Academic literature on the topic 'Famille Bonaparte'

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Journal articles on the topic "Famille Bonaparte":

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Prévot, Chantal. "Le Paris de la famille Bonaparte." Napoleonica La Revue 26, no. 2 (2016): 101. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/napo.026.0101.

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Leroy, Mary. "Entretien avec Mary Leroy." Revue française de psychanalyse Vol. 87, no. 4 (September 20, 2023): 927–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rfp.874.0927.

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Cet entretien avec Mary Leroy, directrice littéraire aux éditions Flammarion, met en évidence le travail éditorial en amont de la rédaction de la Correspondance intégrale entre Marie Bonaparte et Freud, grâce à l’équipe réunie par Mary Leroy et Cécile Marcoux avec Rémy Amouroux et Olivier Mannoni. Il met l’accent sur l’engagement et le soutien de la famille Bonaparte, celui de la Bibliothèque du Congrès et, d’autre part, l’intérêt de l’éditrice pour les recherches de Marie Bonaparte sur le plaisir féminin.
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Hicks, Peter. "Joseph Bonaparte and the "Réunion de famille? of 1832-33." Napoleonica La Revue 8, no. 2 (2010): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/napo.102.0030.

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Tóth, Ferenc. "Un Hongrois en Égypte avant Napoléon. La mission secrète du baron de Tott." Revue Historique des Armées 270, no. 1 (January 1, 2013): 14–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rha.270.0014.

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Le baron de Tott, issu d’une famille hongroise établie en France au XVIII e siècle, fut un officier de hussards employé dans des missions en Orient. Connaissant les langues et usages orientaux, il fut l’un des meilleurs agents de Louis XVI. Après avoir introduit des réformes militaires dans l’armée ottomane durant la guerre russo-turque de 1768-1774, il rejoignit le « parti interventionniste » du gouvernement de Versailles et devint un véritable idéologue du partage et de la colonisation de l’Empire ottoman, en particulier de sa province la plus convoitée : l’Égypte. En 1777, il fut nommé inspecteur général des Échelles du Levant. Cela lui permit d’effectuer une reconnaissance militaire de l’Égypte en vue d’un plan d’occupation ultérieur. Le projet fut déposé dès 1779, mais sa réalisation fut ajournée jusqu’à l’avènement de Napoléon Bonaparte qui s’en inspira pour sa fameuse campagne d’Égypte. Cet article présente l’histoire du projet égyptien du baron de Tott tout en soulignant ses aspects novateurs, comme la participation des savants à cette entreprise et l’intérêt géostratégique de l’Égypte dans la pensée politique française.
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Gabriëls, Jos. "‘Het vooruitzigt op zijn toekomstig geluk’." BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review 136, no. 4 (December 22, 2021): 81–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.51769/bmgn-lchr.11117.

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Door pages op te nemen in zijn hofhouding bood Lodewijk Napoleon, koning van Holland (1806-1810), jonge zoons van de elite de mogelijkheid zich in een hoofse omgeving voor te bereiden op een carrière als legerofficier. Deze aloude junior functies waren gering in aantal en erg gezocht. Voor de koning vormden zij een van de middelen om zijn nieuw gecreëerde troon van legitimiteit te voorzien. Dit artikel bestudeert aan de hand van de pagebenoemingen de patronagerelatie tussen Lodewijk Napoleon en de vooraanstaande families in het koninkrijk. Een prosopografische analyse van de in totaal vijfentwintig pages laat zien hoe hij daarbij probeerde zo veel mogelijk geledingen binnen de verbrede en verbrokkelde elite recht te doen. Hoewel de korte duur van Lodewijks koningschap deze inspanningen uiteindelijk doorkruiste, blijkt de loyaliteit van de pages en hun families in veel gevallen zonder bezwaar te zijn overgegaan op het daaropvolgende keizerlijke bewind.By admitting pages into his household, King of Holland Louis Bonaparte (1806-1810) allowed upper class adolescents to be groomed for military careers in a prestigious environment. These traditional junior court positions, few in number and eagerly coveted, constituted one of the King’s instruments to bolster the legitimacy of his newly-created throne. This article examines royal patronage through the appointments of pages, considering Louis Bonaparte’s policies as well as the response of the country’s leading families. A prosopographical analysis of the total of twenty-five pages reveals how he sought to integrate as many sections of the kingdom’s broadened and fragmented elite as possible. Although the King’s efforts were eventually thwarted by the brevity of his reign, the allegiance of both the pages and their families proved in many cases to have been easily transferred to the succeeding imperial regime.
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Veljic, M., P. D. Marin, Z. Krivosej, and B. Ljubic. "Vascular flora of the Uvac River Gorge in Serbia." Archives of Biological Sciences 58, no. 2 (2006): 125–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/abs0602125v.

