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Napoleon Bonaparte: The Strategic Genius 

Biographics
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His name was Napoleon Bonaparte and he was, above all else, a master propagandist. He made use of his extraordinary way with words to publish political manifestos, newspapers, and, later, his autobiography. He regularly commissioned portraits and sculptures and was acutely aware of how to present himself in the best light. Even when he made moves to crown himself Emperor, he used propaganda and political nouse to convince the populace that it was their idea.
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Host - Simon Whistler
Author - Steve Theunissen
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Executive Producer - Shell Harris
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Biographies by the book, get Napoleon Bonaparte's biography from Amazon: amzn.to/2zjX2NZ
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Joseph Stalin: The Red Terror
• Joseph Stalin: The Red...
Winston Churchill Biography: In the Darkest Hour
• Winston Churchill: In ...
Source/Further reading:
Napoleon: A Life by Andrew Roberts (Kindle Edition)
Napoleon: Rise of an Empire by Alexander Kennedy (Kindle edition)
Napoleon PBS Documentary

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16 май 2024

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Комментарии : 2,8 тыс.   
@Biographics
@Biographics 5 лет назад
Hello everyone. We've been experimenting with a bit of a podcast (a few people were asking for audio versions so they can get Biographics while doing other things)! Fair warning: none of these are new biographies, but rather me having a bit more of a free form chat around the script. I'd love to know what you think, if these are useful, wanted etc :). Thanks, Simon. Links: iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/biographics-history-one-life-at-a-time/id1450405839?mt=2 Sitcher: www.stitcher.com/podcast/biographics-history-one-life-at-a-time Website: biographics.blubrry.net/ RSS: biographics.blubrry.net/feed/podcast/ Spotify: open.spotify.com/album/6N9PS4QXF1D0OWPk0Sxtb4 Trolled people: open.spotify.com/show/0JzjzwJcRqFZ3BcACtahh8?si=MG5HSm1oT0GTNm_r8_HQcg
@michaelclark277
@michaelclark277 5 лет назад
Can you do a video of Ragnar lothbrok Vikings
@michaelclark277
@michaelclark277 5 лет назад
Or anything Vikings
@Native_love
@Native_love 4 года назад
Your best video ever!
@marquisdelafayette1929
@marquisdelafayette1929 4 года назад
You should do a video on the Marquis de Lafayette. One of the richest and well connected men in France he gave up a life in the court of Louis XVI at 19 to come fight for the Americans during the revolution. He had been forbidden to go and bought his own boat and snuck out as a woman to go. During his first battle at Brandywine he was shot in the leg while leading the men in a retreat. He attracted attention from Washington and ended up becoming like a son to him. He went back to France and lobbied for the naval support which eventually won the war.
@northwest2647
@northwest2647 4 года назад
I've read he was a standard 5'7
@shizukajoestar614
@shizukajoestar614 3 года назад
"Never fight too often with one enemy, or you will teach him your art of war." -Napoleon Bonaprate
@militaryjunkie6207
@militaryjunkie6207 3 года назад
European counties *Uses Napoleon tactic*
@Animemesverse
@Animemesverse 3 года назад
@@militaryjunkie6207 hi Marshall
@Kevin-cm1dn
@Kevin-cm1dn 3 года назад
Kinda awkward cause France and British have been fighting for centuries
@hoanirutledge1048
@hoanirutledge1048 3 года назад
This is why majority of combat sport rematches go the other way in the second match
@deepyamandas1192
@deepyamandas1192 3 года назад
Awkwardly that's what he did
@Alpha1200
@Alpha1200 5 лет назад
The fact that Napoleon faced down armies and they just defected to him is still the most badass moment in history.
@tomviktorsson5052
@tomviktorsson5052 5 лет назад
not that badass actually lol . The Germans leaded themselves into the second world war after all , like the French, they lost everything , had nothing to lose and everything to gain .
@Alpha1200
@Alpha1200 5 лет назад
@almightyinferno Indeed I did.
@boho3785
@boho3785 4 года назад
Russia has entered the chat....
@WorshipinIdols
@WorshipinIdols 4 года назад
OneOnOne1162 George Washington did the same after the Army mutinied because the continental congress defaulted on its IOUs and didn’t pay its soldiers (and especially the officers) the money it owed.
@JeanSweeny
@JeanSweeny 4 года назад
If u need/want a hero, I know of no one more qualified. It's hard to destroy Hamilton.
@shaun_b
@shaun_b Год назад
"My enemies are many, My equals are none" - Napoleon Bonaparte
@phantomechelon3628
@phantomechelon3628 3 месяца назад
*Arthur Wellesley has entered the chat*
@Rollin..
@Rollin.. 3 месяца назад
​@@phantomechelon3628Not even close to his equal
@phantomechelon3628
@phantomechelon3628 3 месяца назад
@@Rollin.. You might want to re-take history and find out who won the battle of Waterloo...
@Rollin..
@Rollin.. 3 месяца назад
@@phantomechelon3628 Oh come on bro.. you just proved 2 things. 1. My point 2. That you didn't even read about the battle of waterloo Wellington is extremely overrated, he himself knew that he couldn't beat Napoleon, so his whole strategy was that Prussia will save his british ass, not to mention that Napoleon's army was far from its prime due to the fact that they didn't have the time to train.
@Eli-xf1en
@Eli-xf1en 2 месяца назад
@@phantomechelon3628lmao you got absolutely wrecked son
@drrockkso8882
@drrockkso8882 3 года назад
Fun fact: Napoleon was actually not short. His recorded height of 5'2" was measured in 19th-century French feet/inches, which used a different scale than English feet/inches did at the time. Napoleon's height was equivalent to approximately 5'6" in modern imperial feet/inches, which was the average height of a European male in his era. The enduring image of Napoleon as an insecure short man is almost entirely a product of English wartime propaganda. Cartoonists and pamphleteers in England and other countries fighting the French would draw Napoleon as a short, angry, almost-juvenile tyrant in order to ridicule him for political purposes. Napoleon was well-aware of these depictions and often lamented the damage it did to his reputation. Ironically, he was more insecure about the false perceptions of his height than he was about his actual height.
@elliejelly8815
@elliejelly8815 3 года назад
I’m still taller than him, what a small little Manlet
@0lyge0
@0lyge0 3 года назад
"Ironically, he was more insecure about the false perceptions of his height than he was about his actual height." So he was still insecure about his height.
@yohanncunche6089
@yohanncunche6089 3 года назад
Damm true
@erwinsmith4118
@erwinsmith4118 3 года назад
@@0lyge0 😂😂😂😂😂
@PatriSjodin
@PatriSjodin 3 года назад
Thank you! Thought of this as soon as it was mentioned!
@tengkualiff
@tengkualiff 5 лет назад
Every time someone wants to conquer the world: "Let's go for Russia next!" "Damn it!"
@snakey934Snakeybakey
@snakey934Snakeybakey 5 лет назад
Genghis Khan: Hold my Airag!
@Normal_Boii
@Normal_Boii 4 года назад
Prussians: hold my mustache
@Bronze_Age_Sea_Person
@Bronze_Age_Sea_Person 4 года назад
Mongols:We're the Exception!
