1815
1815 marked the decisive close of the Napoleonic Wars, with Napoleon Bonaparte's French forces suffering a crushing defeat by a coalition army led by the Duke of Wellington and Prussian Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher at the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June, compelling his second abdication and exile to Saint Helena.[1] This outcome ended the Hundred Days, Napoleon's brief resurgence after escaping Elba in March.[2] The Congress of Vienna, ongoing since 1814, produced its Final Act on 9 June, redrawing Europe's map to dismantle French conquests, restore Bourbon monarchies, and institute a balance-of-power system among Austria, Prussia, Russia, and Britain that curbed revolutionary upheavals and preserved continental peace until the mid-19th century.[3] In parallel, the United States ratified the Treaty of Ghent on 17 February, formally terminating the War of 1812 against Britain, though unaware combatants fought the Battle of New Orleans on 8 January.[4][5] Additionally, the cataclysmic April eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia ejected vast quantities of ash and sulfur into the atmosphere, initiating global cooling that precipitated crop failures and famine the following year.[6][7] These events collectively shifted power dynamics, reinforced conservative restorations, and set precedents for international diplomacy grounded in territorial equilibrium rather than ideological conquest.Events
January
On January 3, France, Austria, and Great Britain signed the Secret Treaty of Vienna, establishing a defensive alliance to oppose Russian and Prussian territorial demands in Poland and Saxony during the ongoing Congress of Vienna negotiations.[8] This tripartite agreement, kept confidential from the other allied powers, aimed to preserve a balance of power in post-Napoleonic Europe by limiting Prussian expansion into Saxony and Russian influence over Polish lands, reflecting strategic divisions among the victors of the Napoleonic Wars.[8] The month's most prominent military event occurred on January 8 with the Battle of New Orleans, the culminating clash of the War of 1812 between American forces under Major General Andrew Jackson and a British expeditionary force commanded by Major General Sir Edward Pakenham.[9] Despite the Treaty of Ghent having been ratified on December 24, 1814, to formally end hostilities, slow transatlantic communication prevented awareness on both sides, leading to the engagement.[10] Jackson's heterogeneous army of roughly 4,000 troops—including U.S. regulars, Tennessee and Kentucky militia, Louisiana creoles, Baratarian pirates, freed slaves, and free Black volunteers—entrenched along a canal line fronted by Rodriguez Canal, supported by artillery positioned on the Mississippi River levee.[11] The British, numbering about 5,300 battle-hardened veterans from the Peninsular War, advanced in columns across open fields under heavy fire, suffering devastating losses from American musketry and cannon, including grapeshot and chain shot.[12] Pakenham was mortally wounded early in the assault, along with several senior officers; British casualties totaled approximately 2,034 (killed, wounded, and captured), compared to American losses of 71.[11] [12] The American triumph, though strategically unnecessary after the peace treaty, enhanced national pride, discredited domestic critics of the war such as New England Federalists at the recently concluded Hartford Convention, and propelled Jackson toward national prominence as a military hero.[10] British aims to seize New Orleans as a bargaining chip for control over Gulf Coast trade routes and to sever Louisiana from the United States were thwarted, marking the effective end of major combat in the conflict despite its post-treaty timing.[9] In Europe, the Congress of Vienna continued amid these external developments, with the secret alliance influencing subsequent territorial settlements finalized later in the year.[8]February
On February 17, the United States Senate unanimously ratified the Treaty of Ghent, which had been signed on December 24, 1814, thereby formally concluding the War of 1812 between the United States and Great Britain.[10] The pivotal event of the month occurred on February 26, when Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from exile on the island of Elba. Sailing aboard the brig Inconstant with a small flotilla of transports and feluccas, accompanied by roughly 700 to 1,000 loyal soldiers, he departed Portoferraio at nightfall, taking advantage of the temporary absence of British and French guard ships.[13][14][15] This bold maneuver marked the onset of the Hundred Days, Napoleon's final bid for power that would culminate in renewed conflict across Europe.[16] Earlier in the month, on February 6, the U.S. state of New Jersey granted the first railroad charter in the United States to inventor John Stevens, laying early groundwork for American rail development.[17]March
On March 1, 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte landed at Golfe-Juan on the French Riviera with approximately 1,100 loyal soldiers after escaping exile on the island of Elba, marking the start of his campaign to reclaim power.[18][19] He issued a proclamation to the French people, emphasizing loyalty and the restoration of imperial glory, which helped rally initial support despite facing royalist forces under King Louis XVIII.[20] Napoleon's advance northward, known as the Route Napoléon, proceeded rapidly as troops sent to intercept him defected en masse; by March 7, he reached Grenoble without significant resistance, bolstered by the arrival of news of his escape in Vienna, prompting alarm among European monarchs.[8] On March 10, he entered Lyon, where local garrisons joined his cause, swelling his army to over 15,000 men and demonstrating the fragility of Bourbon restoration loyalty among military ranks.