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During research on the vascular flora of the Uvac River Gorge, 730 species and infraspecific taxa from 87 families were found. The most numerous representatives were from the families Asteraceae (81 taxa), Fabaceae (57), Poaceae (55) and Lamiaceae (47). Hemicryptophytes were the dominant life form (56,6%); in the chorological sense, the most numerous were sub-Central-European (16,3 %) and Euro-Asian species (11,5 %). The following endemic species were recorded: Alyssum markgrafii, Valeriana simplicifolia, Cicerbita pancicii, Lamium bifidum balcanicum, Alyssum corymbosum, Fumana bonapartei, Euphorbia glabriflora, and Potentilla visianii.
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Artola Kortajarena, Koldo. "Aurizko aldaeraren inguruan (Aurizko eta Orreagako euskararen lagin batzuk)." Fontes Linguae Vasconum, no. 119 (June 20, 2015): 61–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.35462/flv119.2.

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Ohiko bideari jarraikiz, saio hau Louis-Lucien Bonaparte euskalariak utzi zigun mapa miresgarria gogoan prestatu dugu oraingoa ere. Aldaera hau osatzen duten (edo, haren ustez bederen, osatzen zuten) bi herriotan bildu lagin batzuk dira, beraz, lerro hauetara ekarri ditugunak. Saioan zehar garbi geratzen da gu ezagutzera iritsi garen euskarak, adin handiko lagun gutxi batzuek mintzatua soilik gainera, dela Aezkoakoaren dela Luzaidekoaren eragina duela (zehaztasunetan sakondu ez badugu ere) eta, hortaz, aski nahasia suertatu dela. Lan honen sarreraren bukaera aldean aritu gara honetaz berriemaile batzuen gurasoen nongotasuna aipatzean, nahiz Aurizko Irigarai abizeneko familia baten baitan, neurri handi batean, bertako euskara bere hartan mantendu zen.
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Clemens, Gabriele B. "Le vendite d'arte della nobiltà romana: una base per il collezionismo europeo." IL RISORGIMENTO, no. 2 (November 2023): 70–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/riso2023-002003.

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Durante il dominio francese nella Penisola italiana (1797-1814), le famiglie nobili dovettero vendere pregevoli opere d'arte per pagare tasse e debiti di guerra. Soprattutto gli esperti d'arte britannici acquistavano dipinti rina- scimentali e barocchi e li mettevano all'asta. Anche intere collezioni passa- rono di mano. Gli acquirenti di questi oggetti erano principalmente ricchi inglesi, ma anche membri della famiglia Bonaparte e funzionari napoleonici protetti dall'imperatore, che costruirono in pochi anni preziose collezioni, rivendute dopo il 1815. I vincitori di Napoleone colsero l'occasione per ac- quisire oggetti d'arte molto costosi, con l'idea di dimostrare il loro potere e aumentare il loro prestigio tramite le loro collezioni. Principi e re gareggia- vano nella costruzione di musei nelle loro residenze, realizzati sul modello del Louvre.
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Espejo Fern´andez, Alejandro. "L´HÔTEL LAURISTON: UNA RESIDENCIA EN PARÍS PARA LA DUQUESA DE ALBA." CUADERNOS DE INVESTIGACIÓN HISTÓRICA, no. 37 (February 5, 2021): 293–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.51743/cih.100.

