Napoleon; a History of the Art of War: From the beginning of the Peninsular war to the end of the Russian campaign, with a detailed account of the Napoleonic warsHoughton, Mifflin, 1907 |
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Side 3
... wrote , December 1 , 1801 , to Gouvion St. Cyr , who represented him in Madrid : " I desire that you should make Their Majesties understand my extreme discontent with the unjust and inconsequential conduct of the Prince of the Peace ...
... wrote , December 1 , 1801 , to Gouvion St. Cyr , who represented him in Madrid : " I desire that you should make Their Majesties understand my extreme discontent with the unjust and inconsequential conduct of the Prince of the Peace ...
Side 29
... wrote him : " The battle of Medina de Rio Seco will be one more title to your military reputation . Never was battle gained under more important circumstances . It has decided the affairs of Spain . " Medals were ordered to be ...
... wrote him : " The battle of Medina de Rio Seco will be one more title to your military reputation . Never was battle gained under more important circumstances . It has decided the affairs of Spain . " Medals were ordered to be ...
Side 50
... wrote Joseph . To Clarke , October 2 , with regard to Cintra , he wrote : " I do not know whether I ought to approve it , but . I see nothing in the act which • LETTER TO JUNOT . 51 is contrary to honor ,
... wrote Joseph . To Clarke , October 2 , with regard to Cintra , he wrote : " I do not know whether I ought to approve it , but . I see nothing in the act which • LETTER TO JUNOT . 51 is contrary to honor ,
Side 55
... wrote : " Who is the military man who has made six months of war and does not feel that in such a position one is to guard against the reports which see the enemy everywhere and with a big lens ? " Napoleon was finding the usual ...
... wrote : " Who is the military man who has made six months of war and does not feel that in such a position one is to guard against the reports which see the enemy everywhere and with a big lens ? " Napoleon was finding the usual ...
Side 60
... wrote the king : " The emperor's intention is that Lefebvre should be master to continue to manœuvre on his right , . to have act against Santander only Bessières and Lefebvre , and to hold in reserve Victor , to second one or the other ...
... wrote the king : " The emperor's intention is that Lefebvre should be master to continue to manœuvre on his right , . to have act against Santander only Bessières and Lefebvre , and to hold in reserve Victor , to second one or the other ...
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Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Napoleon: From the beginning of the Penninsular war to the end of the ... Theodore Ayrault Dodge Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
Napoleon; a History of the Art of War: From the beginning of the Peninsular ... Theodore Ayrault Dodge Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
Napoleon; a History of the Art of War: From the beginning of the Peninsular ... Theodore Ayrault Dodge Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Abensberg advance April archduke arrived artillery Asparn assembled attack Augsburg Austrian Badajoz Bagration Barclay battalions battle Bavarians Bernadotte Berthier Bessières Bohemia Borodino Breitenlee bridge Burgos campaign Castaños cavalry centre Charles column command corps cross Danube Davout debouch defeat defense division Donauwörth Ebro Eggmühl emperor enemy enemy's English Essling Eugene fight flank force French army Friant front Grand Army Guard Gudin guns headquarters Hilaire Hiller horse hundred infantry Ingolstadt Isar July Junot Kollowrath Kutusov La Romana Landshut Lannes Lefebvre Linz Lisbon Lobau Madrid manœuvre marshals Massena miles Moore Morand Moscow move Murat Nansouty Napoleon Napoleon wrote operation orders Oudinot Passau Poniatowski Portugal position pushed Ratisbon reached rear regiments reserve retired retreat river road Russian Salamanca Saragossa seize sent Smolensk soldiers Soult Spain Spaniards Spanish Tagus Talavera thousand town troops Vandamme Victor Vienna village Vilna Vitebsk Wellesley Wellington wing Wrede wrote Berthier
Populære avsnitt
Side 88 - But in case his mild and healing mediation should be again refused, he declared he would treat them as a conquered people, and place his brother on another throne. " I will, in that case, set the crown of Spain on my own head, and I shall know how to make it respected ; for God,'' concluded this extraordinary document, " has given me the power and the will to surmount all difficulties.
Side 356 - These circumstances, combined with the extreme fatigue of the troops, the want of provisions, and the number of wounded to be taken care of, have prevented me from moving from my position.
Side 165 - Austria arrived at my bivouac in Moravia ; you heard him implore my clemency, and swear an eternal friendship.
Side 701 - Sebastian were invested. Joseph's reign was over, the crown had fallen from his head, and after years of toils and combats which had been rather admired than understood, the English general, emerging from the chaos of the Peninsular struggle, stood on the summit of the Pyrenees a recognized conqueror. From those lofty pinnacles the clangor of his trumpets pealed clear and loud, and the splendor of his genius appeared as a flaming beacon to warring nations.
Side 693 - that discipline had deteriorated during the campaign in a greater degree than he had ever witnessed or ever read of in any army, and this without any disaster, any unusual privation or hardship save that of inclement weather ; that the officers had, from the first, lost all command over their men, and...
Side 280 - Emperor of the French, King of Italy, Protector of the Confederation of the Rhine, Mediator of the Swiss Confederation.
Side 49 - Let us bear our triumphal eagles to the pillars of Hercules, there also we have injuries to avenge ! Soldiers ! you have surpassed the renown of modern armies, but have you yet equalled the glory of those Romans who, in one and the same campaign, were victorious upon the Rhine and the Euphrates, in Illyria and upon the Tagus! A long peace, a lasting prosperity, shall be the reward of your labours.
Side 565 - here is the battle you have longed for ; it is necessary, for it brings us plenty, good winter-quarters, and a safe return to France. Behave yourselves so that posterity may say of each of you, ' He was in that great battle under the walls of Moscow.
Side 49 - Rome, which, in the same campaign, triumphed on the Rhine and on the Euphrates, in Illyria and on the Tagus.