Yes, she did meet up with him.
Abraham Lincoln seems to meet this specification.
Napoleon meets Beethoven, when he invaded Vienna, after the fifth Coalition.
No, because William Shakespeare died in 1616 and Napoleon was born in 1769.
During the French Revolution, the size of the French army varied significantly, but by the time Napoleon rose to power in the late 1790s, it had grown considerably. At its peak in the early 1800s, under Napoleon's command, the French army could number over 1 million soldiers. However, during the key revolutionary years from 1789 to 1799, the army typically ranged from around 300,000 to 700,000 soldiers, as it expanded rapidly to meet the needs of the revolutionary wars.
No such historical meeting exists.
Abraham Lincoln knew about Harriet Beecher Stowe because of her novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. In 1862, the then US President Lincoln met her by inviting her to visit at the Executive Mansion. It was not called the White House until President Teddy Roosevelt changed the name to White House.
On July 8, 1862, President Lincoln arrived at Harrison's Landing to meet with Major General George B. McClellan. Lincoln's purpose was to urge McClellan to renew the offensive against Richmond. However McClellan wanted to do that would be satisfactory, however, Lincoln wanted a firm commitment from McClellan, which was not forthcoming.
napoleon dynamite loved monroe. just not enough to put him in the movie...
I am not sure about that question but I think that many people hated Abraham Lincoln especially in the south when he was president. and I am sure that he probably met a daughter of such a person.
At present day Waterloo, Belgium.
It means to meet ones final crushing defeat. The defeat of Napoleon, Emperor of France, at Waterloo in Belgium, was his final defeat. The battle was on the 18th June 1815, and British and Allied forces under Wellington, almost exactly matched against the attacking French, withstood Napoleon's attacks all day, until Prince Bluecher of Prussia arrived in the evening. The Prussians had thrown off another pursuing French army, and the combined weight of the British, Allied and Prussian forces crushed Napoleon's main army by the end of the day.