The courage of Napoleon Bonaparte summarized in 3 minutes

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  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024
  • Napoleon mini-series directed by Yves Simoneau with Christian Clavier
    The Battle of the Pont d'Arcole on November 15, 1796
    The Battle of the Pont d'Arcole took place from 15 to 17 November 1796 (25 to 27 Brumaire Year V) during the first Italian campaign. It opposed the 19,000 French of the army of Italy, under the orders of Napoleon Bonaparte, to the 24,000 men of the Austrian army, commanded by General Josef Alvinczy.
    Napoleon Bonaparte first emperor of the French born August 15, 1769 in Ajaccio and died May 5, 1821 on the island of Sainte-Hélène.
    #Napoleon #France #LeGrandConsilium
    Le Grand Consilium

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @DaHistorian
    @DaHistorian Год назад +132

    Napoleon's soldiers loved him because he was a winning general who cared about his men. He promoted them based on merit and inspired them with his brilliance and charisma.

    • @phanders2022
      @phanders2022 10 месяцев назад

      If so how come he let so many die ON THE WAY to Moscow (through disease starvation and no drinking water)? More in fact than perished on the infamous retreat which he should have avoided for his men's sake.

    • @ThePrinceJokar
      @ThePrinceJokar 10 месяцев назад

      Not everyone is immortal, His ambition got the best of him. he wanted the russians who betrayed him to really give up and sign a peace treaty... they never did, It got to his head really hard when they kept retreating and retreating.@@phanders2022

    • @IMP_ROM
      @IMP_ROM 9 месяцев назад +5

      ⁠​⁠@@phanders2022What else should he have done? Not retreat and still die?

    • @franciscosanchez7474
      @franciscosanchez7474 8 месяцев назад +1

      Cierto, no en vano cada soldado llevaba en mochila el bastón de mariscal

    • @franciscosanchez7474
      @franciscosanchez7474 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@phanders2022Napoleón luchaba por Europa, Rusia estaba gobernada con una mentalidad cavernaria

  • @SilminaIDV
    @SilminaIDV 2 года назад +841

    They respected him so much that when he ordered an almost suicidal assault on the only bridge in town, his men threw themselves at it and took it despite fierce Austrian resistance

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +82

      and he will be even more respected after that

    • @donnydoeschildren3517
      @donnydoeschildren3517 2 года назад +8

      @@LeGrandConsilium tu as napoleon total war ?

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +12

      @@donnydoeschildren3517 je suis plus crusader king

    • @donnydoeschildren3517
      @donnydoeschildren3517 2 года назад +5

      @@LeGrandConsilium dommage tu pourrais ajouter des cinématiques t batailles a tes montages

    • @arthurpendragonsyt
      @arthurpendragonsyt 2 года назад +44

      Ehhhhhhh Oversimplified. I got that reference

  • @johnlansing2902
    @johnlansing2902 Год назад +38

    The difference between " take that bridge ! ". And " we will take the bridge ! Follow me ". Courage , Integrity , Leadership .

  • @smithwesson7765
    @smithwesson7765 2 года назад +176

    Truly, Bonaparte was brave and formidable ! A brilliant tactician.

    • @camaradadimitry
      @camaradadimitry 2 года назад +2

      I agree

    • @ie2adm212
      @ie2adm212 2 года назад

      His only tactics was to attack when 3 against 1.

    • @danythedog7908
      @danythedog7908 2 года назад +13

      @@ie2adm212
      Bataille d'Austerlitz :
      France :
      65 000 hommes
      139 canons
      Pertes:
      1 305 à 1 537 morts
      6 940 blessés
      573 prisonniers
      1 drapeau
      Russie / Autriche :
      80 000 à 90 000 hommes
      160 à 278 canons
      15 000 morts ou blessés6
      12 000 prisonniers
      180 canons
      45 à 50 drapeaux
      Pour toutes les batailles :
      Armées de Napoléon 2845000 contre 5323000
      Pertes des armées de Napoléon 1095000 contre 2524000 .

    • @afgalfa2243
      @afgalfa2243 Год назад

      ​@@ie2adm212 Lol stupid guys...

    • @jonconnington8987
      @jonconnington8987 Год назад +3

      @@ie2adm212 Not exactly, he was an excellent strategist even when vastly outnumbered he was able to divide the enemies forces into smaller groups by making it appear as if his army was bigger in some areas than it actually was, by doing this he was able to decimate them with concentrated attacks using the bulk of his army on the smaller groups of the enemies.

  • @viggofitzosbern7554
    @viggofitzosbern7554 2 года назад +225

    N'oublions pas non plus le courageux Lannes qui, blessé sur un lit, apprenant les difficultés de Bonaparte se precipita pour le sortir de la boue car il était tombé du pont et promis à une mort certaine...
    Depuis ce fait, Bonaparte fut lié à Jean Lannes d'une très grande amitié qui provoqua la jalousie de beaucoup !

    • @felixlarondelle1842
      @felixlarondelle1842 2 года назад +9

      A part que Napoleon sur le pont est une legende !

    • @viggofitzosbern7554
      @viggofitzosbern7554 2 года назад +14

      Le tableau le représentant sur le pont d'Arcole est justement une commande dans ce but.
      Je constate qu'en plus être un tacticien de génie, un meneur d'homme au charisme hors pair et un grand réformateur, il a été aussi un merveilleux communicant...

    • @naelgodefroy2535
      @naelgodefroy2535 2 года назад +1

      @@ffaff1 ça pleure à chaudes larmes ici

    • @alberto-zl9nn
      @alberto-zl9nn 2 года назад

      @@felixlarondelle1842 pas complétement

    • @alberto-zl9nn
      @alberto-zl9nn 2 года назад

      @@ffaff1 les français vous renvoient la politesse

  • @lavishlifezeene2439
    @lavishlifezeene2439 2 года назад +228

    Those are really accurate uniforms and napoleon looks spot on how he did in real life

    • @juancarlosdegoya2757
      @juancarlosdegoya2757 2 года назад +13

      Except for the Austrian artillary

    • @lavishlifezeene2439
      @lavishlifezeene2439 2 года назад +12

      @@juancarlosdegoya2757 yea I know right they look like Russian cavalry

    • @moi97150
      @moi97150 2 года назад +3

      Was you there?

    • @TheMan-je5xq
      @TheMan-je5xq 2 года назад +8

      And the actor that played him I just looked it up is about 5’6 which is about how tall Napoleon actually was

    • @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi
      @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi 2 года назад +2

      Wow you know how did Napoleon behave? You was his friend probably? You should be very old man

  • @Swissswoosher
    @Swissswoosher Год назад +169

    The troops respected him because, in his early years, he fought in their midst, often leading the charge.