@gravyboat2370
@gravyboat2370 4 года назад
Page 1 chapter 1 first paragraph of the book .."how to do war" states.....don't invade Russia.
@bookmouse770
@bookmouse770 4 года назад
Yes, yet the Soviet Union collapsed by itself. Puff
@Biographics
@Biographics 6 лет назад
The myth that he was short stems primarily from the fact that he is listed as 5 feet 2 inches tall at the time of his death. However, this is 5 feet 2 inches in French units. In modern international units, he was just shy of 5 feet 7 inches. - Sorry for the confusion.
@bradleymurphy5941
@bradleymurphy5941 6 лет назад
im 5"8 and im short...napoleon was a short arse too
@annatarlordofgifts2442
@annatarlordofgifts2442 6 лет назад
i was about to say
@annatarlordofgifts2442
@annatarlordofgifts2442 6 лет назад
he seemed short cause he was always surrounded by his tall ass guard
@MrVvulf
@MrVvulf 6 лет назад
I'm glad you came in quickly with a correction, because I had a really embarrassing rebuttal for you www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2010/03/napolean-bonaparte-having-been-short-is-a-myth/
@cernowaingreenman
@cernowaingreenman 6 лет назад
I thought everyone in this century knew that the shortness was a myth based on a deliberate misunderstanding. I can't believe your researchers missed this one, Simon. Off with their heads!
@kasperandersson2385
@kasperandersson2385 3 года назад
Yes Napoleon, the man abdicated in 1840 and died 1821. Truly a man like no other.
@ApostleMan222
@ApostleMan222 3 года назад
How did they not catch that
@ApostleMan222
@ApostleMan222 3 года назад
He meant 1814 - eighteen FOURTEEN!
@mbgal7758
@mbgal7758 3 года назад
I thought I was crazy too. When I saw he abdicated in 1840 I thought I was wrong because I could have sworn Waterloo was in 1815. I’m glad I wasn’t wrong and and it was just down to Napoleon’s superpowers 😆
@johnofmalta
@johnofmalta 2 года назад
@Kasper Boney was a retro vintage future call back time traveler. 19th Century Bitch! JoM
@ernestoA.1999
@ernestoA.1999 Год назад
He was like I rather die first than Abdicate😂😂
@arronkeegan484
@arronkeegan484 4 года назад
Correction: He didn't declare himself 'Emperor of France', he was declared 'Emperor of the French'. As in not an Emperor over a territory, but over a people
@fahoodie1852
@fahoodie1852 3 года назад
Arron Keegan It doesn’t sound like much but it makes a big difference
@GuavaConQueso
@GuavaConQueso 3 года назад
Arron Keegan so he’s the French messiah?
@rezandrarizkyirianto-1933
@rezandrarizkyirianto-1933 3 года назад
@@fahoodie1852 "...that's why it is said so in the coins. 'Napoleon, Emperor of the French' not 'Napoleon, Emperor of France'. The people doesn't belong to him, he belongs to his people..."
@awesomelegion9950
@awesomelegion9950 3 года назад
I want to like this but the number is just perfect.
@rezandrarizkyirianto-1933
@rezandrarizkyirianto-1933 3 года назад
@@awesomelegion9950 Not anymore
@anthonyelenga8939
@anthonyelenga8939 5 лет назад
You conveniently forgot to mention that when he took power, he found a country in chaos at war with everyone and within 5 years, stabilized the economy, rewrote the laws, ended the chaotic revolution, brought back interior peace and unity in country where everyone hated each other, transformed a mob of untrained troops into the most formidable and effective military of his time. And that is even without mentioning the civil code, the french academy, the bank of France, and the support to science (e.g.metric system, Egyptology), and the comission of several public works, projects, general improve in living condition for his people. Plus he was not short. He had an average height for a man of his time. Plus he did defeat Russia before the russian campaign, during the prussian campaign
@Sacto1654
@Sacto1654 5 лет назад
The metric system was originally developed under Napoleon's auspices to drastically simplify weights and measurements. An idea that was *WAY* ahead of its time.
@orangtua3540
@orangtua3540 5 лет назад
Well said Anthony. Napoleon achieved all of the things you mention, which is why he was one of the greatest leaders of all time. It's a great pity there's no one around of his stature nowadays. As for his physical stature; as the old saying goes, "Many good things come in small packages"!! :]
@anthonyelenga8939
@anthonyelenga8939 5 лет назад
@gipcambero When Napoleon took command for the first time, the french armies were losing everywhere. The British has seized control of Toulon, the Austrians were invading and french campaign in the low countries was going poorly. After the siege of Toulon, that he won, he was immediately given command of the army of Italy, because the republic was having setbacks after setbacks. Also by the time he invaded north Italy and beat the Austrians there, the army of the Rhine which had crossed into German territory was beaten. They were saved only because Napoleon was heading towards Vienna so they had to call their armies to stop them. And we know the rest, from this point on, the french army was better organized, better supplied, their morale was as high as ever due to the soldiers having complete faith in their leader, he increased the speed at which the army moved and instaured the Legion d'honneur to promote meritocracy, hence so many brilliant generals and marshalls of the Empire. So, yeah "he transformed a mob of untrained soldiers to the most formidable army of his generation"
@SadCheetah
@SadCheetah 5 лет назад
His military genius was only 1/10th of his overall genius, he modernized nearly all things, industry and workers rights, military, etc to say he was an amazing man is underselling it, it was only by the desire of decadent monarchs that he was undone.
@prof.m.ottozeeejcdecs9998
@prof.m.ottozeeejcdecs9998 5 лет назад
anthony elenga Thanks, Anthony! Fortunately today, the French are proud of his accomplishments! All of them. We still use some of those... and most don't even know it!
@jadawin10
@jadawin10 5 лет назад
Napoleon Bonaparte. THE military genius. General at 24 years old. Fought 60 battles, lost only 8, mainly at the end of his career, against a wide european coalition...
@WorshipinIdols
@WorshipinIdols 4 года назад
So? The battle of Ealyu was a draw. The whole Spanish campaign was a disaster to which he didn’t even personally attend. Generalissimo Prince Alexander Suvorov brother. -63-0. -58 consecutive years of frontline military service. -5 times wounded in combat. -winner of every single award, medal and order Russia had to offer (with a significant part of his career still left to go).
@geert574
@geert574 4 года назад
Against shitty opponents sure, de Tolly, Nelson, Wellington, even lazy Kutuzov kicked his arse
@WorshipinIdols
@WorshipinIdols 4 года назад
Geert Matthys Kutuzov was an excellent leader and General until he got too old (55 at Australitz he read Napoleon like a book and was then over ruled by Alexander the first). By 63 at Borodino, 7 more years of palace intrigue and war with the Turk took its toll).
@WorshipinIdols
@WorshipinIdols 4 года назад
Geert Matthys Are u 5 years old or just a fool? Nelson was an admiral, Wellington didn’t win nothing, Wellington was saved by Blucher, the real hero (for the coalition) of Waterloo. Barclay de Tolly was one of the best. Which fool beat Napoleon?
