MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · October 14 · 1806

ON THIS DAY · 14 OCTOBER 1806

Jena–Auerstedt

Map: Jena–Auerstedt
14 OCTOBER 1806 · THE AGE OF REVOLUTIONS, 1775–1848

14 Oct 1806 — Prussia’s legendary army is destroyed in twin battles fought the same day. Napoleon enters Berlin thirteen days later.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

Follow the red arrows in order — they are one career. 1796: an unknown 26-year-old takes the Republic’s neglected Army of Italy over the coastal hills and, in a year of improvised battles, knocks Austria out of the war (watch northern Italy turn tan: the Cisalpine Republic, first of the “sister republics”). 1798: Egypt — strategic fantasy, tactical victory at the Pyramids, naval catastrophe when Nelson burns the fleet at Aboukir; the general abandons the army and sails home to a hero’s welcome, because news of victories travels faster than accounts. 1799: the coup of 18 Brumaire. The Revolution, exhausted by terror and corruption, trades its liberty for order and gets both: the Code Civil (1804) — equality before the law, careers open to talent, property secured, wives and colonies pointedly excluded — is the Revolution made administrable, and it will outlast every battle on this map.

From Chapter 6 — Napoleon Ascendant of The Age of Revolutions, 1775–1848 (JUL 1807).

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The Age of Revolutions, 1775–1848
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