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Let's review a little bit of what Napoleon was up to
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going into the war of the Third Coalition,
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which really does establish Napoleon
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as the dominant figure in Europe.
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So in 1799, he takes power.
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First with two other consuls,
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but then he declares himself First Consul.
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So he takes power.
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He becomes First-- let me put that in capital letters--
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First Consul.
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Then in 1802, actually before I get to 1802.
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Let me say what he did in 1800.
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In 1800, remember when he took power,
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we were still in the war of the Second Coalition.
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We talked about that a little bit. Napoleon..or
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France had lost ground, they had lost a lot of
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what they had gained in the First Coalition in Italy.
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The Austrians had taken it back.
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So Napoleon decides to take charge, cross the Alps.
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This is a picture of him.
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This is Napoleon crossing the Alps.
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Napoleon crossing the Alps
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Leading the troops into the Alps to take back
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what he felt needed to be taken back from Austria.
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And then we learned in the last video that
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that essentially is what ended the First Coalition.
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So in 1800 he takes back or leaves to take back Italy.
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Leaves to take back Italy.
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And when we talk about Italy,
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we're really talking about the Kingdom of Italy,
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which was northern Italy.
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We're not talking about the Kingdom of Naples,
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which was southern Italy. Or the Papal States.
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Actually let me show you that.
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If we go all the way down here.
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You'll see when people talk about the Kingdom of Italy
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in this period of time, they're really talking about
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this region up here, which is really northern Italy.
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The Papal States are right here.
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And you had your Kingdom of Naples down there.
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Compared to modern Europe, the two countries that
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we associate with Europe today that
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really didn't exist in a unified form in the early 1800s
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were Italy and Germany.
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They were really just broken up
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into a bunch of kingdoms.
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And as I mentioned before, Germany at this point,
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that confederation of kingdoms
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was kind of referred to as the Holy Roman Empire
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where the King of Austria was referreed..had the title of
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Holy Roman Emperor.
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But he didn't necessarily...con..
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he didn't control the Holy Roman Empire
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in a very centralized fashion.
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It was actually controlled by a bunch of smaller kings.
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But anyway, let's go back to Napoleon.
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So that's him crossing the Alps in 1800.
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That ends when he takes it back.
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He defeats Austria.
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That is essentially the end of the Second Coalition.
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We learned that in the last video.
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1801 - You had your Treaty of Luneville.
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End of Second Coalition.
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They don't have a treaty with Great Britain
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until the next year, really just out of attrition.
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But that doesn't matter, it was a very short-lived treaty.
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And then in 1802,
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before we start talking about the Third Coalition,
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Napoleon gets the Constitution of the Year X passed.
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And why do you say year 10? Remember,
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they had this whole revolutionary calendar going.
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So this was.. in the revolutionary calendar
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this was the 10th year of the Revolution.
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But what's really relevant from Napoleon's point of view
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is article one. It says,
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the French people name and the senate proclaims
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Napoleon Bonaparte First Consul for Life.
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First Consul for Life.
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So, if you want to view this is kind of
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legally giving Napoleon almost a king-like status,
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in terms of him being...you know..
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it writes it in words that
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he will rule France for the rest of his life.
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Then we get to 1803.
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And actually, before I get to 1803,
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remember what's happening at the same time here.
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You had your Revolution in Haiti,
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Revolution in Haiti
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which, if you remember from those videos,
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Haiti was
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the most profitable slave colony in the world.
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Once the slaves revolted, got their freedom,
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all of a sudden not as profitable to France
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as it was before.
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And remember, the whole French Revolution started off
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because France was broke.
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So Napoleon tries to reinstate slavery.
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That essentially backfires on him.
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Dessalines catches wind of it,
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him and the other revolutionaries, so they essentially
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start antagonizing Leclerc even more.
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Leclerc and the French occupiers
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get ravaged by yellow fever.
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And Dessalines is a very aggressive general.
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So he starts losing Haiti.
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You have Rochambeau,
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if you remember from those videos, he's a, you know
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this hugely brutal figure who takes over after Leclerc.
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But we have this revolution in Haiti.
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And you can kind of say
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they're starting to lose Haiti.
