Jack
Major
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2011
- Messages
- 6,347
I am just new to collecting and have settled on Napoleonics. It has been years since I read much on the period so have dragged Vincent Cronin's 'Napoleon' off the shelves ten years after having first read it. One of the things I have found really interesting is the success of Napoleon's first campaigns in Italy. You tend to think of his later battles such as Austerlitz, Wagram or Ulm rather than his brilliance when still establishing the 'legend'. Some of the later victories seemd a bit more like slogging matches. To have at one stage fought four major battles in one 96 hour period and to have run rings around the Austrians and Piedmontese with an army in a perilous state was surely one of his greatest achievements. It would seem to a newbie like me that his failure in Russia and at Waterloo, and his vision as a leader in domestic affairs in France, have overshadowed his early success when a few defeats would surely have left him as an historical footnote. I know Waterloo, and now Egypt, will always sell well, but has anyone produced some soldiers from these early campaigns?
Any thoughts on what book I should read next?
Any thoughts on what book I should read next?