    • @psour33
      @psour33 Год назад +13

      He fought in the first line, maning the guns, during the last campaign(campaign of France) before his first resignation in 1814.

    • @kevin-mv6qf
      @kevin-mv6qf Год назад +9

      pretty solid chance that this whole event was propaganda. If nothing else, Napoleon went through great lengths to embellish victories and hide defeats. Other material described the whole charge as an embarrassing farce because nobody wanted to suicide themselves crossing a fortified bridge. Of course, ask yourself if you think Napoleon would really share that embarrassment back home or make up some grand glorious heroic encounter for the newspapers --he went with the later, as always.

    • @elkinlopez2511
      @elkinlopez2511 Год назад

      ​@@kevin-mv6qfanglo y sajon,, 🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮

    • @capoislamort100
      @capoislamort100 Год назад +1

      @@kevin-mv6qfright, he fell off the goddamn bridge and nearly drowned.

    • @lapinmalin8626
      @lapinmalin8626 8 месяцев назад

      @@kevin-mv6qf
      Non ce n'est pas de la propagande et quelque généraux ont fait la même chose pendant la campagne d'Italie pour donner du courage aux hommes
      T'es quand même au courant que les historiens sont pas débile au point de croire les journaux de guerre de Napoléon?

  • @ANProductionsOfficialChannel
    @ANProductionsOfficialChannel 2 года назад +63

    I really want to see this show in full in its original language. I know ot was shot twice but still. To hear Napoleon speaking French would be amazing.

    • @ДмитроСкабіна
      @ДмитроСкабіна Год назад +5

      Говорят Бонапарт говорил по французкий с акцентом.
      Корсика не могла не повлиять на императора,ведь он там родился.

  • @rodolforivero7282
    @rodolforivero7282 2 года назад +27

    Bravos y valientes Franceses.
    El alma de la Legión nace con estos soldados.
    Dignos de mi mayor admiración.
    La fama de Napoleón supera cualquier leyenda.
    Desde argentina un abrazo Legionarios...

    • @alipiocunha6744
      @alipiocunha6744 2 года назад +1

      👍👍👍👍

    • @rodolforivero7282
      @rodolforivero7282 2 года назад +1

      @@alipiocunha6744 gracias legionario...
      marcha o revienta amigo...👍

  • @albertjosefkaelin3754
    @albertjosefkaelin3754 9 месяцев назад +4

    Napoleon miniseries directed by Yves Simoneau with Christian Clavier - The best film of all time! - Brilliantly staged in all areas and loved by millions of audiences!

  • @pradman81
    @pradman81 2 года назад +65

    I don't care what others say. This man was one of the greatest and most influential to have ever lived.
    PS: I am not french. Heck I am not even European.

    • @FazeParticles
      @FazeParticles 2 года назад

      same; the last part, and i fully agree.

    • @SL92018
      @SL92018 2 года назад +2

      100% agree (I'm also not French)

    • @johannuys7914
      @johannuys7914 2 года назад +1

      Absolutely.

    • @ie2adm212
      @ie2adm212 2 года назад +1

      lol buonaparte was a fraud. He had not even one single good side. Nowadays he would photoshop his pics.

    • @SL92018
      @SL92018 2 года назад +5

      @@ie2adm212 Nonsense. He was simply a man of his times. However he achieved a lot more than the other leaders and generals of his era. He formed the basis of unification and formation of whole countries in Europe, such as Italy, began the modernisation of countries like Egypt and others in the Middle East and his crowning achievement:. He singlehandedly created the legal system of modern civil law which is used throughout most of the world outside of common law jurisdictions. The difference being that the countries that use common law outside of England were *forced* to use it as they were subjugated by the English/British.

  • @gral.lucio.mansilla9508
    @gral.lucio.mansilla9508 2 года назад +62

    Que admiración Napoleón gran lider de guerra, gloria eterna a este gran estratega.

    • @hansvasquez1663
      @hansvasquez1663 2 года назад +4

      Pero no más que Alejandro Magno 😎👌

    • @zzerick9362
      @zzerick9362 2 года назад +2

      @@hansvasquez1663 😎👌

    • @josuearonlaraperalta8492
      @josuearonlaraperalta8492 2 года назад +1

      @@hansvasquez1663 alejandro magno es una pulga a comparacion de napoleon acaso alejandro magno goberno 1/3 del mundo¿ alejandro magno lucho contra un imperio en decadencia que encima estaba repleto de luchas internas y reveliones y esa fue su unica gan victoria y luego murio napoleon lucho contra todas las potencias mundiales juntas con una francia destruida por la revolucion y contra potencias que pasaban su maximo esplendor y aun asi gano

    • @hansvasquez1663
      @hansvasquez1663 2 года назад

      @@josuearonlaraperalta8492 la historia y yo no dicen eso
      Hasta google lo dice impresionantemente

    • @hansvasquez1663
      @hansvasquez1663 2 года назад +2

      @@josuearonlaraperalta8492 Alejandro Magno el mejor general de los tiempos

  • @Alextoff174
    @Alextoff174 2 года назад +61

    J'ai un très bon souvenir de cette serie à "gros budget " avec un Chritian Clavier au top de sa forme et ce.. même si plane au dessus de lui Jacquouille la fripouille !! 🙂

    • @unitedkt18
      @unitedkt18 2 года назад +13

      J'aime bien l'humour sur le gros budget. La série est magnifique, pour le rapport budget/qualité. Après, c'est juste criminel de la part de l'Etat français de ne pas y mettre les moyens.

    • @verdeleonais2010
      @verdeleonais2010 2 года назад +7

      D’ailleurs dans le visiteurs il y a une scène ou on voit jacouille dans le champ de bataille qui regarde napoléon

    • @louiskoenig9719
      @louiskoenig9719 10 месяцев назад

      Un pas si mauvais Bonaparte... contrairement à...

  • @christopheherpin155
    @christopheherpin155 2 года назад +210

    Vive Bonaparte vive l empereur 🇲🇫🍂

  • @CochoSGO
    @CochoSGO 10 месяцев назад +25

    I love how in 20 years since the release of this miniseries I've came to understand
    1) This didn't happen.
    2) the petite caporal comes from Napoleon's willingness to come down and personally direct and operate the cannon batteries like an actual corporal.
    Great series.

    • @jansandman6983
      @jansandman6983 10 месяцев назад +1

      Petite? Dude he's 5'6 probably taller than you and he wasn't a corporal but a commissioned officer a graduate from Ecole Miliaire equivalent to USA's West Point. Perhaps you have mixed Napoleon with Hitler who was a Corporal.

    • @TahaAddam
      @TahaAddam 9 месяцев назад

      Okay you probably don't know his reputation all that well in Italy so, let me make this quick.@@jansandman6983
      "La Petite Caporal" was an affectionate term from his soldiers describing how he manned the Battery at Lodi, a position an Artillery Corporal performs.
      Also something to clarify; 5'6 for a French man was average, not so much for a General though (Napoleons Generals, later Marshals were either a few inches or a few feet taller than him)

    • @alexandre2able
      @alexandre2able 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@jansandman6983The "Petite caporal" is exactly because he was a general who in many cases did the work of a corporal (aiming the cannons).

  • @ЮрийПоярков-т2м
    @ЮрийПоярков-т2м 10 месяцев назад +9

    Наполеон - ВЕЛИЧАЙШИЙ ГЕНИЙ! В его расчётливой храбрости никто и никогда не сомневался. Но при Арколе всё было не так как в фильме.

  • @MrAlois294
    @MrAlois294 2 года назад +184

    "Настоящий героизм состоит в том,чтобы быть выше всех невзгод жизни"-слова Императора из книги "Мысли Наполеона".

    • @oleksandr9774
      @oleksandr9774 2 года назад +2

      👍

    • @Сальник-б2ш
      @Сальник-б2ш 2 года назад +4

      А когда он бежал позорно с России что писал ?

    • @oleksandr9774
      @oleksandr9774 2 года назад +18

      @@Сальник-б2ш Армия Наполеона не бежала из России, так как не была разбита в военном сражении. Отступала, да, но не бежала. Причина - мороз и голод.

    • @Сальник-б2ш
      @Сальник-б2ш 2 года назад +3

      @@oleksandr9774 ну вообще-то речь тут идет о Наполеоне который в свою очередь бросил свою армию и бежал в Париж. Почитай что означает слово отступление и не пиши ерунду

    • @МихайлоПарцей-ы5з
      @МихайлоПарцей-ы5з 2 года назад +3

      @@Сальник-б2ш , он вывел остатки своей армии с России

  • @aichagermany
    @aichagermany 2 года назад +16

    I really like Clavier 's portrayal of Napoléon ❤️

    • @SnakeKoRn
      @SnakeKoRn 2 года назад

      Oh what? That's Clavier? That guy is awesome!

    • @citizenbobx
      @citizenbobx Год назад

      About 20 years too old. Should've cast a younger guy for that part of the movie.

    • @elocriativa
      @elocriativa 10 месяцев назад +1

      It's a pity. He's great bit still look too much like asterix

  • @leosp6210
    @leosp6210 2 года назад +25

    The best military commander ever!

    • @davidgelman4935
      @davidgelman4935 10 месяцев назад +2

      Wellington description when asked "who was the greatest general, "Napleon,in this age,in past ages ,in any age,

    • @leosp6210
      @leosp6210 10 месяцев назад

      @@davidgelman4935 Good quote, I didn't know it :)

    • @GutsDovakjin
      @GutsDovakjin 29 дней назад +1

      There were three men that stand out above most other great generals of history, three men of the same mold, to hold military, political and legislative power. Alexander, Caesar and Napoleon. There were many other greats, yes, but these three lead the pack.

  • @Anton-kl5xq
    @Anton-kl5xq 2 года назад +503

    Vive la France 🇷🇺🤝🇫🇷 Salutations de Russie. Forte amitié entre nos pays et nos peuples.

  • @jdewitt77
    @jdewitt77 2 года назад +17

    The battles of Toulon and Pont d"Arcole solidifed the Napoleonic legend.

  • @ReNero-t8s
    @ReNero-t8s 6 дней назад +1

    Napoleone...uno degli ultimi grandi generali e statisti d'Europa....manca oggi una figura come la sua sul continente.

  • @ρτεμής
    @ρτεμής Год назад +5

    Восхищаюсь Наполеоном , великий человек , восьмое чудо света

  • @bruceli9094
    @bruceli9094 Год назад +2

    "Long live France!!" -
    With love from Superpower USA 🇺🇸

  • @eugenekowalski301
    @eugenekowalski301 Год назад +3

    Vive la France libre. Frères se battent au nom de la liberté, de l'égalité et de la fraternité !

  • @jaehaerysiitargaryen8769
    @jaehaerysiitargaryen8769 2 года назад +100

    Caporal ! Vive notre petit Caporal ! 🙏

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +8

      💪👍

    • @ie2adm212
      @ie2adm212 2 года назад +1

      En fait il faisait 1m69, petit mais pas minuscule.

    • @Kouyanski
      @Kouyanski 2 года назад

      C'était la norme cette taille à cette époque.

    • @philippeconstantin8234
      @philippeconstantin8234 Год назад

      Le petit caporal, c’était Adolf, Pas Napoléon, il l’ était peut-être quand il était cadet, mais il était destiné à devenir officier dès son entrée au collège de Brienne.

  • @cleyton6648
    @cleyton6648 Год назад +20

    Batalha na ponte de Arcole,Itália 1795..França vs Áustria muitos morreram nessa luta.Bonaparte cruzou a ponte com a Bandeira Francesa.cena epica 2002..

  • @GameF17
    @GameF17 2 года назад +30

    Un grand moment de bravoure et de courage ! Merci !

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +3

      👍

    • @felixlarondelle1842
      @felixlarondelle1842 2 года назад +2

      A part que ce n est qu une legende !

    • @ie2adm212
      @ie2adm212 2 года назад +1

      Sauf que c'est fake.

    • @danythedog7908
      @danythedog7908 2 года назад

      @@felixlarondelle1842 Qu'est ce qui est une légende ?
      La bataille du pont d'Arcole ou que Napoléon malgré son grade pris un drapeau et s'élance sur le pont au milieu d'une pluie de feu ?
      ( il n'est pas montrer qu'ensuite il tombe du pont et presque noyer dans les marais et la bataille n'a était gagner que plus tard grâce à un coup de géni de Napoléon )

    • @NabucoDinosaur
      @NabucoDinosaur Год назад

      @@danythedog7908 tu sais ce que c'est que la propagande? montrer un "surhomme" pour galvaniser des foules etc? rien de bien compliqué pr ce dictateur

  • @sr.andreazzi
    @sr.andreazzi 2 года назад +18

    Longue vie à la France! 🇫🇷

  • @sponge540
    @sponge540 2 года назад +30

    *Note: He was 25.*

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад

      👌👍

    • @vegetable7979
      @vegetable7979 2 года назад +2

      You have ruined my day, fella.

