Page 146 of The Age of Napoleon

Vermeer, Jan (1632–75), 279

  Verona, 103, 544

  Veronese, Paolo (1528–88), 139

  Versailles, Palace of, 11, 13, 19

  Paris women’s march on, 24–25, 133, 331, 513

  Versuche einer Geschichte (Arndt), 627

  Versuch einer Kritik aller Offenbarung (Fichte), 637

  Vestale, La (Spontini), 278

  Vestris, Marie-Rose (1746–1804), 138

  veto crisis (France, 1792), 37–38

  Viazma, 703

  Victor, Claude (1766–1841), 173, 538, 699, 709, 718, 722–23

  Victor Emmanuel I, King of Sardinia (r. 1802–21), 187, 189, 335

  Victoria, Queen of Great Britain and Ireland (r. 1837–1901), 351

  Vie de Napoléon (Stendhal), 773

  Vien, Joseph-Marie (1716–1809), 140

  Vienna, 104, 562–66, 569–86

  air pollution in, 563

  amusements in, 564

  factories in, 562–63

  history of, 558

  music in, 553, 565–66, 569–86, 614

  occupied by N. (1805), 203–4, 279, 575

  occupied by N. (1809), 232, 263, 578

  population of, 562

  publishing in, 624

  salons in, 563

  Mme. de Staël’s opinion of, 297

  the theater in, 564–65, 618

  the Turks defeated at (1683), 558

  Vienna, Congress of (1814–15), 624, 731–34, 740, 765, 772

  and the 1st Treaty of Paris, 730

  music at, 575, 581, 732

  and N.’s escape from Elba, 734, 735, 765

  Vienna, University of, 563

  Viennois district, 22

  Vier und zwanzig Bücher (Müller), 660

  Vieux Cordelier, Le, 76

  View of the Evidences of Christianity, A (Paley), 394, 397

  Vigée-Lebrun, Marie-Anne-Élisabeth (1755–1842), 139, 519, 683

  Vignon, Barthélemy, 280

  Vigny, Alfred de (1797–1863), 109

  Vihiers, 62

  Villanueva, Juan de (1739–1811), 533

  Villefranche, 49

  Villeneuve, Pierre de (1763–1806), 202–4, 251, 522–23, 524, 525

  Villeneuve, Switz., 171

  Villoison, Jean-Baptiste d’Ansse de (1753–1805), 266

  Vilna, 689, 701, 706, 708, 710, 712

  Vilna, University of, 680

  Vimeiro, battle of (1808), 225, 536

  Vincennes, Fortress of, 10, 132, 191

  Vinci, Leonardo da, see Leonardo

  Vindication of Natural Diet (Shelley), 473

  Vindication of the Rights of Woman, A (Wollstonecraft), 364

  Vindiciae Gallicae (Mackintosh), 504, 515

  vingtième, 8

  Virgil (70–19 B.C.), 145, 286, 532, 632

  Vision of Judgment, A (Southey), 489

  Vision of Judgment, The (Byron), 489

  Vistula River, 210, 700

  Vitebsk, 701–2

  Vitoria, battle of (1808), 228–29, 581

  Vitruvius Pollio (1st cent. B.C.), 139

  Vivian, Charles (d. 1822), 406, 497

  Viviani, Emilia, 484–85, 491

  Vogel, Henriette (d. 1811), 618

  Voghera, 173

  Vogler, Abt Georg Josef (1749–1814), 568, 612–13

  Voight, Privy Councilor, 640

  Volney, Constantin Chasseboeuf, Comte de (1757–1820), 144, 184, 243, 266, 270, 471

