Dan Snow's History Hit - The Rise of Napoleon
Episode Date: January 17, 2025Napoleon Bonaparte is a household name; a rare example of someone who is as well remembered by his supporters as by his enemies. His life is rich with dramatic irony. He was a key figure in the creati...on of the First French Republic, yet became a self-appointed Emperor. Surrounded by enemies, he secured peace in France through war abroad and was hated by the monarchies of Europe, who feared he would bring democracy to their lands. Dan was recently a guest on the Echoes of History podcast, hosted by Matt Lewis, to discuss the life of Napoleon which he's sharing here for DSHH fans to enjoy. Echoes of History is a Ubisoft podcast, brought to you by History Hit. It's available wherever you get your podcasts.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.
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Hi folks, welcome to Down Snow's History Hits.
It's a new year, new content hunt.
We're all doing it.
We all want a little something to help us get a bit smarter,
entertain us, make us better informed.
Particularly if you live in northern climes like I do
and you really need a bit of help getting through these months. the long commutes and the dark, the cold, the wet.
I'm here to share with you an episode that I was lucky enough to take part in. It's part of an
excellent history podcast. It's hosted by History Hit's very own Matt Lewis. It's called Echoes of
History. Matt investigates the historical setting of the Assassin's Creed games. Now, if you're not
a gamer, don't worry.
This is not a podcast about gaming.
It's a podcast about history.
The history that has inspired some of those iconic games.
Each Assassin's Creed is set in a historical world
that the player explores through gameplay.
A famous example, one game was set in ancient Greece,
in Sparta, during the Peloponnesian Wars.
Another in Viking Age Britain and Ireland.
Another in the era of the samurai
in medieval Japan. So Echoes of History podcast delves into the true history behind these game
settings. A few weeks back I got the call up, I joined Matt, for their series on Assassin's Creed
Unity which puts players through the melee of the events of the French Revolution. To discuss the
man who witnessed so much of it, played his part in it, and would emerge as its ultimate beneficiary. The man who changed Europe. The man who crowned
himself Emperor of France, and who's divided us into armies of critics and admirers ever since.
The master of the battlefield. The high priest of reformers. It is, of course, Napoleon Bonaparte. So we thought we'd share on
this feed the episode in which I was a guest on Echoes of History with Matt Lewis, and I was
talking all about the life, the times, and the contradictions of Napoleon. Enjoy. No black-white unity till there is first and black unity.
Never to go to war with one another again.
And lift off, and the shuttle has cleared the tower.
The streets of Paris are alive with the adrenaline of insurrection.
A sight you never dared imagine, even in your wildest dreams, meets your eyes.
Ordinary men and women and children march alongside columns of the National Guard, an alliance of regular bluecoats with their muskets and cannon,
and civilians with pikes and cudgels.
They excitedly bellow over the beat of the marching drum,
Vive la Nation!
The seeds for this uprising were planted long ago,
after generations of feudalism, years of starvation
and months of pretending to respect the people with his national assemblies.
King Louis XVI has now crossed the final line in the sand.
Enough wars, enough inequality. The people are marching to take control.
Their destination is the same as yours, the Tuileries Palace. But your purpose is very different from theirs. On a secret mission,
you rush ahead of the angry crowd as fast and as stealthily as you can. You steal through the
streets of the city until you reach the royal residence. If you had the time, you would pause
to marvel at the sheer grandeur of the Imperial Palace. Expanded and enhanced over centuries,
sheer grandeur of the Imperial Palace. Expanded and enhanced over centuries, it's reached its zenith under Louis XVI, and you might suspect it will never be this immense or spectacular again.
There don't seem to be any guards to prevent your entry. They're busy preparing for the onslaught of
their countrymen. Nevertheless, you sneak to a less-observed facade of the building and jimmy a window
to climb inside. Within, if you had time to take it in, you'd be gobsmacked at the luxury
that surrounds you. But there's no time to waste. You can hear the rebels have arrived
outside the palace. Already, the clamours to open fire overwhelm the calls for peaceful surrender. Tonight, there will be violence.
You hurry through the seemingly endless rooms of gold and alabaster and silk until you reach the
king's quarters and his private study. The object you seek is somewhere within. You open the door,
ready to grab the item and escape, only to find the business end of a pistol aimed straight at
your head. You freeze. Beyond the barrel is the calculating face of a young officer. Although he
wears his uniform well, he's a far cry from the aristocratic dandies you often see promoted up
the ranks. This fellow is serious and bears the thoughtful countenance of a capable
soldier. With a smirk, he lowers his pistol. You don't look like a bloodthirsty revolutionary,
he says. You return the compliment. He lets you into the room and asks what you're doing there.
You reply that you're looking for something, something important that the revolutionaries mustn't get.
