taste, with Metternich it was most likely a form of braggadocio in an effort to hide the weakness of his forces.  However, as Coignet14 describes time and again, in the doing rather than the mere saying, Napoleon always did his best to see to the wounded, remaining on the battlefield personally to see to their welfare. Indeed, when Coignet was poisoned by a Bourbon agent (whom the British ultimately paid for) Napoleon himself sent two medical orderlies to help Coignet and kept himself up-to-date with his medical condition. Wellington called his soldiers ‘scum’ and kept his men at a distance in accordance with his view of aristocratic superiority. British soldiers had the worst reputation in Europe for going berserk once inside towns that they had been besieging. When Moore bolted for the coast and Corunna, leaving hundreds of British women and children behind, it was Napoleon who took care of them!

On the retreat from Moscow Napoleon put his own coaches at the service of the wounded. Would Wellington ever have done such a thing? He also made many comments about the horrors of war which are seldom reported, never by British historians who churn out the same couple of sayings ad nauseum.15 Napoleon wept at the death of Lannes and he was devastated by the death of Duroc. Yet Vansittart adds: “From Napoleon is not far to Hitler…” It was the BRITISH who invented concentration camps in the Boer War – to corral innocent women and children in one place because they could not defeat the Boer Commando in the field.  That was something Napoleon never did – as we have seen, he offered succour to the women and children his enemy abandoned. Some 26,000 Boer women and children died of disease or starved in those camps. It is a shameful aspect of British history that is never taught in our schools. Even the German ministers of the Kaiser complained about this callous treatment. Napoleon was far kinder to his prisoners than the British of the time ever were. French soldiers were stuffed in rotting hulks in England. Napoleon often allowed his former enemies to enlist in his army. There were Spaniards and Portuguese serving with his forces in Russia, for example. And, as mentioned in an earlier article, even Cadoudal was given this option.15

The Daily Mail of June 17th 1989 had a piece entitled ‘Return to Waterloo’ by Paul Johnson, another bombast of the Old School. Johnson spouts: “The British, who hated Napoleon, never believed he would rest content in his tiny kingdom of Elba…” The fact that Louis XVIII never paid the two million francs a year, as prescribed in the treaty of 1814 whereby Napoleon agreed to abdicate, meant that he could not have paid his staff and soldiers had he remained. But it is the statement that ‘the British hated Napoleon’ which needs addressing most. That is either a deliberate lie, or another example of Johnson’s consummate ignorance.

The Grimsby Evening Telegraph of July 14th 1997 has a fascinating account of a time ‘When Lincs mustered to meet Napoleon’s men’. At first glance it might seem as if the Lincolnshire lads were preparing to repel Napoleon if he invaded. The truth is far more interesting: “At the very end of the C18th, and the beginning of the 19th, North East Lincolnshire was under a certain amount of threat. For on the Continent, Napoleon was lending weight to the hopes of local revolutionaries and republicans. These were railing against both the monarchy and the church. Levellers, whose origins were in the Civil War, called for the end of monarchy. To counter those who would positively welcome Napoleon’s troops and the opportunity for revolution they would bring, the establishment – the Constitutionalists – raised bodies of armed men…militia…”16

These were the same sort of armed brigands who murdered peaceful protesters at the infamous Peterloo Massacre of 1819. Yet according to Johnson everyone hated Napoleon! Franceschi and Weider also belie this nonsense, quoting opposition members of Parliament in 1815: “Bonaparte  was received in France as a liberator. It would be a monstrous act to make war on a nation to impose on it the government it did not want.”17 They also repeat the words of the Morning Chronicle which “lectured Lord Castlereagh, the foreign secretary, ‘English patriots think that the powers of the continent are unified not so much against Bonaparte as against the spirit of liberty.’ ”18

Byron hated Wellington  and Castlereagh, not Napoleon, and he was certainly not alone. When Napoleon was prevented from landing on British territory in 1815, after Waterloo, he had many defenders in Parliament and hundreds of people flocked to see him from all over the country. The likes of Johnson seem to believe that if you repeat nonsense long enough a gullible people will believe it to be true. If they only hear the same old lies, perhaps so.

