Napoleon Defeated at Waterloo
For over two decades, the wars that bore Napoleon Bonaparte’s name convulsed Europe and the world’s oceans. From his rise as a young general of the French Revolution through his coronation as Emperor, these wars forced every maritime nation to take sides. Britain’s Royal Navy, under admirals like Nelson and Collingwood, fought to maintain a blockade of the continent, while the press gangs that filled their crews became a grievance sailors would sing about for generations.
On June 18, 1815, Napoleon met his defeat on a rain-soaked field south of Brussels. Having escaped exile on Elba only a hundred days earlier, he faced the combined forces of the Duke of Wellington and the Prussian Field Marshal Blücher at Waterloo. By evening, Napoleon’s Imperial Guard had broken, and the man who had dominated Europe for a generation was finished. He surrendered to the British and was shipped aboard HMS Bellerophon to his final exile on the remote island of St. Helena, where he died in 1821.
Napoleon loomed large in the sailor’s imagination long after his death. He was a figure of almost mythic stature and his story mapped naturally onto the call-and-response rhythm of shipboard work. The short-drag shanty Boney Was a Warrior compresses his entire career into a few verses, from Moscow to Waterloo to St. Helena, with sailors cheerfully mangling the foreign names (“Billy Ruffian” for Bellerophon, “Elbow” for Elba, “Proo-shi-ans” for Prussians). A French relative, Jean-François de Nantes, shares the same musical structure. That crews were still singing “Boney” at the capstan a century later speaks to how deeply the Napoleonic era had marked the seafaring world.