History of the War in the Peninsula and in the South of France: From the Year 1807 to the Year 1814, Band 1W.J. Widdleton, 1862 |
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Seite ii
... prepared the way for invasion . No foreign potentate would have attempted to steal into the fortresses of a great kingdom , if the prying eyes , and the thousand clamorous tongues belonging to a free press , had been ready to expose his ...
... prepared the way for invasion . No foreign potentate would have attempted to steal into the fortresses of a great kingdom , if the prying eyes , and the thousand clamorous tongues belonging to a free press , had been ready to expose his ...
Seite 29
... who pride themselves much upon individual prowess , and the swelling indignation at last broke out . Journal of Dupont's Operations , MSS . The Upon the 2d of May , a carriage being prepared 1808. ] 29 NAPIER'S PENINSULAR WAR .
... who pride themselves much upon individual prowess , and the swelling indignation at last broke out . Journal of Dupont's Operations , MSS . The Upon the 2d of May , a carriage being prepared 1808. ] 29 NAPIER'S PENINSULAR WAR .
Seite 30
... prepared , as the people supposed , to convey Don Antonio , the uncle of Ferdinand , to France , a crowd collected about it ; their language indicated a de- termination not to permit the last of the royal family to be spirited away ...
... prepared , as the people supposed , to convey Don Antonio , the uncle of Ferdinand , to France , a crowd collected about it ; their language indicated a de- termination not to permit the last of the royal family to be spirited away ...
Seite 31
... prepared some check on the Spanish soldiers of the garrison ; they would not have left their own hospital unguarded , still less have arranged the plan so that their loss should far ex- ceed that of the Spaniards ; and surely nothing ...
... prepared some check on the Spanish soldiers of the garrison ; they would not have left their own hospital unguarded , still less have arranged the plan so that their loss should far ex- ceed that of the Spaniards ; and surely nothing ...
Seite 33
... their assent to a constitution prepared by Napoleon ; and at this meeting , called " The Assembly of Notables , " ninety- 34 NAPIER'S PENINSULAR WAR . one Spaniards of eminence appeared 2 * 1808. ] 33 NAPIER'S PENINSULAR WAR .
... their assent to a constitution prepared by Napoleon ; and at this meeting , called " The Assembly of Notables , " ninety- 34 NAPIER'S PENINSULAR WAR . one Spaniards of eminence appeared 2 * 1808. ] 33 NAPIER'S PENINSULAR WAR .
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abrantes affairs Alemtejo Almeida Andalusia arms arrived artillery Astorga Asturias attack Baird Barcelona battalions battle Baylen Bessières Blake bridge brigade British army Burgos Cadiz campaign Castaños Catalonia cavalry centre Colonel columns command commenced communication convention Coruña Cuesta defeat defence detachment division Duhesme Duke Dupont Ebro Emperor enemy English army flank force France French army Frere Gallicia garrison général Gerona guard guns hundred insurrection John Moore's Junot l'armée latter Lisbon Logroño Loison Lord Madrid Marshal military Moncey movement Napoleon occupied officers operations Oporto orders Palafox passed patriots Peninsula Portugal Portuguese position provinces rear Reding regiments reinforced retired retreat river road Salamanca sent Seville side siege siege of Zaragoza Sir Arthur Wellesley Sir Hew Dalrymple Sir John Moore soldiers somatenes Soult Spain Spaniards Spanish armies Tagus Tarragona thousand infantry tion town troops Tudela Valencia Valladolid Villa Franca Zaragoza
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 339 - I hope the people of England will be satisfied! I hope my country will do me justice!
Seite 387 - The suburb, the greatest portion of the walls, and one-fourth of the houses, were in the hands of the French. Sixteen thousand shells, thrown during the bombardment, and the explosion of forty-five thousand pounds of powder, in the mines, had shaken the city to its foundations ; and the bones of more than forty thousand persons, of every age and sex, bore dreadful testimony to the constancy of the besieged.
Seite 304 - I certainly at first did feel, and expressed much indignation at a person like him, being made the channel of a communication of that sort from you to me. Those feelings are at an end ; and I dare say they never will be excited towards you again. If Mr.
Seite 494 - France shall have disembarked it in the harbours specified, or in any other of the ports of France, to which stress of weather may force them, every facility shall be given them to return to England without delay ; and security against capture, until their arrival in a friendly port. 'Art.
Seite 336 - Dalmatia being apprised of major Napier's situation, had him conveyed to good quarters, and with a kindness and consideration very uncommon, wrote to Napoleon, desiring that his prisoner might not be sent to France, which (from the system of refusing exchanges) would have been destruction to his professional prospects. The mar*shal also obtained for the drummer the decoration of the legion of honour.
Seite 386 - Lasnes rejected these proposals, and the fire continued ; but the hour of surrender was come ! Fifty pieces of artillery, on the left bank of the Ebro, laid the houses on the quay in ruins ; the church of Our Lady of the Pillar, under whose especial protection the city was...
Seite 495 - British army shall be restored on the completion of the articles which concern the army ; and the officer of the navy on the disembarkation of the French troops in their own country. The like is to take place on the part of the French army.
Seite 494 - The French army shall carry with it all its equipments, and all that is comprehended under the name of property of the army...
Seite 514 - There is, however, a chance, and whilst there is that I think myself bound to run all risks to support it. I am now differently situated from what I was when Castanos was defeated : I have been joined by general Hope, the artillery, and all the cavalry (lord Paget, with three regiments, is at Toro); and my junction with sir David Baird is secure, though I have not heard from him since I ordered him to return to Astorga,' Sir John Moore to lord Castlereagh.
Seite 336 - Paget, with the reserve, had descended into the valley, and the line of the skirmishers being thus supported, vigorously checked the advance of the enemy's troops in that quarter, while the fourth regiment galled their flank ; at the same time the centre and left of the army also became engaged...