@benkenobi671
@benkenobi671 4 года назад
Had Grouchy done his job and Blucher never made it to the battle, Napoleon would have won Waterloo as well... and this would have been with the inferior position on the field.
@wheelman1324
@wheelman1324 4 года назад
If there was one historical figure I would want to talk to, it would be him.
@Artaee
@Artaee 3 года назад
really no others
@wheelman1324
@wheelman1324 3 года назад
@@Artaee There’s tons of others. Napoleon is just at the top of the list.
@saywhatnow2173
@saywhatnow2173 3 года назад
Same. I always wanted to talk with a Military genius. Like Julius Caesar and Frederick the Great
@66kaisersoza
@66kaisersoza 3 года назад
@@wheelman1324 Alexander the great
@ernestoA.1999
@ernestoA.1999 3 года назад
Outskirts of Infinity no doubt , no other man in history has achieved so much glory by himself
@nicktamer4969
@nicktamer4969 2 года назад
When your enemies called you "the god of war" and they felt the need to elaborate a strategic protocol (the Trachenberg plan) saying: "if Napoleon is on the battlefield, avoid the fight; if he's not, try something", it means you achieved something in the art of war.
@Eli-xf1en
@Eli-xf1en 2 месяца назад
“Napoleon is a torrent. Moscow will act as a sponge to soak him up”
@nappythegreat667
@nappythegreat667 6 лет назад
Thanks for your compliments
@tonygreene81able
@tonygreene81able 5 лет назад
Haha! You guys are so dumb. Lol. Funny though
@tonygreene81able
@tonygreene81able 5 лет назад
@Drunknapoleon, General I mean Emperor, shall I prepare the men for the invasion in the east? Lol
@napoleoni4761
@napoleoni4761 4 года назад
I loo napoleon i
@dangleeballsii8034
@dangleeballsii8034 4 года назад
I love u ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@matelego130
@matelego130 4 года назад
"I loved democracy" emperor paplatine
@bregjejabra25
@bregjejabra25 5 лет назад
"History is a set of Lies agreed upon". Napoleon Bonaparte.
@deepyamandas1192
@deepyamandas1192 3 года назад
His height rumour told in 1 sentence
@bregjejabra25
@bregjejabra25 3 года назад
@@deepyamandas1192 Welll.......Who controlled really Napoleon from behind the scenes? Real Truth in an Infinite Universe that this Earth is part of told in 1 sentence...
@davido3026
@davido3026 3 года назад
@@bregjejabra25 FREEMASONRY controlled him!! They rose him to power and destroyed him !!! He was a stupid minion!
@siddharth8166
@siddharth8166 3 года назад
Reading this quote in history class
@marshalsoult3860
@marshalsoult3860 2 года назад
@@davido3026 wtf are you blabbering about? are you one of those lunatics with theories with no backup information?
@militaryenthusiast485
@militaryenthusiast485 3 года назад
Well yes I am a great man. Britain didn’t declare war in France, they declared war on ME
@marshalsoult3860
@marshalsoult3860 2 года назад
hey sire!
@revolutionarymarxist-lenin7252
@revolutionarymarxist-lenin7252 2 года назад
Same energy as: I'm not trapped in here wth you, you're trapped in here with ME!
@eliegbert8121
@eliegbert8121 2 года назад
"I am not the emperor of france, I am the emperor of the french"
@sexymexijesse
@sexymexijesse 2 года назад
Oui Monsieur! And don't worry, you are definitely average height!!! For the time...😉 British Propaganda: Hold my Fish and Chips...
@bsmi1361
@bsmi1361 2 года назад
🤣
@odirilechristos6043
@odirilechristos6043 2 года назад
"Even when I'm gone I shall remain in people's minds the star of their rights, my name will be the war cry of their efforts, the motto of their hopes" Napoleon Bonaparte. The man's been dead for 200 years and still captures the fascination of the world ought to be the greatest man who's ever lived
@-mason-6538
@-mason-6538 2 года назад
Julius Caesar is the greater man
@danyd8262
@danyd8262 2 года назад
Alexander the Great might have him beat
@Vaginaninja
@Vaginaninja 2 года назад
He doesn't capture my fascination. He was just a freaking loser. No better than Putin
@toppat_royale
@toppat_royale Год назад
Napoleon idolized Caesar and Alexander, he is great, but not the greatest.
@odirilechristos6043
@odirilechristos6043 Год назад
I think he surpassed them
@JimFortune
@JimFortune 6 лет назад
"Today I found out that Napoleon Bonaparte was not in fact especially short. The myth that he was short stems primarily from the fact that he is listed as 5 feet 2 inches tall at the time of his death. However, this is 5 feet 2 inches in French units. In modern international units, he was just shy of 5 feet 7 inches." Mar 23, 2010
@arturs2436
@arturs2436 6 лет назад
Yes a myth and the painting(around 00:49) the vid uses to tell he is short is not his but in fact is his older brother:Joseph-Napoléon Bonaparte(First King of Naples then later King of Spain).
@AbelJasso
@AbelJasso 6 лет назад
Jim Fortune That’s right. Napoleon was not short. I’m kinda disappointed that this channel would say that, especially considering that every other piece on Napoleon these days has this as an attention grabber at the beginning, yet it missed the guys on this video completely
@christineparis5607
@christineparis5607 6 лет назад
He also had a habit of surrounding himself with very tall aides de camp, which pointed up the "little general" nickname, which was really more about his youth, not his height. A great novel written from the point of view of Napoleon's first fiance is called Desiree. She was very young (14) and her older sister had already married the oldest brother, Joseph Bonaparte, who needed her dowry. Napoleon threw over Desiree for Josephine, needing political clout in Paris more than a large dowry. Getting the last laugh, Desiree married a Marachel of France, who was adopted by the old house of Vasa in Sweden, ultimately becoming king, and Desiree, Queen. Her descendants are still the royal family of Sweden today. Wow.
@JimFortune
@JimFortune 6 лет назад
Abel J The great irony is that the quote is from "Today I Found Out" eight years ago. I only went looking for the quote because I thought I remembered Simon pointing this out. ;->
@mannyorange3098
@mannyorange3098 6 лет назад
Jim Fortune quantity not quality
@pspreng
@pspreng 6 лет назад
You mistakenly say that Napoleon abdicated in April of 1840, which was long after his death in 1821.
@pspreng
@pspreng 6 лет назад
I know he said it correctly but the text displayed at the bottom of the screen showed the year as 1840.
@gothicadam6476
@gothicadam6476 6 лет назад
Yep, i saw that too :-)) it's at 17.00 and i think it must be 1814.
@BoonesFarm50
@BoonesFarm50 6 лет назад
saw that too, good catch sir
@holdenroberts6973
@holdenroberts6973 5 лет назад
That's because he died in 1940 at the hands of German soldiers.
@backchat8086
@backchat8086 5 лет назад
I saw him with Elvis in McDonald's just 2 days ago
@TheChintu-il3sq
@TheChintu-il3sq Год назад
"5 coalitions made of nations to defeat one man and a nation" thats a proof of his power and greatness, he carved on pages of history that he's greatest hero for the french!!