[8][21] By March 13, delegates at the Congress of Vienna, including representatives from Austria, Prussia, Russia, and Britain, formally declared Napoleon an outlaw, signaling unified opposition and accelerating coalition mobilization against his resurgence.[22] On March 20, Napoleon triumphantly entered Paris after Marshal Ney, previously ordered to stop him, switched allegiance; Louis XVIII fled to Ghent, ending the first Bourbon restoration and initiating the Hundred Days period of Napoleon's renewed rule.[8] This bloodless march highlighted deep-seated French ambivalence toward the post-1814 settlement, with urban crowds and veterans providing enthusiastic reception despite rural and elite divisions.[21] Elsewhere, minor conflicts persisted; on March 3, the United States declared war on the Dey of Algiers, initiating the Second Barbary War amid ongoing piracy threats to American shipping, though this received limited attention amid European upheavals.[23] In the Netherlands, a law regulated Sunday observance, reflecting post-Napoleonic administrative reforms.[23]April
On April 5, Mount Tambora on the Indonesian island of Sumbawa initiated seismic activity that escalated into the largest volcanic eruption documented in modern history by April 10.[7] The event registered a Volcanic Explosivity Index of 7, expelling an estimated 36 cubic kilometers of dense rock equivalent and vast quantities of sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere, which caused immediate pyroclastic flows, tsunamis, and lahars killing approximately 10,000 people directly on Sumbawa and neighboring islands, with total fatalities exceeding 90,000 from subsequent famine and disease.[6] [24] The atmospheric injection of aerosols resulted in a global temperature drop of about 0.4–0.7°C, contributing to anomalous weather patterns and crop failures the following year.[7] On April 6, British guards at Dartmoor Prison in Devon, England, opened fire on approximately 6,000 American prisoners of war held from the recently concluded War of 1812, resulting in seven deaths and between 31 and 60 injuries.[25] [26] The incident stemmed from a prisoner riot protesting inadequate rations, harsh conditions, and delays in repatriation despite the Treaty of Ghent's ratification in February, as British authorities awaited verification of prisoner status amid logistical challenges and ongoing hostilities elsewhere.[26] [27] A subsequent inquiry attributed the shootings to the guards' actions under Captain Thomas Shortland but deemed them justified to restore order, though American accounts emphasized disproportionate force against unarmed men.[25] Amid Napoleon's Hundred Days regime, April saw intensified preparations for war in France, including the reorganization of the Grande Armée and issuance of conscription decrees to bolster forces against the forming Seventh Coalition.[28] European monarchies, alarmed by Napoleon's return, accelerated military mobilizations, with Austria deploying over 200,000 troops toward the Rhine and Italian frontiers by month's end.[29] Concurrently, in the Neapolitan War, Austrian forces under General Heinrich von Bellegarde repelled Joachim Murat's invasion attempts, securing key crossings like the Po River in early engagements.[30] The Congress of Vienna, already convened since 1814, shifted focus from territorial settlements to coordinating an anti-French response, suspending substantive negotiations until the threat subsided.[29]May
On 2–3 May, Austrian forces under General Johann von Bianchi decisively defeated the Neapolitan army led by King Joachim Murat at the Battle of Tolentino, compelling Murat to abandon his invasion of northern Italy and flee to Corsica, thereby ending the Neapolitan War and facilitating the Bourbon restoration in Naples.[31][32] Murat's defeat stemmed from his opportunistic declaration of war on Austria in March, aiming to align with Napoleon's return, but Austrian numerical superiority—approximately 24,000 troops against Murat's 25,000, bolstered by better artillery—proved insurmountable after two days of fighting marked by Neapolitan retreats and Austrian flanking maneuvers.[8] Amid the Hundred Days, Napoleon Bonaparte reorganized French military forces, completing the formation of L'Armée du Nord under his direct command by late May, comprising around 124,000 men positioned near the Belgian frontier to counter impending Allied invasions.[21] Concurrently, on 12 May, the Allied powers—Britain, Austria, Prussia, and Russia—reaffirmed their April resolution to treat Napoleon's regime as illegitimate and mobilize for a seventh coalition war against France.[8] Royalist insurgents in western France's Vendée region relaunched uprisings on 15 May, though these remained localized and were suppressed by imperial troops.[8] Allied monarchs advanced their armies into western Germany by month's end; on 26 May, Tsar Alexander I of Russia, Emperor Francis I of Austria, and King Frederick William III of Prussia personally led a combined force exceeding 200,000 toward the Rhine, coordinating with British and Prussian troops under the Duke of Wellington and Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher for a planned convergence in Belgium.[8] On 3 May, Wellington and Blücher conferred at Tirlemont to synchronize Anglo-Prussian defenses against potential French offensives.[33] In North America, on 27 May, Missouri Territory militia under Lieutenant Grove L. Currie defeated approximately 50 Sauk and Fox warriors led by warriors including Taimah in the Battle of the Sink Hole near present-day Dardenne Prairie, resulting in several Native casualties and the dispersal of the raiding party; this skirmish, involving ambushes in a sinkhole, is regarded as the final armed clash tied to the War of 1812.[34]June