Johnson also repeats the Waterloo canard: “By the time he used his guards, at 7pm, he was already under pressure from the Prussians.” As we have seen, the influence of the Prussians was operating hours before that. He recounts Wellington shyly admitting: “By God, I don’t think it would have done if I had not been there.” It would not have been done without tens of thousands of Prussians either m’lud.

The Sunday Times of Oct 20th 1996 declares: ‘Napoleon’s bodice ripper found in Moscow archive.’  As well as part of a romance turning up in the Moscow archive so did: “Napoleon’s own account of the disastrous campaign against Russia in 1812, in which he rejects the conventional view that his army was destroyed by winter blizzards.” They report a comment of his which is incredibly relevant to the problems of the current Labour Government in London: “A government that does not know how to admit guilt is a government that cannot command.” However, the paper then flies its own ignorance like a kite. It actually says: “Notes from the archives also suggest the ageing soldier was unwilling to accept that invading Russia too close to winter was the biggest blunder of his life.”

Napoleon’s Grand Army crossed the River Niemen on June 24th 1812, when he was 42 years old. British winters might be bad - but they don’t start on June 24th – neither do winters in Russia.

The Sunday Times then claims he admitted that he had been defeated by Kutuzov at Borodino. They quote Professor John Mcmanners, lecturer in French history at Oxford, who opines: “It is fascinating to realise Napoleon was willing to admit to being out-generalled rather than confess he made such a fundamental mistake as picking the wrong time to take on the Russians.” Again this seems to infer he chose the wrong ‘season’.  As Coignet, who went through the campaign attests, along with the many eye-witness accounts collected by Anthony Brett James and Paul Britten Austin, the summer weather was appalling as well as that in winter.19 The roads were virtually impassable and supplies failed to reach the troops. A good case can be made that Napoleon should have paused at Vilna or Smolensk, or that he ought not to have embarked upon the project at all, but that is not what the Professor seems to be saying. Good manners might make a man, but Mcmanners is a poor historian.

The Sunday Times of Nov 3rd 1996 had a review by Alan Judd of Alastair Horne’s book ‘How Far From Austerlitz,’ entitled ‘His Ticket To Waterloo.’ Judd says Napoleon: “saw a way of evicting the British from Toulon and seized the chance with both hands. Later, sick leave in Paris confirmed his early good impression: the famous ‘whiff of grapeshot’ with which he introduced himself to the Paris mob (killing 400) concisely established not only his initiative but one of the fundamentals of his relationship with the people of France – and with any others he could reach.”

In effect, Judd says Napoleon was born to kill and loved killing people for the mere hell of it. This begs the question just what were the British doing in Toulon? If French ships had seized Bristol, Hull or Portsmouth and had been kicked out and their men slaughtered in droves by Nelson – this would have been ‘a good thing’ to Judd and his ilk and Nelson would be all the more a ‘hero’. Similarly, the Royalist mob that attacked the Convention was determined to remove by violence a legitimate government. Barras commanded the forces that defeated the rebels. Napoleon was in charge of the troops under his command. Napoleon quelled an armed insurrection whilst he was under legitimate authority. When the British militia murdered and mutilated at Peterloo, they were attacking innocent civilians who were merely discussing the way their country should be run.

In a letter to the Sunday Telegraph of May 21st 1995, Cleo Shaw makes this very point: “All too often the violence was on the side of oppressive authority. For example at the Peterloo Massacre, on August 16, 1819, about 60,000 unarmed people, including many women and children, gathered in St Peter’s Fields in Manchester…They had many grievances, including the starvation price of food. But the violence came not from them but from the untrained yeomanry that the magistrates called out. With their sabres they killed 11 people and injured hundreds.”

One has to be very careful about being Judd and jury.

The reviewer then quotes Horne himself: “If Austerlitz raised Napoleon to the pinnacle of his success, it also turned his head and filled it with the delusion that no force could now stop him conquering the world.” This is trite nonsense and likens Napoleon to some evil genius in a James Bond film who gets up in the morning planning world domination even before he has had his breakfast. The very next year after Austerlitz -1806- Napoleon bent over backwards to avoid war with Prussia as Jean Claude Damamme proves in his superb article ‘Jena – 1806, The Battle that Napoleon did not want.’20 Similarly, it was the Austrians who invaded Bavaria in 1809, an ally of France, starting a new war, despite Napoleon asking Marshal Davout to keep his patrols away from the Austrian border so as not to provoke them. And it was the Allies who refused to let Napoleon rule France in peace in 1815 as we have already seen.