@michaelbrett3749
@michaelbrett3749 Год назад
So hes like Hitler Russia USA and the British empire finally made him shoot himself. napolean tried to commit suicide but failed just like he failed to make a French empire
@joonaslehtonen7965
@joonaslehtonen7965 3 года назад
One of the greatest man that ever lived. His only fault was that at one point he stopped listening his aids and started to believe himself to be invincible.
@fatboibrian9047
@fatboibrian9047 3 года назад
he might've still kept his position as emperor if he has kept talleyrand
@christoforospaphitis4090
@christoforospaphitis4090 3 года назад
usually that's what happens when you always win, one needs to remember his/her roots to keep him grounded. Pride (αλαζονία) in Greek histories (tales - historical or otherwise) is the number one sin any great man or person of a certain skill can commit and it will lead him/her with mathematical accuracy to his/her downfall. Pride was considered to have such a disastrous effect that would be considered akin to blasphemy and in mythology Gods would interfere to strike the sinner down - cautionary stories for children.
@Dino-god69
@Dino-god69 3 года назад
Tends to happen when you take on the world 🤣
@fatboibrian9047
@fatboibrian9047 2 года назад
@Divalvaro I meant before that
@fredericksmith7942
@fredericksmith7942 2 года назад
As they all do…
@TheCactus1234
@TheCactus1234 5 лет назад
For some one who is so accurate I find 3 errors 1) At minute 12 a picture of Archduke Franz Ferdinand appears except he was born then. 2) Napoleon abdicated in 1840 yet he died in 1821 3) At minute 19 during the battle of Waterloo a picture is shown from the charge of the Light Brigade from the Crimean war. Really Simon I think there is an issue of quality control here Ashley
@gappuma7883
@gappuma7883 3 года назад
I thought how come he got a photograph and not Napoleon ?!
@thatdude9091
@thatdude9091 3 года назад
I don’t think pictures mature too much...
@kingofthejungle3833
@kingofthejungle3833 3 года назад
don't forget that the British combined with the Spanish to fight the Royal Navy, which resulted in the French losing their navy
@BH-2023
@BH-2023 3 года назад
And he wasn't 5'2", but closer to 5'7"/5'8"
@drfredostein4410
@drfredostein4410 3 года назад
@@BH-2023 5’2” is in French unit, he commented clarifying that
@fatalshore5068
@fatalshore5068 6 лет назад
You didnt mention one of the central reasons for his military success. He purged the french army of aristocratic leaders and promoted men of low birth based purely off of merit, making them extremely loyal to Napoleon. This was unheard of in Europe at the time and made his army the strongest and best led army on the continent. Still a great video!
@michaelbrett3749
@michaelbrett3749 Год назад
It was the biggest army in numbers. Just like Hitlers. But he killed off so many Frenchmen that France never recovered again . Check the population statistics. We dont give credit to big armies winning battles, We give credit to the underdogs like Wellingtons thin red line at Waterloo who routed the Imperial Guard ,or old guard, or young guard, who cares they all died or ran away. le Gaurde Recule. Run away everyone the British will bayonet us and steal our hats.
@Eli-xf1en
@Eli-xf1en 2 месяца назад
Well he preached that but many times he handed out positions to nobility and close family. He only used merit based promotion as a propaganad a tool
@theparadigm8149
@theparadigm8149 3 года назад
France in 1799: “Yay! We are no longer a monarchy!” Napoleón: “Yeah, Imma ‘bout to do what they call a ‘pro gamer move’...”
@theparadigm8149
@theparadigm8149 2 года назад
@Nogent Yeah, and think that’s because of Napoleon. He was a great military leader that became a national hero for his work during the Revolution. He got power via a coup de ta of the consulate, which was very corrupt and unstable at that time. The French people didn’t know Napoleon wanted to be an emperor, but they also didn’t when he did
@BoraCM
@BoraCM 4 года назад
He was 5'7" in English inches.
@BillyMartin4Life
@BillyMartin4Life 6 лет назад
12:09 that's the wrong picture, the person in the picture is Archduke Franz Ferdinand, not Francis II
@jspirmann
@jspirmann 6 лет назад
Kevin Gonzalez im glad you noticed too. i was about to point that out.
@Treblaine
@Treblaine 6 лет назад
It should have been obvious even to them that it's not the correct image because IT'S A FUCKING PHOTOGRAPH!
@theimperiumoftheamericas8419
@theimperiumoftheamericas8419 6 лет назад
Finally someone else noticed. I thought I was going crazy.
@firstlastyoutube
@firstlastyoutube 5 лет назад
yeh
@InvictvsNox
@InvictvsNox 5 лет назад
Okay good, I'm still having my coffee in the morning but seeing Franz Ferdinand and then "the Spring of 1800" threw me off entirely.
@BlackKing.2000
@BlackKing.2000 6 лет назад
“ The Royal Navy smashed the combined Spanish British Fleet” lmao ok
@vespelian5769
@vespelian5769 5 лет назад
That's the power of rum for you!
@ahkilleuskosmos6836
@ahkilleuskosmos6836 5 лет назад
@@JA-eq5um It wasn't that the French navy was bad, it was simply the British navy that was too good.
@skylar_kada
@skylar_kada 5 лет назад
Vespelian literally made me lol 😆
@AHSANALI-tb3hs
@AHSANALI-tb3hs 4 года назад
I was confused too and rewind it multiple times.
@thalessilva1
@thalessilva1 4 года назад
tell mr president how can i become a president?
@thomashazlewood4658
@thomashazlewood4658 4 года назад
While it is informative of Bonaparte's story, the video offers no insights into Napoleon's 'strategic genius'.
@petulantpeterturbo
@petulantpeterturbo 3 года назад
Well that’s the point, it’s a biography after all.
@rhammanuel4162
@rhammanuel4162 3 года назад
Napoleon is 5'6 but this idiot said he's just 5'2
@falseprofit2569
@falseprofit2569 3 года назад
@@rhammanuel4162 yes he technically was 5'2 but in a different measurement I read a comment a bit higher saying yes he was 5'2 in french feet/inches but in english feet/inches he was 5'6 idk I forgot what they said exactly
@kobiesboxing4956
@kobiesboxing4956 3 года назад
@@falseprofit2569 Read the same comment.
@kobiesboxing4956
@kobiesboxing4956 3 года назад
I also felt cheated because I watched this just so I could get insight into Napoleon's strategies. I mean I already knew Napoleon's history, but I did learn some things about him.
@ignitionfrn2223
@ignitionfrn2223 3 года назад
1:30 - Chapter 1 - Early life 3:05 - Chapter 2 - Military academy 4:50 - Chapter 3 - Paris in flames 6:40 - Chapter 4 - Taking control 8:50 - Chapter 5 - Victory after victory 11:40 - Chapter 6 - Absolute power 14:30 - Chapter 7 - Austerlitz 15:40 - Chapter 8 - The russian campaign 16:50 - Chapter 9 - Exile & return 18:20 - Chapter 10 - Downfall
@danielgardner3193
@danielgardner3193 6 лет назад
Nice video Simon, sorry for being pedantic, but Napoleon was 5”2 in French inches, which is about 5”7 in British inches, making him about average for the time.
