The Battle of Waterloo (18 June 1815) was the last major engagement of the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815), fought by a French army under Emperor Napoleon I (r. 1804-1814; 1815) against two armies of the Seventh Coalition. Waterloo resulted in the end of both Napoleon's career and the First French Empire and is often considered one of history's most important battles.

On 1 March 1815, Napoleon returned from exile to regain control of his empire, beginning the period of the Hundred Days. The great powers of Europe responded immediately by branding him an outlaw and declaring war. The decisive Battle of Waterloo was fought between the towns of Mont-Saint-Jean and Waterloo in modern Belgium, then part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Napoleon's objective was to crush the Anglo-allied army of Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, before it could be reinforced by a nearby Prussian army under Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher. Napoleon nearly succeeded in his goal when his men captured the farmhouse of La Haye Sainte and stood poised to break through the allied center. However, the timely arrival of several Prussian corps and a failed charge by the French Imperial Guard dashed Napoleon's hopes of victory. Four days after his defeat at Waterloo, Napoleon abdicated for a second time and was exiled to the island of St. Helena in the South Atlantic, where he would die six years later.

The Battle of Waterloo has often been regarded as one of the most decisive battles in history; it brought an end to the Napoleonic period and ushered in a new political era known as the Concert of Europe. Additionally, Waterloo marked an end to nearly 23 years of constant warfare that had devastated continental Europe since the Battle of Valmy in September 1792. After Waterloo, Europe enjoyed decades of relative peace, as the great powers did not fight another major war until the Crimean War (1853-1856). Still, the importance of the Battle of Waterloo is sometimes overstated; historians have argued that the odds against Napoleon were impossibly high, and had he not been defeated at Waterloo, he likely would have met his end on some other battlefield shortly thereafter

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  • GalaxyBrain [they/them]
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    edit-2
    4 months ago

    Working on an insustrial/noise project with a pal. We've got a third band member who is our electrical engineer. We've got, custom amps, a theremin, keys, some of the weirdest homemade pedals, a bass, the body of a bass that we nailed to a broken piano that has metal strings so we hjng it on its side, nailed the bass to the inside by the neck, turned plugged it in and hit the strings with tools, it sounds like building falling over. We have a drum kit made of contact mics. It's been a recording only thing for now but if we were to play live and crank the volume I'm pretty sure we'd be medically unsafe.

    He's doing a Brighter Death Now solo thing I'm doing like if gothy Italian disco with harsh noise elements. Annie Claudette Dechenne and Farah have been huge new faves and inspiration but tmin general the Italians Do It Better label has been huge for me musically and gotten me out of a rut. Working together it's closer to very very industrial when it was just German people and really weird brits throwing chains at people.