On 16 June 1815, preliminary engagements occurred at the Battle of Quatre Bras, where Anglo-Dutch forces under the Duke of Wellington repelled French attacks, preventing Napoleon Bonaparte from separating the Allied armies.[35] Simultaneously, at the Battle of Ligny, Napoleon's forces defeated Prussian troops led by Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, though the Prussians withdrew in good order rather than being decisively routed.[35] These clashes set the stage for the decisive confrontation two days later. The Battle of Waterloo took place on 18 June 1815 near the village of Waterloo in present-day Belgium, pitting Napoleon's French Imperial Army against a coalition comprising Anglo-Allied forces commanded by Wellington and Prussian troops under Blücher.[1] Despite initial French advances and heavy fighting, including the repulse of French cavalry charges and the failure of the Imperial Guard assault, the arrival of Prussian reinforcements turned the tide, leading to a French rout by evening.[1] The coalition victory ended the Napoleonic Wars' Hundred Days phase, with French losses estimated at 25,000 killed and wounded plus 8,000 captured, compared to around 24,000 coalition casualties. Following the defeat, Napoleon retreated to Paris, where political pressure mounted amid reports of military collapse and desertions.[36] On 22 June 1815, he abdicated for the second time, nominally in favor of his son Napoleon II, though the act was largely symbolic as the child was held in Austria and French legislative bodies rejected the claim.[36] A provisional government under Joseph Fouché assumed control, facilitating the restoration of Louis XVIII and negotiations with the Allied powers.[8]July
On July 3, French forces capitulated at Paris under the Convention of Saint-Cloud, agreeing to withdraw the National Guard and regular army east of the Loire River, allowing Allied troops to occupy the capital without further resistance.[8] This followed skirmishes, including a French cavalry victory at the Battle of Rocquencourt on July 1, which temporarily delayed Prussian advances but could not prevent the overall Allied momentum after Waterloo.[37] Allied armies, comprising British, Prussian, Austrian, and Russian contingents totaling over 800,000 men, entered Paris on July 6, marking the effective end of organized French military opposition to the Bourbon restoration.[8] The provisional government under Joseph Fouché, minister of police, collaborated with Talleyrand to facilitate the transition, establishing a Talleyrand-Fouché ministry on July 7 under the direction of the Count of Artois, Louis XVIII's brother.[8] Louis XVIII returned to Paris on July 8, entering the Tuileries Palace amid demonstrations of loyalty from restored royalist forces, formally ending the Hundred Days period of Napoleon's brief return to power.[38] [39] This restoration was secured by Allied guarantees, including occupation zones in France until indemnities were paid, with 150,000 troops initially stationed around Paris to enforce compliance.[8] Meanwhile, Napoleon, having fled Paris after his second abdication, reached Rochefort on July 3, where he considered escape to the United States but ultimately surrendered to British naval forces on July 15 aboard HMS Bellerophon off the Île d'Aix, stating, "I am come to throw myself on the protection of the laws of England."[39] This act precluded further French resistance under his name, as he was transported to England and later exiled to Saint Helena, with the British government rejecting French demands for his trial or execution.[38] Royalist reprisals, known as the White Terror, intensified in July, with summary executions of Bonapartist officials and soldiers in southern France, though systematic purges awaited parliamentary action later in the year.[37]August
On August 6, a United States naval squadron under Commodore Stephen Decatur concluded operations against Barbary piracy by securing treaties with Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, effectively halting tribute demands and slave-taking raids on American merchant vessels in the Mediterranean.[40] This followed swift victories in late June, including the capture of the Algerian frigate Mashuda, which compelled Dey Omar Agha to release American captives and renounce further extortion.[41] From August 7 to 8, Napoleon Bonaparte was transferred from HMS Bellerophon, where he had been held since his July surrender after Waterloo, to HMS Northumberland for transport to exile on Saint Helena.[42] The move, ordered by British authorities to prevent potential rescue attempts or legal challenges in England, marked the final stage of his isolation; Northumberland departed Plymouth on August 8 under Admiral George Cockburn, arriving at Saint Helena on October 14.[43] Between August 8 and 10, British forces under Major-General Charles Maxwell invaded Guadeloupe, the last French-held territory loyal to Napoleon's regime in the West Indies.[44] With news of Waterloo reaching the island, royalist factions had already ousted Napoleonic governor Victor Hugues, but lingering Bonapartist troops resisted; a British expedition of over 6,000 men from neighboring islands overwhelmed defenses at Basse-Terre and Pointe-à-Pitre, capturing 1,500 prisoners with minimal losses and restoring Bourbon control without a major pitched battle.[37] This action represented the concluding military engagement of the Napoleonic Wars. On August 19, French General Charles de La Bédoyère was executed by firing squad at Grenelle near Paris for treason during the Hundred Days, as part of the Second White Terror's reprisals against Napoleonic supporters.[37] La Bédoyère, who had rallied his regiment to Napoleon upon the emperor's return from Elba, attempted flight to the United States but was arrested; his swift court-martial and death—despite pleas for clemency from allies like Tsar Alexander I—exemplified the Bourbon regime's purge of officers deemed disloyal, amid broader royalist violence claiming hundreds of lives.[45]September
