1802
Napoleon Restores Slavery
In a single decree, the First Consul undid the Revolution's boldest promise and reimposed slavery in the French colonies. In Guadeloupe, Louis Delgres blew himself up rather than submit. In Saint-Domingue, the news reached Toussaint Louverture's generals and the war for Haiti began in earnest. Napoleon sent his brother-in-law Leclerc with twenty thousand troops to crush the rebellion; yellow fever and Haitian resistance destroyed the expedition.
Nguyen Dynasty Unites Vietnam
After three decades of civil war, Nguyen Anh - backed by French adventurers and Siamese arms - took Hanoi and proclaimed himself Emperor Gia Long of a reunited Vietnam. He built a new capital at Hue on the Perfume River and borrowed Qing ceremonial. The dynasty would last, shrinking, until 1945.
Ranjit Singh Takes Amritsar
A one-eyed twenty-two-year-old warlord named Ranjit Singh entered the holy city of the Sikhs and made it his second capital. Over the next decade he would weld the feuding Sikh misls into a single empire stretching from the Khyber to the Sutlej - the last great independent power in northern India, and a serious headache for the Company.
Peace of Amiens
For fourteen strange months, Britain and France stopped trying to kill each other. Tourists crossed the Channel; Fox dined with Bonaparte. Neither side believed it would hold, and neither side meant it to. The peace was a breath drawn before a war that would run, on and off, for another decade.
Castlereagh in Madras
Richard Wellesley, Governor-General of India, extended British protection over the Deccan kingdoms through the 'subsidiary alliance' system, locking Indian princes into a pattern of dependence. The Marathas watched warily, and by the following year war would return. British paramountcy was being written, treaty by treaty, into the subcontinent. Each alliance stripped a prince of his foreign policy and garrisoned his capital with Company troops paid from his own treasury.
Beethoven's Heiligenstadt Testament
In a village outside Vienna, the thirty-two-year-old Beethoven wrote a letter to his brothers confessing his deafness and his suicidal despair. He did not send it. He returned to Vienna and wrote the Eroica instead - the symphony that would break open the Romantic age. The testament was found among his papers after his death.