EMPIRE 1804-1814 NAPOLEON EMPEROR. His laurelled... - Lot 15 - Osenat

Lot 15
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EMPIRE 1804-1814 NAPOLEON EMPEROR. His laurelled... - Lot 15 - Osenat
EMPIRE 1804-1814 NAPOLEON EMPEROR. His laurelled head on the right. DENON DIR. J.P. DROZ F. R/. THE SENATE AND THE PEOPLE. The emperor standing on a bulwark carried by a senator and a soldier. He is holding the imperial scepter and sword of Charlemagne. On the left, a collection of laws and on the right, a ploughshare. At the top, AN XIII (1804). DENON DIR. JEUFFROY F. Smooth slice. Ø 40 mm (33.10 g) ? Julius 1258 , Bramsen 326 Silver medal 1804. Coronation of Napoleon December 2, 1804. Small blows on the edge on the reverse side. Very nice. The coronation of Napoleon followed the proclamation of Napoleon Bonaparte as Emperor of the French under the title of Napoleon I of 18 May 1804. The religious coronation ceremony, officiated by Pope Pius VII, followed by the coronation ceremony, took place on Sunday, December 2, 1804, at Notre-Dame de Paris. It lasted nearly five hours. On 25 November, Pope Pius VII was welcomed at the Château de Fontainebleau with the military honours due to the Heads of State, and the Pope stayed there for four days. During these few days, he received many notables and a visit from Josephine de Beauharnais who confessed to him that his marriage with Napoleon in 1796 had been only a civil marriage. Faced with this state of affairs, Pius VII announced that he would not attend the coronation unless the couple produced a Catholic marriage certificate. On the eve of the coronation, Cardinal Joseph Fesch, Napoleon's uncle, pronounced the marriage at the Tuileries Palace on the night of December 1 in the presence of the parish priest of Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois, Talleyrand and Marshal Berthier. On the morning of 2 December, at 9am, the Pope's cortege left the Tuileries Palace and Pius VII entered Notre-Dame Cathedral at around 10.30am. At the same time, the imperial procession of 25 cars set off in its turn. After making a detour through the archbishopric to don his coat of arms and the insignia of the Legion of Honour, Napoleon entered the cathedral.
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