    • @aetius7139
      @aetius7139 2 года назад +2

      And became an emperor at the age of 33. I felt like a failure.

  • @ernestov1777
    @ernestov1777 2 года назад +87

    The Greatest of All Time. I would time travel and give him modern guns so he can win. A hero against tyrants, he spread the ideals of the French Revolution all over Europe.

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +13

      He finally won this battle by building a bridge further, that was just the first round

    • @plrc4593
      @plrc4593 2 года назад +13

      He was a tyrant himself. Have you heard about the Haitian revolution?

    • @ernestov1777
      @ernestov1777 2 года назад +22

      @@plrc4593 He was not a tyrant, learn the definition of being one, he wanted to make a French Empire as some sort of union under revolutionary values, he made the decision of doing a coup to prevent an actual royalist tyrant to takeover. And for the Haitian Revolution, it was the early 19th century and like all man Napoleon was not perfect, but he eventually changed his mind and abolished slavery himself in 1815, he even condemned slavery when he was in exile. In St Helena he wrote this about Toby, his slave who he tried to free "As for poor Toby, he endures his misfortunes very quietly: he stoops to his work and spends his days in innocent tranquility. Certainly there is a wide step from poor Toby to a King Richard. And yet, the crime is not the less atrocious, for this man, after all, had his family, his happiness, and his liberty; and it was a horrible act of cruelty to bring him here to languish in the fetters of slavery."

    • @plrc4593
      @plrc4593 2 года назад +7

      @@ernestov1777 1815 was over a decade after the Haitian Revolution xD He was a tyrant. He used Polish soldiers, who wanted to fight for freedom of their country and sent them to Haiti to supress Haitians fighting for freedom of their coutry. To hell with Napoleon.

    • @emiliothefrank1312
      @emiliothefrank1312 2 года назад +7

      @@plrc4593 its kinda funny because after the haitan revolution ,the man who lead that same revolution enslaved his own People just right after he kicked out the French
      I mean thats some hipocrisy

  • @Dr_Clement
    @Dr_Clement Год назад +9

    ... scène historique ceci dit remise en cause (il faudra 2 jours de plus et de nombreux morts pour prendre ce pont), même s'il paraîtrait que Bonaparte a chargé (quasiment seul -il n'était pas encore très adulé à l'époque), ce qui effectivement nécessite un courage hallucinant. Le fameux tableau inspiré de cette scène a été commandé par... Bonaparte lui-même.

  • @serivina_freiheitskampfer1936
    @serivina_freiheitskampfer1936 2 года назад +9

    He is my inspiration. The best hero of france.

  • @francoisegindrat2253
    @francoisegindrat2253 11 месяцев назад +1

    Cette version était très Bien. Christian Clavier était un Napoléon tout à fait acceptable

  • @marekt2319
    @marekt2319 2 года назад +12

    Vive L'Empereur
    Vive la France
    Vive la Pologne

  • @ThePeacemaker848
    @ThePeacemaker848 Год назад

    Great series on Napoleon.

  • @zappysvideograph8973
    @zappysvideograph8973 2 года назад +98

    It wasnt actually Napoleon that lead the charge at Arcole but the future Marshal Augereau, the famous painting of Napoleon was very romanticized and was painted 20 years after the battle.

    • @ygobarreto
      @ygobarreto 2 года назад +14

      At Lodi though an identical operation was indeed conducted by himself, lannes and masséna.

    • @yamapopi
      @yamapopi 2 года назад +25

      False ! According to multiple visual accounts, (polish officer Joseph Sulkowski, and lieutenant Jean Antoine François Ozanam) he did lead the charge on the Arcole Bridge. Both do confirm he went all the way to the middle of the bridge, not just on the shore... The english page of wikipedia Battle of Arcole is only citing a single amercian author (Boycott-Brown (2001) for most of the article, which is a bit of shame when you have so many direct testimonies of this battle.

    • @omarbradley6807
      @omarbradley6807 2 года назад +7

      @@yamapopi Yes wikipedia is every time worst with the Napoleonic wars articles, they are basically citing controversial authors with bias, than mainstream aceptable sources.

    • @jpc7118
      @jpc7118 2 года назад +4

      In fact, Napoleon did lead three charges over the bridge but they failed then Augerau took the charge and passed.

    • @el_fr9200
      @el_fr9200 Год назад

      Napoleon beggining the march but he fallen and augereau poursuit

  • @napoleonlempereur3021
    @napoleonlempereur3021 8 месяцев назад

    Vive Napoleon ❤ Vive la France 🇨🇵

  • @ricardobordonmedina9030
    @ricardobordonmedina9030 2 года назад +38

    el hombre más grande que ha parido la humanidad, digno de servir de ejemplo para todos los que queremos abrirnos paso en la vida, !gracias!

    • @musica9040
      @musica9040 2 года назад +4

      El hombre más grande ???? Lo dudo mucho, un hombre que dejó 6 millones de muertos que convirtió a Europa en un carnicería invadió a muchos otros países , por dónde paso dejo destrucción y desolación ese no es ningún ejemplo....ese es un loco maniatico dictador asesino ....

    • @manuelajenjo7787
      @manuelajenjo7787 2 года назад

      ignorante traidor

    • @a.d2868
      @a.d2868 2 года назад +3

      @@musica9040 No. Vive la France, vive l'Empereur. Not our fault if you can't even conquer your toilet. Ah

    • @omarbradley6807
      @omarbradley6807 2 года назад

      @@manuelajenjo7787 cualquiera que lea un libro en España es traidor...

    • @thesamy731
      @thesamy731 2 года назад +1

      @@musica9040 gracias a Napoleón las ideas de la revolución francesa se expandieron. Sin el tu en este momento me estarías besando los pies y me estarías pidiendo permiso para tomar el sol aweonao

  • @LordBolrog
    @LordBolrog 2 года назад +2

    Vive la France !

  • @makutas-v261
    @makutas-v261 2 года назад +49

    Literally the only reason he lost at Waterloo was because of the Prussian rescue of the British, even if he had used his resources on attacking the fort, he was about to beat Wellington anyway.

    • @dehaifu68
      @dehaifu68 2 года назад +1

      They planned for that,if Prussian won't agree to rescue Wellington wouldn't fight at all. Consider Wellington is a very good general,I don't think Napoleon can really get much from him.

