Napoleon at the Boulogne Camp
"THE reasons which induced me to publish the present work are briefly these: My father was a Boulonnais, and owner of the land historically famous for its associations with Bonaparte and Bruix. I have therefore in my possession a number of documents, hitherto unpublished, concerning the Camp of Boulogne.
"Besides this, during the many years spent on my father's property at the Plateau d'Odre, I have had many opportunities of acquiring information and collecting circumstantial evidence on the spot itself, from old men who had seen and talked with Napoleon, and had served under him.
"When writing these pages, in full view of the splendid panorama of the Boulogne roadstead, and from the top of the very cliff on which Napoleon and the Commander of the Flotilla had once taken up their quarters, I could not help thinking that the narrative of former events and of memorable incidents would certainly be of psychological interest to the public.
"Added to this, it seemed to me that a faithful record of typical details connected with Napoleon's Camp at Boulogne, might even prove a useful contribution to the military history of that period, in which the extraordinary and fertile activity of Napoleon—seconded by the ardour, so typical, of his soldiers and sailors—had inspired England with fear, and served to organise an incomparable army."
1100256108
Napoleon at the Boulogne Camp
"THE reasons which induced me to publish the present work are briefly these: My father was a Boulonnais, and owner of the land historically famous for its associations with Bonaparte and Bruix. I have therefore in my possession a number of documents, hitherto unpublished, concerning the Camp of Boulogne.
"Besides this, during the many years spent on my father's property at the Plateau d'Odre, I have had many opportunities of acquiring information and collecting circumstantial evidence on the spot itself, from old men who had seen and talked with Napoleon, and had served under him.
"When writing these pages, in full view of the splendid panorama of the Boulogne roadstead, and from the top of the very cliff on which Napoleon and the Commander of the Flotilla had once taken up their quarters, I could not help thinking that the narrative of former events and of memorable incidents would certainly be of psychological interest to the public.
"Added to this, it seemed to me that a faithful record of typical details connected with Napoleon's Camp at Boulogne, might even prove a useful contribution to the military history of that period, in which the extraordinary and fertile activity of Napoleon—seconded by the ardour, so typical, of his soldiers and sailors—had inspired England with fear, and served to organise an incomparable army."
2.99 In Stock
Napoleon at the Boulogne Camp

Napoleon at the Boulogne Camp

by Fernand Nicolay
Napoleon at the Boulogne Camp

Napoleon at the Boulogne Camp

by Fernand Nicolay

eBook

$2.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

"THE reasons which induced me to publish the present work are briefly these: My father was a Boulonnais, and owner of the land historically famous for its associations with Bonaparte and Bruix. I have therefore in my possession a number of documents, hitherto unpublished, concerning the Camp of Boulogne.
"Besides this, during the many years spent on my father's property at the Plateau d'Odre, I have had many opportunities of acquiring information and collecting circumstantial evidence on the spot itself, from old men who had seen and talked with Napoleon, and had served under him.
"When writing these pages, in full view of the splendid panorama of the Boulogne roadstead, and from the top of the very cliff on which Napoleon and the Commander of the Flotilla had once taken up their quarters, I could not help thinking that the narrative of former events and of memorable incidents would certainly be of psychological interest to the public.
"Added to this, it seemed to me that a faithful record of typical details connected with Napoleon's Camp at Boulogne, might even prove a useful contribution to the military history of that period, in which the extraordinary and fertile activity of Napoleon—seconded by the ardour, so typical, of his soldiers and sailors—had inspired England with fear, and served to organise an incomparable army."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787205444
Publisher: Friedland Books
Publication date: 06/28/2017
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 303
File size: 12 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Jules Fernand Nicolay (February 12, 1848 - November 23, 1922) was a French lawyer, writer and lecturer of Catholic French in the late nineteenth century and beginning of the twentieth century.
Born in Paris in 1848, the son of a professor of literature, Pierre-Louis-Émile Nicolaÿ (1812-1890) and Julie Joséphine Vignon (1821-1891), he was a descendant of artesian coopers (Boulonnais).
He studied law at Sorbonne College and the Collège de Franc and became a lawyer at the Paris Court of Appeal in 1872, defending, among others, Albert de Mun, the Archbishop of Paris and the Pilgrim, and was a regular legal advisor to ecclesiastical authorities in their struggle against the anti-clerical measures taken by the Republicans from 1880.
A militant Catholic with clerical and anti-modernist views, he was a member of the Corporation of Christian Publicists and the National League Against Atheism for ten years. He was a speaker of the movement for the "defense of religious freedoms and the rights of the fathers of the family" in May 1880, as well as at the Catholic Conference in 1888. A prolific author, his conservative, patriarchal and paternalistic views were reflected in his works.
He was awarded the Commander of Saint-Grégoire-le-Grand by Pope Pius X and also received awards from the French Academy and the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences.
Nicolay was married to Alice-Marie-Rose-Albertine Gripon (1861-1923) in 1881 and had five children.
He died in Paris, France in 1922 at the age of 74.



Born in Paris in 1848, the son of a professor of literature, Pierre-Louis-Émile Nicolaÿ (1812-1890) and Julie Joséphine Vignon (1821-1891), he was a descendant of artesian coopers (Boulonnais).
He studied law at Sorbonne College and the Collège de Franc and became a lawyer at the Paris Court of Appeal in 1872, defending, among others, Albert de Mun, the Archbishop of Paris and the Pilgrim, and was a regular legal advisor to ecclesiastical authorities in their struggle against the anti-clerical measures taken by the Republicans from 1880.
A militant Catholic with clerical and anti-modernist views, he was a member of the Corporation of Christian Publicists and the National League Against Atheism for ten years. He was a speaker of the movement for the “defense of religious freedoms and the rights of the fathers of the family” in May 1880, as well as at the Catholic Conference in 1888. A prolific author, his conservative, patriarchal and paternalistic views were reflected in his works.
He was awarded the Commander of Saint-Grégoire-le-Grand by Pope Pius X and also received awards from the French Academy and the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences.
Nicolay was married to Alice-Marie-Rose-Albertine Gripon (1861-1923) in 1881 and had five children.
He died in Paris, France in 1922 at the age of 74.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews