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Napoleon's gorgeous centaur-the life of Murat
Joachim Murat has come to epitomise the beau ideal cavalryman.
Indeed, in the decades following the Napoleonic era, as a horse
soldier excelled to extraordinary prominence, the name of Murat was
often considered as analogous. In reality nobody could come close
in stature and performance. Murat was one of many young men who saw
the French Revolution as an opportunity to prosper in influence,
power, status and wealth. An unabashed self publicist, his gorgeous
uniforms were singular and exceptional even in an age when the
dandy in military uniform was the norm. His ambition was insatiable
and in this was the root of his downfall, for he lacked the
intelligence and moderation to consolidate his advantages. Yet,
Murat rose to be a soldier of the highest rank, through marriage a
member of Napoleon's own family, he was elevated to the aristocracy
as Duke of Berg and in time crowned King of Naples. Though, like
many of his calling, he was no military mastermind Murat was a
reliable lieutenant to Napoleon often achieving-through deeds of
daring-far more than other senior officers could for their emperor.
Above all there could be no doubt about the quality of Murat's
personal courage. He led from the front and latterly rode into the
fiercest melees armed only with a riding crop. Though he came from
a different and lesser mould than his master Napoleon, Murat
fatally shared his weakness for conceits and hubris and, as with
Napoleon himself, poor judgment ended his career ignominiously
before a firing squad of his former subjects. Atteridge's biography
is a well regarded classic and is highly recommended.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
The life of one of the most notable of Napoleon's marshals
There are few students of the Napoleonic epoch who require much
introduction to the character of Marshal Ney. In an empire of many
courageous men who would stand at the emperor's side, Ney was one
of the most charismatic and outstanding. Though he rose to the
highest rank, he ever had the sensibilities of a cavalryman and
with his raw courage, blunt manner, ruddy complexion and habit of
exposing himself to the heart of the action he justifiably earned
his sobriquet, 'the Bravest of the Brave.' As with most of the
soldiers who were closest to Napoleon, Ney was present on many
fields of conflict throughout the period of the Napoleonic Wars,
but it is perhaps telling that for many it is the image of Ney
standing in the snows of the disastrous retreat from Moscow, among
the very last men of the rearguard fending off the harassing
Cossacks, that resonates in the mind. Ney it was too who
continually hurled himself among the futile waves of massed cavalry
as they tried to sweep Wellington's infantry of the ridge at
Waterloo. And it was Ney, of course, perhaps finally a victim of
his own reckless impulses, who faced the firing squad for his volte
face and support for Napoleon during the fateful 'Hundred Days.'
This biography by Atteridge is a well regarded classic and an
essential addition to any library of the Napoleonic era.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
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