Helena 5 Rochefort 4 Waterloo 3 Paris 2 Elba 1 TheWaterloocampaign (15 June – 8 July 1815) was fought between the French Army ofthe North and two Seventh...
Hundred Days: Waterloocampaign 500km 300miles Saint Helena 8 Rochefort 7 Waterloo 6 5 4 3 Paris 2 Elba 1 TheBattleof Wavre was the final major military...
Days: Waterloocampaign 500km 300miles Saint Helena 8 Rochefort 7 Waterloo 6 5 4 3 Paris 2 Elba 1 TheBattleof Ligny, in which French troops ofthe Armée...
Valmy OrderofBattleoftheWaterlooCampaign De Bas and Wommersom, Tome III, table p. 96 According to De Bas and Wommersom, Prince Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach...
members ofthe King's German Legion) who took part in one or more ofthe following battles: Ligny (16 June 1815), Quatre Bras (16 June 1815) and Waterloo (18...
commander in the Anglo-allied army in thebattleofWaterloo (1815), see orderofbattleoftheWaterlooCampaign Karl von Linsingen, commander of Hesse-Kassel...
list of orders ofbattle, which list the known military units that were located within the field of operations for a battle or campaign. Thebattles are...
and then at theBattleofWaterloo (18 June 1815), where he was wounded in his left shoulder by a musket ball. He was aged 22. As a sign of gratitude for...
8 July 1815 (a period of 110 days). This period saw the War ofthe Seventh Coalition, and includes theWaterlooCampaign and the Neapolitan War as well...
order of battle for theWaterloocampaign, formed up as a discrete division in the allied reserve. Its strength is given as 5,376 men, composed of eight...
Battle of Arcis-sur-Aube (1814), and BattleofWaterloo (1815). Andrew Roberts, "Why Napoleon merits the title 'the Great,'" BBC History Magazine (1 November...
south ofthe church marking the grave of Major William Norman Ramsay ofWaterloo fame (see separate article OrderofbattleoftheWaterlooCampaign) A monument...