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Lose Haiti
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And at the same time, and this is 1802,
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and as we're entering into 1803,
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Napoleon began to realize that
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Great Britain controls the seas.
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Great Britain - Dominant Navy.
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And because they're losing Haiti,
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which is really their main profit center,
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and Great Britain is dominant,
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Napoleon essentially gives up on North America.
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Napoleon...so Napoleon gives up North America.
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So outside of Haiti, which was
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this major profit center for the French Empire,
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they also had the territory of Louisiana,
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which is essentially the middle 1/3 of
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what we now consider to be the United States.
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And Napoleon figures out, gee, you know
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Great Britain has a dominant navy.
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I'm giving up on Haiti,
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I'm probably going to lose it anyway to Dessalines.
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Let me just give up on the entire continent.
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If I don't sell Louisiana, either Great Britain or
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the United States will probably be in a good position
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to take it from me.
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So he decides to sell...he sells Louisiana.
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So just as someone, or as an American,
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and especially an American who was born in Louisiana,
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it's fascinating
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the chain of events that led up to this.
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Because when you learn it
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from an American history point of view,
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you just say hey Thomas Jefferson,
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he was able to get Louisiana for $15 million.
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Why would someone sell, all of a sudden,
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this huge amount of territory?
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And the reason is because Napoleon figured
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he was going to lose it no matter what.
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Great Britain had this dominant navy.
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And at the same time,
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he had nothing else to protect in the area.
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The other major valuable asset there was Haiti.
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So a combination of Great Britain having this navy and
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of the slave revolt in Haiti ends up with
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the United States being able to acquire
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what's now the middle 1/3 of the continent.
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You can kind of wonder, gee, if they never did that,
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would they have ever, er, gone on to
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capture the entire west coast?
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So these small little things in history.
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And I wouldn't necessarily call these little things,
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but they lead to
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very tremendous changes in our modern world.
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But anyway, enough about that.
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So he sells Louisiana.
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Great Britain has a dominant navy.
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At first,
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Napoleon was thinking he was amassing troops up here,
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he was thinking about an invasion of Great Britain.
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But more and more it dawns on him that
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Great Britain has a dominant navy.
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Great Britain, I think,
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starts to feel a little self-confident.
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And they don't like all of the gains that
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Napoleon has gotten in the last two wars.
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So, Great Britain declares war in 1803,
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in 1803, in May 1803 -
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Great Britain.. or I could say
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United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland,
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the same thing.
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U.K. declares war.
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And you could view this
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as the beginning of the war of the Third Coalition.
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But it's not a coalition yet.
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It's just the United Kingdom. Or it's just Great Britain.
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And it really gets heated in 1805.
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In 1805, everyone else jumps in.
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And now we're talking about a real coalition.
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Now Great Britain is joined by Austria and Russia.
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And you know Austria, all the time
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in every one of these coalitions,
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they lose territory to France and especially Napoleon.
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They just want to get revenge.
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United Kingdom kind of senses that
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they control the water, they want to get revenge.
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Russia doesn't like this upstart Napoleon.
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And so they all jump in.
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And so there's two interesting angles
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of the War of the Third Coalition.
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Let me write this right here.
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This is the Third Coalition.
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And there were other people who jumped in,
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but these were the major powers.
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So this right here is the Third Coalition.
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So the first thing that happens,
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or really the two almost happen simultaneously.
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In October of 1805, the French navy gets destroyed
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by the British in the Battle of Trafalgar.
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This is Trafalgar, it's actually written here.
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Trafalgar
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And they get destroyed by Napoleon's good old friend,
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Admiral Horatio Nelson.
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So this guy was definitely a thorn in Napoleon's side.
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Horatio Nelson
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He destroyed Napoleon's ships in the Battle of the Nile
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that stranded their troops in Egypt.
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And now he comes and essentially destroys the
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French navy at the Battle of Trafalgar.
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And this is an image of it.
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And I guess the only redeeming fact
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of this battle for Napoleon was that
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near the end of the battle,
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Horatio Nelson actually gets stricken by a bullet
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and he dies at Trafalgar.
