#napoleon bonaparte fgo
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
nu-omicron-alpha-eta · 1 year ago
Text
Fate Grand Order Servant Comparisons
Napoleon Bonaparte
Tumblr media
Left - FGO
Right - Bonaparte at the Pont d'Arcole, by Baron Antoine-Jean Gros, c. 1801
8 notes · View notes
kikaruuni · 4 months ago
Text
Fate Grand Order material VII [Digital]part 6
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
90 notes · View notes
empty-dream · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
This Lostbelt has no future. No tomorrow. Though it may be peaceful, free of conflict and evil… It will never be any more than that. It has no power to change, to develop. My love is not enough. Spring will never come. Life will never flourish. But now, my power should suffice to bring hope to my land. So I withdraw my love and instead offer you death.
Fate/Grand Order • Cosmos in the Lostbelt : Eternal Icy Fire Century, Götterdämmerung
42 notes · View notes
sawbeaver · 1 year ago
Text
That man's chair:
"I told you it would be ridiculously small for me, Master!"
Tumblr media
The Throne of Napoleon Bonaparte, Bruno Ledoux Personal Collection
37 notes · View notes
kiwikipedia · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Gonna need more of whatever this dynamic is
137 notes · View notes
orojuice · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Charlotte Corday's Birthday Special: Like a Slap to the Face!
"One Death to Save A Hundred Thousand Lives, but why'd he have to be one of them?" Commentary:
All that king and queen beheading just to put an EMPEROR on the throne through a voting system. You love to see it.
Napoleon's relationship with Corsica and France is almost as complicated as Corsica's was to the rest of Europe. Some thought it of Italy. Others thought it of France. Many agreed it was less than either.
Napoleon's political stance during his teenage years leaned towards the nationalistic with him writing a number of essays about French oppression (under Genoa, Corsica had more autonomy) and the need for Corsican independence, a sharp contrast to his more pragmatic father, Carlo.
The French Revolution not only provided more military opportunities to the young soldier, but opened him up to various political and philosophical influences as the revolutionaries schemed and quarreled among themselves as to what should be done with their country.
I'd like to think that regardless of what they thought of him, any version of Napoleon as a Servant would be crudely appreciative of anyone from his era, seeing them as little assistants who helped give him a chance of a lifetime.
Corday's political affiliation of this time was of the Girondinis, a more moderate pro-revolutionary faction who were opposed to the more radical groups who advocated for extreme enforcement of the revolution to prevent a backslide.
The assassination of Marat by Corday is thought to have been a critical factor in the stacked trial and extermination of the Girondinis (only a few months after Corday's own death), but it must be kept in mind that they were already highly unpopular thanks to Marat's writings being backed and promoted by their various rival groups such as the Montagnards.
Though how it accelerated the eventual downfall of "The Mountain" (as in, emboldening Robespierre to commit further atrocities to perceived enemies within and without) and the rise of Napoleon is disputable, Corday's murder of Marat caused the public to scrutinize the common woman – the average citizen rather than scions of nobility – as figures who would care about French politics deeply enough to martyr themselves for it.
Nothing good came from this in the short term, as the immediate reaction to this notion was to ban women's political clubs and to enact harsher punishment towards female "counter-revolutionaries".
French feminists of the moment rebuked Corday's attack, claiming that it would incite direct reprisal of some form against their movement. Exposed to their jeers and criticisms during her last four days of life, Charlotte shrugged and noted, "As I was truly calm I suffered from the shouts of a few women. But to save your country means not noticing what it costs."
Though Corday exited the world of the living with as much sanguinity and poise as she could, she suffered a posthumous indignity when one of her guillotine's carpenters by the name of Legros picked up her decapitated head and slapped it across the cheek. Some onlookers believed that her disembodied visage reacted in shock to the assault; at the very least, Charles-Henri Sanson was horrified at the insult. Legros was jailed for three months for this affront.
Charlotte Corday died on July 17. Just 10 days before her 25th Birthday.
Charles-Henri Sanson remained a largely neutral figure throughout the French Revolution. While he beheaded royals and supposed traitors to the revolution, he also did the same to the architects of the September Massacres such as Danton and Robespierre. Perhaps, in another time and place, Marat could've been one of the 2,918 executions Sanson performed.
Sanson would eventually pass on in 1806, long enough to see Napoleon's first reign come into play. It bears mentioning that "The Gentleman of Paris" had never been a big fan of monarchy
Despite the tragic – and arguably idiotic – death of Charles-Henri's son Gabriel, the Sanson legacy outlasted Napoleon's thanks to his other son Henri (the one who actually guillotined Marie Antoinette) and Henri-Clément Sanson, bringing the seven generation dynasty of executioners to a close in 1847.
