The Battle of Trafalgar

21st October 1805

On this day, the British Royal Navy inflicted a resounding defeat on a combined fleet of the French and Spanish navies during the War of the Third Coalition. When Napoleon’s fleet sailed from the port of Cadiz with the aim of taking control of the English Channel as part of his plan to invade Britain, it encountered a recently assembled British fleet under the command of Lord Nelson. The British were outnumbered, but Nelson’s strategy to sail his fleet directly at the allied fleet’s flank in two columns, hoping to break it into pieces, proved to be successful. With temporary superiority in the ensuing battle, 18 allied ships were captured or destroyed, while the British lost none. Nelson himself was shot by a French musketeer during the battle, and died shortly before it ended, but the victory confirmed British naval supremacy, and was achieved in part through Nelson’s departure from prevailing naval tactical orthodoxy.

First Public Performance of the 1812 Overture

20th August 1882

On this day in Moscow, the Russian composer Tchaikovsky’s renowned 1812 Overture (The Year 1812, Solemn Overture, Op. 49) had its first public performance under a tent, near the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. The Cathedral, commissioned in 1812 by Tsar Alexander I to commemorate the Russian victory over Napoleon’s seemingly invincible French Army, was nearing completion in 1880. The following year would see the 25th anniversary of the coronation of Alexander II, and in 1882 the All-Russia Arts and Industry Exhibition was due to take place in Moscow. Tchaikovsky therefore accepted the suggestion that he write a grand commemorative piece for use in all the upcoming festivities, and composed the Overture in just six weeks in the autumn of 1880. Although he personally felt that his work would be “very loud and noisy, but without artistic merit”, it was the 1812 Overture that was destined to make the Tchaikovsky estate exceptionally wealthy.

Napoleon: Emperor of the French

2nd December 1804

On this day Napoleon was crowned as Emperor of the French at a lavish ceremony in the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. Various dignitaries, including Pope Pius VII attended the ceremony which was described as a “masterminded piece of modern propaganda.” Napoleon had already declared the French Republic as an Empire and wanted to strengthen his new monarchy, nobility and future dynasty. His reign as Emperor lasted for ten years before his army was finally defeated by the Sixth Coalition of European nations and he was forced to abdicate.