When you ask why he's been posted to guard the king's rooms, he replies that he's not officially here.
He doesn't often get the chance to rifle through the king's personal papers.
He's making the most of the moment.
Suddenly, a blast of cannon fire shakes the building.
Then the crackle of musket volleys and the smash of doors breaking down.
As the shouts of the revolutionaries echo down the hallways, getting louder as they approach,
the young officer suggests you cooperate to find what you're looking for and make your escape together.
With few options, you accept. He curtly introduces himself.
Napoleon Bonaparte. Pleased to meet you.
Welcome to Echoes of History, Dan. It's fantastic to have you here with us.
Well, this is a great honour. Thanks for having me on, Matt.
No, it's great fun. Keen to get to know more about Napoleon because he's one of those names
that everybody knows the name, but do we know the man well i am thrilled i have lured you away from
the medieval period about which you know so much and always make me feel so insignificant and small
and stupid so now we can have a more equal conversation i'm looking forward to sharing
some of my early modern passion with you bud fantastic i'm looking forward to it too i guess
it strikes me that someone who lives
through the French Revolution,
maybe has been away from France for a couple of years,
gets back in 1804 and thinks,
hang on, we've got an emperor now.
What is going on?
That must have seemed weird.
So can we start off with a little bit about
who Napoleon Bonaparte is and where he comes from?
Actually, if that explorer did come back in 1804,
as long as he came back right at the end of the year,
he'd have discovered that Napoleon had crowned himself, in fact, Emperor of the French. He'd taken the crown from the Pope in the cathedral and placed it on its own head in such an amazing and symbolic way.
One of the things that Ridley Scott got right in the recent Napoleon film.
And so, yes, France has been through absolute turmoil. And as you know,
from the periods that you have written about and podcast about so richly, in every great crisis,
every great upheaval, there is opportunity. There is opportunity for the astonishing talent,
the maverick, the genius. You see this as Chinese dynasties come and go. You see peasants who go on
to become emperors like the founder of the Han dynasty.
You see it in British history, actually not that much, I don't think.
You do see it with Oliver Cromwell in the 17th century,
this guy who's a kind of pretty random provincial gentleman,
turns out to be one of the greatest cavalry commanders in world history
and becomes Lord of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales,
forging this remarkable British state with him as its king in all but name.
And so that's what's happened here.
The French Revolution has torn up the old rulebook.
It's set Europe aflame.
It's ignited a series of astonishing wars.
The old regime's been scoured away.
The army's looking for new leadership.
The navy's looking for new leadership.
And Napoleon is one of the many bright young things that just emerge, that see opportunity
in this carnage and chaos.
He rises to power in a series of ways I think we're probably going to talk about.
And then, like all great leaders, whether they're in business or politics or the military,
huge luck is involved.
Key competitors fall by the wayside for reasons
way outside his control. Opportunity comes his way. And then he's got the genius, he's got the
talent to seize that opportunity and really run with it. When he's given command of an army in
Italy, he brings astonishing energy to it. He wipes the floor with the Austrians in Northern
Italy. He launches a series of astonishing, he's very,
very fast moving. He's a brilliant man at moving people from A to B and then surprising the enemy.
But he's great at being where he's not supposed to be. And he's great at motivating his troops,
rewarding his troops. And he ends up seizing power, not unlike Julius Caesar or Augustus
Caesar in Rome. He sees his power initially as part of a small group, then he slowly gets rid
of the other people.
Eventually, it's just him alone.
And he decides to make it official in December 1804
and crowns himself emperor.
So he's now got a status in his mind,
certainly alongside the emperor of Austria,
the Habsburg, and the emperor, the Tsar of Russia
from the Romanovs.
So he is one of the world's leading statesmen.
That explorer would have been
fairly surprised because he came from, unlike the advertising for the movie, he didn't come
from nothing. He came from a sort of minor aristocratic background, a sort of comfortable
background on an outlying island, Corsica, a distant part of the French world. So he is
unexpected. He didn't really speak French very well when he arrived in France, went to military school. So he is from a very unexpected corner of this country. And he rises into supreme
power. And briefly, his empire will stretch in the years that follow. If the explorer can stay
in Europe, that empire will stretch from Portugal to the gates of Moscow. Enormous European empire
that Napoleon carves out, but it survives only very briefly.
You mentioned then that he didn't speak French when he arrived in France. What language would
he have been speaking? They spoke Corsican, which is a bit more like Italian, really. And indeed,
his name, he was actually christened Napoleone di Buonaparte. So as you can see, he sounds a little
more Italian than French. So he was an outsider.
Because of his aristocratic lineage, he was given the French king,
because it was still a monarchy at that time.
It was pre-revolution.
The French king enabled all boys of that lineage to come
and have a free military education in France.
And so Napoleon turns up.
