Napoleon's Addresses gathers the proclamations, speeches, and public messages through which Bonaparte fashioned power into language. These pieces are at once political instruments and literary performances: compressed, martial, classical in cadence, and charged with the rhetoric of destiny, civic virtue, and imperial legitimacy. Read within the context of Revolutionary and Napoleonic France, they reveal how eloquence could mobilize armies, console citizens, justify conquest, and transform military success into historical myth. Napoleon Bonaparte, soldier, statesman, and emperor, wrote from the center of one of Europe's most convulsive eras. Born in Corsica and educated in French military institutions, he rose through the upheavals of the Revolution by combining strategic genius with acute political instinct. His addresses reflect the mind of a commander who understood that authority depended not only on battlefield victory but also on narrative, symbolism, and the careful cultivation of public belief. This volume is recommended to readers interested in history, political rhetoric, leadership, and the making of modern Europe. It offers direct access to Napoleon's self-presentation and to the persuasive language that helped shape an age of revolution, empire, and enduring historical fascination.