History of War

REDEFINING BONAPARTE

“THIS NEW INTERPRETATION REVEALS A MAN WHOSE WILL TO SUCCEED LED TO GREAT POWER, BUT WHOSE COMPLEX INSECURITIES BROUGHT ABOUT HIS OWN DOWNFALL”

Napoleon Bonaparte famously rose from being an obscure Corsican artillery officer to a renowned general, which eventually led to him to become Emperor of the French. Despite being defeated and exiled in 1815, he is still considered one of the greatest commanders in history, whose military and political legacy endures.

Nevertheless, Napoleon also polarises opinion among historians who heavily debate his achievements, including the Polish-British historian Adam Zamoyski. The author of over a dozen books, including the bestselling 1812: Napoleon’s Fatal March On Moscow, Zamoyski has now written a new biography Napoleon: The Man Behind The Myth, which is published by HarperCollins.

Zamoyski has stripped away the self-serving propaganda created by Napoleon himself to examine a fascinating human being. This new interpretation reveals a man whose will to succeed led to great power, but whose complex insecurities brought about his own downfall.

What was the idea behind Napoleon: The Man Behind The Myth?

It was really to try to find out what all the fuss was about because people go on about this ‘genius’ and God-like figure. The French often see him as a superhuman creature while the British seem to regard him either as a nasty little tick or a military genius. I don’t really buy that he was a genius of any kind and think that term is usually applied to luck and a bit of hard work.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from History of War

History of War1 min read
Ride Into History On Warfare’s Most Iconic Fighting Machines
Discover the WWI roots of the tank, get to grips with some of the most famous models ever to grind into battle, pick through the debris of the greatest armoured clash in history and find out how these weapons of war are evolving. ON SALE NOW Ordering
History of War1 min read
Next Month 1944-2024 80 D-day
Operation Overlord veteran interviews Inside Britain's victory on Sword Beach How Patton's 'Ghost Army' fooled the Nazis ON SALE 9 MAY ■
History of War3 min readInternational Relations
Dekemvriana: Battle Of Athens
The power vacuum left in the wake of the Axis retreat in 1944 was immediately contested by two major political and military groups. One party claiming power was the communist National Liberation Front (EAM) supported by its military organisation the

Related