18th June 1815 Waterloo

Battle of Waterloo by William Holmes Sullivan

Today in 1815 near a small town in Belgium, an Anglo-Allied army defeated Napoleon’s imperial army in a twelve-hour battle that even the victorious Duke of Wellington described as a ‘damn near run thing’ with victory only coming in the evening with the delayed arrival of Blucher’s Prussian forces.

The battle of Waterloo marks one of those rare things – an event that most historians can agree on as a defining watershed moment.

In the narrow sense of military history, Waterloo was probably the last time that the fate of nations would be decided in a single afternoon. In the industrial age that followed, the breech-loading rifle, railways and the telegraph would decide battles, not dashing cavalry charges.  And these battles would be grim matters of attrition lasting days, weeks or months.

Most importantly though 1815 marks a political watershed – before it lies the world of the Ancien Regime and its death throes in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars, and after it is the age of Capital, what historian Eric Hobsbawn described as  ‘the long nineteenth century’ that lasts until 1914 and the outbreak of the Great War.

The forces that defeated Napoleon were a coalition of European monarchies who since 1789 had come together to crush the threat of revolution spreading from France. Against all the odds the isolated forces of France, often armed with little more than the revolutionary fervour of a citizen army, managed to hold off the professional armies of old Europe.

In besieged Republican France it was the resulting economic crisis and political instability that provided the opportunity for a brilliant but impoverished junior artillery officer from Corsica to come to prominence.  Napoleon Bonaparte’s genius as a military tactician in turning defeat into victory when he took command of the ragged and neglected army in Northern Italy was matched by his skill as a political opportunist. Exploiting the political crisis in the Republic, the young general staged a coup to become First Consul in 1799 – and then in 1804 declared himself  ‘Emperor’.

In doing so he unquestionably betrayed the democratic ideals of the Jacobins. But the resulting regime was also a strange hybrid – a popular dictatorship that pursued a policy of foreign expansion and military aggression abroad, whilst maintaining at home the social gains of the revolution. Land reform and the abolition of feudalism were safeguarded, progressive taxation was used to fund public works, church and state were formally separated, religious tolerance extended to Jews and Protestants, and the rule of law replaced the arbitrary powers of the absolute monarchy of the Ancien Regime. The new social order was codified in a set of laws known as the ‘civil code’ or more often today simply as the ‘code Napoleon’. What has now become a constitutional model for many ‘capitalist democracies’ at the time represented a revolutionary break with the past – and marked the emergence of a new bourgeois ruling class.

In response the monarchies of Europe were obliged to sink their differences and combined to resist the threat that France posed to the established order. But twenty years of almost continuous war that lasted from 1792 until 1815, and ranged from Egypt to Russia, saw a succession of alliances fail to defeat France.

Finally after the battle of Leipzig in 1814, the coalition forces invaded France – Prussia, Austria and Russia from the east and Britain and Portugal from the south. Paris was occupied, Napoleon forced to abdicate and exiled to the island of Elba, and a restored Bourbon monarchy was installed in his place.

It is testament to the popular support in France for the Napoleonic regime that the restored Bourbon monarchy lasted for little more than nine months. The returning nobility failed to acknowledge that society had been turned upside down since the revolution and set about trying to return France to the Ancien Regime. Thousands of demobilised veterans drawn from the peasantry were now unemployed, rootless and still loyal to the Emperor. Meanwhile the Coalition powers were preoccupied arguing over the future partition of Europe at the Congress of Vienna – in particular the role of an independent Poland as a buffer between east and west.

Winning over the troops sent to arrest him when he first landed in southern France, Napoleon took his opportunity to march at their head to Paris – and used a plebiscite to restore himself as Emperor with a new constitution that restored the civil code. Royalist opposition swiftly evaporated, and in the space of a few weeks Napoleon was able to mobilise an army of almost a quarter of a million men.

This restored regime – christened ‘The Hundred Days’ – was to be short-lived. The coalition powers also mobilised, and from the outset France was surrounded by hostile powers – although the coalition forces had been severely weakened by so many years of war. On the Belgian border Wellington’s forces were not the battle-hardened veterans of the Peninsula War – most of who had been sent off to fight in America – but a motley collection of untested troops and allies from the Netherlands and minor German states. In fact, despite the subsequent mythology of Waterloo, less than half of Wellington’s troops were actually British.

