French Win Latest Battle of Waterloo

88m3

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French Win Latest Battle of Waterloo
By ALAN COWELLMARCH 12, 2015

  • France’s humiliation at the Battle of Waterloo in every European’s purse or pocket. Instead, it turned into a tussle of a different kind, redolent of history’s long shadow, in which France finally emerged triumphant.

    The events began as Belgium was casting around for a design for a 2 euro coin that would feature an image of the monument that commemorates the battlefield at Waterloo where, on June 18, 1815, Napoleon’s forces were defeated by the armies of Britain, its allies in what is now Belgium and the Netherlands, and Prussia.

    In London, a railroad station was named for the battlefield, and the phrase “to meet one’s Waterloo” has entered the English-language lexicon as denoting a particularly cruel defeat.

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    But when Belgium produced its design for the coin, officials in Paris sent a letter to the European authorities to complain of its “negative” connotations, arguing that Waterloo’s place in European memory went far beyond the battlefield. Indeed, the officials said, French reactions to the coin might well undermine efforts to deepen cohesion among the eurozone countries — as if the 19 nations in the currency union were not already divided by fiscal woes in Greece and grumbling at German-led demands for belt-tightening.

    The coin’s proposed design “appears prejudicial, in a context where the governments of the eurozone are trying to strengthen unity and cooperation throughout the monetary union,” the letter from Paris said.

    And so, on Wednesday, Belgium withdrew its plan, news reports from Brussels said, offering France a victory at Waterloo, albeit two centuries later, and averting the prospect of a potentially divisive vote among European ministers.

    The coin, which is worth about $2.13, was to have been part of ambitious commemorations in which France, from other perspectives, seems happy to join.

    Even as the question of the coin bubbled up, France was preparing totransport the distinctive hat worn by Napoleon at Waterloo from a museum near Paris to be displayed in Belgium, the newspaper Le Monde reported.

    It is axiomatic of history’s rose-tinted vision that nations offer differing accounts of victory and defeat, of who really did what and when. Particularly, since the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, or perhaps since the Norman invasion in 1066, France and Britain have sparred, sometimes as rivals, sometimes as allies, and sometimes as both at once.

    And so, French discomfort at the proposed coin provoked harrumphs here in London. The French “really should recognize that this is a momentous event in Europe’s history and an important one for freedom and democracy — which I’d have thought the French Republic would have celebrated, rather than sought to prevent,” Sir Peter Luff, a Conservative lawmaker, told the newspaper The Daily Telegraph, referring to Waterloo.

    Britain itself has no such qualms about commemorations in coinage. The Royal Mint is offering a special 5 pound coin showing Waterloo’s victors — the Duke of Wellington and Field Marshal Gebhard von Blücher of Prussia — shaking hands in “the spirit of camaraderie,” as the mint’s website put it, a spirit that did not always endure.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/13/world/europe/waterloo-coin-france-belgium-euro.html


How embarrassing. The English media is having a field day. How did Hollande rationalize this?


Daily Mail comment

bleek, london, United Kingdom, 21 hours ago
Why are there so many trees along the side of French roads? Because the Germans like marching in the shade.

:wow:



@Liu Kang @mbewane you were saying about that English pettiness....
 

Dafunkdoc_Unlimited

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Fukk France......



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Liu Kang

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That sensational thread title... @88m3 making the Coli sound like the Sun :mjpls: Lemme edit that for accuracy purposes :mjpls:
 

88m3

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French try to block Battle of Waterloo coin
France wants to block plans for a €2 coin to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the historic battle fought by the Duke of Wellington against Napoleon Bonaparte in 1815 because it would be a “symbol that is negative”.
napoleon-Bonaparte_3179112b.jpg

Napoléon Bonaparte - standing portrait by Isabey Emperor of the French Photo: Alamy

By Peter Dominiczak, Political Editor

7:08PM GMT 10 Mar 2015


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586 Comments


The French government is attempting to block a coin commemorating the Battle of Waterloo, claiming it is a “symbol that is negative” and would undermine the unity of the eurozone.

In an extraordinary intervention, France wants to block plans for a €2 coin to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the historic battle fought by the Duke of Wellington against Napoleon Bonaparte in 1815.

A draft design of the coin was submitted to the Council of the European Union by Belgium, the site of the battle, in February this year.

However, just days letter France objected to the coin, claiming it could cause “hostile reactions in France” and undermine the eurozone.


The French letter to the Council of Europe states that the coin would carry “a symbol that is negative for a fraction of the European population”.

Producing the coin would “risk… engendering hostile reactions in France”, the letter, passed to the Telegraph by sources in Brussels, adds.

• Re-enacting Battle of Waterloo - via a trip to the Portaloo

"The Battle of Waterloo is an event with particular resonance in the collective conscience, going beyond a simple military conflict,” the letter states.

"The circulation of coins carrying a symbol that is negative for a fraction of the European population to us appears prejudicial, in a context where the governments of the Eurozone are trying to strengthen unity and co-operation throughout the monetary union."

Napoleon_Bonaparte_3058757b.jpg
Andrew Roberts's Napoleon the Great shows why this brilliant Corsican managed to dazzle the world for so long (ALAMY)

The Battle of Waterloo on June 18, 1815 stopped the advance of Napoleon across Europe and sent the French emperor into exile for a second and final time.

The battle was fought near the town of Waterloo in modern-day Belgium.

• In pictures: 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo

In the one day of fighting there were around 55,000 either killed, wounded, or missing in action from both sides.

The Council of the European Union said that “any member state whose currency is the euro has the right to raise an objection to the draft design submitted by Belgium if the draft design is likely to create adverse reactions among its citizens”.

It added: “Member states are herewith informed that France submitted such an objection on 5 March.”

• Viva la France! Why I'm fighting for Napoleon

Sir Peter Luff, the Tory MP for Mid Worcestershire, said: “I’m delighted the Eurozone should celebrate the failure of France to create a European super-state.

“[The French] sensitivity is disappointing and they really should recognise that this is a momentous event in Europe’s history and an important one for freedom and democracy – which I’d have thought the French Republic would have celebrated, rather than sought to prevent.”

Peter Bone, the Conservative MP for Wellingborough, said: “It would seem extraordinary that this remarkable 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo should not be commemorated just because it would hurt the feelings of the French.

“The French should grow up a bit and support the Belgians.”

It is not the first time that depictions of the Battle of Waterloo have upset the French.

It has been widely claimed, but never fully substantiated, that the former French presidents Charles de Gaulle, François Mitterrand and Jacques Chirac asked for two large Daniel Maclise murals depicting Waterloo and Trafalgar in the Royal Gallery of the Palace of Westminster to be covered up when they visited the UK.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/11462782/French-try-to-block-Battle-of-Waterloo-coin.html
 

mbewane

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Can't rock with this, actually a lot of french people on social media have been mocking this decision by the French gvt, especially when Napoleon's victories over other fellow EU countries are celebrated in the names of train or metro stations

I heard Belgium wanted to :troll: France by making celebratory coins of..2.5 euros instead:pachaha:
 
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