  Volta, Alessandro (1745–1827), 322, 300, 551–52, 608

  Voltri, 98

  Von Deutschem Bund und Deutscher Staats-verfassung (Fries), 652

  Vonner og de Vanner, De (Heiberg), 665

  Vorarlberg, 205

  V orlesungen über Aesthetik (Hegel), 651–52, 655

  Voronykhin, Andrei, 682

  Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet; 1694–1778), 31

  and Catherine II, 670, 677, 684

  his “Ecrasez l’infâme!,” 315, 334, 471

  in England, 516

  English reaction against, 358, 360, 394

  French Revolution and, 32, 72, 127

  and Frederick II, 594; and Fréron, 69

  Germany and, 619, 629, 646, 654, 658

  Gustavus III and, 661

  on history, 468

  on Holy Roman Empire, 588

  “If God did not exist …,” 52, 253

  Joseph II and, 559; and law, 130

  Malthus and, 346

  Napoleon and, 93, 259, 286

  plays of, 138, 227, 286

  Mme. de Staël and, 290

  Voss, Johann Heinrich (1751–1826), 619

  Voss, Julie von (d. 1789), 594

  Voyage en Amérique (Chateaubriand), 310–11

  Voyages aux contrées équinoctiales du nouveau continent (Humboldt), 751

  Voyages de Humboldt et Bonpland (Humboldt), 609

  Wackenroder, Wilhelm Heinrich (1773–98), 611, 623, 630

  Wagram, battle of (1809), 232, 525, 538, 562

  Walcheren expedition (1809), 526

  Waldstein, Count Ferdinand von (1762–1823), 568–69, 572

  Wales, 342, 361, 472

  Wales, George Augustus Frederick, Prince of, see George IV

  Walewska, Countess Marie Laczynska (1789–1817), 210–11, 232, 236, 711, 735

  Walker, John (1770–1831), 469

  Wallachia, 201, 228, 669, 671, 689, 696

  Wallenstein (Schiller), 615

  Walpole, Horace, 4th Earl of Orford (1717–97), 377, 416

  Walpole, Sir Robert, 1st Earl of Orford (1676–1745), 518

  waltz, 136, 370

  Wanderer, The (Burney), 410

  Warens, Françoise-Marie de La Tour, Baronne de (1699–1762), 332

  War of 1812, Anglo-American, 526, 527, 732

  War of 1812, Franco-Russian, 686, 693–711

  Warsaw, city of, 210, 238, 593, 594, 668, 711

  Jews in, 667

  Warsaw, grand duchy of, 233, 593, 688, 696, 700, 712

  creation of, 213, 276, 668

  end of, 713, 733

  Washington, George (1732–99), 10, 43, 144, 310, 394

  Watchman, The, 426

  Waterloo, battle of (1815), 218, 251, 308, 324, 746–49, 770

  Byron tours ground of, 476

  N. reflects on at St. Helena, 765

  N.’s ailments at, 699, 769

  N.’s published account of, 773

  and the playing fields of Eton, 362, 535

  Waterloo, village of, 744

  Waterloo Bridge (Constable), 382

  Watt, James (1736–1819), 342, 390

  Watteau, Antoine (1684–1721), 283

  Wattignies, battle of (1793), 64

  Wat Tyler (Southey), 451

  Waverley (Scott), 506

  Waverley Novels (Scott), 410, 506, 507

  Wavre, 746, 747

  Wawruch, Dr., 585

  Wealth of Nations (Smith), 472, 512, 685

  Weber, Aloysia (1761?–1839), 613

  Weber, Carl Maria von (1786–1826), 613–14, 630

  Weber (later Mozart), Constanze, 613

  Weber, Edmund von, 613

  Weber, Franz Anton von (1734–1812), 613

  Weber, Fritz von, 613

  Webster, Lady Frances (fl. 1813), 462

  Webster, John (1580?–1625), 482

  Wedgwood, Josiah (1730–95), 368, 428

  Wedgwood, Josiah II, 409, 428, 432, 439

  Wedgwood, Thomas (1771–1805), 409, 428

  Wedgwood pottery, 377, 416

  Wegeler, Franz, 572, 577

  Weimar, 305, 579, 605, 611, 620–23

  N.’s visit to, 226, 227–28

  population of, 614

  Mme. de Staël and, 292–93, 296, 298

  theater in, 614–15, 616, 617

  Weishaupt, Adam (1748–1830), 564

  Weismann, August (1834–1914), 329

  Wellington, Sir Arthur Wellesley, Duke of (1769–1852), 377, 381, 535–39

  early life (to 1808), 535–36

&n
bsp; in Portugal (1808), defeats French at Vimeiro, 225, 536

  retires to Ireland, 536

  victories in Portugal (1809–10), 229, 230, 236, 537–38

  defeats Marmont at Salamanca (1812), 539, 703

  ties down French in Peninsula, 697

  victory at Vitoria (1813), 581

  in south of France (1813–14), 719, 721

  in Paris (1814), 300

  at battle of Waterloo (1815), 744–49

  to Paris (1815), 750, 752

  Britain presents N.’s statue to, 555

  again in Paris (1816), 301

  N.’s attitude toward, 245, 767

  miscellaneous opinions of, 247, 357, 754

  Wellesley, 1st Marquess, see Mornington, 2d Earl of