@christineparis5607
@christineparis5607 6 лет назад
Daniel Gardner WE KNOW!!!!
@Henchman1977
@Henchman1977 6 лет назад
As soon as I heard that I'm like "triggered!"
@Johnny3Batony
@Johnny3Batony 6 лет назад
He was above the average height for that time.
@boogerie
@boogerie 6 лет назад
Owen Connelly addresses this common argument in a footnote in his book BLUNDERING TO GLORY. At his death, N's entourage measured him & recorded that he was 5' 2". The argument that " 5 feet 2 inches in French units" equals "5 feet 7 inches" in British Imperial units. But as Connelly points out that would assume they had in their possession a pre-revolutionary yardstick! N introduced the metric
@varolussalsanclar1163
@varolussalsanclar1163 3 года назад
he was "above average" in height for the time only because Europe had a much younger population back then, with a much greater proportion of the population consisting of children and young adolescents than today, hence the lower average height of a male compared to today. So he was still pretty short for a full grown adult man from France.
@melissacorrigan9238
@melissacorrigan9238 3 года назад
Im still learning the whole story, but an ancestor in my family was one of the army members that helped hide him during the war to survive and later knighted a Bartholomew for helping him so loyally.
@GustavoRodriguez-cv5qw
@GustavoRodriguez-cv5qw 2 года назад
Nobody cares.
@halfofapicture
@halfofapicture 2 года назад
That’s epic. What was the ancestor’s name?
@melissacorrigan9238
@melissacorrigan9238 2 года назад
@@halfofapicture I will need to go back into my ancestry account as my MIL helped me find it. I don’t speak to anyone on my mothers side so when MIL found this out we learnt more about where my side of the family came from. Unfortunately I don’t remember the last name so I will be happy to update when I know it for sure!
@melissacorrigan9238
@melissacorrigan9238 2 года назад
@@GustavoRodriguez-cv5qw then isnt it a good thing you can get back into living your miserable life of not caring? Magic huh? 😂
@GustavoRodriguez-cv5qw
@GustavoRodriguez-cv5qw 2 года назад
@@melissacorrigan9238 Magic would be if you had a brain that works 🤣😂🤣😂🤣
@pollgone9675
@pollgone9675 7 месяцев назад
"there is nothing we can do" Napoleon 2023
@yohannbiimu
@yohannbiimu 5 лет назад
Ludwig van Beethoven's life is very much linked to Napoleon, with his composition of the E major 3rd Symphony which he initially titled "Bonaparte," but later called "Eroica" ("Heroic Symphony, Composed to celebrate the memory of a great man"). He changed this title due to Napoleon's crowning himself Emperor, which completely changed his view of him as a true humanitarian reformer. At Napoleon's death in 1821, he remarked regarding the second movement (Marcia funebre - Adagio assai) "I have already composed the proper music for that catastrophe." The Eroica Symphony is one of the most written-about musical compositions ever, and it ought to be talked about in a future biography of Beethoven.
@wouterkessel4852
@wouterkessel4852 5 лет назад
One thing you had wrong though was that most of the problems at his final battle were actually caused by the overconfidence of his generals, not tactical mistakes made by himself. (Like general Ney's charge with all the cavalry into British square formations which left Napoleon's flanks open.) Also the Old guard was purposefully held back because they were just as much morale support as actual high quality soldiers, as long as they remained in the field the army wouldn't surrender or retreat. This meant that if something went wrong while they where in the field the remainder of the army would almost certainly lose hope and break into a full retreat.
@Michael-jo9jz
@Michael-jo9jz 2 года назад
I proudly made a research paper about Napoleon Bonaparte my freshman year of high school. The topic was "Your hero". I got an A+
@flankspeed
@flankspeed 6 лет назад
The devil it had been unchained... the soldiers they loved him..... Who wrote your script? An Italian?
@Biographics
@Biographics 6 лет назад
An Australian with creative license by an Englishman.
@harrybishop6534
@harrybishop6534 5 лет назад
Thank you! These videos are great, but I find that really distracting - it’s called pronominal apposition, or ‘double subjects’ (e.g. “the French, they surrendered”).
@sikkableeat5614
@sikkableeat5614 5 лет назад
I think English is not his first language, the accent is flawless but he has weird syntax sometimes.
@MsJubjubbird
@MsJubjubbird 5 лет назад
It's done for dramatic effect. He's trying to keep these interesting and not just lectures
@jlr108
@jlr108 5 лет назад
@@MsJubjubbird Doing it once is dramatic effect. Doing it repeatedly is annoyingly distracting.
@8honey874
@8honey874 5 лет назад
“Napoleon was 5’2” *Also than proceeds to show a picture of Louis Bonaparte*
@MsGilli1995
@MsGilli1995 3 года назад
that really hurt
@fahoodie1852
@fahoodie1852 3 года назад
8 Honey That was Joseph
@bruh-uq2zx
@bruh-uq2zx 2 года назад
“If you put a quote under my name, people will believe it.” -napoleon Bonaparte
@emztrue4400
@emztrue4400 4 года назад
Can't wait to see 1 million subscriptions! ❤ Love love Biographics.
@politicaljustice2136
@politicaljustice2136 5 лет назад
It should also be mentioned that he is one of the 2 people in history to have spent the night in the egyptian pyramid and come out alive and sane
@yankees29
@yankees29 3 года назад
space chowkidar who is the second?
@politicaljustice2136
@politicaljustice2136 3 года назад
@@yankees29 not sure but if i remember correctly it is edgar cayce.
@kimmedavid
@kimmedavid 3 года назад
@@politicaljustice2136 Not True I am the second
@michaelbrett3749
@michaelbrett3749 Год назад
He was not sane.
@100dfrost
@100dfrost 6 лет назад
Napoleon was five feet seven inches tall.
@Biographics
@Biographics 6 лет назад
The myth that he was short stems primarily from the fact that he is listed as 5 feet 2 inches tall at the time of his death. However, this is 5 feet 2 inches in French units. In modern international units, he was just shy of 5 feet 7 inches. - Sorry for the confusion.
@christineparis5607
@christineparis5607 6 лет назад
Biographics No confusion, people are more sensitive about Napoleons height than they are about the fact that their life goals have been pathetically reduced to griping at strangers about old, trivial facts that have no bearing on history anyway.
@boogerie
@boogerie 6 лет назад
Owen Connelly addresses this common argument in a footnote in his book BLUNDERING TO GLORY. At his death, N's entourage measured him & recorded that he was 5' 2". The argument that " 5 feet 2 inches in French units" equals "5 feet 7 inches" in British Imperial units. But as Connelly points out that would assume they had in their possession a pre-revolutionary yardstick! N introduced the metric
@tashaosby2470
@tashaosby2470 6 лет назад
Dante Froghst
@caglargenc4999
@caglargenc4999 6 лет назад
stalin was a hobbit as well, 5 feet 6 inches lol
@Godsglory777
@Godsglory777 Год назад
Napoleon was the epitome of what people want in a leader, but rarely do people know what they want or what's actually good for them.
