Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Sharpe had a desperate childhood; after the violent death of his prostitute mother, he goes into a foundling home from where he is "sold" to a chimney sweep. To avoid the appallingly high mortality rate of boy sweeps, he runs away and becomes a thief.
Sharpe's mother was killed in the Gordon Riots of 1780. What was the root cause of these London riots, during which almost 300 people were shot dead by soldiers, and another 200 wounded?
2. Sharpe enlists in the Army to avoid being arrested (and doubtless hanged) for murder. He is sent to India. After many adventures he takes part in the Battle of Assaye, where he saves the life of a man destined to become one of England's most successful soldiers, who in later life called Assaye his greatest victory. What was the family name of this man, better known under another title?
3. The newly commissioned Sharpe runs up against the social prejudices of the day and finds it impossible to gain acceptance from the other officers in his Regiment. He is transferred into a unit which is pioneering a new way of fighting, wearing a new kind of uniform, and using a new generation of military technology. What is Sharpe's new Regiment?
4. On his way home from India in 1805, Sharpe is caught up in Trafalgar, the greatest sea battle of the age. The ship on which he is travelling is captured by a French warship, the Revenant ("Ghost" or "Zombie"). Trafalgar was a famous victory for Admiral Horatio Nelson, but sadly he did not survive it, having been picked off by a French sharpshooter from the rigging of another scarily-named French warship, with which Nelson's flagship HMS Victory was closely engaged. What was that French ship called?
5. After Trafalgar, Sharpe joins his new regiment only to find that here, too, he is ostracized because of his lowly origins. He is appointed to the dead-end job of regimental quartermaster, but runs into an old colleague from India, now a General, who recruits him for a mission to escort a secret agent to a European capital, where Sharpe finds himself on the receiving end of a massive bombardment by the British navy. Which city was it?
6. Continuing on his way, Sharpe heads for Portugal and Spain, where he has a very busy time in the Peninsular War. He takes part in numerous battles, including the Siege of Badajoz, one of the bloodiest engagements of the war. Sharpe leads his company and his regiment into the breach in the city's walls and on to ultimate victory.
What is the term often applied to the soldiers who lead an assault on a defensive position, often at great risk to their lives?
7. Among Sharpe's many Peninsular War battles was Talavera, where he captures a significant object on the battlefield, in a notable feat achieved only five times in the whole Napoleonic period.
What was that object?
8. Sharpe, by now a Lieutenant Colonel, fights at Waterloo, where he is an aide to the Dutch Allied leader the Prince of Orange. Appalled at the Prince's bungling which leads to several units being slaughtered, Sharpe deserts him and ends up back with his old regiment, where he is instrumental in holding the British line, earning the gratitude of his old benefactor the Duke of Wellington.
Wellington said later that the battle was "a damned close-run thing" and the outcome was in doubt until very late in the day. Whose delayed arrival on the battlefield sealed Wellington's victory and Napoleon's fate?
9. After Waterloo, Sharp "retires" to a farm in France and his perennial sidekick Patrick Harper to Dublin, where he runs a pub. However they have one more adventure: a voyage to South America, on a mission to trace the husband of an old friend from Spain, who has disappeared in Chile. While there they encounter a former British Naval officer who is commanding the naval forces of the Chilean rebels fighting for independence from Spain.
Who was this man, whose dramatic real-life career inspired several fictional heroes?
10. In the course of their last adventure in Chile, Sharpe and Harper come face to face with their old enemy, Napoleon Bonaparte. On their way to South America, they call in at the remote island where he has been exiled; they stop there again on the way home only to find that he has died.
Which was this island, where Napoleon spent his final 6 years and died in 1821?
Source: Author
tartandisco
This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor
looney_tunes before going online.
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