30
TJ123-8-2009 LK VWD0011 Tradition Humanistic 6th Edition W:220mm x H:292mm 175L 115 Stora Enso M/A Magenta (V)
*
*
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Moscow
(captured)
Borodino^1812
1812
Friedland 1807
Austerlitz
1805
Ratisbon
1809
Waterloo
1815
RUSSIA
UNITED KINGDOM OF
GREAT BRITAIN
AND IRELAND
CORSICA
SPAIN
FRANCE
HOLLAND
DENMARK
NORWAY SWEDEN
PRUSSIA
AUSTRIA
Elba AD
RIA
TIC
(^) SE
A (^)
AE
GE
AN
(^)
(^) SE
A
(^)
ENGLISH^ CHANNEL
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
MEDITERRANEAN SEA
NORTH
SEA
BALTIC
SEA
BL
ACK
SE
A^
Eb
ro
Danube
Sei
ne
Loire^
Rh
in
e (^)
Elbe
(^)
Ode
r (^)
Tagus
Po
Warsaw
Tilsit
St. Petersburg
Stockholm
Copenhagen
Berlin
Edinburgh
London Amsterdam
Leipzig
Vienna
Palermo
Rome Naples
Marseilles Florence
Ulm
Frankfurt
Brussels
Paris
Bordeaux
Barcelona
Madrid
Seville
Lisbon
KINGDOM OF
PORTUGAL
KINGDOM OF
SARDINIA
KINGDOM OF
ITALY
CONFEDERATION
OF THE
RHINE
GRAND DUCHY
OF WARSAW
OTTOMAN
EMPIRE
HELVETIC REPUBLIC
KINGDOM OF
NAPLES
PAPAL
STATES
KINGDOM
OF SICILY
IL
LY
RI
AN
(^) P
RO
VIN
CES
(^)
- Key
French Empire 1812
French dependencies
Countries allied with Napoleon
Napoleon’s Russian campaign
Site of battle
N
W E
S
0 500 miles
0 500 kilometers
30 CHAPTER 28 The Romantic Hero
30
Austria, Prussia, Portugal, and Spain, he pressed on to
Russia where, in 1812, bitter weather and lack of food
forced his armies to retreat. Only 100,000 of his army of
600,000 survived. In 1813, a coalition of European powers
forced his defeat and exile to the island of Elba off the
coast of Italy. A second and final defeat occurred after he
escaped in 1814, raised a new army, and met the combined
European forces led by the English Duke of Wellington at
the Battle of Waterloo (1815). The fallen hero spent the
last years of his life in exile on the barren island of Saint
Helena off the west coast of Africa.
Napoleon, the first of the modern European dictators,
left a distinctly Neoclassical stamp upon the city of Paris
(see chapter 26). However, he also became the nineteenth
century’s first Romantic hero, glorified in numerous
European poems and paintings, and especially in the
majestic portraits of Jacques-Louis David, his favorite
artist. David’s equestrian portrait of Napoleon (Figure
28.2), which clearly draws on Roman imperial models,
shows an idealized Napoleon—he actually crossed the
Saint Bernard Pass on a mule—pursuing the destiny of
such great military leaders as Hannibal and Charlemagne,
whose names are carved on the foreground rocks. In this
painting, one of five similar versions of the subject, David
depicts Napoleon as a Romantic hero. Napoleon’s diary,
a record of personal reflection, a favorite genre of the
nineteenth-century Romantics, corroborates that image.
Entries made by Napoleon between 1800 and 1817 reveal
many features that typify the Romantic personality:
self-conscious individualism, a sense of personal power,
unbridled egotism, and a high regard for the life of the
imagination.
Map 28. 1 The Empire of Napoleon at its Greatest Extent, 1812. In the lands
he controlled directly and indirectly, Napoleon tried to initiate revolutionary
reforms and institutions, an effort that generally met with resistance.