EBOOK

Blücher and the Uprising of Prussia Against Napoleon, 1806-1815

Dr. Ernest F. Henderson
5
(1)
Pages
217
Year
2015
Language
English

About

Blücher is chiefly known to English readers as the man who came to Wellington's aid at Waterloo. The object of the present volume is to show that he had a separate existence of his own and performed other great deeds in the cause that are equally deserving of praise. Strange that he has never been made the subject of an English biography and that of his German lives none have been translated into English! The present work cannot pretend altogether to fill the gap, as the plan of the series is to treat the movement as fully as the man. Blücher should be established in his rightful position, as the peer of Wellington in all that concerns the overthrow of Napoleon. Although Wellington's legacy is burnished by his Spanish campaigns, Blücher was the one progressive, inspiring element among the leaders of the allied armies from the year 1813 on. Without Blücher's decision to cross the Elbe at Wartenburg there would have been no battle of Leipzig; without his cutting loose from Schwarzenberg in March, 1814, there would have been no closing in of the allies on Paris; without his brave endurance at Ligny in spite of the non-arrival of the promised reinforcements, Wellington would have been overwhelmed at Quatre-Bras and there would have been no Waterloo.

Related Subjects

Artists