Waterloo Battlefield

Waterloo BattlefieldView of the Lion's Mound, cannon, and the Panorama of the Battle of Waterloo (right) at the Waterloo Battlefield, Belgium.

Waterloo Battlefield, location, 3 miles (5 km) south of Waterloo, Belgium, where, on June 18, 1815, the Battle of Waterloo took place, marking Napoleon’s final defeat. In this battle, the British duke of Wellington’s 68,000 allied forces, including British, Dutch, Belgian, and German troops, and some 45,000 Prussians led by Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, overcame a 72,000-strong French army in a battle described by Wellington as “the nearest run thing you ever saw in your life.” The battle changed the course of European history.

Although the battlefield is well-preserved, it is still quite different from the one on which Napoleon and Wellington fought more than 200 years ago. A major difference between then and now is the presence of the Lion’s Mound, an artificially created hill, built at the order of the Netherlands’s King William I to commemorate the wounding of his son, the future William II, and completed in 1826. The monument to the wounded prince is an impressive statue of a lion that sits atop the hill overlooking the battlefield. Other additions include the Panorama of the Battle of Waterloo, a neoclassical rotunda in which a monumental panoramic painting of the battle, completed in 1912, is displayed. A memorial museum opened in 2015 in observation of the bicentennial of the battle.

Many of the buildings used by the armies are still intact. The Hougoumont farm—a position held by British and other allied troops—can be visited by the public. It was attacked solidly by the French from midday until 6:00 in the evening, but it was never taken. The farm was renovated and restored to mark the 200th anniversary of the battle in 2015. The La Haye Sainte farm, another allied fortress, can also be seen, though it is now privately owned, and Napoleon’s headquarters in the village of Waterloo can be visited.

Oscar Rickett