Although Henri-Cléments would cash in on it immediately after his retirement due to gambling debts, tweaking and supplementing an existing apocryphal memoir of Charles-Henri written by Honoré de Balzac for a lucrative rerelease under a different title. Not as well-known a hustle as how he sold one of the original guillotines to Madame Tussauds, but there you go.
37 notes · View notes
dailyfatefigures · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Napoleon Bonaparte by CtrlZ
10 notes · View notes
nero-draco · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
9 notes · View notes
animegirlsakurablr · 8 months ago
Text
Shenanigans in the Grand Order, part 663
🌸 Brynhild’s first interlude
Tumblr media
Ah, so this will be the gist of her interlude, got it.
Tumblr media
So this is taking place in my dreams again, huh? At least it won’t be a recurring setting, unlike a certain Ruler’s interludes.
Tumblr media
Oh hi, Arthur.
Tumblr media
I would say “how do you mistake me for your beloved”, and then I remember “it’s because Ritsuka/Guda treats her kindly (probably)”.
Tumblr media
Oh, she vaguely recognizes him, that’s neat.
Tumblr media
Yay!! 🌸 Napoleon’s interlude, part 1
Tumblr media
And you should know, since you were dumb enough to fight a certain country during winter.
Tumblr media
… Is the whole interlude going to be about Napoleon trying to get Skadi to talk?
Tumblr media
And then you realize, oh, some actually do remember their past summonings (not all, obviously, and it’s really limited to those who are from other Fate entries, but still).
Tumblr media
Unless it involves rabbits.
2 notes · View notes
writer-and-artist27 · 1 year ago
Text
It's past 10 pm on a Friday night when the author posts this, but with a third family member having ascended to the world beyond in the span of a year from cancer treatment, the author had to process things.
And with the recent Halloween Rising 2023 event in FGO NA, a certain Foreigner's antics rubbed the author the wrong way enough to provide just enough of leeway to go try-hard in writing rage.
Fuck cancer in taking another person away from me.
Content warning for spoilers for Sections 4-6 of said Halloween event, graphic violence, cruel and unusual punishment, and mentions of torture. You've been warned.
AO3 link here. OST Playlist on YouTube here, with the new songs all included.
5 notes · View notes
gachagamewishlist · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
UwU
4 notes · View notes
nohm94art · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Featuring Team Big Tiddy
193 notes · View notes
fate-grand-master · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Well there’s a lot I can list honestly, but off the top of my head, I would like to see Napoleon talk with Jeanne d’Arc.
Napoleon was one of the few political men who openly talked about how some of his biggest role models were powerful women; And one of those women was Jeanne d’Arc. She was a country side girl with no education or training who, within a year, became an remarkable leader and cannon artilleryman. Napoleon spent many years training to become the leader and cannon artilleryman he is known as today. There’s really no reason FGO Napoleon shouldn’t honestly be depicted as a huge Jeanne d’Arc fanboy.
It makes no sense to me that Napoleon, who 1) had paintings and statues of Jeanne d’Arc around his home, 2) is rumored to have named one of his cannons after Jeanne d’Arc, has dialog lines for Iskandar and multiple other Greek heroes before he even gets one line with Jeanne.
But yeah, that’s just one of the pairs I’d like to interact more. Thank you for the questions anon(s)!
46 notes · View notes
queencanis · 2 years ago
Text
Some old Napoleon's I drew that I don't recall posting here
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
48 notes · View notes
owob · 3 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
HELLO! i posted this on my twitter, but:
i finished writing about most of my fan hgw...!!!
the 'other characters' is still a WIP but you can read about the main cast here: fatelc.carrd.co
it's a webnovel so you can hit the 'start reading' button to read the prologue!
lmk what u guys think :)
126 notes · View notes
madillhethen · 3 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Lol Mash’s reaction.
She also finally answered a thing I was curious of about HS who were married in life. I guess some do breakaway from that parts of them, Huh?
Tumblr media
This part is too hilarious. Napoleon is so funny 😂.
Tumblr media
Mash is so in on it 🤣.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Haha, for history reference, Josephine was his first wife, right? They had a rocky marriage and she had notorious affairs even though he was madly in love, and then in the end I think they both just started cheating on one another? And the second marriage was a political one if I remember right but it’s been a while since I looked up Napoleon.
Tumblr media
Ophelia’s reactions can only be considered normal.
Tumblr media
I mean this makes the Lostbelt so much more interesting. I was mainly here to learn of why Sigurd doesn’t remember Brynhildr but now I wanna see where this goes 😂.
Tumblr media
We went full on Frozen here with the castle made of ice and snow, and the Ophelia just paraphrasing Elsa’s reaction to Hans and Anna’s engagement.
Tumblr media
Omg, Skadi is in on this too 🤣. She really stood there and watched it all unfold and was just ‘yeah, this man would make a good fit for my beloved daughter’.
This whole scene was just hilarious. I love it.
26 notes · View notes