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Napoleon was attacked (and defeated) by a horde of rabbits. |
Famous Figures |
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Reader, it was chaos. According to General Paul Charles François Adrien Henri Dieudonné Thiébault, "the intrepid rabbits turned the Emperor's flank, attacked him frantically in the rear, refused to quit their hold, piled themselves up between his legs till they made him stagger, and forced the conqueror of conquerors, fairly exhausted, to retreat and leave them in possession of the field." Having ceded this crucial territory, Napoleon retreated to his coach and thought the bunnies would show mercy. They did not. With what historian David Chandler has described as "a finer understanding of Napoleonic strategy than most of his generals," they continued their siege until the coach fled the scene. The reason for the creatures' aggression? Berthier bought tame rabbits from a farmer rather than trap wild ones and, because they hadn't been fed that day, the hungry bunnies swarmed the men they assumed were there to feed them. | |
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Australia fought a "war" against emus — and lost. | |||||||||
Rabbits aren't the only animals that have brought the leaders of a powerful nation to their knees. In 1932, Australia found itself in crisis when some 20,000 emus moved inland during their breeding season and disrupted farmers' crops. After having their classification downgraded from "native species" to "vermin," the ostrich-like birds became public enemy number one. The government sent in World War I veterans to assist the beleaguered farmers, and though they were outfitted with machine guns, they soon found themselves overwhelmed by their flightless foes. "The machine-gunners' dreams of point-blank fire into serried masses of Emus were soon dissipated," observed D.L. Serventy, an Australian ornithologist. "The Emu command had evidently ordered guerrilla tactics, and its unwieldy army soon split up into innumerable small units that made use of the military equipment uneconomic. A crestfallen field force therefore withdrew from the combat area after about a month." The birds were simply too much trouble to get rid of, and though they suffered heavy casualties, they emerged victorious and still thrive Down Under. | |||||||||
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