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Pocos días después de conocer las noticias sobre el incendio que en 1903 arrasó la antigua villa de recreo que la emperatriz Eugenia poseyó en Biarritz, su tristeza ante la desaparición del que fue uno de los edificios más emblemáticos de su reinado. Como ella misma indicaba, con anterioridad al fuego de la villa de Biarritz habían sucumbido ante las llamas los palacios de las Tullerías y de Saint-Cloud -a pesar de que dos palacios tan significativos del reinado del último Bonaparte como son los de Fontainebleau y Compiègne permanecen a día de hoy intactos-. Se olvidó la emperatriz de un tercer edificio desaparecido, el conocido como hôtel d’Albe -hotel de Alba en español-, adquirido por ella misma con la intención de destinarlo a las estancias de su familia en la capital francesa.
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Valenzuela-Vanegas, Mario. "Contribución al estudio de la reproducción, desarrollo y comportamiento de la especie Columbina talpacoti rufipennis (Bonaparte)." Respuestas 1, no. 1 (June 18, 2016): 3–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.22463/0122820x.537.

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La familia Columbidae comprende alrededor de 289 especies (Meyer de Schavensee, 1964). Son aves de variado tamaño, siendo la especie Columbina talpacoti rufipennis una de las más pequeñas. Esta especie, comúnmente llamada "monjita", "abuelita" y "tortolita", está muy culturizada y habita en poblados y ciudades de clima tropical cálido y templado. En la ciudad de Cúcuta, la especie está ampliamente distribuida por el área metropolitana y frecuenta parques, bosques y solares; anida en ramas bajas de árboles como cují (prosopis juliflora), oiti (Moquilia thomentosa ), (Citrus sp), entre otros.Construye en las ramas de los arboles un nido sencillo de palitos atravesados. Se alimenta de granos y semillas; se le ve en epatios y corrales compartiendo alimento con animales domésticos. A pesar de que se asocia en grupos, son monógamas y nidófilas.El presente trabajo estudia el desarrollo de la especie desda la incubación hasta el abandono del nido, y el comportamientos de los padres e hijos durante el mismo período, contibuyendo dee esta manera al conociemiento reproductivo-etológico de estas aves.

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Famille Bonaparte":

1

DI, MANNO BERNARD. "La lettre volee du seminaire : une histoire de famille entre marie bonaparte et jacques lacan." Lyon 1, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992LYO1M226.

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Haegele, Vincent. "La famille Bonaparte et la gestion de l’héritage révolutionnaire : enjeux politiques et économiques au sein de l’espace européen." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021SORUL029.

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La Révolution française s’inscrit dès ses débuts dans un cadre international : tout au long des années 1780, les réformes entreprises dans les pays voisins de la France, mais aussi les crises politiques comme celle vécue par les Provinces-Unies, ont eu un large écho dans le débat politique intérieur. La signature du traité de commerce franco-anglais de 1786 est considérée comme une erreur politique dans un contexte qui voit l’opinion publique française s’alarmer du décrochage subi par l’économie du pays face au rival britannique. La Révolution remet en cause les bases fondamentales de la société française mais aussi ses rapports avec les puissances voisines, dont le langage diplomatique n’est plus compréhensible. L’entrée en guerre, en 1792, est inéluctable. Victorieuse sur le terrain militaire, la France n’est cependant pas pour autant épargnée par les crises politiques engendrées par les expérimentations constitutionnelles successives mises en place. En 1800, Napoléon Bonaparte s’empare du pouvoir et entreprend de consolider l’héritage révolutionnaire, à l’intérieur des frontières, mais aussi à l’extérieur. Bien qu’il prétende fermer le cycle commencé en 1789, Napoléon lui donne une nouvelle dimension dont la finalité est bien de construire un Empire. Cela sous-entend de reconstruire l’appareil diplomatique et de doter les États alliés ou satellites d’institutions inspirées du modèle qu’il incarne en reprenant à son profit les codes et symboles de la monarchie. Pourtant ce modèle n’est pas sans faiblesse. Le présent travail cherche à présenter le rôle de la famille Bonaparte dans l’appropriation des idées révolutionnaires et dans leur transmission à travers l’Europe
From its beginning, the French Revolution was the part of an international framework: throughout the 1780s, reforms and crisis in the foreign countries had a large echo in the internal political debate. The conclusion of the Franco-British commercial treaty in 1786 has been seen as a major political error by a growing part of the French public opinion. People were alarmed by the capability of the country’s economy to face the weight of British rival. The Revolution soon questions the fundamental bases of French society but also its relations with foreign powers, whose diplomatic language is no longer understandable. In 1792, the entry into the war was inevitable. Glorious in the military field, France was not however spared by the political crises engendered by the successive constitutional experiments. In 1800, the general Napoleon Bonaparte seized power and consolidated the revolutionary legacy, within the borders, but also abroad. Although he claimed to close the cycle started in 1789, Napoleon gave it a new dimension whose purpose was to build an Empire beyond natural borders. This implied a new diplomatic organisation and endowing allied or satellite states with institutions inspired by the model he personally embodied by using the codes and symbols of the monarchy for his own benefits. Yet this model was not without weakness. This work aims to present the role of the Bonaparte family in the appropriation of revolutionary ideas and in their transmission across Europe
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Witt, Laëtitia de. "Le Prince Victor Napoléon : (1862-1926)." Paris 4, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA040099.

