The seventeen months from April 1814 to August 1815 were an extraordinary period in European history; a period which saw two sieges of Paris, a complete revision of Europe's political frontiers, an international Congress set up in Vienna, civil war in Italy & international war in Belgium. Gregor Dallas tells the story of these days through the perspectives of three very different European cities: the great metropolis of London, post-revolutionary Paris & baroque Vienna. The writing is almost cinematic in its power to evoke & bring to life the Europe of Tolstoy: the ebb & flow of power, of armies & of peoples across Europe's northern plains. Working essentially from primary sources, Dallas is as interested in the weather conditions before battle as in the way cartoonists reacted to court intrigues & fashions. It is also Europe seen through the eyes of its central players: Talleyr&, who has served nearly every French regime since the Revolution of 1789; Metternich, who devises new plans for a ' Germany' that does not yet exist & for a ' Europe' that remains devided; Wellington, who reveals himself a diplomat as well as a soldier; Tsar Alexander, an idealist seeking to impose a uniform plan for all Europe; & ' Boney' himself, who has his own ideal of Europe &, though banished to Elba, does not abandon his dream to realise it.