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  • The Hundred Days: Return, Waterloo, and the End of Empire
    2026/05/31
    (00:00:00) The Hundred Days: Return, Waterloo, and the End of Empire
    (00:01:28) The Road Back to Paris
    (00:03:54) Abdication and the Island of Elba
    (00:05:35) The Hundred Days
    (00:07:30) Waterloo
    (00:09:18) The Final Exile
    (00:11:29) What Remains

    In October 1813, a prematurely detonated bridge over the Elster River at Leipzig sealed the fate of the French Empire. Twenty thousand soldiers were cut off in an instant. The Battle of Nations — Austria, Prussia, Russia, and Sweden combined against Napoleon — had turned a defeat into a catastrophe. This episode charts the harrowing arc from that burning city all the way to the audacious gamble of the Hundred Days.

    The retreat from Leipzig cost roughly seventy thousand casualties. France itself had changed: years of conscription, taxation, and war had hollowed out public support, and Napoleon's own marshals began making quiet calculations about the future. Yet the 1814 campaign on French soil stands as perhaps his most brilliant defensive performance — winning at Champaubert, Montmirail, and Vauchamps in rapid sequence — before Paris fell and the marshals, led by Ney, told him the army would march no further.

    Exiled to the island of Elba in May 1814, Napoleon did not rest. He reformed the mines, built roads, drilled his tiny garrison, and watched as the restored Bourbon monarchy stumbled. When reports confirmed that France was souring on Louis XVIII, he made a decision that was rationally indefensible and utterly characteristic: he would return.

    On March 1, 1815, he landed near Cannes with a thousand soldiers. Troops sent to stop him defected. Marshal Ney, who had promised to bring Napoleon back in an iron cage, rejoined his old commander. By March 20, Napoleon was back in Paris. The Hundred Days had begun — and all of Europe was mobilising to end them.

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    14 分
  • After Borodino: How Napoleon Won the Battle and Lost the War
    2026/05/30
    (00:00:00) After Borodino: How Napoleon Won the Battle and Lost the War
    (00:00:34) The Army That Marched Into History
    (00:01:45) Why Russia, Why Now
    (00:03:18) The Crossing
    (00:04:56) Borodino
    (00:06:45) Moscow
    (00:08:08) The Retreat
    (00:09:52) What Broke
    (00:11:12) The Aftermath
    (00:12:22) The Weight of It

    What does it mean to win a battle and lose a war? In September 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte achieved what should have been the decisive moment of the Russian campaign: a brutal, grinding victory at Borodino, followed by the capture of Moscow itself. And yet the Grande Armée — six hundred and eighty thousand strong when it crossed the Niemen in June — would limp home a shattered remnant of fewer than one hundred thousand.

    This episode traces the full arc of Napoleon's catastrophic 1812 invasion of Russia, from the strategic miscalculations that launched it to the human devastation that ended it. We examine why Napoleon invaded at all — the collapse of the Continental System, the unresolved tension over Poland, the political need for a swift, reasserting victory — and why the assumptions behind that decision were fatally wrong.

    The Grande Armée was the most sophisticated military force Europe had ever assembled. Its corps system, its artillery, its battle-hardened officer corps: all of it forged in a decade of near-constant war. But Russia refused to fight like Austria or Prussia. Barclay de Tolly's scorched-earth retreat denied Napoleon the frontier battle he expected. Borodino, when it finally came, was not Austerlitz — it was attrition, carnage, and a critical command failure that historians still debate.

    Then came Moscow: empty, burning, and strategically worthless. And then the retreat. This episode asks the question nobody wants to answer — how do you destroy the greatest army in the world? — and finds that the answer had little to do with Russian winters, and everything to do with one man's refusal to reckon with what he didn't know.

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    14 分
  • Built to Win: The Military Machine Behind Napoleon's Greatest Victories
    2026/05/29
    (00:00:00) Built to Win: The Military Machine Behind Napoleon's Greatest Victories
    (00:01:05) The Architecture of an Army
    (00:02:44) The Officers Who Made It Possible
    (00:04:45) The Soldiers Themselves
    (00:06:09) Speed as a Weapon
    (00:07:36) The Doctrine of the Decisive Battle
    (00:08:56) The Weight of Empire on a Military Machine
    (00:10:24) A Machine Built for One Kind of War

    Before the frozen retreat from Moscow, before Waterloo, before exile — there was a war machine so precisely engineered that no army in the world could match it. This episode holds the clock at the moment of Napoleon's maximum power and examines what the Grande Armée actually was when it was working.

    Napoleon didn't simply command a large army. He built a fundamentally different kind of military organisation. Each corps was a self-contained fighting unit — its own infantry, cavalry, artillery, and supply chain — capable of marching and fighting independently before concentrating at the decisive point. Enemies relying on the older linear system were, structurally, already defeated before the first shot was fired.