He's bullied, very badly bullied, for being an outsider,
being a Corsican, being a bit common.
He's not as posh as the other kids in the academy.
And so he's, yeah, he's an outsider.
Fascinating.
What kind of sources do we have for Napoleon's early life and how reliable are they?
Because if he's a guy, you know, not quite coming up from nothing, but relatively coming from nowhere,
how much do we know about his younger years and how do we find those things out
well we have got his own account which is biased and brilliant and weird actually we do have some
accounts of him at school he was said to be a very brilliant student he actually makes a note
in one of his textbooks when he's doing geography he makes a note about the island of saint helena
she sort of said well this is a very small island long way from. Little did he know that his fate and that of St. Helena
would be inextricably linked for reasons that we may cover
towards the end of the podcast.
So we have little snippets like that.
And then this is an era where there's a popular press,
there's a market for books.
And so this is an era where people that knew Napoleon
would write memoirs, not unlike today.
He became the biggest celebrity of the 19th century in many ways.
So actually many books were written about him by people that knew him or historians who looked closely into
him at the time of his life and in the years following his death. So we have many stories.
And obviously, we have to be very careful because, as you know better than anybody,
as a medievalist, there are biases to these stories. There's no gender. But we think we
can piece together a pretty interesting picture of him as a young man.
So we've got good sources. We just have to be slightly careful with them.
As ever. Stick it on a t-shirt, Matt.
Can we always describe Napoleon in those younger years as a kind of passionate patriot? We will
associate him inextricably with French patriotism. Was he always like that? Clearly he's gone to
France to get a military education.
Is he devoted to the French state at this point? No, it's very weird. Probably partly because he
was bullied and he didn't have a great time in France. He became a passionate, a very passionate
believer in Corsican nationalism, Corsican independence. This is one of the great ironies.
Now, there are many, many young people who go on to do quite remarkable things in history who, as young people, you see them veering wildly from whether it's from fascism to communism and back again, flirting with nationalism, testing things out, going to the cafes and the bars, having ferocious arguments with friends, passionate, passionate debates about doing what young people should do and testing out their ideas. And so initially,
yeah, Napoleon is a huge fan of Corsican independence. And that was a very real
prospect. I mean, there was a huge separatist movement in Corsica and it would come to blows
and Napoleon would take part in that conflict during the revolution. But yes, so his commitment
to France was not evident right from the beginning. It's interesting how many of these key figures from history, as you say, they are willing to
open themselves up to a whole range of ideas that might seem contradictory. But what you're seeing,
I guess, is a personality that's willing to try anything and dabble with anything and invest in
something to find out whether it's right or not.
That's precisely correct. And I think it's, I think Philip Pullman told the story beautifully
in the Northern Lights book when he comes up with this idea of a demon that's beside you. And as a
kid, it changes shape radically. And as an adult, it settles. And I think all of us go through a
period, we decide who we want to be. Do we want to be a scholar? Do we want to be a jock? Do we
want to be right? Do we want to be left? Do we care about politics or not? And it's harder to pick up and put down those identities when you get older.
But as a teenager, it's a cauldron.
It's a time to do exactly that, have contradictory views, argue them out,
try and walk with different crowds.
It's exciting.
And Napoleon certainly took advantage of the freedom offered by not just his youth,
but also the revolution.
of the freedom offered by not just his youth, but also the revolution.
Because when it came, he was a very junior second lieutenant in an artillery regiment.
He couldn't afford to join a fashionable regiment, so he joined an artillery regiment.
It's where the clever people went, because the cavalrymen and the infantrymen, to some extent, the guardsmen, would have been there for the social scene and the balls, the connections,
the lovers.
Artillerymen were men of science and engineering and math.
And so it sort of suited him.
It suited his social status, his lack of money, and also his brain.
He was very, very good at it.
So he's the most junior officer in the French Army,
in the unfashionable part of the French Army.
He stuck away there looking at graphs and diagrams,
had to make a mortar fire, an artillery fire more efficient.
And there, suddenly the revolution breaks out and all bets are off. So suddenly everybody is going,
do we want a monarchy? Do we want a constitutional monarchy like the Brits? Do we want total
egalitarian? They're tracing 17th century social movements in England. The level is,
should we outlaw private property? Everyone is going bonkers. So these discussions are going on
and people are veering from one place to the next.
It's an exciting time in many ways,
but a dangerous time.
Yeah, I was going to say that
as someone who will have himself crowned
as an emperor afterwards,
I would have imagined Napoleon
being on the side of the crown
and the king during the French Revolution.
But maybe if we're at this stage
where he's playing with ideas in his life,
maybe that's not right.
I don't know.
Where does Napoleon sit in the revolution? We could have a whole podcast about that,
Matthew. Let me tell you. Initially, he does seem to have welcomed the end of absolute monarchy.