On September 23, the Great September Gale struck southern New England, marking the first major hurricane to hit the region in approximately 180 years. Originating as a tropical cyclone in the West Indies, it intensified into a powerful nor'easter upon landfall near Old Saybrook, Connecticut, generating storm surges up to 15 feet that flooded coastal areas across Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and parts of New York. The storm destroyed ships, homes, and wharves; uprooted forests; killed livestock; and caused crop failures, leading to water shortages lasting up to six weeks in affected areas. Estimates of human fatalities ranged from dozens to over 100, with significant economic disruption in port cities like Providence and Newport.[46][47] In Europe, efforts to consolidate the post-Napoleonic order continued amid the Bourbon Restoration in France and the redrawing of boundaries from the Congress of Vienna. On September 26, Tsar Alexander I of Russia, Emperor Francis I of Austria, and King Frederick William III of Prussia signed the Holy Alliance treaty in Paris, pledging mutual support to uphold Christian principles, monarchical legitimacy, and resistance to revolutionary ideologies. The document, framed as a fraternal union under divine providence, aimed to prevent future upheavals like those sparked by the French Revolution and Napoleon's wars, though its vague terms limited practical enforcement and excluded Britain and papal states.[48] That same day, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord resigned as Prime Minister of France, amid tensions over the harsh terms of the Second Treaty of Paris, which imposed 700 million francs in indemnities and allied occupation until payment. His departure paved the way for Armand-Emmanuel de Vignerot du Plessis, Duke of Richelieu, to form a new ministry focused on financial stabilization and appeasing the victorious powers. Meanwhile, former King Joachim Murat of Naples attempted a desperate invasion of Calabria on September 28, sailing from Corsica with a small flotilla of seven ships and 250 men, but a Mediterranean storm scattered his forces, leading to his capture ashore and eventual execution by firing squad on October 13.[48] In the Low Countries, William I was inaugurated as sovereign prince (later king) of the newly formed United Kingdom of the Netherlands on September 21 in Brussels, fulfilling arrangements from the Congress of Vienna to create a buffer state against French expansion. On September 29, he established the Order of the Netherlands Lion, the highest civilian honor in the kingdom, symbolizing the consolidation of Dutch-Belgian unity under Orange-Nassau rule.[48]October
On October 13, 1815, Joachim Murat, the former King of Naples and Napoleon's brother-in-law, was executed by firing squad in Pizzo, Calabria, following his failed attempt to rally support for a Bonapartist uprising after landing on the Calabrian coast on October 8.[8] Captured shortly after his disembarkation from Corsica, Murat was tried summarily by Bourbon authorities under Ferdinand I for treason and invasion, refusing a blindfold and reportedly shouting "Aim for the heart!" as he faced the volley.[8] His death marked the suppression of one of the last significant military challenges to the restored Bourbon monarchy in southern Italy, reflecting the fragility of post-Napoleonic regimes amid lingering loyalties to the imperial era.[8] The most prominent event occurred on October 15, 1815, when Napoleon Bonaparte arrived at Saint Helena aboard HMS Northumberland to commence his permanent exile, accompanied by a retinue of about 27 loyal followers including staff officers, servants, and family members such as his valet Louis Marchand.[49] [16] The remote South Atlantic island, selected by the British government for its isolation—over 1,200 miles from the African mainland and fortified against escape—housed Napoleon under the guard of Lieutenant General Sir Hudson Lowe, with initial quarters at The Briars plantation before transfer to Longwood House.[49] [16] This arrival, following a two-month voyage from Plymouth, symbolized the conclusive end of the Napoleonic Wars, as the defeated emperor surrendered to British custody on July 15 after Waterloo to avert further French bloodshed.[49] By October 17, Napoleon had settled temporarily at The Briars, interacting with local residents like the Balcombe family, while British forces established a blockade to prevent any rescue attempts.[8] Later in the month, on October 24, 1815, the Allied powers reached a compromise during ongoing post-Vienna negotiations, granting Russia most of the former Duchy of Warsaw (known as the Kingdom of Poland or Congress Poland) under Tsar Alexander I, while allocating the port of Kraków as a neutral republic; this settlement balanced Russian expansionist claims against Austrian and Prussian concerns, stabilizing Central European borders after Napoleon's defeat.[50] These developments underscored the Concert of Europe's early efforts to enforce monarchical restorations and contain revolutionary fervor across the continent.[50]November
On November 20, 1815, representatives of France, Austria, Great Britain, Prussia, and Russia signed the Second Treaty of Paris, which imposed definitive peace terms following Napoleon's final defeat at Waterloo and the resumption of hostilities by the Seventh Coalition.[51] Unlike the more lenient First Treaty of Paris in May 1814, this agreement reduced France's borders to those of 1790, requiring the cession of territories such as the Saar basin, Savoy, and parts of the Rhineland, while mandating the return of artworks looted during the Napoleonic era and an indemnity payment of 700 million francs to the Allies.[51] The treaty also stipulated a five-year Allied occupation of northeastern France by 150,000 troops, funded by France, to enforce compliance and deter future aggression, reflecting the victors' intent to permanently weaken French power after the Hundred Days interlude.