The Two Great Retreats of History

audiobook

The Two Great Retreats of History

by George Grote, comte de Philippe-Paul Ségur

EN·~9 hours

Chapters

Description

The first part of this work brings the legendary march of the Ten Thousand Greek mercenaries to life. When Cyrus the Younger raised an army to challenge his brother for the Persian throne, the hired hoplites found themselves deep in hostile territory after a sudden betrayal. Facing unfamiliar terrain, relentless foes, and dwindling supplies, the disciplined Greeks must rely on their training and leadership to carve a route back to safety. Their desperate trek across hostile lands becomes a classic study of endurance and tactical ingenuity.

The second selection turns to the early nineteenth‑century drama of Napoleon’s Russian campaign. After a bold advance into the heart of the empire, the French Grand Armée confronts an unforgiving winter, stretched supply lines, and the relentless Russian scorched‑earth tactics. As the once‑invincible force begins its withdrawal, soldiers endure hunger, frostbite, and constant attacks while trying to escape the vast, frozen steppe. The narrative captures the stark contrast between the emperor’s ambition and the brutal reality of nature.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (568K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Barbara Kosker, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.

Release date

2008-08-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

George Grote

George Grote

1794–1871

A banker turned radical politician and historian, he devoted years to making ancient Greece vivid and understandable for modern readers. He is best remembered for his sweeping multi-volume History of Greece and for bringing a clear, independent mind to both politics and scholarship.

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comte de Philippe-Paul Ségur

comte de Philippe-Paul Ségur

1780–1873

A French general, diplomat, and memoirist, he is best remembered for vivid firsthand writing about Napoleon’s campaigns. His books helped shape how later generations imagined the Empire, especially the disastrous 1812 march into Russia.

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