Napoleon Bonaparte or Napoleon I.
It was his second time in exile; years before, he had been exiled to the island of Elba, which he proceeded to completely restructure before escaping and making his way back to France. He was later exiled again to St. Helena, where he finally died on 5 May 1821.
Napoleon Bonaparte died there.
Napoleon Bonaparte
He landed in St. Augustine, Florida, and continued to explore as far as St. Helena Island
For his first exile he was sent to the island of Elba in 1813 but he would return to France and rule again for about 100 days before he was ultimately defeated again at the Battle of Waterloo sending him into exile a second time in 1815 to the small island of Saint Helena in the Atlantic Ocean where he would live out the rest of his days.
St Petersburg was build by the Russian Emperor Peter the Great at 1703 and was for over 200 years the capital of the Empire until 1918 after the Russian Revolution of 1917.
It's The Mississippi River And St. Lawrence
Jacques Cartier is a French Explorer who discovered the St. Lawrence River
Napoleon I (Bonaparte) died at Longwood, St. Helena on May 5, 1821.
Napoleon Bonaparte.
By mt Helena I assume you mean St. Helena, the island off the coast of Africa. Napoleon Bonaparte died at St. Helena.
Is it possible you have mixed up a mountain - Mt St Helens with the island in the South Atlantic known as Saint Helena where the French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was exiled and ultimately died on the 5th of May 1821.
Napoléon I (Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of the French)
One well known person was Napoleon Bonaparte, a former Emperor of France.
Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of France, who was then banished to St. Helena Island, where he died.
On St. Helena in the South Atlantic.
No, he died on St. Helena in the South Atlantic where he was exiled in 1821.
St. Helena died of natural causes, old age.
Died in AD 328
On St Helena Island in the South Atlantic.