What are your sources on that? And marauding does not necessarily result in deaths. The soldiers were allowed to plunder, not to murder.K. A. Pital wrote:Except when I look at the civilian casualty count, it does not look as if France inflicted disproportional civilian casualties on its enemies.
Yeah, as it shows that the high liberal ideas of Napoleon were worth nothing when he wanted the resources.And please, Haiti is your counterexample?
A) Napoleon was an absolutist who crushed any dissent against his rule in far more bloodier terms. Look at the conduct of himself and his troops in Spain. He also had political opponents killed and even murdered people who had not even plotted against him.How about reinstalling the Inquisition in Spain and restoring the ridiculous Bourbon monarchy in France proper with persecution of republicans and atheists? How about subjecting Europe to absolutism and religious terror?
B) As bad as the Bourbons or the Inquisition was, I'd have to be convinced that the death toll from their actions was higher than that of the wars caused by Napoleon invading Europe to consider them worse than Napoleon. You don't get to claim the moral high ground if you leave the ground covered in Blood.
He also caused far more suffering, death and destruction than any of the bastards above. His invasion of Spain alone wrecked the country completely that even fifty years later they had not recovered from it and can therefore be blamed for all the wars that resulted from that disintegration as well.Perhaps Napoleon was not quite the greatest reformer of his age, but sure as hell he was more of a reformer than the bastards who did what I described above.
Go ahead, pull them up regarding conduct of the British during the Napoleonic Wars. Or you can remember what I think of the British Empire and then maybe consider that I am right when I am telling you that Napoleon's devastation was far outside the norm, even for his age.Harrowing details can be found in plenty of places that were plundered and ravaged by the British, that much I can tell even without books.