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So this really establishes.. you know the Royal Navy,
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the British navy was already dominant,
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destroying the French navy,
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which was the only navy that
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could in some way compete on any level.
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Destroying them at Trafalgar really
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established British domination of the seas.
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This is actually an image of the Battle of Trafalgar.
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This is the battle right there.
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A bunch of ships just shooting at each other,
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you can't really make out what's happening.
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And just to connect that to modern day Great Britain,
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or the modern day London,
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this right here is an image of Trafalgar Square.
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It is named after the Battle of Trafalgar,
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which established Britain is dominant in the seas.
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That is Trafalgar Square in London.
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Trafalgar Square
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And if you go there, you will see Nelson's column.
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This is Nelson's column right there,
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named after Horatio Nelson. Nelson's column.
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And at the very top of it, there's a little figure,
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or it's probably pretty large,
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but little relative to the column,
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of Horatio Nelson himself.
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So that was a bit of an aside,
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but this occurred during the war of the Third Coalition.
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So Napoleon's navy is destroyed.
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But he doesn't give up.
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He's just like, OK, oh well,
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I can't do much beyond you,
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but in Europe I can still do a lot of damage.
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So what he does is he takes his troops that..
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He had given up on actually attacking Britain by sea.
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He realized that he could never realistically do that.
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Let me show you the troop movements that
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were going on at this time.
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So he had troops here that
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he had given up on actually attacking Great Britain.
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And what he does is he meets the Austrians.
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So the Austrians are amassing their troops here.
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They actually thought that there was a possibility that
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the main campaign would go in Italy.
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So they actually focused most of their troops there,
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that we'll see as a major mistake.
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But they have troops in what we can kind of view as
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southern...what is now southern Germany
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near the Black Forest.
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And then they also amassed some troops near Italy.
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And then the Russians were coming up behind.
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They weren't able to meet.
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And we're dealing with the fall,
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this is now September, October of 1805.
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And the Russians were back here
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trying to bring their troops
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to assist the Austrians in meeting Napoleon.
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And what Napoleon does, you know, all of these,
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it's always unclear on how much of it was
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tactical genius versus pure luck.
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Because they didn't have satellites,
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they didn't know where the other troops were.
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They didn't necessarily know exactly what's happening
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on a minute-by-minute basis, like armies do today.
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But what happened, it's...er.. I guess...tremendous..
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it's one of the pivotal battles in European history,
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is that Napoleon meets the Austrians at Ulm.
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Let me draw it on this map right here. At Ulm.
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So on this map they just do a very general--
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This is Napoleon meeting the Austrians
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right here at Ulm.
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There's actually a whole campaign of Uim,
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several battles.
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But it was a decisive victory at Ulm.
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And the crux of that victory was that
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Napoleon was able to fool the Austrians.
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So this is a zoomed-in version
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of what was going on here.
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This is France.
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This is the Black Forest. This is Austria right there.
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Blue is Napoleon troops, red are the Austrian troops.
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And you saw, Austria had amassed most of their troops
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on the Italian front.
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So here in Black Forest, you have your Austrian troops.
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What Napoleon did is he had General Murat
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make it look like the main force of the French
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were coming straight from the West.
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And they did that by having cavalry
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essentially giving the appearance of a major force
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coming in from here. So they came..
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So the Austrians were thinking, OK, this is the direction
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that we're going to face our main antagonism from.
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But at the same time, the bulk of the Napoleon's army--
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remember he doesn't see exactly
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how many people are here,
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they just made it look like this is the bulk of the army.
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But the bulk of the army actually did
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what they call a wheeling manoeuvre,
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where they went around the Austrian army.
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And they were able to do it much faster
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and in a much more nimble way than
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anyone would have predicted,
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because they essentially didn't have to
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carry as many supplies.
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They were doing this during the harvest season.
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And this was by design.
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If you capture enemy territory
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during the harvest season, and these are things that
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you usually don't think about
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when you learn about military battles.
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But you've got troops, you've got to feed the troops.
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If they can't capture food from the land,
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then you've got to carry supplies with you.
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And supplies are heavy it slows down your army.
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But if you do the attack during the harvest season,
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you don't have to carry food.
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You don't carry as much food.
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You can just take it from the farmers that you pass by.
