CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

'Vive l'Empereur!' Napoleon finally gets to invade England

Published: 31 May 2015 - 12:28 pm | Last Updated: 13 Jan 2022 - 12:33 pm

 

 

Bury St Edmunds, United Kingdom---A squadron of Napoleon's army pant up the path that leads to Stoney Hill Wood, a copse of beech trees chosen for an ambush of the Duke of Wellington's redcoats.
"Vive l'Empereur!" shout the troops as they advance through the English countryside. "Vive Hollande!" shouts one joker, before being reprimanded.
Staying in character is vital to the business of re-enactment, and 300 British enthusiasts fighting for both sides are in training for one of their biggest ever gigs -- restaging the Battle of Waterloo to mark its 200th anniversary.
Below the corpse, near a little stone bridge, two French soldiers in grey coats lie on their backs as if dead.
They have been motionless on the grass for the past hour, despite the risk of sunburn.
"I will die this weekend, and more than once," said Brian Bullock, a 61-year-old who works in a psychiatric hospital but for now is transformed into a French sapper.
He cuts an impressive figure with his salt and pepper beard, loose-fitting white leather apron, a sawtooth sabre and heavy axe hanging from his belt.
Paul Wisken, 60, is a retired IT support worker.
Today, he is a corporal in an elite French unit, although he has in the past played a duke as well as ordinary soldiers.
"I have had hundreds of lives," he told AFP.
The troops will be part of 5,000 re-enactors in Belgium on June 18, bringing to life a legendary battle in which Wellington and the Prussian general, Gebhard von Bluecher, won a definitive victory over Napoleon.
- Cannon roar -
Practising their manoeuvres in the grounds of the 18th-century Ickworth House, deep in the English countryside, the British enthusiasts are a glorious sight in their bright uniforms, with cannon roaring and muskets crackling.
This level of historic accuracy doesn't come cheap.
"When I was a general I had to pay 600 euros ($655) just for the hat," Wisken said. "The average soldier is wearing about 1,300 to 1,500 euros worth of equipment."
Fortunately, there are many good deals to be had on the Internet for shakos -- military caps -- sabres and rifles, and those here believe the outlay is well worth it.
"When you have a high pressure job, it's a way to leave the 21st century behind and just become somebody else for the weekend," Wisken said.

AFP