[52] Provisions extended beyond France, designating the Ionian Islands as a British protectorate to counterbalance Austrian influence in the Adriatic and Adriatic trade routes.[53] In parallel diplomatic efforts tied to the Congress of Vienna's framework, the Allies on November 27 adopted a constitution for the Kingdom of Poland, establishing it as a constitutional monarchy under Russian Tsar Alexander I while granting limited autonomy, and declared Kraków a neutral free city-republic under joint great power guarantee to serve as a Polish national symbol amid partitions.[54] These arrangements aimed to stabilize Eastern Europe by integrating Polish territories into Russian control while preserving nominal independence, though they sowed seeds for future nationalist discontent given Russia's dominant role. Elsewhere, the treaty's economic burdens exacerbated France's post-war recovery challenges, with the indemnity equivalent to roughly two years of French government revenue, financed partly through new taxes and loans that strained the restored Bourbon regime under Louis XVIII.[51] Allied occupation forces, totaling over 1 million at peak earlier in the year, began consolidating in designated zones by late November, enforcing demilitarization and monitoring Bonapartist remnants, which contributed to internal French stability but at the cost of sovereignty and resentment.[52] These events marked the formal closure of the Napoleonic era in Europe, shifting focus toward the Concert of Europe's balance-of-power system, though punitive measures underscored the Allies' prioritization of security over reconciliation.December
On December 5, U.S. President James Madison delivered his seventh annual message to the 14th Congress via written submission, emphasizing the restoration of peace after the War of 1812, the benefits of commercial intercourse with Europe, and the need for domestic infrastructure improvements, a national university, and a stronger military establishment to deter future aggression.[55][56] The address also celebrated the recent treaty with Algiers that ended tribute payments to Barbary powers, reflecting a shift toward assertive U.S. naval policy in the Mediterranean.[57] On December 7, French Marshal Michel Ney, known as the "Bravest of the Brave" for his valor in Napoleon's campaigns, was executed by firing squad in Paris near the Luxembourg Gardens following his conviction for treason by the Chamber of Peers.[58] Ney had pledged loyalty to the restored Bourbon monarchy in March 1815 but joined Napoleon during the Hundred Days, leading troops against the Allies at Waterloo; his trial, conducted amid the White Terror, drew criticism for procedural irregularities and reliance on coerced testimony, underscoring the political retribution of Louis XVIII's regime against Bonapartist holdouts.[59] He refused a blindfold and commanded the squad himself with the words, "Soldiers, fire on me! Do your duty well!"[58] Cultural milestones marked the month amid Europe's stabilization. On December 15, composer Gioachino Rossini received a commission from Rome's Teatro Argentina for an opera buffa titled Almaviva, ossia L'inutile precauzione, revised in 1816 as The Barber of Seville, which premiered to initial failure but later became one of opera's enduring masterpieces.[60] Jane Austen's novel Emma, her fifth and final completed work published during her lifetime, appeared on December 23 in three volumes by London publisher John Murray, exploring themes of social class, marriage, and self-deception in Regency England through the matchmaking misadventures of its titular heroine.[60] In the United States, the Handel and Haydn Society—today the oldest continuously performing arts organization in the country—gave its inaugural concert on December 25 at Boston's King's Chapel, focusing on choral works by Handel and Haydn to promote musical excellence post-independence. These events reflected a broader European and American pivot toward cultural and institutional renewal after years of conflict.Date unknown
American dentist Levi Spear Parmly introduced the concept of dental floss in 1815, advocating the use of waxed silk thread to remove debris from between teeth as a preventive measure against decay and gum disease.[61] [62] Working in New Orleans, Parmly emphasized interdental cleaning in his clinical practice, marking an early advancement in personal oral hygiene practices that relied on manual threading rather than modern nylon filaments.[63] This innovation, detailed in his later treatise A Treatise on the Defects of Teeth and of the Methods of Preserving the Remaining Teeth Sound and Entire, laid foundational principles for interdental care amid limited dental tools of the era.[64]Significance
End of the Napoleonic Wars
Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from his exile on the island of Elba on 26 February 1815, landing at Golfe-Juan near Antibes on 1 March with about 1,000 men, initiating the period known as the [Hundred Days](/page/Hundred Days).[8] He marched on Paris, encountering little resistance as troops defected to him, and entered the Tuileries on 20 March, compelling King Louis XVIII to flee.[8] The Allied powers, alarmed, reformed the Seventh Coalition against France, with Britain, Prussia, Austria, and Russia committing forces totaling over 900,000 men by mid-1815.[65] Napoleon mobilized approximately 200,000 troops for the Waterloo Campaign, invading the Austrian Netherlands to divide Anglo-Dutch and Prussian armies.[1] On 16 June, he defeated the Prussians at Ligny but failed to prevent their retreat, while simultaneously repelling but not routing Wellington's forces at Quatre Bras.[66] The decisive Battle of Waterloo occurred on 18 June near Waterloo, Belgium, pitting 72,000 French troops against 68,000 Anglo-allied soldiers under the Duke of Wellington and arriving Prussian reinforcements under Marshal Blücher.