Napoleon: The End of Glory tells the story of the dramatic two years that led to Napoleon's abdication in April 1814. Though crucial to European history, they remain strangely neglected, lying between the two much better-known landmarks of the retreat from Moscow and the battle of Waterloo. Yet this short period saw both Napoleon's loss of his European empire, and of his control over France itself. In 1813 the massive battle of Leipzig - the bloodiest in modern history before the first day of the Somme - forced his armies back to the Rhine. The next year, after a brilliant campaign against overwhelming odds, Napoleon was forced to abdicate and exiled to Elba. He regained his throne the following year, for just a hundred days, in a doomed adventure whose defeat at Waterloo was predictable. The most fascinating - and least-known - aspect of these years is that at several key points Napoleon's enemies offered him peace terms that would have allowed him to keep his throne, if not his empire, a policy inspired by the brilliant and devious Austrian foreign minister Metternich. Napoleon: The End of Glory sheds fascinating new light on Napoleon, Metternich, and many other key figures and events in this dramatic period of European history, drawing on previously unused archives in France, Austria, and the Czech Republic. Through these it seeks to answer the most important question of all - why, instead of accepting a compromise, Napoleon chose to gamble on total victory at the risk of utter defeat?
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Product Details
Weight: 674g
Dimensions: 162 x 241mm
Publication Date: 07 Aug 2014
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780199660803
About Munro Price
Munro Price is a historian of modern French and European history with a special focus on the French Revolution and is Professor of Modern European History at Bradford University. His publications include The Fall of the French Monarchy: Louis XVI Marie Antoinette and the baron de Breteuil which won the 2002 Franco-British Society Literary Prize and The Perilous Crown: France between Revolutions (2007. His most recent book (with Stanley Price) The Road to Apocalypse: the Extraordinary Journey of Lewis Way (2011) was shortlisted for the Wingate-Jewish Quarterly Prize. A regular reviewer for The Sunday Times The Sunday Telegraph History Today and BBC History Magazine he has also appeared on Radio 4 on French radio and on BBC2's Reputations series.
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