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  2. Waterloo: The History of Four Days, Three Armies and Three ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterloo:_The_History_of...

    Waterloo: The History of Four Days, Three Armies and Three Battles [1] is a history book written by Bernard Cornwell, first published in Great Britain by William Collins on 11 September 2014, and by Harper Collins Publishers on 5 May 2015 in the United States.

  3. Waterloo campaign order of battle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterloo_campaign_order_of...

    The casualty numbers include all the casualties suffered by each regiment over the three days of fighting during the campaign from 16 June 1815 to dawn on 19 June 1815. Present at the Battle of Waterloo, Wellington had 71,257 soldiers available, 3,866 officers and 65,919 other ranks.

  4. Battle of Quatre Bras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Quatre_Bras

    The Battle of Quatre Bras was fought on 16 June 1815, as a preliminary engagement to the decisive Battle of Waterloo that occurred two days later. The battle took place near the strategic crossroads of Quatre Bras [a] and was contested between elements of the Duke of Wellington's Anglo-allied army and the left wing of Napoleon Bonaparte's French Armée du Nord under Marshal Michel Ney.

  5. Battle of Waterloo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Waterloo

    Waterloo was the decisive engagement of the Waterloo campaign and Napoleon's last. It was also the second bloodiest single day battle of the Napoleonic Wars, after Borodino. According to Wellington, the battle was "the nearest-run thing you ever saw in your life". [18] Napoleon abdicated four days later, and coalition forces entered Paris on 7 ...

  6. Waterloo campaign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterloo_campaign

    The Waterloo campaign (15 June – 8 July 1815) was fought between the French Army of the North and two Seventh Coalition armies, an Anglo-allied army and a Prussian army. Initially the French army had been commanded by Napoleon Bonaparte , but he left for Paris after the French defeat at the Battle of Waterloo .

  7. Minor campaigns of 1815 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minor_campaigns_of_1815

    The Battle of Waterloo, followed as it was by the advance of the armies of Blücher and Wellington upon Paris, was so decisive in its effects, and so comprehensive in its results, that the great object of the War — the destruction of the power of Napoleon Bonaparte and the restoration of the Bourbon Dynasty under King Louis XVIII on 8 July ...

  8. Waterloo campaign: Quatre Bras to Waterloo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterloo_Campaign:_Quatre...

    After the fighting at Quatre Bras, the two armies settled down for the night.The Anglo-allied army on the field of battle and the French just to the south. The bivouac on the battle field of Quatre Bras, during the night of 16 June, continued undisturbed until about an hour before daylight, when a cavalry patrol having accidentally got between the adverse pickets near Piermont, caused an alarm ...

  9. Waterloo campaign: Waterloo to Paris (18–24 June) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterloo_Campaign:_Waterloo...

    Eye witness (1816), "Appendix 24", The journal of the three days of the battle of Waterloo, by an eye-witness. To which is added an appendix containing the official reports of the allies, p. 26; Five, Jean et Emmanuel (2007), Les fortifications de la ville de Namur (PDF). Description (in French) of Namur's defences