Judd then writes in fine Orwellian style: “France warred with Europe for 25 years.” Of course, the £66,000,000 paid in bribes by the British Government to entice Austria and Russia and other poorer countries into their coalitions was done merely to promote ‘peace and prosperity’ as Big Brother might have put it. The truth is very simple – England was the cause of most of the wars of that time. It was England that provoked the Americans to rebel; it was England that bankrolled the other continental powers to attack France; it was the British navy that considered the sea and oceans their own domain – where other countries could only ply their trade under British sufferance. And all this for a rapacious clique of corrupt politicians in Whitehall, and a later crew of nasty Bourbon exiles.

Judd adds: “each conquest needs another to protect it. Talleyrand, the subtextual hero of this book, tried and failed to persuade his master of this before deserting him…” Talleyrand as ‘hero’ – that would certainly have amused his contemporaries – especially Fouché - his equal in duplicity and treachery.

Judd too, has to get in the ‘Hitler’ slur: “Horne makes telling comparisons with Hitler throughout…Napoleon buried at least a million Frenchmen…” What Judd doesn’t say, is that most of them were killed because of the repeated wars of aggression started by England even though he admits: “it was Britain that stood against him throughout, bankrolling the allies to the tune of an astonishing
£66 m.”

In ‘The Grand Old Duke’ which appeared in the Sunday Times of March 30th 1997, Robert Blake oozes over the “great man” and speaks of “the two heroes of the war against Napoleon. Wellington and Nelson…” He quotes Wellington saying: “take my word for it, if you have seen but one day of war, you would pray to Almighty God that you might never see a thing again.” Quite so, so what was Wellington doing in another country looking for war? Why didn’t he agree to the peace proposals Napoleon urgently requested as soon as he returned from Elba?  Was Mont Saint-Jean some strange extension of the Home Counties that does not appear on British maps? Just what was he doing there?

He was trying to destroy a man who had just staged a bloodless takeover of a country that was glad to see the back of the Bourbons. As the English Opposition member had said, why go to war to prevent the French people from having the ruler they wanted? The answer is in a simple phrase – it was a war to maintain privilege.

That same year, Blake wrote in the Sunday Times – Nov 16th 1997 – a review of Frank McLynn’s book on Napoleon, catchily entitled with complete impartiality: ‘He detested freedom and liberty.’ The old Tory warhorse trots out the same tosh. He asserts that: “McLynn has a bit of a chip on his shoulder about England.” Yet so did his ‘hero’ Wellington, who never forgave providence for causing him to be born in Ireland. When confronted by his non-English birth, Wellington said with eminent modesty: ‘Not only donkeys are born in a stable.’  He certainly considered himself a god set above the ordinary man, and he was dead set against extending the franchise to the common people.

Blake says of Lord Liverpool: “He may not have been very exciting figure but he was honourable, conscientious and efficient.” This appraisal concerns the man who bullied Louis XVIII into persecuting former Napoleonic soldiers and officials after Waterloo.  As David Hamilton-Williams states: “D’Artois used both the police force and his agents to terrorize and murder Bonapartist officers and supporters as requested by the British Prime Minister Lord Liverpool.”21

This is the same sort of ‘honour’ no doubt that led to the construction of those concentration camps in South Africa – victory at all costs, vengeance at every turn. Lord Blake might be all in favour of such men, but the British public, if they knew of such events, would be suitably ashamed of what was done in their name by corrupt aristocratic ‘leaders’.

Maurice Chittenden comments on Peter Hofschröer’s work in The Sunday Times of Jan 25th 1998: “Hofschröer, who spent eight years researching evidence in the Prussian archives and in accounts by British, German and Dutch officers present in the allied headquarters, said: ‘The Duke of Wellington very carefully nurtured his reputation. The whole truth was, at times, a casualty in the process’.”  Hofschröer made a case for Wellington deliberately hanging back when Blücher faced Napoleon at Ligny. Chittenden adds: “John Elting, a retired American army colonel whose own history of the Napoleonic wars became a textbook at Westpoint military academy, supports Hofschröer: ‘I knew this was going to produce howls of anguish. American historians have always been suspicious why Wellington was so slow,’ he said.”

