(Image from Oceans Bridge) |
Today historians, re-enactors and wargamers celebrate the 200th Anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo. (The dual prelude battles of Ligny and Quatre Bras occurred two days prior to today).
This final battle of the Napoleonic Wars manages to earn entry into many "most decisive battles" lists. Not all of them to be sure, but many of them and for good reason: It cut down Napoleon's comeback to about a hundred days (111 to be exact).
(Image: The situation at 6 PM, from Great Military Battles) |
Last year, one wargamer, Steve St. Clair, made the news for his quest to re-create the Battle of Waterloo with 250,000 six-millimeter figures. Meanwhile, Canada's Military Museum's will be hosting a "hands-on" Waterloo Project invloving a "mere" 10,000 figures.
A more life-like project has also been underway. With the help of re-enactors, photographer Sam Faulkner attempts to picture what the Battle of Waterloo really looked like.
There's books galore, both fiction and non-fiction, one could read, not to mention 1970 film by Dino De Laurentiis.
Despite the lack of a Waterloo DVD, there are plenty of alternatives to read, watch, re-enact, wargame, and otherwise learn about the great battle that occurred 200 years ago.
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