But the weakening of the monarchies of old Europe was more far-reaching than simply a tactical military disadvantage. In order to defeat first the revolution and then Napoleon, the coalition powers had set into motion forces that they could not control and that would eventually consume them. The previous decisive campaign of 1814 was known as the ‘War Of Liberation’ and Leipzig as the “Battle Of The Nations’. In Prussia in particular after the humiliating defeat at Jena in 1805, the nation and its forces, fuelled by a nationalist fervour, had been reconstructed as a citizen army on the French model. Even in backward Russia, a new type of nationalist consciousness developed which would expresses itself ten years later in the Decembrist revolt of liberal young army officers. In Britain conscription was not adopted and the army remained a professional one, but for the first time government propaganda appealed to the masses as freeborn Englishmen to overthrow ‘Boney the tyrant’.

If Waterloo meant defeat for Napoleon, it did not represent a return to the pre-revolutionary world of 1789. The monarchies of Europe were forced to acknowledge their dependency on the new class now coming into its ascendency – the bourgeois.

In the next century France would go through a succession of revolutions alternately producing constitutional monarchies, republics and even a restored empire – but all would be based resolutely on this class and a new capitalist order that would have been unrecognisable to the court of Louis XVI. And in Germany and Austria nation states would emerge based on a popular nationalism that would have equally been unrecognisable to Frederick The Great.

When Napoleon was finally humbled in battle in the face of overwhelming odds at Waterloo, he was exiled for the rest of his life to the remote island of St Helena. Although popularly remembered as one of history’s greatest generals, he himself saw that the true significance of his legacy was political:

My true glory is not to have won 40 battles…Waterloo will erase the memory of so many victories. … But…what will live forever, is my Civil Code.

[Written by journeyman]

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18th June 1858  the Death of the Rani of Jhansi

Lakshmi Bai – the Queen of Jhansi

Today we pay tribute to Lakshmi Bai – the Rani (queen) of Jhansi – killed in battle on this day in 1858 by British Imperialists during India’s First War of Independence. She was twenty-two years old. The story of this freedom-fighting warrior heroine is the stuff of legend. Like Boudicca, she trained and personally led an army against occupying forces. Like Joan of Arc, she rode into battle dressed as a man. And, like the fictitious Scarlet Pimpernel, so mysterious and mythologised is the Rani that it’s difficult to identify the truth. Was she beautiful, as most accounts claim? Or was her face disfigured by smallpox? Was she a diplomatic head of state, or a ruthless and cunning rebel? Even the details of her death are uncertain. Many Western sources cite the date as 17th June 1858, while orthodox Indian references state the 18th. According to some versions, she died riding into battle against the British. Others say that she was shot while holding the ramparts of Gwalior Fort. Whatever the truth, the story of a female leader battling for her kingdom against the might of the British fired the Indian nationalistic imagination. During the long struggle for freedom, it was the Rani of Jhansi who served as the emblematic symbol of resistance.

So how did this real-life Xena manage to lead an army in the modern era, in direct opposition to the perceived notions of nineteenth-century Indian (and worldwide) feminine decorum?

In 1848, the power-hungry British East India Company under the leadership of Lord Dalhousie adopted the “doctrine of lapse” – allowing the British to annex an Indian state if the ruler did not have a male heir. Resistance to the policy, and the subsequent Great Rebellion of 1857, brought the Rani of Jhansi – the young widow of the last ruler of the state of Jhansi – into the political spotlight. After Jhansi “lapsed” to the British in 1854, the Rani repeatedly petitioned the British for her adopted son’s rightful inheritance. To Dalhousie she wrote: “It is notorious, my Lord, that the more powerful a state … the less disposed it is to acknowledge an error or an act of arbitrary character.” She later appealed to the Court of Directors of London, writing that the lapse represented a “gross violation and negation of the Treaties of the Government of India.” Her diplomatic pleas were rejected.

When British army Sepoys (Indian-born soldiers) rebelled in Jhansi, the Rani was held accountable despite her lack of involvement in the mutiny. In retaliation, the British army led by Major-General Sir Hugh Rose attacked Jhansi in March 1858, and laid siege upon the fort. Lakshmi Bai escaped and was tracked to Banda, where Rose’s forces reported that “… though the fellows did their utmost, she got away … She is a wonderful woman, very brave and determined. It is fortunate for us that the [Jhansi] men are not all like her.” In June 1858, 20,000 Indian rebels led by the Rani – donned in full warrior’s regalia – mounted an attack on Rose’s forces outside Gwalior. And it was here that the queen met her death. Rose wrote of his foe: “The Rani was remarkable for her bravery, cleverness and perseverance; her generosity to her Subordinates was unbounded. These qualities, combined with her rank, rendered her the most dangerous of all the rebel leaders.” The British captured Gwalior three days later, and burnt the royal library containing thousands of ancient Sanskrit scriptures.

In 1942, an all-women regiment of the Indian National Army formed to fight British colonial rule, was named in honour of the Rani of Jhansi. She was a most potent symbol of women’s empowerment, courage, tenacity and capacity for India – and for us all!

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