Contents
Academic literature on the topic 'Armée napoléonienne'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Armée napoléonienne.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Journal articles on the topic "Armée napoléonienne"
Iachello, Enrico. "Centralisation Étatique et Pouvoir Local en Sicile au XIXe siècle." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 49, no. 1 (February 1994): 241–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ahess.1994.279255.
Full textDenis, Béatrice. "Représenter Austerlitz : le système icono-textuel napoléonien." RACAR : Revue d'art canadienne 47, no. 1 (August 30, 2022): 23–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1091819ar.
Full textLafon, Jean-Marc. "Hervé Drévillon, Bertand Fonck, Michel Roucaud (ÉD.), Guerres et armées napoléoniennes. Nouveaux regards,." Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine 61-2, no. 2 (2014): 236. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rhmc.612.0236.
Full textBrun, Jean-François. "Le rôle du Grand Empire dans le recrutement et la logistique des armées napoléoniennes." Revue Historique des Armées 291, no. 2 (January 2, 2018): 31–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rha.291.0031.
Full textCrépin, Annie. "Gilles Candela, L’armée d’Italie (1792-1797). Des missionnaires armés à la naissance de la guerre napoléonienne." Annales historiques de la Révolution française, no. 367 (March 1, 2012): 233–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/ahrf.12391.
Full textPansini, Valéria. "Gilles Candela L’armée d’Italie. Des missionnaires armés à la naissance de la guerre napoléonienne Rennes, PUR, 2011, 402p. et 6 p. de pl." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 71, no. 01 (March 2016): 238–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ahs.2016.0040.
Full textPuigmal, Patrick. "Indépendance, politique et pouvoir au Chili et en Argentine : attitudes des officiers napoléoniens dans les armées de libération (1817-1830)." Napoleonica La Revue 4, no. 1 (2009): 62. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/napo.091.0005.
Full textDuprat, Annie. "Philippe de Carbonnières, La Grande Armée de papier. Caricatures napoléoniennes, Mont-Saint-Aignan, Presses universitaires de Rouen et du Havre, 2015, 184 p., ISBN 979-10-240-0523-2." Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine 64-1, no. 1 (2017): 197. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rhmc.641.0197.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Armée napoléonienne"
Candela, Gilles. "L'Armée d'Italie (1792-1797) : des missionnaires armés à la naissance de la guerre napoléonienne." Aix-Marseille 1, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007AIX10085.
Full textPigeard, Alain. "Le service des vivres dans les armées du Premier Empire 1804-1815 (armée de terre)." Paris 4, 1995. http://www.theses.fr/1995PA040045.
Full textAfter seizing power on 18 Brumaire, Bonaparte set to reorganizing the army he had inherited from the old regime and the revolution. Of all the reforms, the service of provisions, sorely extended during the campaigns of 1792 to 1799 would receive particular attention right up until the end of the Empire. Two distinct ministries would be created: the ministry of war and the ministry of war administration; with the service of provisions depending on the latter (the precise designation was to change frequently). The war administrators corps, created on the 29th of January, 1800, would have the highly demanding task of organizing the supply of troops that would roam throughout the European continent. The vast size of the armies and the increasingly distant campaigns would force napoleon to use inexact methods (requisitioning, special levying). The severest shortages would be felt during the Polish (1807), Russian (1812) Spanish and Portuguese (1807-1813) campaigns; the absence of provisions would sometimes be replaced by looting. Even with the best imperial will, the system never functioned correctly; the cost of the wars being a factor of considerable importance. The soldier was all too often forced to improvise; the Napoleonic wars would serve as
Lemaire, Jean-François. "Blessures et blessés dans les armées napoléoniennes." Paris 4, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA040099.
Full textNapoleon instigates great artillery's entrance on the stage. Cannons will henceforth induce the battle's end, with the help of a strategy based on the quickness of action: "cannons and cannons again, but lightning before all". As a paradox, a moral obligation to help the wounded appears during an II. A soldier becomes a real citizen deserving consideration and recognition. Napoleon is at variance with surgeons. He wants to have full freedom of action in battle, fields; but the surgeons wish to attend quickly the wounded. As he realizes the great number of wounded, napoleon changes his mind. The analysis of his correspondence reveals that he began to elaborate a real wounded evacuation's plan at the end of 1813. But it is already too late. On the other hand, the analysis of wounded's personal documents may deceive. The drawing up of wounds does not help to understand their level of gravity, level that can only be appreciated if the same wound appears again. As personal documents stays doubtful, all memories and correspondence set up the best authority. Their great abundance empowers a wholesome strainer
Colson, Bruno. "Le général Rogniat : premier ingénieur de la Grande Armée et critique militaire." Paris, EPHE, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006EPHE4078.
