The Field

Christmas Eve with Napoleon

Christmas Eve 1808, northern Spain, the 16th year of war with revolutionary France. “Ever since the beginning of the month the weather had been colder than it usually is in England at this season,” wrote Captain Alexander Gordon of the 15th King’s Royal Hussars a week earlier. “For the last five or six days the frost had become most intense and the roads very slippery... It continued snowing all night, and in the morning the ground was covered to the depth of eight or 10 inches.”

Armies in those days usually withdrew to winter quarters when the first frosts came but not this year. In 1807, Napoleon Bonaparte had turned on his former ally, Spain, putting his brother on the throne, and in May 1808 the Spanish had risen against him. A British army landed in Portugal to assist them, and Bonaparte arrived to take personal command and throw them out.

The force, soon to grow to 42,000 men, was the largest that Britain had sent abroad since the Duke of Marlborough’s day. Although small by continental standards, it was all that London could spare. Indeed, the foreign secretary, George Canning, warned its commander, Lieutenant-General Sir John Moore, that it was “not merely a considerable part of the dispensable force

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Field

The Field3 min read
Horse Trials And High Society
Dafydd Jones made his name photographing Oxbridge swells and debutante balls in the 1980s. Looking back, their fresh faces seem strangely dated, their taffeta and askew bow ties as distant as 1920s Flapper parties. Yet this celebrated lensman with im
The Field4 min read
Perfection In A Pinch
The brown crab can be found all around the British Isles and is by far our biggest species. The female is impressively productive, laying between 250,000 and three million eggs a year. Pot-caught crab is the most sustainable choice, as it is species
The Field3 min read
Floral Fireworks
I SOMETIMES WISH we had called our daughter Iris, although she might not have thanked us for it. For me, it is a name of infinite romance, since Iris was the Greek goddess whose task it was to carry messages between heaven and earth, crossing between

Related Books & Audiobooks