NAPOLEON III (Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, future).... - Lot 13 - Osenat

Lot 13
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NAPOLEON III (Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, future).... - Lot 13 - Osenat
NAPOLEON III (Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, future). Autograph letter signed "Napoleon Louis B.", addressed to Hortense Perrégaux, wife of the duke of Ragusa, Marshal Auguste-Frédéric-Louis Viesse de Marmont. Arenenberg, [on Lake Constance, in the Swiss canton of Thurgau], February 18, 1836. 2 pp. 1/2 in-8, address on back, black wax armorial seal retained; marginal loss on second leaf due to opening with damage to one word. "I have many thanks to make to you, you made me spend very pleasant moments; because you must think that FOR AN AUTHOR IT IS NOT AN INDIFFERENT THING TO APPREND THAT A COMPETENT JUDGE APPROVES HIS WORK. THE G[ENERA]L DEJEAN SEES MY WORK WITH INDULGENCE and I believe that it is to you, Madam, that I owe the benevolence he is willing to grant me. I beg you, Madame, to apologize to him for the fact that he received two copies of my manual; the first was sent to you by my mother during my trip to Lausanne, and I was not able to mark on it with my own hand the homage I wished to pay to the general; I therefore gave him a second copy on which a few polite words marked MY ESTIMATE FOR THE OLD WARRIOR. I have before my eyes the charming box that you kindly sent me, I use it every moment, for from the first day I filled it with my best tobacco..." He then recommends a former servant of his mother Queen Hortense. PRINCE LOUIS NAPOLEON-BONAPARTE, ARTILLERY OFFICER AND HISTORIAN OF HIS WEAPON. He was a student at the Swiss artillery school of Thun during the winter of 1831-1832, and published several works on the subject, a Manuel de l'artillerie à l'usage des officiers d'artillerie de la République helvétique (1836), a Histoire du canon dans les armées modernes (1848), and Études sur le passé et l'avenir de l'artillerie (1846-1863, in collaboration with general Ildefonse Favé). ARTILLERY STUDIES ARE A NAPOLEONIAN MILITARY TRADITION, Napoleon I, Napoleon III and the Imperial Prince having in common the fact that they had all completed their military studies in this elite scientific corps. ARENENBERG OF HIS YOUTH, AT HIS MOTHER THE QUEEN HORTENSE. Hortense de Beauharnais had been forbidden to stay in France since 1815, but had been allowed to acquire the small castle of Arenenberg, which brought her closer to her brother Prince Eugene, son-in-law of the King of Bavaria. She lived there until her death, raised her children there, including the future Napoleon III (who always remembered it fondly), and made it a Bonapartist high place, but also a popular literary, artistic and social salon. GENERAL OF THE EMPIRE AND AIDE DE CAMP TO NAPOLEON I DURING THE HUNDRED DAYS, PIERRE FRANÇOIS MARIE AUGUSTE DEJEAN (1780-1845) was the son of the former minister of war Jean-François Aimé Dejean. Proscribed in July 1815, he stayed in Styria, Croatia and Dalmatia (both regions under Austrian control at the time), before being allowed to return to France at the end of 1818.
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