RARE SOUVENIR OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE'S SIEGE OF ACRE - Lot 234

Lot 234
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Result : 975EUR
RARE SOUVENIR OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE'S SIEGE OF ACRE - Lot 234
RARE SOUVENIR OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE'S SIEGE OF ACRE LARREY (Dominique-Jean). Signed "D. J. Larrey" as surgeon-in-chief of the Armée d'Orient. "Devant Acre", 25 floréal an VII [14 mai 1799]. 3/4 p. in-8 oblong. Framed under glass. "The army's surgeon-in-chief attests that the c[itoy]en Jacques Boissy, lieutenant of the company of workers attached to the engineers, is affected by an extremely serious wound that requires special care. It would be appropriate to assign to this patient, who is to be evacuated, someone who can give him the help he needs...". The Syrian campaign. Bonaparte left for Syria at the head of an expeditionary corps to fight Jazzar Pacha, but the latter refused a direct confrontation, relying instead on a war of attrition and relying on coastal strongholds: the French successively and sometimes with difficulty took El Arich (February 20, 1799), Gaza (February 24), Ramlah (March 1) and Jaffa (March 7). Finally, the siege of Acre began on March 19, but the city put up fierce resistance, with the logistical help of English and Ottoman ships, and the advice of emigrant French soldier Antoine de Phélippeaux. Bonaparte failed to win over the population, obtaining at best the temporary inaction of the Emir of Zaydani. In addition, he had to contend with guerrilla forces from Nablus and an army from Damascus, which he defeated at the battle of Mount Tabor on April 16. After the failure of two final assaults on Acre on May 10, one of which he led himself, Bonaparte raised the siege on the night of May 20-21, and led his exhausted troops back to Cairo, stricken by the plague and partly defiant towards him.
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