
At first blush, the idea that Napoleon did not die on May 5, 1821, and that he escaped from
But there may be more to such a theory than mere wishful thinking. It has been established that Napoleon used impersonators throughout the years of ruling
Several authors, most notably Thomas Wheeler (1974), have proposed that sometime in the early years of exile on St. Helena, one of Napoleons doubles was recruited to take his place. Wheelers analysis suggests that Sgt. Pierrre Robeaud (elsewhere identified as Francois Eugene Robeaud), while in the first stages of stomach cancer, was induced to take Napoleons place. It is he, Robeaud, who eventually succumbed to stomach cancer and it is he who is buried in the church of the Invalides.
There are just enough strange facts to give impetus to such a theory. Robeaud, impoverished and living with his sister in the French
Wheeler notes that the various memoirs suggest marked changes in Napoleons behavior from 1819 on. He was no longer the defiant emperor, no longer active and energetic. Wheeler gathers a series of coincidences to produce, in 210 pages, a plausible scenario. Leys novel and the Ian Holm film (as described in the next chapter) use this premise -- the substitution of a double for Napoleon -- as the basis for their entertaining artistic endeavors.
As a bittersweet conclusion to the story, Wheeler suggests that Napoleon, having fled to
To accept this theory and its variations, one has to assume a plot of elaborate proportions. A significant number of the members of the Longwood household would have to have been involved, and would have to have held their silence. The complications of getting Napoleon off the island and to
All in all, as romantic and appealing as this theory is, it seems an unlikely explanation for the fate of Napoleon.