[1] Heavy rains delayed the start, and despite initial French advances, including the destruction of the allied center by French cavalry and Old Guard assaults, coordinated Anglo-Prussian counterattacks shattered the French army by evening.[67] Casualties at Waterloo were severe: French losses reached approximately 25,000 killed or wounded, with 8,000 captured, while Anglo-allied forces suffered around 15,000 casualties and Prussians about 7,000.[68] The defeat compelled Napoleon's retreat to Paris, where he abdicated unconditionally on 22 June in favor of his son, though this was rejected by the Allies and French chambers.[69] A provisional government under Talleyrand facilitated Louis XVIII's second restoration on 8 July, while Napoleon surrendered to British forces on 15 July and was exiled to Saint Helena.[8] The Final Act of the Congress of Vienna, signed on 9 June amid Napoleon's resurgence, redrew European boundaries to restore pre-revolutionary monarchies, compensating powers like Austria, Prussia, and Russia with territories such as Saxony and Polish lands, while establishing the German Confederation and Swiss neutrality.[70] Following Waterloo, the Second Treaty of Paris on 20 November imposed harsher terms on France: borders reverted to those of 1790, with occupation by 150,000 Allied troops until 1818, a 700 million franc indemnity, and cession of colonies like Tobago and Senegal.[69] These agreements, alongside the Quadruple Alliance's commitment to collective security, formally concluded the Napoleonic Wars, ushering in a conservative order aimed at preventing revolutionary upheaval.[69]Restoration of Monarchical Stability in Europe
The Congress of Vienna, convened primarily from September 1814 to June 1815, prioritized the principle of legitimacy in restoring hereditary monarchies displaced by the French Revolution and Napoleonic conquests, aiming to reestablish political stability through the return of pre-revolutionary dynasties.[71] This effort culminated in the reinstatement of the Bourbon monarchy in France under Louis XVIII, who ascended the throne definitively after Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo and the failure of the Hundred Days campaign, with European powers explicitly barring any Bonaparte from ruling to prevent further upheaval.[72] Similar restorations occurred elsewhere, including the return of Ferdinand VII to the Spanish throne and the reestablishment of traditional rulers in various Italian states, countering the revolutionary and imperial disruptions that had upended Europe's monarchical order.[73] To safeguard these restorations, the victorious powers—Austria, Prussia, Russia, and Great Britain—formalized the Quadruple Alliance on November 20, 1815, pledging collective action to maintain the territorial settlements of Vienna and to suppress any threats to the restored monarchies, particularly from France or internal revolts.[74] Complementing this, Tsar Alexander I of Russia initiated the Holy Alliance on September 26, 1815, uniting the monarchs of Russia, Austria, and Prussia in a pact to govern according to Christian principles and to defend absolute monarchy against liberal or revolutionary ideologies, reflecting a conservative backlash against the ideological chaos of the prior decades.[48] These alliances provided a framework for intervention, as seen in subsequent suppressions of uprisings, thereby enforcing monarchical stability across the continent for several years. Territorial adjustments under the Vienna Final Act, signed on June 9, 1815, further bolstered monarchical resilience by compensating key dynasties—such as Austria's acquisition of Lombardy-Venetia and Prussia's gains in the Rhineland—while creating buffer states like the Kingdom of the Netherlands to contain French expansionism, all designed to prevent any single power from dominating and destabilizing the restored order.[75] This system emphasized balance of power over nationalism or popular sovereignty, privileging dynastic legitimacy as the causal foundation for long-term peace, though it sowed seeds of resentment among subject populations by ignoring emerging ethnic and liberal aspirations.[76] By late 1815, these measures had effectively quelled immediate threats, ushering in a period of relative monarchical dominance until the revolutionary pressures of the 1820s and 1830s tested the alliances' durability.Emergence of the Concert of Europe
The foundations of the Concert of Europe were laid by the Treaty of Chaumont, signed on March 1, 1814, by Austria, Great Britain, Prussia, and Russia, which bound the signatories to deploy 150,000 troops each against France and to uphold the European balance of power after Napoleon's defeat, thereby establishing a precedent for collective security among the major powers.[77] This defensive alliance aimed to secure the independence and repose of European states by countering French aggression and preventing any single nation's dominance.[77] The Congress of Vienna, convened from September 1814 to June 1815, built upon this framework by reshaping Europe's political map through negotiations among over 200 delegations, primarily dominated by the four allied powers, to restore legitimate monarchies and achieve a stable equilibrium that would deter future upheavals.[78] The Congress's Final Act, signed on June 9, 1815, formalized territorial adjustments, such as the creation of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the enlargement of Prussia and Austria, and the return of Bourbon rule to France, all designed to distribute power so as to avoid the imbalances exploited by Napoleon.[79] Napoleon's escape from Elba in March 1815 and subsequent defeat at Waterloo on June 18, 1815, necessitated the reaffirmation of these principles, shifting focus from wartime coalition to peacetime coordination.[78] The Concert's institutional mechanism emerged with the renewal of the Quadruple Alliance via the Treaty of Paris on November 20, 1815, which committed the powers to maintain 60,000 troops each for potential intervention against French resurgence and, crucially, to convene regular congresses for consultation on matters affecting European peace and stability.[80] This treaty transformed the ad hoc wartime alliance into a system of multilateral diplomacy, emphasizing preventive diplomacy and joint action to suppress revolutions and preserve the monarchical order established at Vienna, thereby inaugurating a period of relative great-power harmony until the 1820s.[81] Complementing this was the Holy Alliance, proclaimed on September 26, 1815, by Russia, Austria, and Prussia, which invoked Christian principles to legitimize intervention against liberal and nationalist movements, though Britain declined formal adherence due to its constitutional monarchy.[82]Transatlantic and Colonial Developments
