Europe Under Napoleon 1799-1815 (Hodder Arnold Publication)

Europe Under Napoleon 1799-1815 (Hodder Arnold Publication)

by Michael Broers (Author)

Synopsis

Napoleon Bonaparte dominated the public life of Europe as no other individual before him since Charles V in the 16th century. Not surprisingly, the story of the man and his life has usually swamped those of the time and the place. This book is an effort to redress the balance. It is an attempt to see the Napoleonic Empire from an entirely new perspective: that of the ruled, rather than the ruler. Michael Broers concentrates on the experience of the peoples of Europe - particulary the vast majority of Napoleon's subjects who were neither French nor willing participants in the great events of the period - during the dynamic but shortlived career of Napoleon when half the continent fell under his rule.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 302
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Hodder Education
Published: 27 Sep 1996

ISBN 10: 0340662646
ISBN 13: 9780340662649

Media Reviews
What emerges, then, is a picture which escapes many of the usual cliches, and for which there is simply no parallel elsewhere, it being hard to imagine a more stimulating and useful introduction to the subject [and] Broers' thesis being a powerful one. --English Historical Review


What emerges, then, is a picture which escapes many of the usual cliches, and for which there is simply no parallel elsewhere, it being hard to imagine a more stimulating and useful introduction to the subject [and] Broers' thesis being a powerful one. --English Historical Review

What emerges, then, is a picture which escapes many of the usual cliches, and for which there is simply no parallel elsewhere, it being hard to imagine a more stimulating and useful introduction to the subject [and] Broers' thesis being a powerful one. --English Historical Review


What emerges, then, is a picture which escapes many of the usual cliches, and for which there is simply no parallel elsewhere, it being hard to imagine a more stimulating and useful introduction to the subject [and] Broers' thesis being a powerful one. --English Historical Review