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Napoleon Revolutionized Warfare Yet Lost Through His Own Success. Strategic Innovation, Imperial Overreach, and the Collapse of Military Genius — Tracing Bonaparte's Campaigns From Revolutionary France to Waterloo, 1796–1815
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- Nombre de pages196
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-20341-3
- EAN9783565203413
- Date de parution28/01/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
Napoleon Bonaparte transformed European warfare through speed, adaptability, and the ruthless exploitation of enemy mistakes. He shattered larger armies through superior positioning, destroyed coalitions by attacking before they could coordinate, and inspired legendary loyalty through personal charisma and meritocratic promotion. Yet the same aggressive instinct driving his victories-never consolidating gains, always seeking the next battle-ensured his eventual destruction.
Understanding Napoleon's military genius requires examining both the innovations and the fatal pattern driving him toward Russia and Waterloo. This book reconstructs Napoleon's campaigns through military dispatches, battle maps, memoirs from officers and conscripts, and after-action analyses by opponents forced to adapt or perish. It traces the Italian campaign revealing his early mastery-rapid maneuver separating Austrian and Piedmontese forces, living off conquered territory, and negotiating while advancing.
It follows the Egyptian expedition as strategic disaster masked by propaganda, then Marengo's near-defeat salvaged through subordinate initiative Napoleon later claimed as planned genius.
Understanding Napoleon's military genius requires examining both the innovations and the fatal pattern driving him toward Russia and Waterloo. This book reconstructs Napoleon's campaigns through military dispatches, battle maps, memoirs from officers and conscripts, and after-action analyses by opponents forced to adapt or perish. It traces the Italian campaign revealing his early mastery-rapid maneuver separating Austrian and Piedmontese forces, living off conquered territory, and negotiating while advancing.
It follows the Egyptian expedition as strategic disaster masked by propaganda, then Marengo's near-defeat salvaged through subordinate initiative Napoleon later claimed as planned genius.