For people like him, there was no question that his career was going to be enhanced
in a world where there was a little bit more meritocracy. So, you know, and remember,
a lot of these people initially lobbying for revolution,
we might describe them as upper middle class people who want a piece of the action as well.
These are not people absolutely committed to full democracy,
enfranchising everyone, including women, for example.
There are all sorts of different shades of revolution.
And it seems like Napoleon initially welcomed it and also very much welcomed it
because he believed it
would help Corsican nationalism, it would help Corsica become independent. He thought the
revolution would loosen the autocratic ties that bound France together and therefore Corsica could
drift further away from France, have its own identity, have its own parliament and constitution.
It does seem though that he didn't want outright independence at this point. He liked the idea of Corsica within a revolutionary, more modern French state. So he thought
that Corsican aspirations could be met if they were treated with respect and had a measure of
self-government within this French state. So you then get a three-way fight in Corsica,
which he plays a part in. He commands a battalion at one
point, approximately 500 men. So he's fighting in Corsica, royalists who just want the Ancien
Régime. They want King Louis back and they don't want any change. There are revolutionaries and
then there are Corsican outright nationalists, outright separatists. And so he's walking the
middle path. He's trying to represent the French revolutionary government in Corsica.
Interesting. So he's already made that shift from Corsican independence to being able to see a role for Corsica in a new France, a revolutionary France, so that Corsica maybe
maintains power of being associated with France, but becomes a much more modern place too.
Exactly. And in which, surprise, surprise, Corsicans like him can flourish
within the wider French state.
So he's like,
oh, I no longer need to secede from France
in order to kind of meet my ambitions,
which are motivation as old as time.
How then do we start to see Napoleon
begin to rise to prominence?
So we've had him as a really junior officer
during the French Revolution.
How does he begin to climb up and become much more prominent?
Well, this is the most extraordinary moment.
This is where in the lives of all the great leaders,
certainly the great leaders who've pulled themselves up by their own bootstraps,
in those careers, there is always the most astonishing bit of luck.
Napoleon's driven out of Corsica.
He ends up as a pretty marginalized,
itinerant guy wandering around the south of France, taking part in the local and regional
discussions around the revolution. At this point, speaking up for what's going on in Paris,
the Jacobins, the national convention, speaking up for the revolutionary regime effectively in Paris,
is knocking about in the south of France. And then something astonishing happens. French royalists, so anti-revolutionaries, take the city
of Toulon, which is the HQ of the French Mediterranean Navy, so enormously important
naval base, like Portsmouth in the UK, but in France. And they invite the British, can you
believe it? They invite the British in, and together the French royalists invite the British, can you believe it? They invite the British in and together the French royalists and the British have this foothold in France. They control Toulon, hoping it would be a sort of a nodal point from which royalists could spread out and recapture, wind back the revolution. This would be the engine of counter-revolution.
And it just turns out that one of Napoleon's fellow Corsicans was sent there by the Republican forces trying to contain or try and take on this threat in Toulon.
And he knew that Napoleon knew about artillery and he's like, geez, I just need to find someone who knows about guns.
He calls up Napoleon, he says, come on, give me a hand come together in this potent cocktail, and they blast Napoleon onto the French stage, the world stage, the European stage,
and he never, ever looks back. Key thing is luck gets him there, and he capitalizes on that luck
with brilliance and hard work. He is a very good artillery officer. He is very smart. He scours
the surrounding
countryside for all guns guns left over from the seven years wars sitting outside pubs and
restaurants and sitting in town squares whatever it is lying around in old arsenals and he gathers
them all together works out he's gonna melt down he creates shot for these guns and he positions
these guns brilliantly really he comes up with a plan to besiege Toulon.
He reduces these outlying forts one by one
and then makes Toulon completely untenable for the Royal Navy.
Now, unlike the film, sorry to mention this again,
he does not set fire to the Royal Navy.
The Royal Navy sort of withdraw to avoid that eventuality.
The revolutionary government of France recaptpped the city in December 1793.
And Napoleon is the star of the show. Yeah, as you say, it's very interesting how often
even the most brilliant people do need that moment of luck to get them there. It's a combination of,
you say, the luck to get there and the brilliance to remain there. It's interesting
how often that happens, I think. You're listening to Dan Snow's History. You're listening to me
talking about Napoleon. More coming up. This is History's Heroes. People with purpose,
brave ideas, and the courage to stand alone, including a pioneering surgeon who rebuilt the
shattered faces of soldiers in the First World War.
You know, he would look at these men and he would say,
don't worry, Sonny, you'll have as good a face as any of us when I'm done with you.
Join me, Alex von Tunzelman, for History's Heroes.
Subscribe to History's Heroes wherever you get your podcasts.
