Histoire du Consulat et de l'Empire, (Vol. 12 / 20) by Adolphe Thiers

(8 User reviews)   1591
By Aria Cooper Posted on Jan 25, 2026
In Category - Household Systems
Thiers, Adolphe, 1797-1877 Thiers, Adolphe, 1797-1877
French
Okay, history friends, I need to talk about a volume that feels less like reading history and more like watching a slow-motion car crash you can't look away from. This is Adolphe Thiers's twelfth volume on Napoleon's empire, and it covers 1812. You know the year. It's the one with the snow, the retreat, and the complete unraveling of a man who thought he was invincible. Forget dry facts; Thiers was there (almost). He talked to the generals, read the letters, and he lays it all out with this gripping, tragic energy. This isn't just about battles; it's about the moment Napoleon's luck ran out and his entire world started to freeze and crack. If you've ever wondered how a single campaign could break the unbreakable, this is your book. It's brutal, detailed, and completely absorbing.
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Adolphe Thiers wasn't just a historian; he was a political insider who wrote this massive history of the Consulate and Empire while many of the players were still alive. Volume 12 zeroes in on the catastrophic year of 1812 and the Russian campaign.

The Story

This book picks up with Napoleon at his peak, commanding an army of over half a million men from across Europe as he invades Russia. Thiers walks us through the strategic reasoning (flawed as it was), the early clashes, and the long, empty march to Moscow. Then comes the capture of a deserted, burning city that was supposed to be the prize. The real story—the heartbreaking one—is the retreat. Thiers details the collapse: the punishing cold, the desperate hunger, the breakdown of discipline, and the relentless attacks from Russian forces. It's a step-by-step account of how the Grand Armée simply ceased to exist. The volume ends with Napoleon abandoning his army to race back to Paris, his power and myth critically wounded.

Why You Should Read It

What makes Thiers special is his access. He writes with the urgency of someone piecing together a recent disaster, full of firsthand reports and official correspondence. You get a clear sense of Napoleon's stubbornness, his generals' doubts, and the sheer scale of the suffering. Thiers doesn't paint Napoleon as a monster or a pure hero; he shows you a brilliant leader making a colossally arrogant mistake and then being utterly powerless to stop the consequences. Reading this, you feel the weight of that terrible winter and the shockwaves it sent through Europe. It's history as high-stakes drama.

Final Verdict

This is for the reader who already has a basic timeline of the Napoleonic Wars and wants to dive deep into the most famous disaster. It's perfect for military history fans who love campaign details, but also for anyone fascinated by stories of hubris and downfall. Be warned: it's a dense, old-school history (it's volume 12 of 20, after all), so it requires some commitment. But if you stick with it, you're rewarded with one of the most authoritative and compelling contemporary accounts of an empire beginning to crack under the ice.



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Andrew Hernandez
2 years ago

Surprisingly enough, the plot twists are genuinely surprising. I will read more from this author.

Joseph Robinson
1 month ago

From the very first page, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. Absolutely essential reading.

Elizabeth Wilson
1 year ago

The fonts used are very comfortable for long reading sessions.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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