616 Pages
by Routledge

616 Pages
by Routledge

616 Pages
by Routledge

With a new introduction by Andrew Roberts. 'A penetrating interpretation...No one with a serious interest in the Napoleonic period can afford to ignore it. ' - Times Literary Supplement Whether viewed as an inspired leader or obsessed tyrant, Napoleon has divided opinion for over 200 years. Few individuals have left such a mark on history. Georges Lefebvre's classic work, published in... Read more

Introduction  Translator's Note  Foreword  From 18 Brumaire to Tilsit 1799-1807  I The Legacy of the Revolution  1. The Conflict between the Ancien Regime and the Revolution  2. The Consequences of the War and the Terms of the Peace  3. The Coming of Napoleon Bonaparte  II The Pacification of France and Europe (1799-1802)  4. The Organisation of the Dicatorship in France  5. The Pacification of Europe  6. Bonaparte Consul for Life  III Imperial Conquest to the Treaty of Tilsit (1802-1807)  7. France and England: The Struggle Renewed (1802-1805)  8. Napoleon's Army  9. The Formation of the Grand Empire (1805-1807)  From Tilsit to Waterloo, 1807-1815  IIII. The Imperial Conquests after Tilsit (1807-1812)  10. The Continental System (1807-1809)  11. The War of 1809 3. England's Successes (1807-1811)  12. The Continental Blockade  13. The Preliminaries of the Russian Campaign (1811-1812)  V The World in 1812  14. Imperial France  15. The Continental System  16. The Independent Forces III  VI The Fall of Napoleon (1812-1815)  17. The Disintegration of the Continental System (1812-1814)  18. The Restoration of the Hundred Days  Chronology  Further Reading  Index

Biography

Georges Lefebvre (1877-1959) One of the foremost historians of the Twentieth Century and known as the ‘historian’s historian’, he held the chair of the French Revolution at the Sorbonne . His The French Revolution is also available in Routledge Classics.

'Magisterial...a biography that is almost as much a personal adventure story as an intellectual treatise.' - Andrew Roberts

'A penetrating interpretation...No one with a serious interest in the Napoleonic period can afford to ignore it. ' - Times Literary Supplement