    • @omarbradley6807
      @omarbradley6807 2 года назад +3

      @@dehaifu68 Yes but if Wellington would not had fought, his army wouldn't had been a factor, and thus the French would had won

    • @dehaifu68
      @dehaifu68 2 года назад +1

      @@omarbradley6807 Wellington won't fight Waterloo but he will wait for better chances, like in Spain. Napoleon couldn't win because 4 countries decided to maintain at least 600000 troops,yet France was depleted. No way they would stop.
      Napoleon was just so arrogant,his Marshalls were defeated by Wellington in Spain. So of course,he won't admit he is just like his Marshalls that he was defeated completely. So was "what if".
      The key is Wellington and Blucher they made agreement. If Blucher said he won't then Wellington just retreats more deep, Napoleon couldn't catch him and when other troops of other countries come,then he will fight,so Wellington won't fight an unprepared battle. So if Blucher wont come, Wellington won't fight and Napoleon can't catch him.
      So if he does fight, Napoleon should think that Wellington must be planning something because he's Wellington who defeated his many Marshalls before,so Wellington definitely a good general,so if he stands and fight he must have confidence. But Napoleon was just so arrogant. Not only he underestimated Wellington. But he won't allow his Marshalls better than him. So that's his excuse to tell his Marshalls means I was better because I already beaten Wellington and if Blucher wouldn't come, blah blah.
      So I wouldn't think Napoleon is so great, He had better combat skills because he's an military officer who become emperor. But other countries also had great guys just they were not emperor so they wouldn't use whole national resources to fight .
      So Napoleon had great achievements. Yet I don't think he is that great.

    • @omarbradley6807
      @omarbradley6807 2 года назад +1

      @@dehaifu68 You are repeating yourself time after time, however Wellington, would had no place to whitdrew except the sea, and Napoleon, wasn't arrogant, but he beat the bests, Wellington wasn't so great, he screwed at almost every offensive battle, and the campaign would had been won. The other troops didn't matter, maybe Napoleon would had won maybe not. But Wellington either fought, or retreat to his lines

    • @dehaifu68
      @dehaifu68 2 года назад +1

      @@omarbradley6807 I don't think so he can retreat to Prussian at least, Napoleon just couldn't beat them if they stick together. Napoleon defeated the best? Who? Prussian emperor? You said Wellington isn't best so did Napoleon beat him? No.
      Don't say excuses, Napoleon had better troops and even more troops. He didn't know where Prussians went,he didn't know Wellington had new tactics. That's war,like Napoleon used new tactics several years before then won many battles. In Waterloo, it's Wellington's turn. And Napoleon was arrogant, that's a fact.
      You can see how he judged everyone. How he treated ppl who could have challenged him.
      Wellington won in Waterloo because he planned well. Prussian was even late for several hours.

  • @dragosion5596
    @dragosion5596 11 месяцев назад +2

    Viva la FRANCE 🇫🇷

  • @Vinilupus
    @Vinilupus 2 года назад +8

    Homens não seguem títulos. Homens seguem CORAGEM.

  • @joseantoniolinares6849
    @joseantoniolinares6849 2 года назад +2

    El mas grande de Francia saludos desde Argentina

  • @adrien27445
    @adrien27445 2 года назад +3

    Grand consilium j'adore ce que tu fais

  • @andreviniciusdasilva7453
    @andreviniciusdasilva7453 2 года назад +2

    Viva la France !!

  • @magamaster1221
    @magamaster1221 Год назад +3

    Наполеон величайший император всех времён

  • @MandomRiRo
    @MandomRiRo 2 года назад +19

    Le courage de Christian Clavier 😍

  • @guille224
    @guille224 2 года назад +7

    El siglo XXI necesita urgente un Bonaparte!!!!!
    Restaurador de las leyes y las buenas costumbres de occidente!!!!
    Viva el Emperador...!!!!

  • @maximiliendzitko5022
    @maximiliendzitko5022 2 года назад +2

    A chaque fois les frissons

  • @joseluisalfonzogr1155
    @joseluisalfonzogr1155 Год назад +4

    Este actor es muy bueno

  • @BoucherDeStonne
    @BoucherDeStonne 11 месяцев назад +2

    VIVE la France

  • @glocksmith226
    @glocksmith226 2 года назад +49

    And, down the dark everyone feared him the Austrians, prussians, British and Russians feared this Corsican he took their pride of military their guns and soldiers dominated Europe and, this peasant is destroying our pride everyone was crying the wives in saint Petersberg were crying for their dead husbands, the prussian soldiers crying out in Berlin for they lost their miltery pride, the Austrians in Vienna feared because he was breathing down their neck. And in Paris everyone celebrated cheered for the glory he was bringing victory after victory, and
    this peasent was Napoléon Bonaparte, master of Europe he was not emperor of France but emperor of the French, to show his love for his people he talked with his soldiers cried with them buried their dead with them understood their problem, the man who crossed the alps where Hannibal once did, the man who spread his revolutionary and Nationalistic ideas wherever he went call him a tyrent, call him miltery genius, call him Satan, call him god call him messiah or call him a monster he certainly made france Great again.

    • @yannickbesson1448
      @yannickbesson1448 2 года назад +6

      Well, he was not a peasant, though

    • @athishnirup1815
      @athishnirup1815 2 года назад +10

      @@yannickbesson1448 but other European powers viewed him as a peasant some random guy who had no right to rule suddenly now is an emperor. So he was right

    • @tadluimeme
      @tadluimeme 2 года назад +6

      Corsican with a big C please , That's my people.

    • @glocksmith226
      @glocksmith226 2 года назад +5

      @@tadluimeme there I Corrected it happy.

    • @tadluimeme
      @tadluimeme 2 года назад +1

      @@glocksmith226 thx

  • @mariacolcombet3916
    @mariacolcombet3916 Год назад

    Tres beau film Merci 🇫🇷

  • @bthome123
    @bthome123 Год назад +13

    "You cannot stop me," he warned the Austrian statesman Metternich, "I can spend 30,000 men a month". That was some kind of courage.

  • @lapinmalin8626
    @lapinmalin8626 8 месяцев назад +4

    Vive l'Empereur

  • @delzay6894
    @delzay6894 2 года назад +8

    Aunque no sea Frances, admiro a Napoleón y sus intentos por llevar la ilustración a toda europa, y utilizar sus habilidades para lograr vencer en las batallas.

