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      RITES of PEACE

       The Fall of Napoleon & the Congress of Vienna

      ADAM ZAMOYSKI

      Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       10: Battlefield Diplomacy

       11: Paris Triumph

       12: Peace

       13: The London Round

       14: Just Settlements

       15: Setting the Stage

       16: Points of Order

       17: Notes and Balls

       18: Kings’ Holiday

       19: A Festival of Peace

       20: Guerre de Plume

       21: Political Carrousel

       22: Explosive Diplomacy

       23: Dance of War

       24: War and Peace

       25: The Saxon Deal

       26: Unfinished Business

       27: The Flight of the Eagle

       28: The Hundred Days

       29: The Road to Waterloo

       30: Wellington’s Victory

       31: The Punishment of France

       32: Last Rites

       33: Discordant Concert

       34: The Arrest of Europe

       Bibliography

       Index

       About the Author

       Notes

       By the Same Author

       Praise

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Introduction

      The reconstruction of Europe at the Congress of Vienna is probably the most seminal episode in modern history. Not only did the congress redraw the map entirely. It determined which nations were to have a political existence over the next hundred years and which were not. It imposed an ideology on the whole Continent, derived from the interests of four great powers. It attempted to set in stone the agreement between those powers, with the result that their expansionist urges were deflected into Africa and southern Asia. It entirely transformed the conduct of international affairs. Its consequences, direct and indirect, include all that has taken place in Europe since, including aggressive nationalism, Bolshevism, fascism, the two world wars and, ultimately, the creation of the European Union.

      The action was played out in a dramatic series of shifts of fortune, by some of the most fascinating characters of European history. At its heart stood Napoleon, fighting desperately for his throne, yet undermining his chances with every move he made and seeming to court disaster with apparent abandon. On the other side, Tsar Alexander of Russia, by now convinced of a divine calling to save the world, could not see that he posed a threat to it in the eyes of everyone else. The consummate political puppeteer Metternich excelled himself as he cajoled and manipulated in order to mould events to his own vision of a safe world. The vulpine Talleyrand weaved about in a desperate attempt to save something for France, and himself, from the wreckage of Napoleon’s empire. The eminently likeable Castlereagh, a thoroughly decent man in every respect, found himself cutting up nations and trading souls as ruthlessly as any practitioner of realpolitik. A host of other characters took their places in this great carnival at one time or another, including the Duke of Wellington, who revealed himself to be as good a statesman as he was a general, and a fascinating array of women, who played on the passions and frustrated ambitions of the great men of Europe, leading to moments of high tragedy and low farce. From gore-spattered battlefield and roadside hovel to the gilded

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