The ratification of the Treaty of Ghent by the United States Senate on February 16, 1815, and by President James Madison on February 17, 1815, formally concluded the War of 1812 between the United States and Great Britain, restoring pre-war boundaries and maritime rights without addressing core American grievances such as impressment or trade restrictions.[83] The treaty's terms, negotiated in Ghent, Belgium, since August 1814, reflected mutual exhaustion after three years of conflict, with Britain distracted by the Napoleonic Wars and the U.S. facing internal divisions and economic strain.[5] Unaware of the treaty's signing on December 24, 1814, American forces commanded by Major General Andrew Jackson repelled a British amphibious assault at the Battle of New Orleans on January 8, 1815, inflicting approximately 2,036 British casualties (including 291 killed, 1,262 wounded, and 484 captured or missing) against just 71 American losses (13 dead, 39 wounded, and 19 missing).[12] [9] The British expedition, led by Major General Sir Edward Pakenham and involving over 8,000 veteran troops diverted from Europe after Napoleon's defeat, aimed to seize control of the Mississippi River and New Orleans but faltered due to poor coordination, entrenched American defenses bolstered by cotton bales and earthworks, and effective artillery fire from figures like Major General Jean-Baptiste Adolphe Lafitte's Baratarian pirates.[12] This victory, though militarily unnecessary post-treaty, enhanced U.S. national cohesion, propelled Jackson toward future political prominence, and underscored Britain's overextended imperial commitments across the Atlantic.[84] In Spanish America, 1815 marked a nadir for independence insurgencies amid renewed royalist counteroffensives following Ferdinand VII's restoration in Spain. Mexican rebel leader José María Morelos y Pavón, who had proclaimed a constitutional congress and abolished slavery in insurgent territories, was captured by royalist forces under Agustín de Iturbide and executed by firing squad on December 22, 1815, after a guilty verdict for treason from a military tribunal.[85] In northern South America, Simón Bolívar, defeated in multiple engagements including the Battle of Ocumare in August 1814, retreated to Jamaica by mid-1815, where he drafted the "Jamaica Letter" on September 6, 1815, critiquing Spanish colonial tyranny and calling for unified continental liberation, though his forces remained fragmented and royalist reconquests advanced.[86] These setbacks, fueled by Ferdinand VII's dispatch of over 10,000 troops to Venezuela and internal divisions among creole elites, temporarily stalled momentum toward independence, preserving Spanish colonial administration in key viceroyalties like New Granada and Peru.[85] The post-Waterloo peace in Europe facilitated a resumption of transatlantic commerce and emigration, with British North American ports reopening to U.S. trade and initial waves of European settlers—primarily British, Irish, and German—arriving in Canada and the U.S. amid reduced naval blockades, setting patterns for 19th-century demographic shifts.[87] Britain, having retained Canada and adjusted to U.S. territorial ambitions without territorial losses, shifted imperial focus toward consolidating holdings in the Caribbean and consolidating anti-slave trade patrols under the 1807 Abolition Act, though enforcement remained inconsistent in colonial outposts.[88] These developments presaged Britain's informal influence in the weakening Spanish Empire, as London prioritized commercial access over direct territorial expansion in the Americas.[88]Prelude to Climatic and Economic Disruptions
The eruption of Mount Tambora on the Indonesian island of Sumbawa, commencing on April 5, 1815, and reaching its explosive climax on April 10, marked one of the most powerful volcanic events in recorded history, with a Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) of 7.[89] [90] This cataclysmic discharge ejected approximately 100-150 cubic kilometers of material, including vast quantities of sulfur dioxide—estimated at 60 million tons—into the stratosphere, forming a global veil of aerosols that reflected sunlight and initiated a period of hemispheric cooling.[91] Locally, the blast triggered pyroclastic flows, ash falls up to 1.4 meters thick over 500 kilometers, and tsunamis reaching 4 meters in height, devastating agriculture and settlements on Sumbawa and neighboring Lombok, with direct fatalities numbering around 10,000 and indirect deaths from starvation and disease exceeding 70,000 in the immediate region.[92] These events laid the groundwork for broader climatic perturbations, as the persistent stratospheric sulfate layer began to alter weather patterns worldwide by late 1815. The atmospheric repercussions of Tambora's emissions set the stage for the "Year Without a Summer" in 1816, with preliminary cooling effects emerging in the latter half of 1815, including anomalous frosts and reduced insolation across the Northern Hemisphere.