It's time to revisit our archives. In this episode one of the world’s great historical novelists takes us back to one of the most dramatic and consequential moments in European history. Bernard Cornwell is our guide to the Battle of Waterloo.
Waterloo. That single word is enough to conjure up images of Napoleon with his great bicorn hat and the daring emperor’s nemesis, the Duke of Wellington. Over the course of twelve or so hours on a Sunday at the start of summer, these two commanders met on a battle in modern-day Belgium, to settle the future of Europe.
For a battle so vast is size and significance, it still has some elusive elements. Historians cannot agree on when it started. The movement of the troops is still subject to debate. Wellington, who might have been best qualified to answer these riddles, preferred not to speak of Waterloo. His famously laconic verdict was simply that it was ‘the nearest-run thing you ever saw in your life.’
Few people are as qualified to analyse this tangled history as Bernard Cornwall. For forty years he has been writing about this period of history through his ‘Sharpe’ series of books.
As Cornwall publishes his first new Sharpe novel for fifteen years, we take the opportunity to ask him about the battle that was central to all. Over a brilliantly analytical hour, he walks us through the battlefield, in three telling scenes.
Scene One: Sunday June 18th, 11.10 am. Napoleon orders his grand battery to start firing
Scene Two: Sunday June 18th, 8.00 pm. Napoleon sends the Imperial Guard to save the battle.
Scene Three: Sunday June 18th, 10.00 pm. Wellington weeps over the casualties.
Memento: A heavy cavalry sword, carried in an attack at Waterloo
People/SocialPresenter: Peter Moore
Guest: Bernard Cornwell
Production: Maria Nolan
Podcast partner: Colorgraph
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See where 1815 fits on our Timeline
James McAuley: The House of Fragile Things (1942)
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Shrabani Basu: Arthur Conan Doyle’s Crusade (1907)
Margarette Lincoln: The Glorious Revolution (1688)
Mary Hollingsworth: Charles V in Italy (1530)
Philip Stephens: Britain Alone (1962)
Juliet Nicolson: Frostquake (1963)
Prof. Carol Dyhouse: Love, Love, Love (1966)
Prof. John Heilbron: Galileo's Ghost (1643)
Kate Mosse: The City of Tears (1572)
Season Four Trailer
Pen Vogler: A Christmas Feast
Charles Spencer: The White Ship (1120)
Ian Mortimer: Regency Britain (1825)
Joseph Hone: Paper Chase (1711)
Judith Herrin: The Road to Ravenna (500)
Damien Lewis: Behind Enemy Lines (1944)
Giles Tremlett: The Spanish Civil War (1936)
Chris Bryant: The Glamour Boys (1939)
Paul Cartledge: The Battle of Thermopylae (480 BCE)
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