Category: Napoleonic Wars

  • The Rothschild-Waterloo Myth

    This theory holds that Nathan Mayer Rothschild received news of Wellington’s victory at Waterloo before the British government, deliberately spread false rumors of a British defeat, triggered a collapse in British government securities, and then bought the market for pennies before the truth became public. In its strongest form, the story turns Rothschild from a fast and well-connected war financier into the hidden purchaser of Britain itself. The documented record clearly shows that Nathan Rothschild had an exceptionally effective courier and bullion network during the Napoleonic Wars and that he played a major role in British wartime finance. What is not supported is the famous tale that he staged a false-defeat panic and acquired the country through a single stock-exchange trick.

  • The 1812 "Russian Fire" Plot

    This theory held that the burning of Moscow in 1812 was not chiefly the work of Russian scorched-earth policy, local arson, or chaotic looting, but part of a deeper anti-Napoleonic design linked to British money and British strategic interests. In this view, Britain—already the great financier of continental resistance—had helped underwrite or encourage the destruction of Moscow in order to trap Napoleon in a ruined city and ensure the destruction of the Grande Armée. The historical record clearly shows that British subsidies and anti-Napoleonic coalition-building were central to the wider war, and that there is real evidence linking Governor Rostopchin and Russian authorities to the city’s burning. What remains unproven is the claim of British funding or direction in the Moscow fire itself.