Napoleon : tragic figure or flawed genius?
Napoleon's christening name
was Italian: Napoleone Buonaparte. He was born on the island of Corsica
one year after it became French property. As a boy, Napoleon hated the
French. Still, he attended the Paris Military Academy, and became a French
lieutenant at age 16.
The emperor
Napoleon was in Paris during the French revolution, and when France became
a Republic on 10 August 1792, he was promoted to the rank of Captain.
After defeating the Italian armies in 1796 and the Austrians in 1797,
he was made General. In November 1799, he overthrew the French Directory
to become First Consul of the government. He called himself Napoleon I.
In 1804, a mere 12 years after the monarchy was disposed of in the French
Revolution, Napoleon secured a vote to change France from a consulate
to an empire. Napoleon became Emperor of France.
By 1812, Napoleon had wiped
out the last traces of the Holy Roman Empire and conquered most of Europe.
But after a disastrous battle against Russia, his enemies struck back.
On 18 March 1814, the allies marched into Paris. Napoleon abdicated on
6 April 1814.
Battle of Waterloo
Napoleon was sent into exile on Elba, a tiny island off the coast of Italy.
In March 1815, he escaped and marched toward Paris with thousands of his
old guard. For a brief time, known as the Hundred Days, Napoleon returned
to his former glory. He was finally defeated by a combined English and
Prussian force on 18 June 1815 at the Battle of Waterloo in Belgium.
St. Helena
On 15 July 1815, Napoleon was exiled to the remote tiny volcanic island
of St. Helena, south of the Equator. The nearest land is Ascension Island,
1,120 km (700 miles) to the north.
Accompanied by some of his generals
who chose to go into exile with him, Napoleon lived in Longwood House
on St. Helena. He passed time by dictating his memoirs and playing billiards.
The green wallpaper
The wallpaper in his room was dyed with Scheele's Green, a colouring pigment
that had been used in fabrics and wallpapers from around 1770. Named after
the Swedish chemist who invented it the dye contained copper arsenite.
In 1893 an Italian biochemist called Gosio discovered that if wallpaper
containing Scheele's Green became damp, the mould converted the copper
arsenite to a poisonous vapour form of arsenic. Breathing the arsenic
on its own might not have been enough to kill Napoleon, but he already
was ill with a stomach ulcer. On the 5 May 1821, the arsenic possibly
tipped the scale against "the little corporal."
Napoleon was buried on St Helena,
but his body was later reburied in Paris on the banks of the Seine. He
wish to be cremated was not respected.

Napoleon Bonaparte
(15 Aug 1769 - 5 May 1821)
Napoleon married Josephine de Beauharnais, a widow with
two children, on 9 March 1796. The marriage was childless and he divorced
her in 1809. The next year he married Marie Louise, the 18-year old daughter
of the Hapsburg Emperor of Austria. Within a year she had given Napoleon
a son whom he named the King of Rome.

Was he a tragic figure or a flawed genius?
Napoleon quotes:
"A man will fight harder for his interests than for his rights."
"From sublime to ridiculousness there is only one step."
The
complete story of Napoleon's wallpaper 
Napoleon
quotes 
St Helena 
Many kings were mad
Peter the Great taxed people with
beards
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