#4444630 - 10/20/18 10:38 PM
Waterloo
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Alicatt
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Today my wife and I went to Charleroi to pick up a friend that had just flown in. On the way back from the airport we decided to go visit the Waterloo Lion and the site of the Battle of Waterloo. Alas we were late getting there as our friend's flight had been delayed so we only got to see the lion and the panorama of the battle. This was my first visit and the third for my wife, the last time she was here was on the way back from dropping off me at the airport so I could hurry back to look after my very ill brother, while she was at the top of the mound with our youngest son she got a phone call to say that my brother had passed away about the time I got on the aircraft. So it was with this in the back of my mind when I was climbing the stairs to the top of the mound. Butte de Lion The mound is made from sand and earth taken from each of the countries that fought against Napoleon Napoleon The round house that contains the panorama of the battle of Waterloo The fields where the battle was fought Layout of the battle part of the painting of the panorama, the panorama is 110m long and 12m high and depicts the battle at around 18:00 on the 18th June 1815 In the background you can see Napoleon on his horse Marengo leading his staff More pictures, including a couple of panoramic shots: https://imgur.com/a/zGoGXW4
Chlanna nan con thigibh a so's gheibh sibh feoil Sons of the hound come here and get flesh Clan Cameron
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#4444667 - 10/21/18 07:27 AM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: rwatson]
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Alicatt
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Thanks for the post Alicatt very impressive !! Thanks, we were just too late to be able to go into the museum and also we were too late to take advantage of their VR headsets, you can hire them and then look around the battle site and see the battle unfold in front of you. I have made a note that I have to go back with more time and see the rest of the exhibition. Forgot to put a link in for the site: http://www.waterloo1815.be/index.php?page=Home
Last edited by Alicatt; 10/21/18 07:29 AM. Reason: add link to the location
Chlanna nan con thigibh a so's gheibh sibh feoil Sons of the hound come here and get flesh Clan Cameron
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#4444672 - 10/21/18 09:45 AM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: Alicatt]
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BD-123
Old Scroat
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Old Scroat
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Naunton Beauchamp Worcestershi...
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A most atmospheric and poignant image of the silhouetted mound against a dramatic cloudscape, considering the associations with the passing of your brother Alicatt.
Two years after the mound was constructed, it is said that on visiting, Wellington was outraged, exclaiming, "They have altered my field of battle!". This post has made me want to re-visit the film again, considered to be one of the most spectacular and authentic historic cinematic works ever made. Only error I could deduce was the British troops singing 'Boney was a warrior' a naval 'long drag shanty' which wasn't penned until some years after: Boney was a warrior Away, a- yah! A warrior and a terrier Jean Francois!
Boney fought the Russians Away, a- yah! The Russians and the Prussians. Jean Francois!
Moscow was a-blazing Away, a- yah! And Boney was a-raging. Jean Francois!
Boney went to Elba Away, a- yah! Boney he came back again. Jean Francois!
Boney went to Waterloo Away, a- yah! There he got his overthrow. Jean Francois!
Then they took him off again Away, a- yah! Aboard the Billy Ruffian. Jean Francois!
He went to Saint Helena, Away, a- yah! There he was a prisoner, Jean Francois!
Boney broke his heart and died Away, a- yah! Away in Saint Helena Jean Francois!
I recommend the FutureLearn free online course; "Wellington and the Battle of Waterloo" if anyone is interested in this period of history.
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#4444676 - 10/21/18 10:49 AM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: BD-123]
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Alicatt
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A most atmospheric and poignant image of the silhouetted mound against a dramatic cloudscape, considering the associations with the passing of your brother Alicatt.
Two years after the mound was constructed, it is said that on visiting, Wellington was outraged, exclaiming, "They have altered my field of battle!". This post has made me want to re-visit the film again, considered to be one of the most spectacular and authentic historic cinematic works ever made. Only error I could deduce was the British troops singing 'Boney was a warrior' a naval 'long drag shanty' which wasn't penned until some years after: Boney was a warrior Away, a- yah! <snip> I recommend the FutureLearn free online course; "Wellington and the Battle of Waterloo" if anyone is interested in this period of history. Yeah it was quite poignant, it was my wife's friend that took the pic through the car window as we were driving up, I did slow off so she could get the pic through a gap in the hedge, that was my sum total contribution to the picture By the time we cot to the mound the clouds had almost passed and all I could get was the Butt(e) of the lion in the second picture, all pics were taken with phones. "Boney was a warrior" was sung with great gusto in the school I went to, and it was a regular in the music lessons, so I remember it well. I don't have the Waterloo film but I do feel like going and watching Sharpe's Waterloo again.
