Route Napoléon
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The Route Napoléon is the route taken by Napoléon in 1815 on his return from Elba. It is now concurrent with sections of routes N85, D1085, D4085, and D6085.
The route begins at Golfe-Juan, where Napoleon disembarked 1 March 1815, beginning the Hundred Days that ended at Waterloo. The road was inaugurated in 1932 and meanders from the French Riviera north-northwest along the foothills of the Alps. It is marked along the way by statues of the French Imperial Eagle.
Route[]
From south to north:
- Antibes
- Grasse
- Saint-Vallier-de-Thiey
- Castellane
- Digne
- Sisteron
- Gap
- Col Bayard (1,246 m)
- Corps
- La Mure
- Laffrey
- Grenoble
Gallery[]
Route Napoleon, Prairie de la Rencontre, Laffrey, France
Lake on the Col Bayard
External links[]
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- Media related to Route Napoléon at Wikimedia Commons
Categories:
- Roads in France
- 1815 in France
- Alpes-Maritimes
- Alpes-de-Haute-Provence
- Hautes-Alpes
- Isère
- Hundred Days
- History of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
- Napoleon
- France road stubs
- Napoleonic Wars stubs
- Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur geography stubs