  • @Your_phantom
    @Your_phantom 9 месяцев назад

    Le meilleur des meilleurs

  • @jaresh5536
    @jaresh5536 2 года назад +21

    I'm French and Napoleon's fan but I concur: this fiction is ridicule though it attempts to depict one of the famous victories of Napoléon.
    Napoleon never reached the bridge himself and ended up falling on the side, protected by a staff officer, Muiron, who died protecting him .
    These movie scenes are frankly not great nor representative. Uniforms are not correct.
    Yes muskets were not precise but Clavier standing up, defiant in the middle of the bridge is ridiculous.
    However Napoleon did show great courage throughout his reign and got wounded several times, and got his nickname 'petit caporal' from that Italian campaign.

    • @thibaultbushido3540
      @thibaultbushido3540 2 года назад

      Tout pareil
      J’aurais pas dit mieux
      Pas de doute, tu es un vrai fan de Napoléon.
      Vive l’empereur ! mais pas trop quand même, la démocratie c’est bien et mettre sa famille dans des sièges royaux ça fait despote.
      Personne n’est parfait…

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +3

      Si tu connais des films plus « historically accurate » sur Napoléon et plus récents, ça m’intéresse 😉

    • @bismarck3880
      @bismarck3880 2 года назад

      @@thibaultbushido3540 Tout le monde mets ses fidèles serviteur ou membre de sa famille sur des postes clé par exemple les Habsbourg ont eu de nombreux rois sur différents royaume d'Europe durant longtemps

    • @WetaMantis
      @WetaMantis 2 года назад +1

      Ah non quand il pause ses couilles sur le trône c'est là que ça devient intéressant! Vive l'Empereur!

  • @claudepinat4970
    @claudepinat4970 Год назад +1

    vive NAPOLEON Vive l' EMPEREUR

  • @milovanmarkovic4435
    @milovanmarkovic4435 2 года назад +11

    I always wondered if Muiron had survived will he become a marshal later like Murat and others🤔

  • @MS-rs1hg
    @MS-rs1hg 2 года назад +1

    J aime beaucoup son excellence Napoléon

  •  2 года назад +19

    Thanks to Napoleon who invaded España, Argentina won his Independence after defeating two brits invasions in Buenos Aires. Our liberator, general San Martín, fought Napoleon in Arjonilla, Bailén y Albuera. Those experiences were useful to cross the almost 7 000 metres Andes and liberate Argentina, Chile and Perú. Thank you.

    • @waalaikumsalam.
      @waalaikumsalam. 2 года назад +2

      we moroccans were invaded by spain also and the western world was mad at us when the people resisted 😭😭😭😭😭

    •  2 года назад +1

      @@waalaikumsalam. we know how were spaniards ,we won them with thou of deaths.

    • @waalaikumsalam.
      @waalaikumsalam. 2 года назад +2

      @ look at the riff republic. that we’re moroccans who destroyed spain

    • @michaeleastham3868
      @michaeleastham3868 Год назад +1

      Pity about the Falklands....

  • @mr.knoll-it-all1564
    @mr.knoll-it-all1564 Год назад +1

    Best general in the world “let’s just charge them straight on… maybe they’ll get spooked and run away”

  • @poppi510
    @poppi510 2 года назад +25

    When you are German but also Bavarian…you can’t really say something against Napoleon 😂

    • @TonioBZH
      @TonioBZH 11 месяцев назад

      Why ?

    • @hzuiel
      @hzuiel 11 месяцев назад

      @@TonioBZH Because he liberated poland and germany from being occupied and divided up between prussia, russia, and austria.10's of thousands of germans and poles gladly joined his armies after his campaigns in that region defeated those powers.

  • @waltergomezherrera717
    @waltergomezherrera717 2 года назад

    Desde Alejandro.
    No había nacido otro pequeño Gigante.
    Como Bonaparte.!

  • @guilhermerodrigues9908
    @guilhermerodrigues9908 2 года назад +39

    This reminds me of the battle of Nagashino, the cavalry charged into a huge fortified position. Here we see Napoleon charging on a bridge into a fortified position. It didn't work in Nagashino, and history repeated itself, here.

    • @MajorCoolD
      @MajorCoolD 2 года назад +5

      Well History is however full of examples where such and similar manuvers suceeded aswell. One shouldnt forget that any War is both sides trying to do their best while suffering the worst. Deciciveness, swiftness and great resolve is required to carry such a thing through. In this case, I could have told old Bonnie in this scene that this attack would not suceed when both the Cannons AND the Infantry were ready to receive him.

    • @FLVCTVAT_NEC_MERGITVR
      @FLVCTVAT_NEC_MERGITVR Год назад +1

      It worked in real life as well. The depiction here isn't accurate.

    • @bertellijustin6376
      @bertellijustin6376 Год назад +1

      @flvctvat…..except it didn’t. Napoleon never even stepped on the bridge during the fighting. He stopped a good ten to twenty yards away from the actual bridge. His men were cut apart by the two cannons and the Austrian infantry. The attack was repulsed as shown. What won the day was French actions all along the front forcing the Austrians to decamp before they were surrounded if I remember right. Napoleon had sent at least two or three battalions across the river by pontoon bridge and boat on both the up and down stream sides of the river. So it was actually General JJ Gueie , who had crossed the rivers at Alberado
      that led the push from the north that drove the Austrians out of arcole.

  • @bertrandbeauvoise392
    @bertrandbeauvoise392 2 года назад

    Vive la France🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷 !

  • @Rider.Looper2
    @Rider.Looper2 11 месяцев назад +6

    this scene really happened, it was during the Italian 🇮🇹 campaign when Napoleon was not yet emperor but just a general at the very beginning of his career.
    Check for yourself on the Internet
    The name of this famous battle is called ➡️ [The Battle of Pont d'Arcole] took place from November 15 to 17, 1796 (25 to 27 Brumaire Year V) during the first Italian campaign. It pits the 19,000 French 🇨🇵 of the Army of Italy, under the orders of Napoleon Bonaparte, against the 24,000 men of the Austrian army, commanded by General Josef Alvinczy.

    • @davidgelman4935
      @davidgelman4935 10 месяцев назад

      Good description in Chandler s The Campaigns of Napoleon

  • @alexandermpln003
    @alexandermpln003 11 месяцев назад

    La suerte favorece al intrepido . 🎉🎉 ¡¡Viva francia !! Saludos desde Perú

  • @LeGrandConsilium
    @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +306

    Next video, Napoleon takes Moscow in 3 mins?