How do we then progress from a man who has shot up the ranks,
come to prominence, been a core part of the French Revolution?
How does this man go about making himself Emperor of France?
That seems like a real step too far.
The next key moment, he's now a star.
He's a star of the revolution.
He gets no politicians.
He gets no senior army commanders.
He's given some interesting jobs.
Revolutionary governments are guillotining each other,
rising and falling in Paris, like chopping and changing.
I mean, it is a time of chaos in many ways.
Literal chopping and changing.
Literally chopping heads and changing governments.
That's a good point.
Perhaps that's where the expression comes from.
But in all chaos,
there is opportunity
for ambitious young men.
And he is one of them.
But it's also great danger.
I mean, he spends a couple of weeks
in prison at one point
because that one regime
he's particularly associated with
falls from power
and he sort of manages
to distance himself enough
from them just in time
to avoid their fate.
He knows what it's like.
It's the Game of Thrones here in some ways. But the key moment comes in October 1795, when again, royalists,
those pesky royalists, they raise their heads again, this time in Paris. They are sick of the
revolution. They managed to get a mob, a crowd of people, and they threaten the, you could call it a
parliament, the national convention, this kind of executive body, well, actually the sort of executive slash legislative body that's running
the revolutionary government. And one of the leaders of that government knows Napoleon. He
just knows he's a reliable, decent guy, knows what to do. And he gives him command of troops
protecting, well, the French government. And Napoleon famously deploys cannon on the streets of Paris.
He blasts canister rounds, which is when you don't fire a cannonball,
you fire a sack or a box of musket balls effectively out of a cannon.
The heat and velocity of that blast the box.
It frees all the little musket balls from that box.
So it turns it into a giant shotgun.
So you spray bullets effectively across a wide area. It's a brutal anti-personnel
weapon. And if used on the streets of Paris, it can be devastating. You can create a killing zone
on a street of Paris. And he kills hundreds, some people say well over a thousand Parisians,
enemies of the regime. It's later the expression people may have heard of is a whiff of grape
shot. So with a whiff of grape shot, Napoleon saves the government.
He wins the undying loyalty of the French directory, this French government.
As a treat, they appoint him head of the army of Italy.
Now they may have also seen ambition in this man at this point.
Things are chopping and changing so fast.
The problem is whenever you do find someone who's brilliant and very able and capable,
particularly a military commander, you're already half thinking,
well, hang on a second, is he after my job? Because everyone's seen that anything's possible. So they give him this plum job, but it's also a job that is out
of the way. And it's also slightly a dead end job because the army in Italy is going nowhere very
quickly. And so they give him this job and they see what he can do with it. And that, whether
they intended it or not, is just another great launchpad for Napoleon,
because he is like a fish to water. He arrives in Northern Italy, and his effect on that theatre
of operations is profound. He rides through Northern Italy like a whirlwind.
He just seems like one of those people who give him any task and he'll do it. Those annoying
people who are just good at everything.
And even when you send him to Italy to try and trip him up,
turns out he's actually quite brilliant at it.
The kingdom in Northwest Italy at that point,
slightly various names, but it's in Piedmont.
And Napoleon knocks it out in a fortnight.
And then he turns his focus on the Austrians
who at that point have control lands in Northern Italy
and drives them back again and again and
again, humiliates the Austrians. And with every victory, his men gain more supplies, gain more
courage, gain more belief. He is very good at rewarding his men. The French armies loot and
pillage their way across northern Italy. He enriches his men. He understands, he motivates
them. He knows what they want. And he's a kind of charismatic,
talismanic figure.
You start to see him.
He is not usually on the front line.
There was a point at one battle,
the Battle of Achille,
where he seizes the flag.
The people may have seen portraits of him
in the thick of the action.
He seizes the flag,
trickle on,
and he runs forward
and he comes under fire
and his troops surge to go and rescue him.
But that's not his absolute strong point.
He's just a phenomenal organizer.
He looks at maps.
He sees the routes along which armies should travel.
He knows when to spread his troops out so that they don't get too hungry.
The problem is in this period, you can't bring food to an army.
You have to bring the army to food is the old expression.
In the 19th century, you've got railways and tinned food.
And then later you get frozen beef and stuff. You can bring enormous amounts of supplies from anywhere to anywhere,
in fact. You can sustain an army on the Western Front for four years in muddy trenches. You can't
do that in this period, this early modern period. So if you gather 50,000 men together, you eat all
the food in the area within two days. You have to disperse them all again, but you need to gather
them again to beat the enemy. So it's this game of constant dispersal and concentration
and he makes a virtue of that so what he does he sends junior subordinate commanders with whom he
has an excellent understanding he sends them along different roads they get gather the food and move
along separate roads you avoid traffic jams everyone can eat their way through the countryside
like a plague of locusts and then boom boom, you gather together at this key point,
inflict a stinging defeat against the enemy,
and then bang, you separate out again.
