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  1. The full composition, in a print of 1879. The Meeting of Wellington and Blücher after the Battle of Waterloo is a monumental wall painting by Irish painter Daniel Maclise, completed in 1861. It depicts the moment towards the end of the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815, when the commanders of the allied British and Prussian armies, the Duke ...

  2. Wellington and Blücher meet at the windmill of Bussy at 1 pm, where they agree that Napoleon seems to be about to attack Ligny, not Quatre-bras. The Prussians take responsibility for this battle, but the 4th corps, headed by General von Bülow, doesn’t arrive in time, and the 80,000-strong Prussian army loses the Battle of Ligny against Napoleon.

  3. Wellington and Blücher meet at the windmill of Bussy at 1 pm, where they agree that Napoleon seems to be about to attack Ligny, not Quatre-bras. The Prussians take responsibility for this battle, but the 4th corps, headed by General von Bülow, doesn't arrive in time, and the 80,000-strong Prussian army loses the Battle of Ligny against Napoleon.

  4. Blücher and Wellington had been exchanging communications since 10:00 and had agreed to this advance on Frichermont if Wellington's centre was under attack. [ 189 ] [ ai ] General Bülow noted that the way to Plancenoit lay open and that the time was 16:30.

    • 18 June 1815; 209 years ago (1815-06-18)
    • Coalition victory
  5. The moment depicted is 9.15pm on the evening of 18 June, 1815. In the centre of the composition, the Duke of Wellington is shaking hands with his Prussian ally Generalfeldmarschall Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher directly in front of the sign of an inn appropriately-named “à la Belle Alliance”. Wellington is mounted on his famous horse ...

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  7. Jun 17, 2015 · The Prussians’ arrival was decisive in securing the allied victory, and when Wellington and Blücher met late in the evening they saluted each other as victors. Meeting of Wellington and Blücher, from The Wars of Wellington, a narrative poem. (London, 1819) 838.m.7. Following Waterloo, Blücher at last retired for good.

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