    Behind that structure stood exceptional men. Alexandre Berthier, the chief of staff who translated Napoleon's sweeping strategic vision into precise, executable orders — the nervous system of the entire force. Joachim Murat, whose cavalry turned victories into annihilations, pursuing broken enemies with a ferocity that denied them any chance to regroup. Auguste Marmont, who wielded artillery not as a supporting arm but as Napoleon intended it: a primary weapon that shattered formations before infantry advanced.

    And then the soldiers themselves — veterans of the Italian and Egyptian campaigns, hardened by years of war, bound together by a meritocratic culture that the aristocratic armies of Austria, Prussia, and Russia simply could not replicate. Men who believed they were part of something larger, because the structure of the army told them they were.

    Episode 12 of Napoleon Bonaparte: A Complete Biography — the engine of conquest, examined at the height of its power.

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    11 分
  • Pratzen Heights: The Trap Napoleon Set Before the Battle Began
    2026/05/28
    (00:00:00) Pratzen Heights: The Trap Napoleon Set Before the Battle Began
    (00:00:41) The Weight of the Crown, One Year In
    (00:01:36) The Coalition Moves
    (00:02:43) The Ground at Austerlitz
    (00:03:51) The Forces Arrayed
    (00:04:48) The Eve of Battle
    (00:05:36) The Morning of December Second
    (00:06:40) The Battle Breaks Open
    (00:07:49) The Rout
    (00:08:44) What Austerlitz Settled
    (00:09:50) The Commander Assessed
    (00:10:47) The Myth Takes Hold

    One year to the day after placing the crown on his own head, Napoleon Bonaparte delivered the military verdict his empire desperately needed. Austerlitz — fought on December 2nd, 1805 — wasn't simply a victory. It was a proof of concept: that a commoner-turned-emperor, commanding a republic-born army, could break the finest professional forces in Europe.

    This episode picks up where the coronation left off. Britain had financed the Third Coalition. Austria and Russia were in the field. The Grande Armée had pivoted east from Boulogne at breathtaking speed, encircling and destroying the Austrian force under General Mack at Ulm before Kutuzov could intervene. But eighty-five thousand Austrian prisoners didn't end the war — the Russians were still coming, and Tsar Alexander himself was riding to the front.

    Napoleon surveyed the ground near the Moravian town of Austerlitz and saw everything he needed. The Pratzen Heights commanded the centre of the field. His plan was to give the allies a reason to abandon them. He stripped his right flank, made it look exposed and vulnerable, and waited for the allied commanders — divided between the cautious Kutuzov and the overconfident Alexander — to take the bait.

    They did.

    This episode covers the strategic build-up, the army's composition and cohesion, the famous firelight vigil on the eve of battle, and the fog-shrouded opening moves of December 2nd — revealing how every element of the allied advance was anticipated, baited, and prepared for before a single shot was fired.

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    13 分
  • Self-Crowned Emperor: The Coronation That Rewrote European Power
    2026/05/27
    On December 2, 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte stood before the assembled power of Europe inside Notre-Dame Cathedral and did something no monarch had dared before: he took the imperial crown and placed it on his own head. It was a gesture of breathtaking deliberateness — and this episode unpacks exactly what it meant.

    This chapter explores the months of political engineering that preceded the coronation: the Senate proclamation of May 1804, the carefully managed plebiscite, the Concordat with Rome, and the extraordinary decision to invite Pope Pius VII to Paris rather than travel to the Vatican. Every detail had been calculated. The Pope would witness, not grant. Napoleon's authority would rest on the will of the French people — not on God, not on bloodline.

    Yet the man who had built his career on talent over heredity now wrapped himself in the symbols of ancient dynastic power. That central contradiction — revolutionary meritocrat cloaking himself in Charlemagne's mantle — is the key to understanding Napoleon at this pivotal moment in his reign.

    We examine the ceremony itself: the choreography, the crowds, the imperial court assembled from revolutionaries and aristocrats alike, the painter Jacques-Louis David, and the oath Napoleon swore — an oath that pointedly promised to protect the liberties of the revolutionary era, not a divine right to rule. This was empire built on a new foundation, and every coalition that would form against Napoleon in the years ahead was partly a reaction to what took place inside that cathedral on a cold Sunday morning in Paris.

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    13 分
  • Saint-Cloud: The Coup That Almost Destroyed Napoleon Before It Saved Him
    2026/05/26
    (00:00:00) Saint-Cloud: The Coup That Almost Destroyed Napoleon Before It Saved Him
    (00:01:11) The Directory's Slow Collapse
    (00:02:27) The General Returns
    (00:03:37) The Conspirators
    (00:04:58) Saint-Cloud: Where the Plan Cracked
    (00:06:56) How He Made It Stick
    (00:08:26) What Actually Changed
    (00:10:03) The Weight of the Bargain
    (00:11:19) Where It Leaves Us

    Paris, November 1799. The coup that would reshape the world almost ended in disaster. Napoleon Bonaparte — celebrated general, conqueror of Italy and Egypt — walked into the Council of Five Hundred at Saint-Cloud and was nearly torn apart by the men he came to persuade. Screaming deputies, shouts of "outlaw him," grenadiers dragging him from the chamber. For a few desperate minutes, the most famous soldier in France was on the verge of political ruin.

