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Napoleon's Gamble: How One Man's Ambition Changed the Map of Europe Forever

Par : François D. Beaumont
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8235988743
  • EAN9798235988743
  • Date de parution08/05/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim

Résumé

He was born on an island no one cared about, the second son of a minor lawyer who died young, educated on charity scholarships at schools where the other boys mocked his accent. He spoke French with an Italian inflection his entire life. He had no money, no connections, and no particular reason to believe the world owed him anything. By the age of thirty-five, he ruled an empire that stretched from the Atlantic coast of Spain to the borders of Russia.
Napoleon's Gamble is the story of how that happened - and what it cost. This is not a book about dates and battles, though the dates are precise and the battles are rendered with the kind of visceral clarity that puts you on the frozen ground at Austerlitz, in the burning streets of Moscow, on the rain-soaked ridge at Waterloo. This is a book about a mind unlike any other that the modern world has produced: a mind that could absorb the terrain of a country from a map and identify its decisive vulnerability before anyone else had finished reading the same map.
A mind that could design a legal code, reorganize the finances of a bankrupt nation, build an administrative system from scratch, and then ride out to win a battle - sometimes in the same week. Napoleon Bonaparte changed the world in ways that most people who live in that changed world have never been told. The legal system that governs your property, your contracts, your family inheritance - if you live in France, Belgium, Louisiana, Quebec, or any of dozens of countries across Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East - runs on principles that Napoleon personally debated into existence in the early hours of the nineteenth century.
The administrative structure that still organizes the French Republic. The concept of merit over birth that now underlies every modern institution that claims to promote on the basis of ability. The map of a unified Germany. The independence of most of Latin America. The doubling of the United States through the Louisiana Purchase. All of it traces back, in lines that this book makes visible, to the decisions of one man.
But Napoleon was also the man who sent 685, 000 soldiers into Russia and brought fewer than 93, 000 back. The man who restored slavery in the Caribbean after the Revolution had abolished it. The man who built the most sophisticated propaganda apparatus Europe had yet seen and used it to paper over catastrophes his own decisions had caused. The man who wept at the scale of the carnage at Eylau and then ordered another campaign that produced carnage on an even larger scale.
Both things are true. The genius and the ruin. The liberator and the oppressor. The lawmaker and the conqueror. This book holds them both without flinching, because the only Napoleon worth understanding is the one who was all of these things simultaneously. Napoleon's Gamble moves at the pace of the man himself - fast, precise, and relentless. From the Corsican childhood that forged a borderland identity to the coup that seized France in a single night.
From the sun of Austerlitz to the ice of the Berezina. From the Saint Helena rock where he spent six years dictating his own legend to the tomb at the Invalides where two centuries of visitors have stood above red porphyry and tried to make sense of what lies beneath. The gamble of the title was not one bet made at one moment. It was the continuous wager that Napoleon renewed every single day of his career: that intelligence and will, applied without restraint, could overcome the resistance of the world.
He was right about that for a very long time. And then he wasn't. For readers of Andrew Roberts, Anthony Beevor, and David McCullough. For anyone who has ever wanted to understand how one person can genuinely change the course of history - and what that kind of changing costs.