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Le 4 septembre 1870, le Second Empire s'écroule à la suite de la défaite de Sedan. Le parti bonapartiste est anéanti. Quelques fiefs subsistent malgré tout, qui permettent la constitution du parti de " l'Appel au peuple " (1872). Après la mort de Napoléon III (1873), l'avènement de son fils, le prince impérial, confirme la remontée du parti bonapartiste. L'espoir est de courte durée ; il est tué au Zoulouland en juin 1879. Dans l'ordre de succession, le nouveau prétendant devrait être le prince Napoléon, unique cousin germain de l'empereur. Or, le fils de Napoléon III laisse des dispositions testamentaires contraires à la législation impériale, par lesquelles il choisit comme successeur politique le prince Victor, fils aîné du prince Napoléon. Cette décision déclenche une rupture irrémédiable entre le père et le fils et place le prince Victor à la tête du parti bonapartiste pendant une quarantaine d'années. Or, son règne politique marque le déclin définitif de la cause bonapartiste. Aussi, il apparaît comme le fossoyeur du bonapartisme en tant que force politique. En réalité, face à l'impuissance électorale du bonapartisme, le prince Victor s'impose un devoir de mémoire qui devient désormais son seul moyen de faire rayonner la gloire impériale. Avec le prince Victor, on pénètre dans l'intimité d'un héritier d'une ancienne famille régnante, condamné à l'exil. On découvre la spécificité de cette vie à part, dans laquelle se côtoient les obligations d'ordre politique et celles liées au train de vie d'usage d'un prétendant en exil
On September 4, 1870, the Second Empire collapsed following the defeat at Sedan. The Bonapartist Party was annihilated. Despite this, several bases of popular support subsisted, resulting in the creation of the party “l'Appel au people” (1872). After Napoleon III's death (1873) the advent of his son, the Prince Imperial, confirmed the resurrection of the Bonapartist Party. But their hopes were short lived; he was killed in Zululand in June, 1879. According to the order of succession, the new pretender should have been Prince Napoleon, the Emperor's only first cousin. However, Napoleon III's son defied imperial legislation in his will by selecting Prince Victor, Prince Napoleon's eldest son, as his political successor. This decision created an irreparable rupture between father and son and placed Prince Victor at the head of the Bonapartist Party for four decades. However, his political reign marked the definitive decline of the Bonapartist cause. Furthermore, in terms of Bonapartism as a political force, he seemed to many to personify the last nail in its coffin. In reality, faced with the Bonapartist movement's lack of electoral power, Prince Victor took upon himself the duty of remembrance, which soon became the sole medium through which he could revive the cult of imperial glory. By studying Prince Victor we delve into the intimate world of the heir of an old reigning family condemned to exile. We discover the peculiarities of this singular life in which he was torn between the duty of reviving his political cause, and the lifestyle of a pretender in exile

Books on the topic "Famille Bonaparte":

1

Lanctôt, Hermine. Madame Laetitia Bonaparte: Conférence donnée aux Dames bienfaitrices de l'Institution des sourdes-muettes. Montréal: Beauchemin, 1996.

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Moreau, Lucette. La famille Bonaparte dans les sciences et les arts, ou, Plus de sept générations au service de la France. Tours: Roseau, 2001.

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Hugentobler, Jakob. Die Familie Bonaparte auf Arenenberg. Arenenberg: Napoleon-Museum, 1989.

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Figueroa, Carlos Gigena. Guillermo Bonaparte: Aventura, trabajo, familia. Córdoba, República Argentina: Centro de Estudios Genealógicos de Córdoba, 1994.

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Vidal, Florence. Caroline Bonaparte. Paris: Pygmalion, 2006.

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Vidal, Florence. Elisa Bonaparte. Paris: Pygmalion, 2005.