    This episode tells the full story of 18 Brumaire from the inside out. First, you need to understand the world it emerged from: the Directory, France's exhausted five-man executive, had spent four years lurching from crisis to crisis, cancelling election results, relying on the army to survive, and watching public trust in republican institutions collapse. Inflation punished ordinary citizens. Royalist sentiment was returning. Jacobin radicals were stirring. The republic was structurally broken.

    The conspiracy itself was not Napoleon's idea. The architect was Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès, the revolutionary theorist who had been searching for what he called a sword — a military figure to give force to political reorganisation. He found his man in Napoleon, freshly returned from Egypt, reputation intact despite abandoning his army there, and stepping ashore at exactly the right moment.

    What followed at Saint-Cloud was messy, desperate, and almost catastrophic. Napoleon's address to the Elders rambled incoherently. His entry into the Five Hundred triggered a near-riot. It was his brother Lucien, president of the Council, who seized control of events and rescued the coup from collapse.

    This is the episode where Napoleon's era truly begins — not with the smooth inevitability of legend, but with chaos, luck, and a brother's quick thinking.

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    13 分
  • Stranded in Egypt: How Catastrophe Became Legend
    2026/05/25
    (00:00:00) Stranded in Egypt: How Catastrophe Became Legend
    (00:00:59) Why Egypt
    (00:02:39) The Expedition Sets Sail
    (00:04:27) The Disaster at the Nile
    (00:05:51) Syria and the Limits of Will
    (00:07:41) The Return and the Reframing
    (00:09:18) What Egypt Built
    (00:11:07) The Lasting Question

    In 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte sailed for Egypt at the head of thirty-five thousand soldiers, a fleet of thirteen ships of the line, and nearly one hundred and sixty scholars, scientists, and artists. The expedition was sold as a masterstroke — a blow to British imperial power by severing Europe's overland routes to Asia. What followed was one of the most audacious, catastrophic, and myth-making episodes of his entire career.

    The Battle of the Pyramids delivered a sharp tactical victory over the Mamluk cavalry of Murad Bey, and Cairo fell within days. But on the first of August 1798, Admiral Horatio Nelson's fleet found the French ships anchored at Aboukir Bay and destroyed them. Eleven of thirteen French ships were sunk or captured. The Orient exploded. Five thousand sailors were killed or taken prisoner. In a single night, Napoleon's expeditionary force became a stranded garrison with no way home.

    This episode traces the full arc of the Egyptian campaign — from the strategic logic that drove it, to the desert march and the Battle of the Pyramids, to the annihilation at the Battle of the Nile, to the doomed push into Syria. More than a military history, it asks a harder question: how did Napoleon convert a genuine disaster into the cornerstone of a political legend? The answer reveals something essential about the man that no battlefield victory ever could — his extraordinary ability to control the narrative of his own life.

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    13 分
  • Mantua Must Fall: The Siege That Defined Napoleon's Italian Conquest
    2026/05/24
    In the spring of 1796, Napoleon Bonaparte took command of a starving, undersupplied Army of Italy and proceeded to tear apart a combined Austro-Piedmontese force nearly double his strength. This episode covers the most concentrated burst of military success of his career — six engagements in fifteen days, the rapid neutralisation of Piedmont, and the drive eastward that brought him into Milan as Europe's most celebrated soldier.

    The tactical genius on display here wasn't recklessness — it was architecture. Napoleon identified that the Austrian and Piedmontese armies were operating as two separate forces pretending to be one, and he drove a wedge between them before they could concentrate. Montenotte, Millesimo, Ceva, Mondovi — each battle a deliberate blow against an isolated portion of a divided enemy. Twenty-one captured standards. Fifty-five artillery pieces. Fifteen thousand prisoners. From a campaign Paris had considered a sideshow.

    But Milan was only the symbolic prize. Mantua was the strategic one — a fortress city at the confluence of the Mincio River and the Lombardy lakes, held by a disciplined Austrian garrison capable of holding for months. As long as Austria held Mantua, it held leverage over all of northern Italy. Napoleon couldn't bypass it. He had to break it.

    This episode examines the operational logic behind Napoleon's speed, the audacious Po River crossing without a bridging train, the political reality of 'liberation' versus extraction, and the opening of the Mantua siege that would define the next phase of the campaign. Essential listening for anyone tracing how a twenty-six-year-old transformed European warfare.

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    13 分