Full textGeneral Joseph Rogniat (1776-1840) was chief engineer of the Grande Armée in 1813. In 1816, he wrote a book on the art of war, in which he praised but also critized Napoleon. On the island of Saint-Helena, the emperor read the book, denigrated it and dictated harsh commentaries which were published in 1823. Rogniat was shocked and wrote a angry response. This contradictory exchange of ideas was quite unique. Its analysis and the reactions it produced lead to a re-evaluation of french military thought at the beginning of the 19th century. General Rogniat's brilliant career also provides a better insight into the role of the french engineer corps during the napoleonic wars. Rogniat was the son of a notary who was a member of the legislative assemby and personified the new bourgeois elite. General Rogniat served the Bourbon restauration and became a pear of France in 1831. Most of the archival sources used in this work come from the french military archives in Vincennes, the national archives in Paris and private papers
Boudin, Michel. "Les commissaires des guerres du Consulat et de l'Empire." Paris 4, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA040252.
Full text1800-1815. The commissariat was living the last fifteen years of a four-century long existence. This institution on the verge of the Consulat was then rich in the old regime reforms and had been given a text which synthetized all the past experiences by the Directoire. But this legislative and statutory masterpiece didnté thwart embezzlement whatsoever. To attend to what was most urgent, the Premier Consul created what was and is still called "Inspection aux Revues" and thus deprived the Commissariat Officers of the most important historic part of their functions (responsabilities). But what might have seemed to be dismantling of the commissariat yielded rather disappointing results. A close inspection of the Ordonnateurs' personal individual files and the study of the intendants' roles in the Consulat as well as in the military campaigns from the Empire era, let us foresee the real world the administrateurs used to live in. The fictious attractiveness of the commissaire's profession fails in hiding the misery caused by their living conditions and in making people forget their long living execrable reputation of inefficiency and dishonesty. Such a situation had been partly inherited from the former regimes but had been highly maintained by the patent fiasco of the imperial military administration together with the high command duplicity, thus easing their responsability for the soldiers' deprivation and transferring it onto these civil servants
Bruyère-Ostells, Walter. "Les officiers de la Grande Armée dans les mouvements nationaux et libéraux (1815-1833)." Paris 4, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA040045.
Full textThe Grand Army officers take part in national and liberal actions in France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greese, Belgium, Poland and South America. They play a great part in the army and politics as well. South America or Greece recruit officers by contracts ; in Napoli, in Piedmont, France, Belgium or in Poland, most Napoleonic officers act by conviction. They are liberal with bonapartist liking or, less often, with orleanist liking. Real boonapartist are few and most officers don’t prefer any dynasty before 1830. That’s why Louis-Philippe was accepted in July 1830. Among officers, many are republicans, either moderate or radical. They are numerous among either in the 1789’s or even in Marie-Louises. In additional, National feeling explains their commitment, even in foreign parts. During uprisings for national liberty (France, Belgium), commitment can be spontaneous but in other revolutions (Italy, Greece), it can be the result of underground groups. Officers stay in European liberal towns. There, free masonry is still a mind society but doesn’t choose between liberalism and conservatism. So, officers join secret societies like carboneria. Their action is real but itisn’t a European union
Sick, Sylvain. "Les conscrits du Léman et du Mont-Blanc, la conscription et la Grande-Armée, sous le Consulat et l'Empire." Paris 12, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA120067.
Full textThese works are articulated around two sections. The first is dedicated to the study of Leman and Mont-Blanc conscripts in the heart of their state of origin. The conscript population is studied though operations of conscriptions the sanitary state that characterised them, the public spirit that they showed, as well as through particular phenomenon such as replacements, rebelliousness and it’s repression. The second part of this research analyses what became of these same individuals once they have been incorporated in the regirnents of the Great Army. These works, mainly statistical, study the distribution during the ordinary and extraordinary levies of the Empire, before presenting these men’s militar careers trough their participation in the campaigns. The history of their regiments, and what became of them. A last part evokes the dismantlement and the destiny of the soldiers and states of Leman and Mont-Blanc in 1813-1814
Brun, Jean-François. "L'économie militaire impériale à l'épreuve de la VIe coalition." Clermont-Ferrand 2, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993CLF20042.
Full textAfter the russian campaign, napoleon i undertakes with some improvising to rebuild a new great army in orfer to fight russia, which is soon helped by prussia. Two kinds of events mark this will. In the eazstern part of europe, the available imperial unities, commanded by murat then by beauharnais, try to slacken the enemy's forward movement from the inemen to the elbe, between december 1812 and april 1813. At the same time, france, italy and the german territories under the rule of paris know a great deal of requisitioning in men and horses, as well as in supplies and all sorts of military goods. This gives the opportunity of studying carefully the inner structure and the limits of the imperial warfare system. An armistice puts an end to the first campaign in saxony, and the disaster of leipzig stops the second one. So, in november 1813, the great army, deeply reduced, sets in a defensive position along the rhine while france,which is exhausted and used up, cannot give napoleon enough horses and war equipment to recover his military power during the following wiiks. This incapacity clearly shows proof that the first empire does not have a war economy. In fact, it is the military power resulting from short time wars which settles the french economical and political domination upon continental europe, and not the opposite. In short, the imperial ruling classes keep on reasoning in an rachaic way : war is possible thanks to economical "surplus". But since the russian campaign, logistics has become a very tough problem foreshadowing modern conflicts in which economy takes an essential part
Puigmal, Patrick. "L'influence militaire française pendant l'indépendance du cône sud de l'Amérique latine (Chili, Argentine, Pérou)." Pau, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PAUU1001.