@jarhead21100
@jarhead21100 5 месяцев назад
People know what they want in a leader, they simply don't know what it costs.
@Godsglory777
@Godsglory777 5 месяцев назад
@@jarhead21100 think of all the people that voted Joe Biden into office...lol...do people really know what they want in a leader?
@jarhead21100
@jarhead21100 5 месяцев назад
@@Godsglory777 they wanted a guy who wasn't Trump. They didn't know what it would cost.
@MegaCalum11
@MegaCalum11 9 месяцев назад
Biographics: Napoleon uses lots of propaganda. Also biographics: Napoleon was short.
@Truthseeker1515
@Truthseeker1515 5 лет назад
My family housed Leaticia (his mother) and his brothers and sisters in Marseille when they arrived from Corsica as refugees from the Paoli regime. We shared similar roots as both of our families were from Genoa. And Italians help each other out, especially those living abroad, even naturalized French as he was. They were poor (many sisters, minimal prospects) and we gave them shelter and clothes....he was a totally unknown artillery lieutenant with very limited career prospects. Lucien (or Luciano) became a very close friend of the family. We possessed love letters between Josephine and Napoleon but these were sold many, many years ago....
@HeroLanding
@HeroLanding 3 года назад
What an honor!
@Truthseeker1515
@Truthseeker1515 3 года назад
Really?
@christopherpeery7436
@christopherpeery7436 2 года назад
a small price to pay for salvation
@Truthseeker1515
@Truthseeker1515 2 года назад
@@christopherpeery7436 I have very mixed feelings. Millions of people died because of him. Without the French revolution, he would have been nothing. And yet he remains adored in France and in the wider world....
@banditop276
@banditop276 2 года назад
@@Truthseeker1515 the story is a little more complicated .. that he is responsible for millions of deaths and without him the revolution would not have survived
@tyson6695
@tyson6695 4 года назад
History lesson 101: DONT INVADE RUSSIA!
@sibiria8816
@sibiria8816 4 года назад
Tyson these guys all end up in russia sooner or later
@tylerfleming1662
@tylerfleming1662 4 года назад
Everybody fucks that part up tho
@jrnbloodaxehaugen678
@jrnbloodaxehaugen678 4 года назад
There is a way to invade Russia. Just don't get so ahead of yourself while doing it
@jagpalsukhraj
@jagpalsukhraj 4 года назад
@@tylerfleming1662 except for the mongols
@tylerfleming1662
@tylerfleming1662 4 года назад
@@jagpalsukhraj hahahahaha you got me
@VaxtorT
@VaxtorT 3 года назад
You failed to mention that he challenged 40 other boys when being bullied. After beating the best of them they soon left him alone afterward.
@samkay3419
@samkay3419 4 года назад
Napoleon was 5' 7" in English measurements. The average Frenchman at the time was 5' 5" in English measurements. The "Napoleon was short myth" was from his height being measued in French Imperial units of 5' 2" which equalled the English 5' 7". He looked small next to his" Old Guard" who were 6' tall plus a tall bearskin hat.. The " Little Corporal" was a term of endearment by his bodyguard. The British took the bearskin hats and adopted them after Waterloo.
@scook9999
@scook9999 6 лет назад
Wow, just found Biographics for the first time today. Thanks, Simon. I know it's a group, and not just you, but you are great on camera and really make the material pop off the screen. Thanks for you and your group working so hard.
@Vaginaninja
@Vaginaninja 2 года назад
Simon is just the disappointing, unattractive face who still hasn't been taught to talk in a normal and pleasant way
@PhilliesNostalgia
@PhilliesNostalgia 5 лет назад
16:58 He died 1821 He abdicated 1814
@AndrewTateOfficial
@AndrewTateOfficial Год назад
16:56 damn, napoleon was so OP that even death couldn't keep him subdued for long. he came back from the grave 19 years later, just to abdicate and say "you didn't beat me. I quit"
@LiveFreeOrDie2A
@LiveFreeOrDie2A 9 месяцев назад
The difference in locations between his first exile and his second exile is just wild. His 1st on Elba was only 5 miles off the Italian coast. His 2nd on St. Helena, was 1,000 miles off the closet coast.. of Africa!
@scheimong
@scheimong 6 лет назад
13:47 I think you mean, the royal navy smashed the combined Spanish ***French*** fleet?
@gutsjoestar7450
@gutsjoestar7450 4 года назад
Not exactly. The Spanish French destroyed many British navy and even killed the admiral Nelson who led the British navy
@gutsjoestar7450
@gutsjoestar7450 3 года назад
@Eliot Thexton ah
@leabeggs8079
@leabeggs8079 6 лет назад
my favourite channel on youtube. as always an excellent video Simon.
@Phelsuma-laticauda
@Phelsuma-laticauda 7 месяцев назад
“There is nothing we can do “
@sygmandiasthemage1629
@sygmandiasthemage1629 4 года назад
Napoleon last words: "In Russia, land conquers you".
@unculturedswine5583
@unculturedswine5583 4 года назад
and now, you may drop the mike
@karhin9912
@karhin9912 4 года назад
*drops mike wasowsky*
@markhenley3097
@markhenley3097 6 лет назад
2:06 Why is there a picture of Archduke Ferdinand when you're talking about Francis II?
@Kriskazam
@Kriskazam 5 лет назад
Prins van Oranje yeah wtf
@GerryBolger
@GerryBolger 6 лет назад
Emperor Vespasian would make a fascinating topic to discuss. He saved the Roman Empire from the brink of self distruction by being uniquely caring, open minded and strong. He was also born to mule hearding peasants and only gained his position by sheer merit. There are few rags to riches stories quite as huge in scale as his.
@boomerhgt
@boomerhgt 4 года назад
One of my favourite You Tube Biography channels great job
@cjthegood
@cjthegood 3 года назад
0:46 That was Napoleon's brother Joseph, who became King of Naples and Spain.
@Kunfucious577
@Kunfucious577 5 лет назад
The craziest part is that he tried to conquer the world and they just sent his ass to another island so he couldn't try to conquer the world again.
@nicktamer4969
@nicktamer4969 2 года назад
Napoleon never tried to conquer the world (or even Europe). He just fought back kings who wanted to destroy French Revolution.
@ChapmanFilms
@ChapmanFilms 6 лет назад
WOW I was just think this morning why hasn't Simon done a video on Napoleon??? Then I check my You Tube Feed... Boom.. Napoleon. Kind of creepy you read my mind. Good video too. Maybe when you get the time do Charles de Gaulle?
@Biographics
@Biographics 6 лет назад
We did a video on our sister channel a few years ago about Napoleon as well. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-UbkQ9ZFR6nM.html - Shell
@ChapmanFilms
@ChapmanFilms 6 лет назад
Well going to watch it now
@christineleblanc4486
@christineleblanc4486 4 года назад
He changed the legal system by codifying the laws, and his system is still used today (not just in France). Also, I'm rather disappointed you didn't mention Josephine. Can we have an episode on her?