There will undoubtedly be more revelations as more old documents, letters and accounts come to light. Suffice it to say, Wellington certainly did not win the battle of Waterloo alone as Keegan and Blake and the like seem to insist. A letter to the Sunday Telegraph of Oct 23rd 1994 brings out another important contrast between Napoleon and Wellington. Dr. John Adamson writes: “Wellington’s battles were relatively small-scale operations. None approached the scale of Napoleon’s engagements at Jena or Wagram. At Leipzig…the combined forces involved on both sides totalled more than 400,000 men. Generalship in those circumstances was a test Wellington never faced.” Napoleon was also an Emperor, with a whole country to run, and he was aware of the treachery that could always occur behind his back as it had in 1814. Such colossal responsibilities were never faced by Wellington, who made a reactionary Prime Minister when he did climb to the top of the ‘greasy pole’ in England.

Perhaps one day, a film will be made that does Napoleon justice. It has been a long time since Abel Gance. The Daily Express reported on August 1st 1986 that Jack Nicolson paid $250,000 for the rights to The Murder of Napoleon. The actor said: “I look at him as thinkers like Bernard Shaw and Nietszche did who considered Napoleon THE man.”

In Britain, the same jaded biased stories have kept recurring over the past few decades. Right-wing publications give space for the same elderly generation of High Tory apologists to chant the same old mantras. The English Press Gang continue to mug Napoleon’s memory and seek to attain the historical apotheosis of Wellington and Nelson. They might be journalists, but they are definitely not historians.

© 2009 John Tarttelin  M.A. History

Author of The Real Napoleon - The Untold Story
A Souladream Production



NAPOLEON AND THE ENGLISH PRESS GANG
NOTES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY

* Quoted in SOMERSET DE CHAIR  NAPOLEON ON NAPOLEON (1992) Frontispiece.

1.   FRANK McLYNN   NAPOLEON (1997) p.264
2.   See Wikipedia under GILLRAY
3.   McLYNN   op.cit., p.265 (My italics)
4.   SOMERSET DE CHAIR op.cit, p.266
5.   Ibid., p.271
6.   DAVID HAMILTON WILLIAMS   WATERLOO NEW PERSPECTIVES (1993) p. 320
7.   Ibid., p.324
8.   DAVID CHANDLER WATERLOO THE HUNDRED DAYS (1980) p.165
9.   Ibid., p.151 (My italics)
10. Ed. JEREMY BLACK   GREAT MILITARY LEADERS AND THEIR CAMPAIGNS (2008) p.198
11. Ibid., p.202
12. GENERAL MICHEL FRANCESCHI AND BEN WEIDER   THE WARS AGAINST NAPOLEON (2008)
        p.195
13. NIGEL NICOLSON   NAPOLEON 1812 (1985)
14. JEAN ROCH COIGNET   CAPTAIN COIGNET (1850) LEONAUR (2007)
15. See my ARTICLE Napoleon and the Art of War on the INS Website
16. My Italics
17. FRANCESCHI AND WEIDER op.cit., p.195
18. Ibid., p.195
19. See    ANTONY BRETT-JAMES 1812 (1966)
                  PAUL BRITTEN AUSTIN   1812   THE MARCH ON MOSCOW (1993)
                  PAUL BRITTEN AUSTIN   1812   NAPOLEON IN MOSCOW (1995)
                  PAUL BRITTEN AUSTIN   1812   THE GREAT RETREAT (1996)
20. See INS Website under ARTICLES
21. DAVID HAMILTON WILLIAMS   THE FALL OF NAPOLEON (1994)

