The battle of Waterloo was a titanic struggle which saw some 45,000 men and 5,000 horses killed or wounded in a space no greater than three square miles. By the end of the day, however, the career of Napoleon Bonaparte was at an end and with it almost twenty-five years of slaughter and suffering that had devastated much of Europe. Today the battlefield is well-preserved, and much visited, but, curiously enough, much of it is little known, few visitors penetrating very far beyond the great mound put up by the Dutch government to mark the battlefield in 1815.
Based on fieldwork conducted by Professor Charles J. Esdaile in conjunction with the Royal Army Museum in Brussels and developed by the University of Liverpools Computing Service Department, this app is designed to allow visitors (both virtual and physical) to explore the site at their leisure.
App features:
- 8 Interactive tours of the site of the battle, including The Defence of Hougoumont, The French Cavalry Charges and The Attack of the Guard
- GPS Tracker
- Descriptions of 145 points of interest
- On-site photographs
- First-hand accounts of the Battle
- Background information, putting the battle within its wider historical context