So you're moving like the Mongols in many ways.
You're moving like poison flooding through a network of capillaries.
You're just moving across northern Italy and coming together,
moving apart again, and the Austrians don't have a clue what is going on.
And in the end, by 1797, so he's been there about two years, he goes in 96, by the spring of 1797,
he's advanced 100 kilometers from Vienna. He hasn't just humiliated the Austrians in northern
Italy. He is threatening the Austrian homeland. I mean, this is catastrophic stuff and is a sense
of what's to come. It feels like the revolutionary government, the directory in Paris must have been
looking at him and thinking, oh, I mean, he's quite a good guy to have on side when he's doing
what you want. But as you said, when there's all this chopping and changing going on,
those brilliant people can very easily look like a threat. Do you think they saw
Napoleon's big takeover in France coming
or does that come out of the blue?
No, I mean, already after about 15 minutes in Italy,
he's sitting there at that dinner party.
He's talking about how he's very similar to Alexander the Great.
He has a very strong sense of his own place in history.
So I think his enemies are already saying at this point
that he wants to become a dictator.
You know, he's doing extraordinary things.
He ends a thousand years of independence for Venice.
Venice has pretty much been independent since the post-classical era, basically. And Bonaparte
marches on Venice, threatens to batter it with artillery. You know, he's an artilleryman. He's
a great quote from Bonaparte. He goes, it is with the guns that one makes war. And that's very
prescient because that is the 20th century. In first and second world war, you make war with artillery. You blast enemy positions,
you make them untenable. Then you send infantry in to secure. It's still a hard job, still a
miserable job. The gun takes ground, the infantry hold it. And today, people see in Ukraine, it's
all about artillery fights, all about shells. It's overwhelming firepower, drive an enemy out,
kill an enemy out, drive them out. Make them surrender.
Demoralize them.
And then you take that ground and hold it with your own infantry.
And Napoleon gets that.
I mean, he pioneers that.
And he wins.
In Northern Italy, he wins nearly 20 pitch battles.
He extracts astonishing amounts of wealth from Northern Italy.
He steals paintings and jewels.
I went to Genoa once, and I held this beautiful, a jar of vase and it's got a crack in it.
And it's been fixed and it was cracked
because Napoleon dropped it on the floor
when he was looting the Genoese treasury there.
He's acting like a politician.
He starts newspapers to become sort of PR engines for him.
This is not a man who's like,
I'm just interested in military affairs.
Please direct all political questions by civilian overseers.
This is someone who from the beginning is, well, it's clear he's got political
ambition. Yeah. This is history's heroes, people with purpose, brave ideas, and the courage to
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And how then does he go about justifying appointing himself as emperor of a newly unroyalised France?
There is no monarchy, there is no king. How does he suddenly justify becoming an emperor? Well, there's a series of coups. More and more people are purged from the government,
and then people go, let's use Napoleon to get rid of our enemies in Paris. So he does that for them.
And then of course, they realize, wow, now we depend on Napoleon, aren't we? So he just gets
closer and closer and closer to the very heart of government until he is the de facto ruler of
France. We should say he does go via Egypt. I mean, it's a completely bonkers episode in his life.
He decides that he's going to partly to emulate Alexander the Great. He's going to conquer Asia
and partly to destroy the British in India. He's going to go to Egypt. He's going to march across
the Middle East, and then he's going to go to India, make common cause with anti-British
Indian princes and drive the British out of India. And
having done that, that will bankrupt the British. I mean, it's a long way around. That shows how
hard it was to cross the English Channel. If you're going to India to try and hurt the Brits,
it just shows how safe the Brits felt in their home island. Anyway, so he goes to Egypt. He
manages to conquer Egypt briefly, but the Brits catch up with him there. Nelson famously destroys
Napoleon's fleet off the coast of Egypt. Napoleon is forced to sneak home, abandoning his army in Egypt, who then wither
on the vine and have a terrible time. And he then sneaks home. When he sneaks home,
he overthrows the government again, this time with even sort of a small band, one of whom was
one of his brothers, in fact. Look, he's now the most important politician in France. There are two
other consuls who sort of rule alongside of it. He's the first consul, and you'll be surprised to learn the first consul is the most important
consul. Is he seeing himself now as well as Alexander the Great as something like Caesar?
He's calling himself a consul. Then he calls himself a dictator. Again, a word drawn from
Roman history. He knows exactly what's going on here. And in the end, he just decides to make it
official, really. He doesn't want to become king because a king is discredited in France.
They've got rid of the king.
They've executed the king.
So he chooses the fanciest title of all, which is emperor,
which puts him on a par with the Austrian emperor in Vienna
and the Romanov emperor in St. Petersburg.