Chlanna nan con thigibh a so's gheibh sibh feoil Sons of the hound come here and get flesh Clan Cameron
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#4444685 - 10/21/18 12:01 PM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: Alicatt]
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KraziKanuK
Veteran
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Ottawa Canada
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22 June. This morning I went to visit the field of battle, which is a little beyond the village of Waterloo, on the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean; but on arrival there the sight was too horrible to behold. I felt sick in the stomach and was obliged to return. The multitude of carcasses, the heaps of wounded men with mangled limbs unable to move, and perishing from not having their wounds dressed or from hunger, as the Anglo-allies were, of course, obliged to take their surgeons and waggons with them, formed a spectacle I shall never forget. The wounded, both of the Anglo-allies and the French, remain in an equally deplorable state. — Major W. E. Frye.
There was only 16 squadrons of RAF fighters that used 100 octane during the BoB. The Fw190A could not fly with the outer cannon removed. There was no Fw190A-8s flying with the JGs in 1945.
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#4444690 - 10/21/18 01:01 PM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: PanzerMeyer]
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Alicatt
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Outstanding post Alicatt and thanks for posting those pics. You really do need to get the film on DVD. Amazon should have a copy.
Thanks, I was thinking of yourself when I posted the pictures Film is available on prime so I have it on my list to watch soon, thanks.
Chlanna nan con thigibh a so's gheibh sibh feoil Sons of the hound come here and get flesh Clan Cameron
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#4444802 - 10/22/18 04:46 AM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: Alicatt]
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Joined: Jun 2005
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Sluggish Controls
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Hong Kong
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Thx for sharing !
For some obscure reasons Napoleon Bonaparte is somehow still considered a great head of state in France. That little Corsican despot managed to rack up some 5 millions casualties (military and civilians) during his Napoleonic Wars. Not too shabby for that time.
Cheers, Slug
"Major Burns isn't saying much of anything, Sir. I think he's formulating the answer..." - Radar - M*A*S*H
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#4444824 - 10/22/18 01:02 PM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: KraziKanuK]
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Joined: Apr 2006
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BD-123
Old Scroat
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Old Scroat
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Naunton Beauchamp Worcestershi...
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22 June. This morning I went to visit the field of battle, which is a little beyond the village of Waterloo, on the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean; but on arrival there the sight was too horrible to behold. I felt sick in the stomach and was obliged to return. The multitude of carcasses, the heaps of wounded men with mangled limbs unable to move, and perishing from not having their wounds dressed or from hunger, as the Anglo-allies were, of course, obliged to take their surgeons and waggons with them, formed a spectacle I shall never forget. The wounded, both of the Anglo-allies and the French, remain in an equally deplorable state. — Major W. E. Frye. Further grisly outcome from the war was the exploitation of the corpses to produce 'Waterloo teeth' dentures made from the extracted teeth of the dead.
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#4444829 - 10/22/18 01:20 PM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: Sluggish Controls]
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PanzerMeyer
Pro-Consul of Florida
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Pro-Consul of Florida
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Miami, FL USA
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For some obscure reasons Napoleon Bonaparte is somehow still considered a great head of state in France. That little Corsican despot managed to rack up some 5 millions casualties (military and civilians) during his Napoleonic Wars. Not too shabby for that time.
Cheers, Slug
They are not obscure reasons. Ironically, Napoleon was quite the "progressive" for his time. That is why the old established monarchies like the ones in Russia, Austria and Prussia were alarmed by his rise to power. They did not want the ideas of the French Revolution spreading to their empires.
“Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.”
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#4444874 - 10/22/18 07:12 PM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: PanzerMeyer]
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Joined: May 2010
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Alicatt
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Ice Cold in Alex or Eating in ...
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For some obscure reasons Napoleon Bonaparte is somehow still considered a great head of state in France. That little Corsican despot managed to rack up some 5 millions casualties (military and civilians) during his Napoleonic Wars. Not too shabby for that time.
Cheers, Slug
They are not obscure reasons. Ironically, Napoleon was quite the "progressive" for his time. That is why the old established monarchies like the ones in Russia, Austria and Prussia were alarmed by his rise to power. They did not want the ideas of the French Revolution spreading to their empires. Also the British establishment were alarmed by his progressive ideas and that was one of the main reasons that Britain had to neutralise him.
Chlanna nan con thigibh a so's gheibh sibh feoil Sons of the hound come here and get flesh Clan Cameron
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#4444970 - 10/23/18 08:37 AM
Re: Waterloo
[Re: Mad Max]
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Joined: Mar 2007
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Aullido
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I often wonder about Napoleon and his significance. Imagine for a moment that he beat both the Brits and the Russians and established a truly European State. He had no capable successor and the whole edifice would have fallen apart like Alexander's but with less lasting effect on his death. Universal metric system and democracy. (I know they were created before, but without Napoleon they would have not spread to the rest of the world so fast.)
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Exodus
by RedOneAlpha. 04/18/24 05:46 PM
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