[7] Global land temperatures dropped by about 1°C on average, exacerbating seasonal irregularities and priming agricultural systems for failure; for instance, early signs of diminished sunlight and erratic precipitation were noted in Europe and North America by autumn 1815.[90] This volcanic forcing interacted with existing vulnerabilities, such as depleted soil fertility from wartime neglect, foreshadowing widespread crop shortfalls that would manifest acutely the following year. Economically, the transition to peacetime following the Napoleonic Wars' conclusion in mid-1815 compounded these climatic precursors, unleashing disruptions from demobilization and trade realignments. Millions of soldiers returned to civilian life amid collapsing wartime demand for goods, leading to unemployment spikes and deflationary pressures; in Britain, for example, grain prices initially fell due to oversupply before volcanic-induced scarcities reversed the trend.[93] The lifting of blockades and subsidies disrupted mercantile networks, triggering bankruptcies and credit contractions across Europe and North America, while Tambora's aerosol loading threatened export-dependent agricultures, setting a dual trap of post-war adjustment and impending harvest volatility that fueled famines, migrations, and social unrest by 1816-1817.[94] In regions like Switzerland, grain costs began escalating from late 1815, quadrupling within two years as early climatic signals strained supplies already burdened by demobilized labor surpluses.[94]Births
January–June
In early January, European powers at the Congress of Vienna navigated tensions over post-Napoleonic territorial arrangements. On January 3, representatives from France, the United Kingdom, and Austria signed a secret treaty to counter expanding Prussian and Russian ambitions in Germany, reflecting concerns over balance of power amid ongoing negotiations.[8] [95] Across the Atlantic, the Battle of New Orleans occurred on January 8, where American forces under Andrew Jackson repelled a British invasion attempt, resulting in over 2,000 British casualties against fewer than 100 American losses, unaware that the Treaty of Ghent had ended the War of 1812 on December 24, 1814.[96] [95] February brought further developments in both diplomacy and military escape. The U.S. Senate ratified the Treaty of Ghent on February 17, formally concluding the War of 1812 and averting further escalation.[95] On February 26, Napoleon Bonaparte departed from his exile on the island of Elba aboard the brig Inconstant, initiating his return to France with around 1,000 men.[8] [95] March marked the dramatic resurgence known as the Hundred Days. Napoleon landed at Golfe-Juan on March 1 and advanced northward, rallying troops and public support; by March 20, he entered Paris unopposed, prompting King Louis XVIII to flee, and reestablished imperial rule.[8] [95] The Congress of Vienna, interrupted by this upheaval, saw delegates reaffirm their commitment to Bourbon restoration, with the Seventh Coalition forming against France.[50] April witnessed Napoleon's efforts to consolidate power amid mounting opposition. Mount Tambora in Indonesia underwent a cataclysmic eruption beginning April 5, ejecting massive volcanic ash that later contributed to global cooling, though immediate impacts were localized with approximately 71,000 deaths from pyroclastic flows and tsunamis.[95] In France, Napoleon reinstated the tricolor flag on April 20 and promulgated the Additional Act on April 22, modifying the constitution to broaden electoral participation.[8] Coalition forces declared on April 25 their intent to continue hostilities until Napoleon's unconditional surrender.[8] May saw internal challenges, including a royalist uprising in the Vendée region on May 15, as Napoleon prepared for invasion.[8] Louis XVIII, from exile in Ghent, urged resistance to Napoleonic mobilization.[8] June culminated in decisive military confrontations. The Congress of Vienna concluded with the signing of its Final Act on June 9, redistributing territories to establish a conservative European order, including the creation of the German Confederation and neutralization of Swiss cantons.[8] [50] Napoleon departed Paris on June 12 to lead his army, crossing the Sambre River on June 15.[8] On June 16, French forces engaged Coalition armies at Ligny, defeating the Prussians under Blücher, and at Quatre Bras, checking the Anglo-Dutch under Wellington.[95] The Battle of Waterloo on June 18 proved catastrophic for Napoleon; his 72,000 troops faced 118,000 Anglo-allied and Prussian forces, suffering around 41,000 casualties in a defeat that shattered French hopes, with Wellington's lines holding against repeated assaults until Prussian reinforcements arrived.[8] [95] Subsequent actions included the Battle of Wavre on June 19, where Grouchy's corps clashed with Prussians, and Napoleon's abdication on June 22 in favor of his son, though Coalition demands insisted on unconditional surrender.[8] Louis XVIII began his return to Paris by June 25, signaling the Bourbon restoration's resumption.[8]July–December
- July 13 – James Alexander Seddon (d. 1880), American lawyer who served as Confederate Secretary of War during the American Civil War.
- August 5 – Edward John Eyre (d. 1901), English explorer known for his transcontinental journey across Australia and controversial governorship of Jamaica.
- October 29 – Daniel Decatur Emmett (d. 1904), American composer credited with writing the song "Dixie."
- November 2 – George Boole (d. 1864), English mathematician and logician who developed Boolean algebra, foundational to modern digital logic and computer science.[97]
- November 12 – Elizabeth Cady Stanton (d. 1902), American activist who co-organized the Seneca Falls Convention and co-authored the Declaration of Sentiments, advancing women's suffrage.[98]
- December 10 – Ada Lovelace (d. 1852), English mathematician recognized for her work on Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine, including the first published computer program algorithm.[99]