BIBLIOGRAPHY

1.   PAUL BRITTEN AUSTIN   1812 THE MARCH ON MOSCOW (1993)
2.   PAUL BRITTEN AUSTIN   1812 NAPOLEON IN MOSCOW (1995)
3.   PAUL BRITTEN AUSTIN   1812 THE GREAT RETREAT (1996)
4.   JEREMY BLACK (Ed.)   GREAT MILITARY LEADERS AND THEIR CAMPAIGNS
       (2008)
5.   ANTONY BRETT-JAMES   1812 (1966)
6.   SOMERSET DE CHAIR (Ed)   NAPOLEON ON NAPOLEON (1992)
7.   DAVID CHANDLER   THE CAMPAIGNS OF NAPOLEON (1966)
8.   DAVID CHANDLER   WATERLOO THE HUNDRED DAYS (1980)
9.   JEAN ROCH COIGNET   CAPTAIN COIGNET (1850) LEONAUR (2007)
10. JOHN ELTING   SWORDS AROUND THE THRONE   (1988)
11. GENERAL MICHEL FRANCESCHI AND BEN WEIDER   THE WARS AGAINST
       NAPOLEON (2008)
12. DAVID HAMILTON WILLIAMS  WATERLOO NEW PERSPECTIVES (1993)
13. DAVID HAMILTON WILLIAMS THE FALL OF NAPOLEON (1994)
14. FRANK McLYNN   NAPOLEON (1997)
15. NIGEL NICOLSON 1812 (1985)







Saturday, 19 December 2009

MY FAVOURITE BOOKS ABOUT NAPOLEON'S 1812 CAMPAIGN


1812 the year of fire and ice

I have built up my Napoleonic library over many years. Most of the books I bought here in England were highly critical of Napoleon and everything he stood for - no surprises there then. It was only as I read books by American authors in particular that I realized that the same historical events were open to more than one interpretation. Then, as I read and discovered more myself, I saw that Napoleon had been rated one of the greatest geniuses of all time by no less a person than Goethe, who met the French Emperor and received the Legion of Honour from him in person. Heine and Nietszche were other admirers of Napoleon. More recently, a wide perusal of the Net has revealed nuggets of pure joy for the Napoleonic researcher. Abbott's writings were completely new to me when I came across them last year as was the excellent commentaries by Walter Runciman, especially his 1919 volume Drake, Nelson and Napoleon. Runciman who lived from 1847-1937 was likewise brought up to believe in the myth of the Corsican Ogre and yet he came to a completely different assessment of Napoleon after extensive reading in the British archives.

One of the best books about Napoleon and his Grand Army is by John Elting. Swords around a Throne is full of great anecdotes and those little human touches that reveal Napoleon the man. The scholarship of the sadly deceased Elting is superb and there are chapters about every branch of the French Army including information about cantinieres and other vital elements of the non-military participants in glorious pages of history. No fact is too arcane but that Elting has a comment to make about it. There are many references to 1812 scattered throughout the volume and they are all well worth reading.

For the political element of the Franco-Russian struggle and particularly the personal relationship between Napoleon and Tsar Alexander, Curtis Cate's book The War of the Two Emperors is invaluable. Alan Palmer's Russia in War and Peace  is also useful and had excellent illustrations particularly contemporary Russian ones.

My favourite writing of all however, are eye-witness accounts of the horrors of this Russian epic. I have already mentioned the memoirs of Bourgogne and Coignet. One superb trilogy that utilizes  scores of such first-hand witnesses is that by Paul Britten Austin.  Although Austin is no real fan of Napoleon, the sheer effort of putting dozens of different perspectives into one continuous narrative is extremely impressive and I enjoyed reading his volumes considerably.

What first got me interested in the Russian campaign was  reading Anthony Brett-James' 1812 eyewitness accounts (1966). Sadly, this seems to be out of print now but if you can find a second-hand copy it will be well worth the trouble. Similarly, Boris Uxkull's Arms and the Woman gives an excellent Russian view on this campaign. I found my copy by accident in a second-hand book store in Doncaster, England- I had never heard of it before. I enjoyed reading it back in 1987 and more recently in 2005. Amazingly, Amazon have a dozen versions of this volume, one for as little as two dollars.

I cannot finish without mentioning the very recent work of my friend, that excellent French historian Jean-Claude Damamme whose Les Aigles en Hiver (The Eagles in Winter) came out last year, published by Plon. As yet, it is unavailable in English. How I regret that my French is so poor!  Other excellent books by Monsieur Damamme are available. If you want an account of Waterloo that has regard to history and not propaganda - do take a look.