Full textLoustalot, Bernard. "Desgenettes : 1762-1837 : un homme de réseau dans la transformation de l'art de guérir." Paris, EHESS, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016EHES0041.
Full textRené Nicolas Dufriche des Genettes, known as Desgenettes, is a doctor who lived between two centuries. He had been through a tumultuous period, both on the political levels and on the military issues. Thus, he had the opportunity to meet several historic characters: Benjamin Franklin, Madam Rolland. . . And above ail Napoléon Bonaparte. Familiar with the salons of the period, he had been a witness of the transformation of the French society more than the political events, and as chief doctor of Bonaparte army's then Napoléon, he followed several campaign of the great gênerai of the time. His career survived to the Empire, tormented by the political vicissitudes. Historical character himself, he first of ail played a rôle in the military medicine in Egypt and in the Great Army after 1807. Two "prowess" are generally at his crédit: his inoculation of the plague, and his opposition to Bonaparte about the poisoning of the sick people of Jaffa. On a routine basis, he had managed health service that had to be adapted on the daily movement and the situation of an army more and more numerous and uncoordinated, often in foreign territories and with frequent and deadly epidemics. Nevertheless, Desgenettes had also had a significant civil activity, first a scientific activity with some publications about the absorbing system (lymphatic), about education (anatomy defence), spreading of knowledge by taking part of the edition of several revues, second, as a Professor of Hygiene at the school subsequently university of medicine of Paris. Besides, it is as mayor of the 10th district of Paris and Professor of Hygiene that he will faced in 1832 the first modern plague epidemic: the cholera-morbus. Born in a family part of the bourgeoisie that pretended to be aristocratic, Desgenettes is a remarkable image of this ambitious people that embraced the Enlightenment ideas (intellectual cosmopolitanism, operative freemasonry), and managed to get through the revolutionary turmoil to compose the Napoleonic meritocracy. Very cultivated but sceptical about religious, medical (friend of Broussais but fighting his doctrines) or politic (loyal but not docile to the Emperor), his strong character and his independent spirit (opposition to Bonaparte and resignation of the Academy of Medicine) ostracised him
Books on the topic "Armée napoléonienne"
La Roche-sur-Yon (France). Musée municipal. and Bibliothèque Paul Marmottan, eds. Charlet, 1792-1845: Aux origines de la légende napoléonienne. [Paris]: B. Giovanangeli, 2008.
Find full textDe la manoeuvre napoléonienne à l'offensive à outrance: La tactique générale de l'armée française, 1871-1914. Paris: Economica, 2009.
Find full textQueloz, Dimitry. De la manoeuvre napoléonienne à l'offensive à outrance: La tactique générale de l'armée française, 1871-1914. Paris: Economica, 2009.
Find full textBoudon, Jacques-Olivier. Armée, guerre et société à l'époque napoléonienne: Actes du colloque organisé par l'Institut Napoléon et la Bibliothèque Marmottan les 17 et 18 novembre 2000. Paris: Editions SPM, 2004.
Find full textLa grande armée de papier: Caricatures napoléoniennes. Mont-Saint-Aignan: Presses universitaires de Rouen et du Havre, 2015.
Find full textFrance. Ministère de la défense, France. Direction de la mémoire, du patrimoine et des archives, and Fondation Napoléon, eds. Guerres et armées napoléoniennes: Nouveaux regards. Paris: Nouveau Monde, 2013.
Find full text1974-, Blot Grégory, ed. La véritable histoire de Jules, jeune tambour de l'armée de Napoléon. Montrouge: Bayard éd., 2013.
Find full textLaffaille, Gabriel. Mémoires (1787-1814): Extraits du Carnet de La Sabretache, années 1930-1931. Paris: Librairie Historique F. Teissèdre, 1997.
Find full textLaffaille, Gabriel. Mémoires (1787-1814): Extraits du Carnet de La Sabretache, années 1930-1931. Paris, 102 rue du Cherche-Midi, 75006: Librairie historique F. Teissèdre, 1997.
Find full textConnelly, Owen. Blundering to glory: Napoleon's military campaigns. Wilmington, Del: Scholarly Resources, 1987.
Find full text