    • @charlyfrog5666
      @charlyfrog5666 2 года назад +9

      No ! Churchill getting sloshed in 2 mins ...🤣

    • @SilminaIDV
      @SilminaIDV 2 года назад +8

      The war of the third coalition in 3 minutes XD

    • @bugvswindshield
      @bugvswindshield 2 года назад +3

      😂😂🤣🤣🤣

    • @tojamatokanava7778
      @tojamatokanava7778 2 года назад +1

      Le Grand Consilium , 1812 kämpften die sogenannten Franzosen, die sogenannten Russen und andere Verbündete gegen Deutsche.Die niederträchtigen Verräter der Deutschen Nation leisteten den Alliierten im Krieg gegen die Deutsche große Hilfe.

    • @elem2992
      @elem2992 2 года назад +1

      Tu sais quoi mon copain... après tes vidéos branlette sur l'empereur J'ai hate que tu nous fasses une vidéo sur comment les russes et les prussiens ont occupé Paris ! Ça va être chouette

  • @FirstnameLastname-py3bc
    @FirstnameLastname-py3bc 2 года назад +1

    Viva la France

  • @juanpablobarresi4420
    @juanpablobarresi4420 2 года назад +3

    No hay dudas de que Napoleon Bonaparte fue un hombre con coraje y con valor...
    Eso, no lo salva del gran error estratégico de invadir Rusia.
    Rusia es invencible, por los rusos y por su territorio.
    Un pueblo Valiente sin dudas...
    ¿Quien puede negar la valentía del pueblo ruso que supo humillar con dos alambres a la mayor maquinaria bélica hasta 1945, que fue la genocida e imperialista Alemania de Hitler?
    Respecto a Napoleón, hay dos cosas a su favor:
    1) luchó contra la monarquías europeas y el feudalismo
    2) su lucha por consolidar la Revolucion Francesa, derivó inevitablemente, en la liberación de las colonias españolas de America.
    La diferencia entre Stalin y Napoleón, fue que Napoleón avanzó sobre los territorios europeos, y no los liberó, sino que los conquistó
    El gran Stalin, en cambió derrotó a los Nazis y liberó a toda Europa de ese flagelo imperialista.
    Pero para concluir, que un enanito de una colonia francesa como Córcega, sin avales, mas que su inteligencia y sus convicciones, proveniente de una familia humilde para la época, haya llegado a poner bajo su bota, a duques, reyes, príncipes y haya hecho temblar a los monarcas Ingleses y a los Zares Rusos, habla no solo de valentía sino de uno de los cerebros más prodigiosos de la historia, y de una convicción excepcional.
    Asi como Lenin y Stalin a mi entender, o Mao, o Fidel Castro, han demostrado ser lúcidos e inmortales por sus logros contra los Imperios, para toda la Eternidad

  • @chiron8018
    @chiron8018 2 года назад +6

    Época que as guerras tinham algum gosto em se batalhar. Hoje, um míssil pode resumir 80% do conflito...

    • @rianmachado2890
      @rianmachado2890 2 года назад +1

      Por isso que eu nao gosto dessas guerras modernas

    • @chiron8018
      @chiron8018 2 года назад +2

      @@rianmachado2890 Nem eu, mano. Pra mim, a honra nas guerra acabou em 1945. Dps, com as ogivas e mísseis, já era...

    • @rianmachado2890
      @rianmachado2890 2 года назад +1

      @@chiron8018 verdade

    • @MarcoAurelio-vv3gz
      @MarcoAurelio-vv3gz 2 года назад

      Um míssil faz muita coisa, especialmente em questão de destruição, mas pra ocupar um território até hoje ainda é necessário a velha infantaria.
      A conquista do chão ainda é decidida com pólvora e sangue.

    • @chiron8018
      @chiron8018 2 года назад

      @@MarcoAurelio-vv3gz Se esqueceu dos drones que destroem vc em segundos...

  • @petroniogurgel3869
    @petroniogurgel3869 Год назад +1

    Napoleão,grande francés.Ajudou o Brasil,ao forçar a vinda de Don joão VI e toda a corte para o Brasil.

  • @wanob254
    @wanob254 2 года назад +6

    L'assaut du pont d'Arcole ne servait à rien des pertes inutile mais Napoléon reste le meilleur

    • @Cloporte.indomptable
      @Cloporte.indomptable 2 года назад +6

      L'erreur est humaine et c'est en s'apprenant des erreurs que l'humain progresse.

    • @amenohana1494
      @amenohana1494 2 года назад +1

      il a tellement apris qu'il est mort en slip sur une île lui

    • @grandducdebretagne2663
      @grandducdebretagne2663 2 года назад +4

      @@amenohana1494 ptdr ça marche le weeb bandeur de japon

    • @Cloporte.indomptable
      @Cloporte.indomptable 2 года назад +5

      @@amenohana1494 combien sont mort en slip sur ton île, par contre, j'aimerais connaître..

    • @thibaultbushido3540
      @thibaultbushido3540 2 года назад

      @@amenohana1494 tu n’as clairement rien appris de la culture japonaise.

  • @SinaRiahi-ow1zk
    @SinaRiahi-ow1zk 11 месяцев назад +2

    Feru de l ' Histoire universelle et connaissant les anglais, je dois dire que Napoléon était le cauchemar des anglais des décennies bien après sa disparition , ils le craignaient et ils étaient fascinés de sa puissance , Napoléon Bonaparte fut le plus grand général, jamais égalé de l Histoire universelle.

  • @xdarkrabbitcesare4124
    @xdarkrabbitcesare4124 2 года назад +8

    Qui n’aurais point souhaité se retrouver au côté de sont l’empereur durant cette triste journée où il démontra son courage & c’est tripe au côté des valeureux soldat de l’empire. 🇫🇷🇫🇷 vive Bonaparte

  • @perfect.player
    @perfect.player 2 года назад +6

    Австрийцы видимо очень ненавидят эту речку, потому что все пушки стреляли только в нее

    • @marcsole4261
      @marcsole4261 2 года назад

      больше нет рыбы

  • @diorion15
    @diorion15 Год назад +1

    In Japan, a cartoonist named Tetsuya Hasegawa draws cartoons about Napoleon. It's very interesting, so I recommend it☺️

  • @Nicolas-Vive-Le-Christ-Roi
    @Nicolas-Vive-Le-Christ-Roi 2 года назад +5

    Napoléon était un grand stratège, même un très grand. On lui doit les armées modernes à base de corps et tant d'autres choses. Mais ce n'est pas le plus grand dirigeant de France pour moi, on a eu Philippe Auguste ou Saint Louis qui n'hésitaient pas à se battre au côté de leurs hommes même quand ils étaient blessés

  • @comunismocacaprogrescaca7262
    @comunismocacaprogrescaca7262 2 года назад

    Desde España a la isla de Santa Elena y con depresion

  • @creamyrma6609
    @creamyrma6609 2 года назад +14

    Обязательно куплю себе картину Наполеон на Аркольском мосту

    • @igoros54
      @igoros54 2 года назад

      ....через Березину ))) 😄😁

  • @mandalorian.212
    @mandalorian.212 2 года назад +1

    🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🥁 Vive le GRAND Empereur 🥁🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷

  • @MrAlkylation
    @MrAlkylation 2 года назад +6

    Quelle époque formidable! la vie avait un sens au moins et on ne s'ennuyait pas! Le vrai courage était valorisé!
    Rien à voir avec le monde d'aujourd'hui!