C. John Tarttelin M.A. History

Author of The Real Napoleon - The Untold Story

A Souladream Production




Friday, 18 December 2009

AT THE BEREZINA RIVER - RUSSIA 1812

Posted by PicasaBATTLE OF BEREZINA by Peter von Hess (1792-1871) Wikipedia

This is the best picture I have come across that shows the chaos at the fateful crossing of the River Berezina during Napoleon's retreat from Moscow. The irony here was that the water should have been frozen solid, particularly as 1812-1813 was the coldest Russian winter in a hundred years, but slightly milder weather had  led to a thaw and the Grand Army was faced instead by a turbulent mass of ice filled water.

Already, the Russians were on the other side and two more Russian armies were closing in from behind. The situation for the French was dire in the extreme. Two-thirds of the army had succumbed to starvation and the cold and the coup de grace from Kutozov's men seemed imminent. As always during moments of extreme pressure and seemingly unassailable odds, Napoleon's intellect shone as sharply as the sparkling snow all around him. In a fantastic ruse he lured the Russians on the far bank south away from the intended crossing point where two bridges were thrown across the river by General Eble and his heroic men. In ice cold water they worked tirelessly, handed drinks by Napoleon himself. As they succumbed to the cold they floated away downstream and others took their place. What bravery, what self-sacrifice!

While Victor's gallant troops fended off the Russian pincer movement to the rear, the remnants of the Guard and the other corps filed silently across the river. Over 10,000 stragglers, not wanting to leave their firesides, were captured by the enemy. During a lull in the fighting, one bitter night, Sergeant Bourgogne, sick and weary, crossed one of the bridges with difficulty. As he wrote in his memoir of these events, he could nor understand why the stragglers did not heed his example - thousands could have saved themselves with one last desperate effort.

At another time, Jean-Roch Coignet found himself at one end of a bridge shepherding people across the river. A few yards away, opposite him at the same end, Davout the Iron Marshall was doing the same thing. Some years before, the Marshal had been instrumental in getting Coignet into Napoleon's elite Guard. Coignet was a titch, 'petiot' or 'a little un' as it is in French. Davout suggested he put two packs of playing cards in his shoes to beat the measure! Coignet did so and became the smallest ever member of the Guard. His bedmate back in France had nicknamed him his dwarf and Coignet, whose pal was the tallest man in the Regiment, could walk beneath  his friend's outstretched arm!

This same man was later discovered by Napoleon himself on guard outside his bedchamber. The Emperor was gobsmacked (I don't know the French equivalent for that). The man was over six feet four with an eighteen inch bearskin on his head and a plume over a foot long stuck on the side of that. He was a veritable giant - well over eight feet tall in his full uniform. One important point here - the French foot was 3/4s of an inch longer than the English one. Hence Napoleon's height of 5'2" French equates to approx. 5 feet 6 inches. Napoleon was not small - he was the average height for his day. Indeed, when he stepped on board the Bellerophon in 1815 Captain Maitland stated he was about 5' 6" English in height.

So impressed was Napoleon with the man's height that he immediately sent him to his superior officer in order to turn him into a drum major so he could strut his stuff in front of a splendid military band. The man was fazed by the Emperor speaking to him in person and in his confusion he left his musket on the floor! When he came back for it, flushed with embarrassment Napoleon told him to leave it and that he would stand guard in his place.

So it was that le Petite Caporal or Le Tondu as the men in the Guard called him ( the 'shorn one' because he always had his hair cut short - his elite Guard had ponytails), stood guard for himself. Many apochryphal stories were told by the men of their Emperor standing guard for a weary soldier fallen asleep at his post - on this occasion he did stand guard for one of them. Just imagine what this did for the morale of the common French soldier. Napoleon was not just their hero - he was one of them.
C. John Tarttelin M.A. History

Author of  The Real Napoleon - the Untold Story

A Souladream Production


Thursday, 17 December 2009

THE END OF AN ERA- WATERLOO SUNSET


The Battle of Waterloo began late on the morning of June 18th 1815. The ground had been saturated by torrential rains that followed the eruption of the volcano Tambora in April of that year. The decade 1810-1820 was the coldest of the C19th due to an unprecedented amount of volcanic eruptions in quick succession and there was probably a lot of residual dust in the atmosphere even before Tambora exploded with far greater force than the Krakatoan eruption of 1883.

