Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from exile on Elba and reformed his Army. Wellington had previously chosen the ground, assuming that a returned Napoleon would make a move for Brussels. Napoleon divided the armies of Blucher and Wellington, and having done so, hoping he could defeat them individually, he gave battle at the place where Wellington chose to hold him. This place was just south of a little town called Waterloo.
Or: Napoleon's escape from Elba and his successful attempt to regain the power in a very short time, alarmed all the European Courts leading to an immediate mobilization of their armies.
Napoleon claimed he had but no hostile intention against none of the European Nations and he wanted only rule France according to the clear wish expressed by the French people immediately after his return. But in vain: the mobilization went on and the first two allied armies, those of Great Britain and Prussia were deploying their troops through the Flanders (The Belgium of today).
The general strategical plan of the Allied coalition foresaw to concentrate the most possible of their armies before getting engaged in the hostilities and then proceed to invade France, as they had already done in the campaign of 1814. In so doing they would have again had such a numerical superiority over Napoleon's army to secure them the victory.
But Napoleon forestalled that plan and invaded Belgium, beating the Prussians at Ligny, thus dividing them from the British and forcing Wellington to fight at Waterloo.
Or:
Two great armies met.
Duke of Wellington (England) He was defeated by Wellington, But Wellington would have lost had the Prussians under Blucher not joined the battle, Napoleon needed to keep the 2 opponents apart & defeat them seperately. Marshal Grouchy gets the blame: Had the French won, however, Napoleon would have taken the credit.
You do realize that Napolean's waterloo was the Battle of Waterloo. That's were the term comes from. Anyway, Napoleon lost at Waterloo, Belgium in 1815.
It begins with the 1799 coup against the French Directory and is marked with his 1821 death or with his abdication and exile after the battle of Waterloo.
Napoleon Bonaparte
Waterloo is about 12 miles south of Brussels in Belgium. But that was not his only defeat by any means. Leipzig in Germany was a terrible drubbing. Otherwise known as the Battle of the Nations, he was even opposed by a former Marshal, Bernadotte.
Napoleon lost the Battle of Waterloo in Belgium, which signaled the end of the first French Empire.
The Battle of Waterloo.
The french lost. it started on 18th june 1815 tha battle recived its name waterloo because wellington was in waterloo the night before the battle.:))))))poo
There were 8.000 French soldiers captured at Waterloo.
It was on 18 June 1815.
Napoleon Bonaparte.
NapoleonBonaparte
I would say the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
He was defeated at the Battle of Waterloo.
One of them was Napoleon Boneparte.
French about 41.000 Allied about 22.000
Yes, he commanded the French army.