In this battle scene, the cheerful British army trounces the ragged French army now in rapid retreat. The hearty figures of the British soldiers contrast …
Napoleon, wearing a red bonnet inscribed "foolscap," sits astride a donkey and sets off for Elba. Marie Louise, seated behind Napoleon, beats the donkey with …
Although the text quoted above Napoleon's head is lifted from a published translation of a speech made by Napoleon to the French Legislature, the caricaturist …
Napoleon (center), riding a mule, reviews his conscripts which consist of drunken friars, zanies, scrawny soldiers, and Dutchmen on toads. Attempting to appear dignified under …
This sheet is divided into eight panels (four across, two down). The sing-song verses, originally published in the "Morning Chronicle," accompany the images depicting the …
Comfortably seated in the East Indies, John Bull surprises Napoleon who emerges from the globe, one foot on Bengal. Napoleon drops a sheet titled "Plan …
In this highly colored caricature, Joseph Bonaparte wanders in the dangerous middle ground between Vesuvius' eruption and the eruption of Spanish resistance fighters. Without a …
Napoleon, cast as an emaciated hound, retreats, running across a frozen plain, his tail tucked between his legs. In this caricature, Napoleon's bust is drawn …
The two heirs to the Spanish throne, Antonio and Carlos, are infantilized and sleep soundly on Napoleon's lap. Like the other sleeping royals, Antonio and …
In this well-known satire by Thomas Rowlandson, Napoleon is represented as a large spider sitting in the center of his web waiting patiently for unsuspecting …
In this detailed image parodying "The Adoration of the Maji," the King of Rome, heir of Napoleon, is introduced to "Debuteys" and other dignitaries. In …
Hand-colored etched caricature (after William Heath?), published June 13, 1816; numbered 370; 'A procession of John Bull's pensioners walks from right to left, headed by …