And kind of matches his ambition, I guess,
just to go straight for the absolute top of the title tree.
Yes, that's it.
He goes absolutely for the top of the title tree.
It's throwing a bit of shade on people who are merely kings.
And the remarkable thing is he's very good at organising referenda.
This hereditary empire, this new empire in which Napoleon
and his heirs would rule in perpetuity,
was confirmed by
a vote in June of 1804. I think it was over three and a half million people voted for Napoleon.
They voted yes, and only 3,000 people voted no. Sounds slightly familiar with certain places in
the world today, maybe. Do we see Napoleon then, he will become a dictator and absolute ruler.
Do we see him using any of the kind of tricks that we still see used by modern dictators today?
Well, yes, he uses plebiscites to give a pattern, give the appearance of legitimacy to his regime.
He's obsessed with PI, he's obsessed with newspapers, what they're printing,
spin stories, hates gossip
about himself and his wife, Josephine, despises it, hates to be mocked. Yes, incredibly modern
in all of those respects. He promotes family members to senior positions. He promotes old
allies that he feels he can trust. This great cavalry commander, a man called Murat, Joachim
Murat, said to me, one of the most handsome men in Europe,
he actually married Napoleon's sister.
Napoleon gave great titles out to his henchmen.
He became known as the first horseman of Europe.
Actually, he helped Napoleon in his early career clear the streets of Paris
in that anti-revolutionary government riot.
He promotes his siblings famously as he starts to conquer bits of the rest of Europe.
One of his brothers becomes king of the Netherlands.
Another brother becomes king of a sort of new state in germany he creates another brother slightly hopeless one becomes king of spain puts his sister on the throne of naples
it's dictator playbook stuff particularly i guess in britain we have a view of napoleon ultimately
as as a guy who will lose we We think about Nelson defeating his forces.
We think about Waterloo and Wellington defeating him finally.
Where would you put Napoleon on the kind of scale of military commanders?
Was he good or was he just lucky?
Did he lose as often as he won?
Oh, that's such a hard question.
I mean, he was astonishingly brilliant tactically.
Strategically, of course, he lost in the end.
You're not allowed to give him high marks for that.
You know, you're on the losing side.
He's actually catastrophically defeated not once, but twice.
You know, in 1814, he abdicates as Emperor of the French.
He goes to Gliland in the Mediterranean, gets bored, comes back, tries again.
This time he's imprisoned on the island of saint helena by the
british this little tiny speck in the atlantic ocean one of the most remote places on planet
earth and i've been there and his house is remote on saint helena so he's living in the most remote
part of the most remote islands on earth and that's where he spends his final years furious
raging at his subordinates who let him down not taking much of the blame himself for his failures.
So strategically, he made errors,
but my goodness, he was at his peak,
at his peak in 1805 at the Battle of Austerlitz.
He was astonishing at Battle of Marengo.
He's astonishing.
And this is something I didn't think the film captured,
the astonishing personal loyalty to him
he provoked among the men who served him,
like Joan of Arc almost.
In fact, his presence on the battlefield
was worth 5,000 men.
They fought harder for Napoleon.
When he made his comeback in 1815, French armies,
he walked up to them and they just threw down their muskets
and surrendered to him, flooded around him, kissed him,
begged him forgiveness, wanted to touch him.
He aged badly.
By 1811, 12, 13, 14, 15, he's suffering.
We think he had stomach very bad.
He was in pain.
Stomach ulcer.
He may have had cancer.
He had, I think, pretty multiple medical ailments by that stage.
Piles, for example.
It was not comfortable to sit on a horse.
So he was not the same man he'd been at Auslitz when he stayed up all night placing units,
making sure everybody knew the plan, acting with such energy and decision.
Astonishing.
He came to rely on overwhelming
numbers. His battles got less subtle as he went on. He just used great battering rams. He didn't
care for the suffering of his own men. He would use troops, send troops forward in overwhelming
numbers until enemy positions were taken. The slaughter of some of his later battles,
like the battle outside Moscow, the battle of
Borodino in 1812, which was a victory, but one of the bloodiest battles in history to that point.
So he becomes slightly lazier, but he is an astonishing, astonishing commander. In the end,
overreached himself, invaded Spain. The Spanish campaign became an ulcer that something like a
quarter of a million French soldiers were killed, disabled in that Spanish campaign. He invaded Russia, which destroyed an army of 600,000
men, left him with a handful of men staggering back across Europe as half fugitive. He just went
too far. It's amazing. I mean, none of this is my period, but it strikes me as incredible that no
one ever learns the peril of fighting a battle on two fronts, particularly when you invade Russia. Whether it's overconfidence or believing
their own myth, you seem to get these leaders who just decide to open fronts of war everywhere,
and that is ultimately their downfall. Yes, that's a very good point. I think you
believe your own invincibility. You believe somehow that the hand of destiny is touching
you. Fate has singled you out. Of course's the problem it can feel like that if you're napoleon everything
goes right everything you touch turns to gold for about five or six years and you think well there
you go that's just luck and that can stop but it can change i think that's an element of that the
other element you know if you and i were french we're having this conversation we'd be talking
about british belligerence i have to be be open to this critique that actually Napoleon
may have wanted peace.