@pemithmithsara7632
@pemithmithsara7632 2 года назад
What did you expect; the video is made by a Brit
@wertyuiopasd6281
@wertyuiopasd6281 2 года назад
The video maker is an id-iot who doesn't even know that Napoleon was actually 2cm taller than the average man at the time lol. What did you expect?
@digitalstories2179
@digitalstories2179 Год назад
No feminists please get out
@JoeHynes284
@JoeHynes284 3 года назад
just found this channel and it's great, i'd enjoy a little more coverage about him becoming emperor if anyone has suggestions
@esamunaeebsaad389
@esamunaeebsaad389 6 лет назад
Its my first view and I really liked your channel. And was kind of loved it at the beginning when I heard "Dance of the sugar plum fairies". ❤
@Moriartart
@Moriartart 6 лет назад
I love this channel and I love Napoleon so this was perfection ☺️
@michaelbrett3749
@michaelbrett3749 Год назад
dear Alexia ...so you love short fat men who are murderers ok
@Godsglory777
@Godsglory777 Год назад
Very good job sir. You have a special skill for telling history and the facts as they are. I thoroughly enjoy your content.
@leobestbote4244
@leobestbote4244 3 года назад
I learnt loads about Napoleon during highschool and you left out a lot of his accomplishments and many battles fought, however it's a good summary of the story of a great man
@DrewSohl
@DrewSohl 5 лет назад
His father was smart.He fought,he lost,made peace and did well with the French.
@Key212
@Key212 6 лет назад
Yess!!! Another great one. Watched it on the way to work. I love your channel.
@Biographics
@Biographics 6 лет назад
We'll assume you weren't driving. - Shell
@fishjj76
@fishjj76 3 года назад
Best two sentence summary of the Battle of Austerlitz. Love these videos.
@teaganwalsh7011
@teaganwalsh7011 3 года назад
He was 5'2" French measurement which is 5'7" common.
@firefox3249
@firefox3249 6 лет назад
17:00 I'm pretty sure Napoleon was long since dead by 1840. I'm also pretty sure that he abdicated in 1814.
@LmaoMoni
@LmaoMoni 6 лет назад
He was 5'7"...
@Key212
@Key212 6 лет назад
The Liberal Teen taller then me forever alone ..... Lol
@Biographics
@Biographics 6 лет назад
The myth that he was short stems primarily from the fact that he is listed as 5 feet 2 inches tall at the time of his death. However, this is 5 feet 2 inches in French units. In modern international units, he was just shy of 5 feet 7 inches. - Sorry for the confusion.
@LmaoMoni
@LmaoMoni 6 лет назад
Biographics oooooooo
@jimbobjimjim6500
@jimbobjimjim6500 6 лет назад
Why did you still say he was short then?...........
@rickynotricardo6328
@rickynotricardo6328 6 лет назад
Jimbobjim jim yeah thats still short
@georgebush5310
@georgebush5310 3 года назад
This is all the motivation I need to work
@MapleSyrupPoet
@MapleSyrupPoet 3 года назад
At 30, he was in charge ...pretty impressive
@ryankiel4895
@ryankiel4895 2 года назад
He was one of the most gifted men in history, to be sure. I am realizing that his pride, ambition and pure avarice for power have little equal.
@MapleSyrupPoet
@MapleSyrupPoet 2 года назад
@@ryankiel4895 we could talk about short men, and their personalities ...I believe Napoleon was around 4'10," or 5'1" in this area 🤔
@camorinbatchelder6514
@camorinbatchelder6514 6 лет назад
Vive l’Empeurer!
@diegoavnet93
@diegoavnet93 5 лет назад
TRoL MaRz Empereur*
@paulmcdonough1093
@paulmcdonough1093 5 лет назад
scared of the British
@matios83
@matios83 4 года назад
Trolling is a hobby. Even for me.
@Zebastian88
@Zebastian88 6 лет назад
He was not a small man! He was 5 foot, 2 inches but the French inches at the time were longer than the English. Which would make him 1.70 meters today, average/ slightly above average at the time. Even rather large for a Corsican. Shame on you Simon...
@christineparis5607
@christineparis5607 6 лет назад
James TheCat It's not much of a crime you know, Simon was only talking about his height, not his....
@boogerie
@boogerie 6 лет назад
Owen Connelly addresses this common argument in a footnote in his book BLUNDERING TO GLORY. At his death, N's entourage measured him & recorded that he was 5' 2". The argument that " 5 feet 2 inches in French units" equals "5 feet 7 inches" in British Imperial units. But as Connelly points out that would assume they had in their possession a pre-revolutionary yardstick! N introduced the metric
@ersturdevant2831
@ersturdevant2831 5 лет назад
Ego cope. He was short, look at the historical paintings. Deal with it, heightists!
@Heisenberg882
@Heisenberg882 4 года назад
@@ersturdevant2831 he was seen as short in paintings because he surrounded himself with the imperial guard, which were some of the tallest and best troops in Europe
@ersturdevant2831
@ersturdevant2831 4 года назад
@@Heisenberg882 The fact that imperial guards are tall doesn't disprove that Napoleon was short.
@Spirito_Irzlmine
@Spirito_Irzlmine 2 года назад
Great video I learn so much when watching your videos
@jimbeaux89
@jimbeaux89 4 года назад
Wow man. Napoleon was incredible
@wholeNwon
@wholeNwon 5 лет назад
Quite a few silly mistakes. Surprised that you aren't more careful. There are incorrect illustrations, dates, other images, dialog, etc.
@SKa-tt9nm
@SKa-tt9nm 3 года назад
Surprised you haven’t created your own video yet. Im sure it’ll be vastly superior.
@wholeNwon
@wholeNwon 3 года назад
@@SKa-tt9nm Why bother? I just want to be passively entertained. And YT does that. Sometimes I want to be informed and YT usually does that well enough.
@petulantpeterturbo
@petulantpeterturbo 3 года назад
wholeNwon Judging by the amount of comments saying his information is incorrect, I’d trust his word sooner than I trust yours.
@ryanhayward2161
@ryanhayward2161 6 лет назад
Great video!!
@andrewl8962
@andrewl8962 9 месяцев назад
Brilliantly explained. Thank you. Andrew. 👍
@sephirrothvt
@sephirrothvt 2 года назад
Napoleón was not a narcissist, just a rich dude that got close to strong powers and took over, then failed on his goal, he knew what war meant for his people and tried to take over Europe for his people.
@ldblokland463
@ldblokland463 6 лет назад
The first transition music was "the sugar fairy" ironic, since it was composed by Tchaikovski, a Russian. The conquest that was the begin of Napoleon's end...
@johnsummers9660
@johnsummers9660 6 лет назад
The consistent quality of videos that Mr. Whistler and his team produce over their several channels is pretty remarkable. Even when they cover subjects I may not really have any interest in, the way they present the information, even given the broad overview and generalities that are their simply due to the short length of the videos, they make the subject interesting. Kind of like Fresh Air with Terri Gross or To the Best of Our Knowledge on NPR. That's a rare gift and I glad Simon and his team possess such a gift.