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They're harvesting food as you pass by,
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you just take it, you can be fast and nimble.
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And he essentially went around the army
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and was able to attack the Austrians from this direction.
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And then essentially destroy them.
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And this is why I hinted in the last video that
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Napoleon starts to view himself as invincible.
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And this was before the Russians could come
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to actually reinforce the Austrians.
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So they did it-- by being able to do it so quickly,
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they were able to just only tackle the Austrians.
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So it was a decisive victory at Ulm.
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Let me go to the painting right there.
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This is a painting of the surrender at Ulm.
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The surrender at Ulm
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And then the combined Russian and Austrian forces,
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they essentially, you can kind of view they regrouped,
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but they re-met Napoleon's forces after Ulm.
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In another several weeks, at Austerlitz.
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And once again, Napoleon just routed them.
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And there's always a debate.
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Some of it might have been tactical genius,
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some of it might have been pure luck.
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But after routing them at Austerlitz--
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so this is Austerlitz --
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and taking so much I guess both in terms of
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casualties and prisoners from the enemy
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without incurring so much themselves,
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this really was the high point in terms of
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a battle for Napoleon. This was a high point.
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Austerlitz is what really convinced Napoleon that
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he is truly, truly a military genius.
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And that's not saying that he's not.
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But it was such a route that he started to imagine that
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he's on some level invincible.
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And so the outcome, this essentially ends
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the war of the Third Coalition.
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Ends 3rd Coalition
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And with that ending,
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Austria had to give its territory that
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it had gotten in Italy.
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So Austria had to cede the territory that it had in Italy,
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some of the territory that it had in Bavaria.
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And from, I guess just a general point of view,
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this was historically significant.
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Because until this point in time,
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this whole area was called the Holy Roman Empire,
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with the King of Austria calling himself
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the Holy Roman Emperor.
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Even though he didn't have direct control
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over all of these Germanic regions. After..this is...
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Let me go back up here.
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This is in 1805,
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or we can even say we're entering 1806,
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but in late 1805, with the end of the Third Coalition,
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now the Austrian King no longer
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calls himself the Holy Roman Emperor.
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He gives up the title.
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And this region right here is no longer called
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the Holy Roman Empire.
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It is called the Confederation of the Rhine.
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Confederation of the Rhine
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And it's essentially under the protection of Napoleon.
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And this is the first time--
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we're starting to get to a point,
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Germany won't be unified for another 60 or 70 years.
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But we're starting to get to the point that
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the German nation is escaping from
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the bounds of being the Holy Roman Empire.
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And so it's getting in that direction.
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So the Holy Roman Empire is gone.
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France gets significant territory
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from Austria, once again.
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Russia on some level is just humbled a little bit.
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And then we end in 1806, or at the end of 1805,
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with France Dominant.
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And while all of that was happening,
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it was really in 1804
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when France was only at war with Great Britain.
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The whole alliance hadn't formed yet.
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It 1804, in December--
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and this is relevant that it's a peek into his ego.
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So this is the year before Austerlitz.
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In 1804, Napoleon declares himself,
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or he crowns himself Emperor.
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Napoleon crowns himself Emperor.
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And this is a picture of him as Emperor.
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And after this point, instead of being called
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Napoleon Bonaparte, he is called Napoleon I.
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And the idea of crowning yourself Emperor,
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you might say, what's the point?
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You already were Consul for life,
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you have power for your whole life.
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But other than you get this neat title emperor,
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which probably feeds your ego quite well,
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but beyond that, this essentially establishes a dynasty.
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It now says, I'm not just a First Consul,
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I am the emperor.
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I'm Napoleon I.
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And it implies that his descendants will continue to
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reign over the French Empire.
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So on some level, he kind of
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destroys the notion of a republic.
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So we're ending the Third Coalition
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the Third Coalition with France dominant
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France is dominant in Europe.
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It has gotten all of this territory mainly from Austria.
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The Holy Roman Empire no longer exists.
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It's now the Confederation of the Rhine.
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Napoleon, after Austerlitz, thinks that he is invincible.
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And he also is now Emperor. So he has all of his,
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you know, his visions of grandeur coming true.