The Prussian Army was seen to the east in the early afternoon and Napoleon had to send all his reserves to fend them off while he tackled Wellington to his front. The Young Guard enacted prodigies of valour at Placenoit and 7,000 Prussians became casualties before overwhelming their French counterparts. Meanwhile Grouchy, far away with 33,000 vital supporting troops did not heed advice and march to the sound of the guns - an old military maxim. Napoleon had failed to warn him in time. At the Battle of Ligny on the 16th, Napoleon's last victory,  the Prussians had retreated in disorder but they were not routed. The expected help on their right from Wellington had not materialized and Gneisenau was all for heading off back to Prussia tout de suite. There was no sign of Blucher who had been ridden down by French cavalry and was lain trapped beneath his horse. Had the French soldiers captured or killed Blucher there would have been no Waterloo as Wellington would never had stood without the promised aid of a Prussian corps.

Although the remnants of the Young Guard were still fighting at Placenoit late in the evening of the 18th, it was all over in the centre around 8pm after a second Prussian corps had arrived and when elements of the 'Middle' regiments of the  French Imperial Guard were repulsed by the British soldiers who had been given time to regroup by the arrival of their allies. There was no massacre of the Old Guard - the two elite regiments of chasseurs and fusiliers escaped in good order as David Chandler makes clear in his impressive account of Napoleon's campaigns.

In the painting above we see Napoleon at the climactic moment of the battle when he realizes that all is lost. Such was the panic amongst the retreating French soldiers that the Emperor had to abandon his coach - it was captured by the Prussian cavalry who set off in pursuit. The stolid British troops were too exhausted to pursue and most of their cavalry had been destroyed earlier in the battle in repulsing the initial attack of d'Erlon's corps. Too excited to reign in their mounts they plunged headlong into the French lines and many were caught by Pire's lancers who had been observing the approaching Prussians.

C.  John Tarttelin M.A. History 

Author of The Real Napoleon - The Untold Story

A Souladream Production

BUST OF NAPOLEON BY HOUDON



This is one of my favourite images of Napoleon. Here is a man who is a thinker and a sage, as far from the stereotypical image of the mindless conqueror as one can get. Napoleon had a passion for intellectual inquiry that overrode military necessities. On the eve of the Battle of Austerlitz  in December 1805 he discussed literature with his officers. After invading Russia and capturing Lithuania without a shot he asked to see the astronomer Sniadecki - there had been a famous comet in the skies above Europe in 1812. While on board ship on the voyage to Egypt in 1798 he had discussed God and religion with his companions. Such was the mind that fascinated Goethe and almost everyone who ever met Napoleon. Even his enemies were affected by his charm and easy conversation. He treated people the same way whether they were kings or peasants - he was approachable to all as Bourgogne and Coignet repeatedly attest. When British sailors took him to England and later to Saint Helena they were as fascinated by him as anyone. Frederick Maitland's account of his time on the Billy Ruffian or Bellerophon make this abundantly clear. The English Tars loved it when they put a play on for Napoleon and the one-time ruler of most of Europe deigned to listen and watch them for  twenty minutes - repeatedly laughing at their antics, especially the men who were dressed as women. In 1920 H.G. Wells had written that Napoleon was a tyrant who never laughed. But then Wells as a great story-teller - he was certainly no historian. Posted by Picasa

BEST BOOKS ABOUT NAPOLEON

     


The Evening of Waterloo by Earnest Croft (1879)


I would start with one of the best memoirs I have ever read - Sergeant Bourgogne's account of the great retreat from Moscow in 1812. Bourgogne's experiences are so tellingly written that you can almost feel the snow between your fingers and the icy wind blasting the back of your neck.

Bourgogne was in the Imperial Guard and along with his best friend Picart, he faced one nightmare after another on the infamous retreat and saw everything from frozen corpses to evidence of cannibalism. But despite everything, his faith in his Emperor never wavered and his own personal bravery was beyond question. If you only ever read one account of the 1812 campaign - make it this one.

