Tag: Pontoon
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A captain’s memoirs on the 1809 Campaign …
Our narrator, Jérôme-Etienne Besse, was born on 5 May 1774 at Aubiac, in the Lot-et-Garonne Department. He recounts his experiences of the war against Austria. Besse served in the 84th Line Infantry Regiment. He eventually also saw action in Russia, was sent to Siberia as a prisoner, and returned in time to fight at the…
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1813-14 letters from Cuirassier Brigadier Pilloy
The following letters are drawn from a voluminous register which also contains copies of the Emperor’s proclamations, accounts of our narrator’s travels and more or less unusual recipes. The author in question is Étienne-Nicolas Pilloy, born in Santeau, canton of Pithiviers (Loiret), a farmer by trade. Here are his service records: 13th Cuirassier Regiment. Entered…
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Archduke Charles’ correspondence from the 1809 Campaign
Ried, this 8th April 1809. My dearest uncle, I arrived here yesterday, though not without having suffered a lot from the cold. Everything here is covered with snow. I leave this afternoon for Altheim. I will be in Braunau tomorrow evening, and the day after tomorrow before daylight I will cross my Rubicon, if, as…
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Remarks on the battle of Wagram, by General Édouard Colbert …
General Pierre David Édouard de Colbert-Chabanais (1774-1853), in his ‘Unpublished Remarks’, wrote a concise account of the battle of Wagram. Its simplicity and modesty enhance its interest. We reproduce it here verbatim, together with some other manuscripts that he drew up. According to the orders given the day before by Napoleon, the French light cavalry…
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Colonel Raymond Guiraud’s war journal (IV) …
8 April 1809. After a two-day rest at Bayonne, I left for Paris and prepared to join the (Imperial) Guard in Germany … We travelled in peasant carts which were drawn fairly smoothly by requisition horses … We often encountered long columns of Austrian prisoners, who were merrily making their way to France. This was…
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General Lasalle’s 1809 correspondence (IV) …
First attack on Engerau (Petržalka) All of Lasalle’s letters, written in great haste, often in the middle of the night, occasionally in the course of a reconnaissance at the first available lodging, have a striking sense of spontaneity and absolute sincerity. He describes in a few words the region he occupies or crosses: in reading…
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General Lasalle’s 1809 correspondence (III) …
The provisioning of such a quantity of cavalry must indeed have been very problematic. Without having the habit of complaining, Lasalle demonstrated the greatest solicitude to ensure the sustenance of his eleven regiments and Marulaz’s brigade, with the latter being qualified as a division because it had the numerical importance, having been placed under his…