With Napoleon in Russia.
by Caulaincourt, Armand-Augustin-Louis de
Published by : William Morrow and Company (New York) Physical details: 422 p.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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900 - 999 | 940.2742092 Cau (Browse shelf) | Available | Gift | 15390 |
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940.23 Dur The Reformation | 940.24 Wed The thirty years war. | 940.253 Gay Age of Enlightenment | 940.2742092 Cau With Napoleon in Russia. | 940.2742092 Dur Age of Napoleon. | 940.2745 Adk Nelson's Trafalgar | 940.3 Fro Front Page History of the World Wars as Reported by The New York Times |
Includes index
Ambassador's return --
On the eve: 1812 --
First blood --
Smolensk --
Borodino --
The fire --
Indecision --
No truce --
Sauve-qui -peut --
Hunger --
Ice --
The Beresina --
By sledge to Warsaw --
Warsaw to dresden --
Dresden to Paris.
"In 1807, Napoleon had sent him as an ambassador to St. Petersburg, where Caulaincourt tried to maintain the alliance of Tilsit. His tasks were more those of a spy than an ambassador, and although Napoleon's ambition made the task a difficult one, Caulaincourt succeeded in it for some years. In 1810, Caulaincourt strongly advised Napoleon to renounce his proposed expedition to Russia. During the war he accompanied the emperor and was one of those whom Napoleon took along with him when he suddenly left his army in Poland to return to Paris in December 1812. At the beginning of 1813, following the death of general Duroc, Caulaincourt took up the position of Grand Marshal of the Palace. He was charged with all diplomatic negotiations and signed the armistice of Pleswitz, June 1813, represented France at the congress of Prague in August 1813, and at the Treaty of Fontainebleau on 10 April 1814. During the first Bourbon Restoration, Caulaincourt lived in obscure retirement. When Napoleon returned from Elba (the Hundred Days), he became his minister of foreign affairs, and tried to persuade Europe of the emperor's peaceful intentions. After the second Restoration, Caulaincourt's name was on the list of those proscribed, but it was erased on the personal intervention of Alexander I with Louis XVIII. Caulaincourt's famous memoir, "With Napoleon in Russia" was lost for years and finally unearthed after World War I. Many years of restoration followed and it was finally published for the first time in 1933."--Wikipedia.
15390