Waterloo was his final military defeat but some say that his true defeat came at the end of his Russian campaign as this weakened him politically and his troops morale was dented which lead to his defeats.
Waterloo
It was at Waterloo in Belgium.
Waterloo, I would say. It's where he surrendered.
The Battle of Austerlitz was a site where Napoleon Bonaparte and his Grand Armee crushes the forces of Russia and Austria
The Battle of Waterloo was near Brussels, Belgium.
The Battle of Trafalgar where Horatio Nelson destroyed the combined French and Spanish Fleets.
At Waterloo in present day Belgium.Or:For those with a medical inclination it might be his battle against stomach cancer while exiled on St. Helena.
Napoleon's final defeat came at Waterloo in 1815 in what is now Belgium. Napoleon had originally been defeated the Battle of Nations at Leipzig in 1813. After that he was exiled to Elba, a small island off the coast of Italy in 1814. A year later he returned to France and led the so-called Hundred Days during which he put an army back together and marched to confront the coalition forces of the other major power of Europe. After he was defeated at Waterloo, Napoleon was exiled to Saint Helena, a small island in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.
In Spain. They raised one of the mightiest armies the world has ever seen. But they made one fatal mistake. They used aluminum in almost everything, including their armor. Since it was winter, there were deadly effects of the aluminum. It allowed the cold to pass right through. Thousands of soldiers died that winter, including Napoleon.
Waterloo is the battle site where French Emporer Napoleon was defeated by the Englishman Lord Wellington. In common usage it is a reference to a major loss or defeat.
He was exiled to Elba, and then he came back with an army for what is known as the 100 days. He then was defeated at Waterloo and was exiled to St. Helena in the remote South Atlantic where he died of stomach cancer.
Perhaps at Austerlitz.