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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Napoleon's Road to Glory, July 8, 2003
This review is from: Napoleon's Road to Glory (Hardcover)
When I received a review copy of David Markham's new book, I was reluctant to read it. My first thoughts were with over 250,000 books on the man and the era, what could justify spending my time reading a book that so many others have covered so well already? I then thought about what I really wanted in a book about Napoleon - something that would be easy to read, covers all the important facts, and so well organized I could use it as a general reference book. I am happy to report that Mr. Markham delivers all of these and more! "Napoleon's Road to Glory" is organized chronologically into six parts, plus a prologue and an epilogue. Each part covers a different period of Napoleon's life: the Revolution, the Consulate, his glory years (1805 - 1809), his years of missteps (the Continental Blockade, Spain, and Russia), his downfall (1813 - 1815), and exile. Each section consists of several chapters that cover a different topic. For example in the section titled "A Republican Emperor," there are chapters on why Napoleon declared himself emperor; on his victories over the Austrians, Russians, and Prussians; the domestic reforms he made at home (such as education and religion); his love life; and his need to set up a dynasty so that his accomplishments would be carried on after his death. Although the chapters are relatively short and can easily be read in a 15 minute sitting, each is packed with relevant information and provides a superb summary of the salient points. Those looking for a quick reference book will be pleased by its logical organization and detailed index - both of which permits the reader to find information quickly "Napoleon's Road to Glory" is written from a decidedly pro-napoleon perspective. Mr. Markham promotes the idea that Napoleon was a man of peace and was forced by his enemies into the many wars. This is, however, not a military history of Napoleon. Napoleon's campaigns and battles are covered only briefly. The book's focus is on how Napoleon came to power, how he ruled, and his long term, non-military achievements- such as the Code Napoleon, re-forming the education system, and re-building the French economic infrastructure. Yet the author does not avoid the many controversies that have surrounded the man, including among others, the massacre of the Turkish prisoners-of-war and the execution of the Duke d'Enghien. Nor does Mr. Markham gloss over Napoleon's blunders. One section is devoted to his three major mistakes: the Continental System (i.e., the closing of the European markets to Great Britain), the invasion and subsequent quagmire in Spain, and the disastrous invasion of Russia in 1812. He also turns a very critical eye towards the errors Napoleon made during the Waterloo Campaign. The book ends with a brief look at Napoleon's exile on Saint Helena. It addresses his treatment by the British and provides updated information on whether or not he was murdered. "Napoleon's Road to Glory" is fast paced and a great read. Mr. Markham has the ability to take dry facts and spin a tale that will hold the interest of the most jaded reader. It is a welcomed balance to what seems to be an increasing number of anti-Napoleon biographies being published.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE bio on Napoleon!, February 17, 2006
This review is from: Napoleon's Road to Glory (Hardcover)
Napoleon's Road to Glory is a well-written and well-researched biography that could easily replace Felix Markham's classic biography of the French emperor to become the new standard biography of Napoleon I. One important way that David Markham, unlike the earlier Markham, improves upon the presentation of the older biography is by supplying numerous endnotes that provide readers with reference points for future research into certain key and fascinating aspects of Napoleon's compelling life. Moreover, David Markham's book does not suffer from the problems of obvious authorial bias that plague books such as Alan Schom's Napoleon Bonaparte.
I am especially pleased to see that he included sections on Napoleon's religious policies and vision of European unity (highlighted even more in his Napoleon for Dummies), as well as comparisons of Napoleon to earlier leaders like Alexander the Great. David Markham provides an overview of Napoleon's settlement with the Catholic Church, including an overview of the background of the situation inherited by Napoleon before Markham addresses how Napoleon sought to resolve the religious divisions of the French Revolution. Moreover, Markham, who bases most of his material on Napoleon and the Jews from Ben Weider's work, explains that Napoleon's proclamation declaring Palestine an independent Jewish state even served as part of David Ben Gurion's argument that the United Nations should recognize Israel in 1947, roughly one hundred and fifty years after Napoleon planned to issue his proclamation! Markham reminds us that Napoleon was after many kinds of peace: domestic, foreign, and religious.
Napoleon reopened the University of Pavia and granted its professors liberal stipends. In 1808, he created the Academic Palms as a reward for excellence in teaching. In Napoleon's Road to Glory, Markham describes Napoleon's improvements to Paris and other cities in France, Italy, and Switzerland as a parallel to the public works projects initiated by Julius Caesar. David Markham seconds Geoffrey Ellis's designation as the consular period as a Pax Napoleonica. As Markham puts it, if Napoleon "were Caesar, then the Consulate was his Pax Romana even in the years when there was no actual peace." Markham adds that some "consider the Consulate to have been something of a golden age of French culture . . ."
The what if?'s of history also abound in this book, as does the logic behind Napoleon's foreign policy. Readers learn, for example, that a report published "by Colonel Sébastiani . . . suggested that France could easily retake Egypt" and Markham explains Napoleon`s desire to keep the Belgian departments, because much "of Belgium is French-speaking and had always been seen as a potential part of France." And imagine the consequences had Napoleon married a Russian bride and managed to avoid invading the Russian Empire in the year following the appearance of the above quotation! Instead, the Franco-Russian alliance rapidly collapsed in such an extreme fashion that in a proclamation to his troops in 1812, Tsar Alexander cited "difference of religion" as one of the reasons why Russian peasants now consider themselves as Napoleon's "irreconcilable enemies." What is more, the king of Naples turned on Napoleon following Napoleon's defeat at Leipzig in 1813, because Marshal Murat "feared that Napoleon had expressed a resolution to . . . incorporate Naples with the kingdom of Italy."
I have graded many history assignments in my academic career at two universities and were I to assign a grade to this impressive volume, I would overwhelmingly give the book a solid A+!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A veritable tour de force! A most impressive accomplishment!, June 15, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Napoleon's Road to Glory (Hardcover)
It is so difficult to say something new and original about Napoleon, but in Napoleon's Road to Glory David Markham has given the man and the events a totally original and new spin that is a veritable tour de force. His prose is exciting, like bursts of gunfire, on the run, rather than the long-winded orations too often found in historical writing. The book is well-written, well-researched and especially easy to read. It sounds like a pleasant conversation between friends and not thunder and lightening from a pulpit! Markham knows how to keep his audience's attention and the story flows smoothly without the usual ups and downs. He asks the right questions and gives excellent answers and explanations. Napoleon's Road to Glory is a most impressive accomplishment! Prince Gregory Troubetzkoy Fellow, International Napoleonic Society Author, In the Service of the Tsar: The Memoirs of Denis Davidov
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