Bourgogne's experiences show that the human spirit can surmount every obstacle and even in the depths of despair - lost in the frozen wastes of Russia - he kept faith with himself - and survived.


Borodino 1812 by Peter vonHess (1843)


Another soldier is also worthy of mention. Jean-Roch Coignet was born a peasant and did not even learn to read and write until he was well into his Thirties. He was taught by members of his own regiment. His incredible adventures as a boy almost defy comprehension. As a small child he had a tug of war with a large wolf - a prize sheep being the trophy being torn between them. He was abandoned by a cruel stepmother straight out of Disney central casting and ignored by his wastrel father who sired innumerable bastards in the locality.

Coignet was rescued by a kind horse trader and helped his protector supply the French Army with remounts. Eventually his love of adventure got the better of him and he joined up himself. The rest as they say - is history, written by Coignet himself. He served in Poland in 1807, Austria in 1809, Russia in 1812 and at Waterloo in 1815. This smallest member of Napoleon's Imperial Guard played a big part in many battles and was on very friendly terms with the Emperor himself. He noticed Napoleon as he took great care of the wounded - of all sides. He knew the real Napoleon.

Of particular fascination is Coignet's account of the aftermath of Waterloo. He took part in the rout but discovered that once back in Paris a whole new French Army was regrouping south of the Loire. Marshal Davout refused Napoleon the 117,000 men in reserve as well as the services of new recruits. The French had more men than the victorious but separated and isolated troops under Wellington and Blucher. The Prussian cavalry was actually repulsed before Paris but then traitors like Fouche took charge and denied Napoleon political support. As the former Emperor headed for the coast and a hoped-for exile in America, Coignet and thousands of other French soldiers eager for revenge were held back by Marshal Davout - formerly Napoleon's most loyal subordinate. Waterloo was far from being the sole cause of Napoleon's downfall.

THE WARS AGAINST NAPOLEON - BOOK REVIEW

The Wars Against Napoleon: Debunking the Myth of the Napoleonic Wars
 by Ben Weider and General Michel Franceschi (2008) AMAZON


Napoleonas First Consul by Gros



The greatest threat to peace in Europe in the early nineteenth century was the British Cabinet. With its millions in subsidies it fought a mainly proxy war against France before Napoleon, and France under Napoleon. It was other countries that basically did the dying for British ends. England had been fighting France for decades and, still smarting under the loss of the American colonies, who won their freedom with crucial French backing, the last thing it wanted was for ideas of freedom and equality to spread amongst its own down-trodden people.

The  British population was held in contempt by its autocratic, aristocratic, oligarchic masters. The French Revolution was a match hovering over the keg of liberty and the British Cabinet was determined to put it out.

Napoleon solidified the gains of the Revolution. He was the only one strong enough and pragmatic enough to heal the wounds of French society and under him France became a serious player in the field of international relations once again. The ancient monarchies were terrified that under his leadership, the liberalisation fostered by revolutionary ideas would spread to their own realms. Hence they pocketed the English bribes and fostered a series of coalitions that were to expunge the French leader and all he stood for from the map of Europe.

In their excellent book, Michel Franceschi and Ben Weider raise dozens of points, particularly in regard to the diplomacy of the time, that will be a real eye-opener to British readers. Especially telling are the references to the British press and Opposition in 1815 who said that the war of that year against Napoleon was totally unjustified. And Marie-Louise's letter to her father, expressing her anguish that he could be contemplating war against his own son-in-law is very revealing - especially as she says the English were probably behind it.

One reviewer has stated sneeringly that the authors blame the loss at Waterloo on a bad thunderstorm. They do not say that: they rightly comment that the French were outnumbered. In fact, although Wellington hung on grimly, it was the arrival of 45,000 Prussians, 7,000 of whom died at the hands of the Young Guard at Placenoit, that sealed the Emperor's fate. Not many of those Prussians went to Eton by the way.

As a reader of dozens of books on this period, I can honestly say that this is the first one that I have come across that looks at things from Napoleon's perspective. Far from being called The Napoleonic Wars, the period 1799-1815 would be better dubbed The English Mercenary Wars. Five stars!