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Vidal, Florence. Elisa Bonaparte. Paris: Pygmalion, 2005.

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Vanoyeke, Violaine. Les Bonaparte. Paris: Criterion, 1991.

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Abella, Rafael. José Bonaparte. Barcelona: Planeta, 1997.

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Carrington, Dorothy. Napoleon and his parents: On the threshold of history. London, England: Viking, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Famille Bonaparte":

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"An Italian Family in Corsica." In Bonaparte, 19–39. Harvard University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvjf9w40.5.

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"1. An Italian Family in Corsica." In Bonaparte, 19–39. Harvard University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4159/9780674425996-002.

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Bell, David A. "1. The Corsican, 1769–1796." In Napoleon, 14–26. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780199321667.003.0002.

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Napoleon Bonaparte was born in 1769 in Corsica, just after it came under the control of the Kingdom of France. ‘The Corsican, 1769–1796’ outlines Napoleon’s early life, including his enrolment at Brienne military boarding school at age nine. He developed a love of literature and considered life as an author, but after finishing Brienne, he went to the École Militaire in Paris, graduating in 1785. In 1786, after his father’s death, Napoleon returned home to Corsica to help with family affairs. He remained in Corsica after the start of the French Revolution, but his rise through the ranks of the French Army is described along with his marriage to Rose de Beauharnais (Joséphine) in 1796.
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Runyon, Randolph Paul. "Friends in High Places." In The Mentelles. University Press of Kentucky, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813175386.003.0008.

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In letters to Charlotte and Waldemar, Edme boasts of his friendship with members of the Bonaparte family. He publishes a version of the Old Testament from which all miracles have been excised, though it excites the anger of "religious bigots." He urges his son and daughter-in-law to write his good friend Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours, newly arrived in America, to court his favor. They do, and du Pont, residing in New York, engages Waldemar to investigate his land holdings in Scott County, Kentucky. The Mentelles provide him with candid observations on the population and economy of Lexington and the surrounding area. They begin lifelong friendships with Henry and Lucretia Clay and with Mary Owen Todd.
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Philippon, Jacques, and Jacques Poirier. "The Babinski Circle." In Joseph Babinski, 85–96. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195369755.003.0004.

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Abstract Joseph Babinski’s personal relationships help to shed light on his character and personality. Family is the innermost circle, composed of his parents and brother, with whom he shared living space and meals throughout his life, beginning on boulevard Montparnasse, where the brothers were born, on rue Bonaparte, and finally on boulevard Haussmann, where all the family members successively passed away. A second circle was made up of a small number of close and intimate friends, carefully selected, all of whom were about the same age, and who were regular guests at Sunday luncheons.1 9is group included Henri Vaquez, Jean Darier, Pierre Bazy, Émile Picard, and Fernand Widal.2 Except for Picard, they were all physicians, but not neurologists, and of high social and cultural standing: physicians in chief in the Parisian hospital system, university professors, members of the national academies, and recipients of the Legion of Honor.
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Parry, D. L. L., and Pierre Girard. "The new regime:1800–1824." In France since 1800, 7–33. Oxford University PressOxford, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199252299.003.0002.

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Abstract Napoleon Bonaparte was only just born a Frenchman. Though the island of Corsica had been held by many different Mediterranean powers over the centuries, it had never been French until 1768, when Louis XV bought it from the Republic of Genoa. An expedition sent later that year finally defeated the last Corsican resistance on 8May 1969. Neither Corsica ‘s harbours nor its rocky soil offered much reward for its conquerors—but its children were to remake France, Europe, and even the world. On 15 August that same year, Napoleone Buonaparte was born into a family of minor Corsican nobles who had rallied to the French cause. As a result, he received a military education at royal expense from 1779and became an officer in the army of Louis XVI in 1785. A few years later, the French Revolution and its wars overturned the old order in France and Europe, and enabled Napoleon to fulfil what he believed to be his destiny. Napoleon ‘s personality combined elements of the old regime, the Revolution, and military discipline, and he stamped these three features on the new regime in France. He grew up under the old regime, was educated in schools for the sons of noblemen, and was confirmed as a Catholic. Like many youths of the period, he was entranced by Enlightenment philosophy, and wrote romantic fiction badly ( ‘Napoleon began a life of action because of his failure in literature, ‘ observed Goethe).

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