    • @p-esimiste3274
      @p-esimiste3274 2 года назад +2

      Oui dites... Comme c'était formidable d'aller se faire étriper de plomb à 20 ans pour la folie d'un seul homme. La guerre 39/45 aussi, quelle époque formidable. Ça c'est du sens!

    • @arthureroma8762
      @arthureroma8762 2 года назад

      Naïf

    • @MrAlkylation
      @MrAlkylation 2 года назад +1

      @@p-esimiste3274 Tu vois ça comme ça car tu penses individualiste. Eux ils se battaient pour un destin commun.

    • @p-esimiste3274
      @p-esimiste3274 2 года назад

      @@MrAlkylation ba oui, le destin de mourrir ensemble, c'est super! Puis surtout on a vu ce que ça a donné. Napoléon a quand même tout perdu. Et la République ce n'est pas mieux qu'avant quand on voit ce qu'il se passe depuis deux siècles. Vas t'en toi mourrir pour un meilleur destin, toi qui n'est pas individualiste, il y a plein de combats à mener. De toute façon la pensée principale de mon message est de trouver ça totalement ridicule de dire que c'était une époque formidable. On peut souligner la mentalité, la détermination, mais plein de combats nobles sont mené à notre siècle aussi, sauf qu'on en parle pas. Les gens comme vous s'en foutent. Vous préférez bander devant un symbole de puissance(ce que vous ne serez jamais) qui n'a finalement fait que des milliers de mort pour rien et dire que'' ça, c'était le bon temps''.

    • @MrAlkylation
      @MrAlkylation 2 года назад +1

      @@p-esimiste3274 Mort pour rien non je crois pas.

  • @marcusguanio1290
    @marcusguanio1290 28 дней назад

    He got the nickname of the "petit caporal" at Lodi, not at Arcole. But this scene could double as Lodi, and is still top-notch.

  • @thefrenchspacer
    @thefrenchspacer Год назад +4

    He truly is the Alexander of his time

    • @habazlambazazathe6th989
      @habazlambazazathe6th989 Год назад +1

      ok french fries..alexander the great conquered the whole known world unlike the frenchies

    • @thefrenchspacer
      @thefrenchspacer Год назад

      @@habazlambazazathe6th989 I was comparing more his tactical genius and way to fight among his troops. One can also argue Napoleon opposition was much stronger than the one to Alexander but its debatable.

  • @vcab6875
    @vcab6875 8 месяцев назад

    “Courage is contagious. When a brave man takes a stand, the spines of others are stiffened”
    Billy Graham

  • @bekkorim7296
    @bekkorim7296 2 года назад +3

    💯💯😍

  • @matthewdelmiro87
    @matthewdelmiro87 2 года назад +1

    Vive l'empereur! 🇫🇷

  • @albertoalbores3842
    @albertoalbores3842 2 года назад +5

    La batalla se gana en la línea del frente no desde un trono.

    • @Disappeared...
      @Disappeared... 2 года назад

      Всё битвый выигрывают с трона командующие на карте придумывая стратегию, а уже после войска просто выполняют эту стратегию

  • @bilplaymo6121
    @bilplaymo6121 Год назад +2

    the bridge or Arcole, one of the first courage an rage action of Naopléon Leader....So? : VIVE L'EMPIRE !

  • @dominiquebeaulieu
    @dominiquebeaulieu 2 года назад +3

    Il a manqué de vision pour avoir vendu la Louisiane … et attaqué la Sainte Russie 🇷🇺.

  • @eduardodiaz7875
    @eduardodiaz7875 Год назад +1

    Ese NAPOLEON ERA UN GENICIDA NO SE COMO HACEN PELICULAS DE ESTE TIPO , QUE O TIENEN MAS HEROES LOS FRANCESES , NO TIENE HISTORIA LOS FRACHUTES.

  • @marcinszymanski9254
    @marcinszymanski9254 2 года назад +15

    We used to say in Poland that we had a lot of Kings but the only one Emperor. However I don't believe that he will make such a stupid charge on bridge.

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад +10

      *appear where you are not expected. -Sun Tzu

    • @fuckyoutube9305
      @fuckyoutube9305 2 года назад +1

      this is just a movie, if this happened in real life Napoleon would of died in the first volley whilst they were crossing. The plot armour is very powerful

    • @fuckyoutube9305
      @fuckyoutube9305 2 года назад +1

      @@LeGrandConsilium
      except they fully expected him to try and cross the bridge, which is why it was so heavily deffended

    • @marcinszymanski9254
      @marcinszymanski9254 2 года назад +1

      @@fuckyoutube9305 yes I know, that way I don't understand why they are making such a scene in movie which should present wisdom of Napoleon.

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад

      @@fuckyoutube9305 yes but they were probably not expecting a frontal rush on the bridge, napoleon overestimated them, he should have built a bridge further from the start (which he will do the next day and won easily)

  • @MichaelMilesDavid
    @MichaelMilesDavid 3 месяца назад

    Vive Bonaparte ! Vive l'Empereur !

  • @НеТанкист-н3я
    @НеТанкист-н3я 2 года назад +5

    Да Здраствует Бонапарт!

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman6101 8 месяцев назад +1

    BOOOO!

  • @zukoulou7464
    @zukoulou7464 2 года назад +4

    Certains wokes veulent déboulonner les statues de Napoléon...

    • @thibaultbushido3540
      @thibaultbushido3540 2 года назад

      Ils ont qu’à détruire l’arc de triomphe aussi ! Et le théâtre romain d’Orange tant qu’à faire !
      Bin oui les romains étaient des esclavagistes, il faudrait même changer le nom de la ville et détruire toutes les œuvres d’art !
      Mais où va-t-on ?

    • @LeGrandConsilium
      @LeGrandConsilium  2 года назад

      pour chaque statue déboulonnée une vidéo 😉

  • @camaradadimitry
    @camaradadimitry 2 года назад

    You make me proud son...