| MARENGO | Village in Italy, site of a 1800 battle in which Napoleon defeated the Austrians (7) |
| TUSCANY | A region in central Italy, site of a cathedral with a dome designed by Filippo Brunelleschi in its c |
| ANZIO | In Italy, site of Allied landings in World War II (5) |
| JENA | City in Germany, site of an 1806 battle in which Napoleon defeated the Prussians (4) |
| BORODINO | Russian village, scene of an 1812 battle in which Napoleon defeated the Russians (8) |
| AUSTERLITZ | Battle of 1805 in which Napoleon defeated Russian and Austrian armies |
| AJACCIO | Corsican city in which Napoleon Bonaparte was born in 1769 (7) |
| LEIPZIG | City in Saxony at which Napoleon Bonaparte suffered a decisive defeat in 1813 (7) |
| PUGLIA | Italian name for the region forming the heel of the boot of Italy, site of Lecce, the so-called "Florence of the South" (6) |
| WATERLOO | Name of the battle in which Napoleon met his final defeat; or, the UK's busiest rail station (8) |
| CORSICA | Island on which Napoleon was born in 1769 (7) |
| MONTECASSINO | Hill above a town in Central Italy, site of intense battle during the Second World War (5,7) |
| CANNAE | Village in Italy which was scene of a victory by Hannibal over the Romans in 216 BC (6) |
| NAPOLEON | Leader who led the French to victory against the Austrians at the Battle of Marengo in 1800 (8) |
| ROESELARE | Municipality in West Flanders, Belgium that was the scene of a French victory over the Austrians in |
| PROSECCO | Meaning "path cut through woods", a village in Italy after which a variety of frizzante or spumante white wine is named (8) |
| ELBA | Third-largest island of Italy; site of Napoleon Bonaparte's first exile (1814-15) |
| AOSTA | - Valley; smallest, least populous region of Italy, site of Mont Blanc (5) |
| ELYSEE | Cambridgeshire diocese in which Napoleon once lived? |
| EBONY | Wood in which Napoleon gets English to advance |