Napoleon's anabases - definitie. Wat is Napoleon's anabases
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Wat (wie) is Napoleon's anabases - definitie

GIVEN A CIRCLE AND ITS CENTRE, THE PROBLEM OF DIVIDING THE CIRCLE INTO FOUR EQUAL ARCS USING ONLY A COMPASS
Napoleon's Problem; Napoleon problem
  •  Construction the middle of a distance or of a line segment only with a compass, animation [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:01-Mitte_Abstand-Strecke_nur_mit_Zirkel.gif see here.]

Napoleon's Crimes         
2005 BOOK BY CLAUDE RIBBE
Napoleon's Holocaust; The Crimes of Napoleon; The Crime of Napoleon; Napoleon's Crimes: A Blueprint for Hitler
Napoleon's Crimes: A Blueprint for Hitler () is a book published in 2005 by French writer Claude Ribbe, who is of Caribbean origin. In the book, Ribbe advances the thesis that Napoleon Bonaparte during the Haitian Revolution first used gas chambers as a method of mass execution, 140 years before Hitler and the Nazis.
Death mask of Napoleon         
Napoleon's Death Mask; Napoleon's death mask
During the time of Napoleon Bonaparte, it was customary to cast a death mask of a great leader who had recently died.Fulghum, Neil (2008).
Moscow 1812: Napoleon's Fatal March         
  • An artistic depiction of Napoleon's retreat from Moscow, by [[Adolph Northen]]
BOOK BY ADAM ZAMOYSKI
1812: Napoleon's Fatal March on Moscow
Moscow 1812: Napoleon's Fatal March is a non-fiction book analysing the events and circumstances during the French Invasion of Russia and the events during the reign of Napoleon, which would, ultimately, mark the ending of the Napoleonic empire after his troops were defeated after attempting to access Moscow. The book was written by Adam Zamoyski and first published on August 3, 2004 by HarperCollins; receiving positive reviews by critics and the media.

Wikipedia

Napoleon's problem

Napoleon's problem is a compass construction problem. In it, a circle and its center are given. The challenge is to divide the circle into four equal arcs using only a compass. Napoleon was known to be an amateur mathematician, but it is not known if he either created or solved the problem. Napoleon's friend the Italian mathematician Lorenzo Mascheroni introduced the limitation of using only a compass (no straight edge) into geometric constructions. But actually, the challenge above is easier than the real Napoleon's problem, consisting in finding the center of a given circle with compass alone. The following sections will describe solutions to three problems and proofs that they work.

Georg Mohr's 1672 book "Euclides Danicus" anticipated Mascheroni's idea, though the book was only rediscovered in 1928.