  Werner, Zacharias (in full, Friedrich Ludwig Zacharias; 1768–1823), 296, 616

  Werther (Goethe), see Sorrows of Werther, The

  Weser River, 595, 600

  Wesley, John (1703–91), 360

  West, Benjamin (1738–1820), 380, 381

  Westbrook, Eliza, 470, 473, 474

  Westbrook, Harriet, see Shelley, Harriet Westbrook, Mr., 470, 474

  West Indies, 203, 367, 447, 518, 520, 522

  Westminster Abbey, 359, 416, 500

  Westminster Review, The, 407, 504

  Westminster School, 362, 404, 424

  Westmorland County, 442

  Westphalia, kingdom of (1807–13), 206, 253, 277, 590–92, 660

  creation of, 213, 218

  end of, 733

  Westphalia, Peace of (1648), 50, 516

  Westphalia, province of (Prussian), 597

  West Prussia, province of, 593

  Wetzlar, 597

  Whigs, 355, 363, 370–71, 467

  and the Luddites, 460

  and Morning Post, 408, 437

  and Prince of Wales, 357, 512

  Whitbread, Samuel (1758–1815), 361

  White Doe of Rylstone, The (Wordsworth), 451

  White Horse, The (Constable), 382

  White Terror (France, 1795), 62, 84–85

  White Terror (France, 1815), 753, 774

  Whitman, Walt (1819–92), 415

  Whitworth, Charles Whitworth, Baron, later Earl (1752–1825), 189

  Wieland, Christoph Martin (1733–1813), 226–28, 293, 305, 614, 617, 620–21, 658

  Wiener Zeitschrift, 565

  Wiener Zeitung, 565

  Wilberforce, William (1759–1833), 43, 359, 360, 367–68, 512, 526

  Wilhelm Meister (Goethe), 632

  Wilhelm Tell (Schiller), 293, 660

  William IV, Stadholder of Holland (r. 1747–51), 85

  Williams, Edward (d. 1822), 494–96, 501

  Williams, Jane, 496–97, 501

  Wilson, Sir Robert Thomas (1777–1849), 713

  Winchester School, 362

  Winckelmann, Johann Joachim (1717–68), 139, 554, 611, 630, 667

  Windermere, Lake, 381, 418

  Winter Palace, St. Petersburg, 681–82

  Winter’s Tale, A (Shakespeare), 358

  Wisdom Descending to Earth (Prud’hon), 283

  Wittenberg, 592

  Wittenberg, University of, 606, 631

  Wittgenstein, Ludwig Adolf Peter (1769–1843), 709–10, 716, 723

  Wolf, Friedrich August (1759–1824), 266, 607

  Wolfe, James (1727–59), 380

  Wolfenbüttel, 590, 591

  Wöllner, Johann Christian von (1730?–1800), 594

  Wollstonecraft, Mary (1759–97), 364–66, 413, 481, 604

  death of, 366, 400, 474, 475

  women: campaign for rights of, 86, 292, 364–66, 491, 604–5

  N.’s views on, 255–56

  status of, 133–34, 181, 291, 298, 354

  Wonsowicz, General, 711

  “Words in Season” (Wieland), 621

  Wordsworth, Ann, nee Cookson (1747–78), 418

  Wordsworth, Christopher (1774–1846), 418

  Wordsworth, Dorothy (1771–1855): appearance, 421

  birth and childhood, 418

  and Coleridge, 422, 427–28, 436, 437, 439

  devotion to William, 419, 421–22

  in Germany, 429

  illness and death, 452–53

  journals of, 428, 433–34

  and Lyrical Ballads, 429, 430

  and Prelude, 443

  and Southey, 449–50

  and “Tintern Abbey,” 431

  and William’s marriage, 434–35

  Wordsworth, John (1741–83), 418, 434

  Wordsworth, John (1772–1805), 418, 449

  Wordsworth, Mary, nee Hutchinson (1770–1859), 422

  courtship, 432, 433

  marriage, 434–35, 437, 449, 452

  nurses Dorothy, 452–53

  Wordsworth, Richard (1768–1816), 418–20, 432

  Wordsworth, William (1770–1850), 374, 418–22, 427–36, 442–46, 451–53, 507

  appearance, character, 421, 438, 451

  birth, early life, 417, 418–19, 443–44

  and Byron, 446, 451, 452, 456, 536

  and Coleridge, 416, 422, 425, 427–33, 437–39, 442–48 passim death of, 417, 451, 452

  and De Quincey, 449

  in France, 419–20, 434–35, 444

  and French Revolution, 419–20, 448, 452, 513

  and Godwin, 366, 397, 400, 421, 452

  at Grasmere, 417, 433–34, 435, 442, 449

  marriage of, 434–35

  his rich patrons, 376, 409, 421, 432, 434

  becomes poet laureate (1843), 451

  theory and philosophy of poetry, 429, 431–32, 442, 472, 493

  political orientation, 366, 420, 448, 451–52

  religious attitudes, 381, 389, 397, 429, 430–31, 443, 445–48, 452, 478, 493, 644–45

  and Southey, 449–450

  travels, 419–20, 429, 432, 434–35, 452

  and Annette Vallon, 420–21, 434–35, 452

  his work, 374, 416, 427–32, 435–36, 443, 451, 478, 645(see also Lyrical Ballads Prelude)