@Biographics
@Biographics 6 лет назад
Fresh Air? That is high praise indeed. - Shell
@d.kincaid3595
@d.kincaid3595 6 лет назад
Generalities that are their... Really? They're, their, and there. Learn the difference. Not that hard.
@johnsummers9660
@johnsummers9660 6 лет назад
LOL I accidentally used "their" instead of "there" and some knucklehead thinks it was done out of ignorance even after correctly using "their" in the first sentence of my comment. Just because it aggravates you I'm not editing it because sometimes you just gotta let things go. I don't care if people think I'm stupid but I wonder if you care if people think you're a pedantic jerk-face.
@jrox1138
@jrox1138 6 лет назад
Biographics aren’t they pro neo liberal agenda tho.. Napoleon was 5’7 , the video just try’s to downplay him. If this was Saladin or Zulu they would have tried their best to get history accurate. There were a lot of inaccuracies with the Aztecs too. There is no proof of their mass sacrifice compared to that of the Spanish Inquisitions and Crusades.
@meliodas4705
@meliodas4705 6 месяцев назад
"There is no immortality, only the memory that is left in the minds of men"- Napoleon Bonaparte, let us hope that we will never forget a military and political genius such as Napoleon.
@explorer1968
@explorer1968 3 года назад
Napoleon Bonaparte raised from dirt to the throne of France, he was the natural successor of Alexander the Great and of Julius Caesar; then he did the unimaginable mistake of engaging in a two-front war attacking Spain and Portugal while invading Russia. Sent twice into exile, he got the brilliant idea of writing his memoirs: even in permanent defeat, he overcame the death of forgetfulness living through this day as a hero for the ages, something his enemies couldn't avoid!!
@jolyonwagg8249
@jolyonwagg8249 5 лет назад
You need a new picture editor. She or he is making some absolute howlers.
@rsears78
@rsears78 5 лет назад
Jolyon Wagg then maybe you should do it........
@suzannefitch51
@suzannefitch51 4 года назад
Jolyon Wagg p
@jenbutler926
@jenbutler926 6 лет назад
Yet another fantastic video. Love them! Great work 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@JeanSweeny
@JeanSweeny 4 года назад
"The greatest man of action in 19th century Europe"--Winston Churchill He was extraordinary in more ways than one can wrap the mind around. All the miles from Europe to Africa to Russia without motor; enlightenment itself on horseback.
@JeanSweeny
@JeanSweeny 4 года назад
@steve hammond I understand why this argument sounds credible, but Rousseau, Montesquieu and Voltaire built and remained a big part of his foundational thought process. And life happens. Ideas behind the enlightenment are mutually exclusive from real life only as written by philosophers of the enlightenment, or if you were royalty. I see his life's work inexorably driven by the "Enlightenment".
@JeanSweeny
@JeanSweeny 4 года назад
@steve hammond I understand why this argument sounds credible, but Rousseau, Montesquieu and Voltaire built and remained a big part of his foundational thought process. And life happens. Ideas behind the enlightenment are mutually exclusive from real life only as written by philosophers of the enlightenment, or if you were royalty. I see his life's work inexorably driven by the "Enlightenment".
@eyobzewdie9305
@eyobzewdie9305 Год назад
Best Narration Vivid and Interesting. Thank You.
@TheHoagie13
@TheHoagie13 6 лет назад
11:58 Um.......Franz Ferdinand II wasn't even alive in 1800. IDK why you chose a photo of a guy who didn't exist yet, plus photography wasn't invented yet!
@user-lv7ph7hs7l
@user-lv7ph7hs7l 5 лет назад
It is an incorrect photograph but photography was first being experimented with in the early 1700's. The major trouble was capturing permanent images. But images in a liquid that would disappear if shaken or exposed to too much light where achieved by 1717. Through the rest of the 1700's and early 1800's people experimented with a variety of techniques until in the 1820's the first true permanent photographs where done that still exist today. The chemicals used in "modern" analog photography where discovered in the 1600's including their light-sensitive properties being observed. It's shame nobody put two and two together earlier or we could have had photographs as far back as the 1630's.
@johnwilliamsjr5540
@johnwilliamsjr5540 5 лет назад
people laugh at me for being short but then when they see how much taller I am then they are when laying down they stop laughing real fast
@greenriverviews6819
@greenriverviews6819 9 месяцев назад
Waterloo was not just one battle, it was a mini campaign carried out at lightning speed over less than a week by Napoleon. He totally thrashed the Prussians and the English during the previous two days. Duke of Wellington's advance preparations and plans for a deployment at Waterloo prevented a total rout. On the day itself, arguably Scott Greys' off the cuff cavalry charge broke the early French momentum so the battle then dragged on till late, ending in disaster for the French.
@manuelcruz2256
@manuelcruz2256 2 года назад
thank you for increasing our knowledge 💡
@moistyreact
@moistyreact 6 лет назад
Notification squad :D Simon, you and your team are easily one of the hardest working group of people on RU-vid. Your balance of quality and quantity is unmatched on the platform.
@jmarch_503
@jmarch_503 6 лет назад
Vault Dude agreed
@otterruss7562
@otterruss7562 6 лет назад
funny to see you here lol
@teddywawwrzyniak104
@teddywawwrzyniak104 6 лет назад
Vault Dude I'll second that!! Great job!! ;)
@supergaga1712
@supergaga1712 5 лет назад
Would be better if it was accurate.
@jackofshadows8538
@jackofshadows8538 5 лет назад
Vault dude You seem to be a bit thick, don't you? Most of the info they mention is wrong, the images are horribly incorrect. Put it this way, I wouldn't base my exams on anything in this 'content'. It's rushed out and poorly researched. You'd be better off checking wikipedia.
@daddysbigrod5276
@daddysbigrod5276 6 лет назад
Do Hannibal from Carthage!
@mihaiilie8808
@mihaiilie8808 5 лет назад
King Meme Thats a good one and also Napoleon liked Hanibal the most.
@anthonybraceful1945
@anthonybraceful1945 4 года назад
Mihai Ilie EXACTLY, HE DUPLICATED HANNIBALS STRATEGIES THAT WAS THE KEY TO NAPOLEONS MILITARY SUCESS
@thomascoburn5481
@thomascoburn5481 4 года назад
Yes Hannibal was the goat
@justadudegaming3081
@justadudegaming3081 2 года назад
Napoleon really experienced the motto: Winter is coming!
@alexandrefr8029
@alexandrefr8029 4 года назад
Napoleon ´s life can resume by a famous word of himself : In french , en français : impossible n’est pas français. In english, en anglais : impossible it’s not french . Sorry for my bad english , hi from france 🇫🇷 and thanks for the review.
@philipb2134
@philipb2134 5 лет назад
13:50 - Why would the Royal Navy have smashed "the combined Spanish-British fleet"???
@derpynerdy6294
@derpynerdy6294 3 года назад
Hahahahhaha I just can't but yeah mistakes happen Admiral nelson was too good for navy battle tactics
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