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  1. 26 cze 2024 · This map of Europe in 1812 depicts the continent during the height of French power during the Napoleonic Wars. The boundaries and political entities shown are reflective of the territorial changes brought about by Napoleon Bonapartes conquests and alliances.

  2. The French invasion of Russia, also known as the Russian campaign (French: Campagne de Russie), the Second Polish War, and in Russia as the Patriotic War of 1812 (Russian: Оте́чественная война́ 1812 го́да, romanized: Otéchestvennaya voyná 1812 góda), was initiated by Napoleon with the aim of compelling the Russian ...

  3. 21 wrz 2021 · In March 1812 the Austrians agreed to supply 30,000 men to support a French invasion of Russia. In return Napoleon guaranteed the integrity of the Ottoman Empire and promised to restore the Illyrian provinces to Austria in exchange for Galicia, which was to be given to a reconstituted Poland.

  4. 22 mar 2019 · The Frenchman Charles-Joseph Minard’s figurative maps of the French army’s loss during Napoleons campaign against Russia in 1812-13 is one of the field’s classics. Research on data visualization. Graphs, charts and colorful maps.

  5. This visualization depicts Napoleon's disastrous march to Moscow, in the winter of 1812. Beginning at the Polish-Russian border, the maroon flow-line shows the size of the Grand Army (initially 422,000) as it progressed through Russia.

  6. Charles Minard's 1869 map of Napoleon's march on Moscow in 1812, a thematic flow map depicting the heavy human losses Napoleon's army suffered using an ever-thinning line. The beige and...

  7. 30 maj 2013 · DataViz History: Charles Minard’s Flow Map of Napoleon’s Russian Campaign of 1812 – Polotsk, Smolensk and on to Borodino. Continuing The March. Since Minard’s map is in French, I have provided an English language version for us to use as we discuss the flow of Napoleon’s march in detail. [2] Polotsk, Smolensk and on to Borodino.

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