  Worms, 49, 588

  Wright, Capt. John Wesley (1769–1805), 190

  Wurmser, Count Dagobert Sigismund von (1724–97), 101, 103, 104

  Württemberg, 202, 218, 253, 588, 621, 750

  becomes a kingdom, 205

  in Confederation, 206, 589

  Würzburg, battle of (1796), 97

  Würzburg, bishopric of, 588

  becomes a grand duchy, 206

  Würzburg, University of, 293, 644

  Wyatt, James (1746–1813), 377

  Xenophon, 309

  Yorck von Wartenburg, Johann David Ludwig (1759–1830), 713

  York, 345, 470

  York, Frederick Augustus, Duke of (1763–1827), 535

  Young, Arthur (1741–1820), 8

  Young, Thomas (1773–1829), 110, 385, 386, 388–89

  Yvan, Dr., 708, 727

  Yverdun, Switzerland, school at, 660

  Zach, General von, 174

  Zakharov, Adrian, 683

  Zante, 105, 552

  Zeitgeist, 650, 656

  Zelter, Karl Friedrich (1758–1832), 580

  Zerbrochene Krug, Der (Kleist), 617

  Zieten, Count Hans Ernst Karl von (1770–1848), 747

  zoology, 328–30, 386

  Zoonomia (E. Darwin), 391

  Zurich, battle of (1799), 119

  About the Authors

  WILL DURANT was born in North Adams, Massachusetts, on November 5, 1885. He was educated in the Catholic parochial schools there and in Kearny, New Jersey, and thereafter in St. Peter’s (Jesuit) College, Jersey City, New Jersey, and Columbia University. New York. For a summer he served as a cub reporter on the New York Journal, in 1907, but finding the work too strenuous for his temperament;, he settled down at Seton Hall College, South Orange, New Jersey, to teach Latin, French, English, and geometry (1907–11). He entered the seminary at Seton Hall in 1909, but withdrew in 1911 for reasons he has described in his book Transition. He passed from this quiet seminary to the m
ost radical circles in New York, and became (1911–13) the teacher of the Ferrer Modern School, an experiment in libertarian education. In 1912 he toured Europe at the invitation and expense of Alden Freeman, who had befriended him and now undertook to broaden his borders.

  Returning to the Ferrer School, he fell in love with one of his pupils—who had been born Ida Kaufman in Russia on May 10, 1898—resigned his position, and married her (1913). For four years he took graduate work at Columbia University, specializing in biology under Morgan and Calkins and in philosophy under Wood-bridge and Dewey. He received the doctorate in philosophy in 1917, and taught philosophy at Columbia University for one year. In 1914, in a Presbyterian church in New York, he began those lectures on history, literature, and philosophy that, continuing twice weekly for thirteen years, provided the initial material for his later works.

  The unexpected success of The Story of Philosophy (1926) enabled him to retire from teaching in 1927. Thenceforth, except for some incidental essays Mr. and Mrs. Durant gave nearly all their working hours (eight to fourteen daily) to The Story of Civilization. To better prepare themselves they toured Europe in 1927, went around the world in 1930 to study Egypt, the Near East, India, China, and Japan, and toured the globe again in 1932 to visit Japan, Manchuria, Siberia, Russia, and Poland. These travels provided the background for Our Oriental Heritage (1935) as the first volume in The Story of Civilization. Several further visits to Europe prepared for Volume 2, The Life of Greece (1939), and Volume 3, Caesar and Christ (1944). In 1948, six months in Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Egypt, and Europe provided perspective for Volume 4, The Age of Faith (1950). In 1951 Mr. and Mrs. Durant returned to Italy to add to a lifetime of gleanings for Volume 5, The Renaissance (1953); and in 1954 further studies in Italy, Switzerland, Germany, France, and England opened new vistas for Volume 6, The Reformation (1957).

  Mrs. Durant’s share in the preparation of these volumes became more and more substantial with each year, until in the case of Volume 7, The Age of Reason Begins (1961), it was so great that justice required the union of both names on the title page. And so it was on The Age of Louis XIV (1963), The Age of Voltaire (1965), and Rousseau and Revolution (winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1968).

  The publication of Volume 11, The Age of Napoleon, in 1975 concluded five decades of achievement. Ariel Durant died on October 25, 1981, at the age of 83; Will Durant died 13 days later, on November 7, aged 96. Their last published work was A Dual Autobiography (1977). spective for Volume IV, The Age of Faith (1950). In 1951 Mr. and Mrs. Durant returned to Italy to add to a lifetime of gleanings for Volume V, The Renaissance (1953); and in 1954 further studies in Italy, Switzerland, Germany, France, and England opened new vistas for Volume VI, The Reformation (1957).

  Mrs. Durant’s share in the preparation of these volumes became more and more substantial with each year, until in the case of Volume VII, The Age of Reason Begins (1961), it was so great that justice required the union of both names on the title page. And so it has been on The Age of Louis XIV, The Age of Voltaire, Rousseau and Revolution, and now on The Age of Napoleon.