I personally don't think I do buy this critique, but historians
argue about it, that there's a point at which
Napoleon's like, look, just leave me alone.
Leave me alone.
You enjoy your empire, the rest of the
world. I want to run Western Europe.
And we can normalize relations.
And I won't have to attack Spain. I won't have to attack Russia.
I won't have to extend this war, because all he was doing when he's attacking Spain and
Portugal and Russia, he's trying to get at the Brits like Hitler, like Hitler in 1941.
It seems crazy given what we know and we think of Hitler.
Of course, he wanted a big empire in the East.
He wanted to smash Bolshevism.
But he needs to defeat the British.
And Napoleon needs to defeat the British because they were intransigent in their opposition
to both Napoleon and Hitler. And so both of them decide that the easiest thing to do is not to sail
across the English Channel because the Royal Navy is the most powerful fleet in the world and will
destroy them. That's not an option. The only other option then is knock out Britain's ally or
potential ally on the continent. And that is Russia or the Soviet Union or whatever. Both of them
discovered that the road to London lay through Moscow. That's a crazy thought, but it's true. And so there is a
group in France who will just say, Napoleon was fine. It's the Brits who forced him into this,
making these decisions time and again to prolong the war, to expand the war.
I'm not sure I buy that person. What would you say are some of the legacies of Napoleon? Because
weirdly, for an absolute ruler, he's considered to have a fairly significant legacy around democracy in Europe, which seems like a bit of a juxtaposition to me.
always remembered. All sorts of things are true at once, and it can be very confusing.
If Napoleon's troops arrived in a city, it was a time of slaughter and abuse and savagery and plunder. But he would also then break the hold of the Catholic Church. He would break the hold
of traditional aristocracies. He would introduce a more egalitarian law code. He would make sure that modern ideas around sanitation were introduced. He would encourage citizens to have rights, albeit within the universe of his absolute power. aspiration in those people. And it was an aspiration that would be rekindled through
the 19th century every time there was a revolution, a revolution against those
ancient regime, those old school forces that had reasserted themselves after Napoleon,
that the church had come back in, the traditional hierarchies had been reintroduced,
the prince bishops, the dukes, the kings. Some people were able to look back this Napoleonic
period and think that was a time when the door was opened. We had a vision of the future, albeit at the barrel of a
musket, at the end of a bayonet, and albeit accompanied by hardship and brutality. But the
door opened a chink there, and that's the future we want. And so you're right. So strangely,
Napoleon, in some places across Germany, across Italy,
and even across parts of Spain, in some places becomes associated with modernity and a rights-based, I don't want to say democratic system,
but a rights-based liberal order.
Yeah, really interesting.
And I guess we ought to deal with the myth that he was a very short man.
It's an important one, everyone.
Never cease to amaze. Napoleon was 5 foot 7 inches. It's an important one, everyone. Never ceases to amaze.
Napoleon was five foot seven inches. He was 1.7 meters tall. He was not a tall man,
but he was an average height for the time. He was average. He was dismissed as small
in British propaganda, in satirical magazines, in cartoons, in the popular press, literally trying to belittle
Napoleon. And the reputation has stuck. So next time you go around saying someone's got
Napoleon complex, they may be a megalomaniac, but it's not because they are particularly short,
because Napoleon was average. Well, thank you so much for joining us, Dan. I mean,
I would also say that anyone who stands next to you is going to look tiny. So I'm sure Napoleon
would have looked like a very small man next to you.
But it's been absolutely fantastic to have you join us on Echoes of History and to find out a whole load more about this man right at the centre of the French Revolution of Assassin's Creed Unity.
Thanks very much, Dan.
What a treat. Thank you very much.
Hey, everyone. Thank you for listening.
I hope you enjoyed this episode of Echoes of History.
It's a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit.
You can listen to more fascinating expert interviews
about the history behind the Assassin's Creed series
by listening to Echoes of History,
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Thanks for listening to this one. Bye-bye.
This is History's Heroes.
People with purpose, brave ideas, and the courage to stand alone.
Including a pioneering surgeon who rebuilt the shattered faces of soldiers in the First World War. You know, he would look at these men and he would say,
don't worry, Sonny, you'll have as good a face as any of us when I'm done with you.
Join me, Alex von Tunzelman, for History's Heroes.
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