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    36 Kommentare

    1. SoSmartKappa on

      I dont understand how for example military occupation of Moscow count, but military occupation of Vienna does not (and he did it multiple times).

    2. funderfulfellow on

      Why does every generation have a psychopath who wants to take over the world? They waste immense resources and inevitably fail.

    3. DaskalosTisFotias on

      Small detail but some islands in Greece are missing. It was not only Corfu but Zante , Kefalonia , Ithaca , Paxoi , Leukada and Kythira.

    4. Bubolinobubolan on

      Prussia wasn’t a client state of France. It was a fully independent country and an ally of France, like Austra was.

      Edit: assuming that this map depicts France in the fall of 1812

    5. Is this an optical illusion or „Millitary occupation“ shade in the legend doesn’t match with the map? Assuming Northern Spain, Prussia and Moscow are the millitary occupied zones here

    6. simply_not_edible on

      This really needed more colour differentiation. I’m having trouble distinguishing green from green here, sadly.

    7. Doesn’t the Netherlands count as a client state? We had Louis Bonaparte over here

    8. rly_weird_guy on

      I’m having a hard time telling the colour between military occupation and client state

    9. Colour choice is bad when you need to find all of them on the map to be able to distibguish them.

    10. We’re blessed with infinite colours yet whichever plonker who put this map together decides to use green, and another 3 almost identical greens.

    11. >official borders of client states

      This is close to nonsensical in the case of Spain, as Jose Bonaparte’s government never controlled all of Spain, and an independent Spanish government continued to exist throughout the Peninsular War (las Cortes de Cadiz).

    12. Napoleón micropene:

      His remains ended up, allegedly, in the hands of an Italian priest, who in turn transferred them to a London bookseller who was no more than an intermediary of a third secret party native of Philadelphia. Napoleon’s penis, which according to legend measured four centimeters due to the effects of glandular disease, was exhibited in 1927 at the Museum of French Arts in New York. A Time magazine journalist who attended the exhibition defined it as „the battered strip of a cord“ and another reporter of „shrunken eel.“

    13. Chip_Vinegar on

      That would be the entry of the word „overreach“ in a dictionary of pictures.

    14. AleksejsIvanovs on

      Wasn’t the French Louisiana (about 1/3 of the modern USA) a part of that Empire as well?

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