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  1. Jérôme Bonaparte (* 15. November 1784 in Ajaccio; † 24. Juni 1860 im Château de Vilgénis, Massy), ursprünglich Girolamo Buonaparte, war der jüngste Bruder Napoléon Bonapartes. Von 1807 bis 1813 war er König des Königreiches Westphalen, sein offizieller Königsname dort war Jérôme Napoleon (JN) bzw. Hieronymus Napoleon (HN).

  2. Zum Bewusstsein kamen ihm die politischen Umwälzungen erstmals am 13. Juni 1793, als seine Familie vor dem korsischen Revolutionär Pasquale Paoli (1725-1807) fliehen musste und Zuflucht in Südfrankreich fand. Als Napoleon in Frankreich allmählich an Bedeutung gewann, hatte er in seinem kleinen Bruder Jérôme einen seiner größten Bewunderer.

  3. Jérôme-Napoléon Bonaparte (born Girolamo Buonaparte; 15 November 1784 – 24 June 1860) was the youngest brother of Napoleon I and reigned as Jerome Napoleon I (formally Hieronymus Napoleon in German), King of Westphalia, between 1807 and 1813.

  4. 18. März 2008 · Lebenslustiger Monarch im Musterstaat. Von Jochen Stöckmann · 18.03.2008. Seinem kleinen 23-jährigen Bruder Jérôme vertraute Napoleon 1807 das neugeschaffene Königreich Westphalen an. Der junge...

  5. 18. Apr. 2024 · Jérôme Bonaparte (born November 15, 1784, Ajaccio, Corsica—died June 24, 1860, Villegenis, France) was Napoleon I’s youngest brother, who became king of Westphalia and marshal of France. It was through Jérôme that the Bonaparte line extended into the United States; his eldest son, Jerome, grew up in Maryland with his American ...

  6. Focusing on the lesser-known operations from 1800 to the Russian campaign in 1812, this study completes the gaps in the military history of the Napoleonic Wars. As Lamar demonstrates, Jerome was not responsible for the failure of Napoleon's early manoeuvres during the invasion of Russia, nor did he lose the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

  7. His three mistresses—two German and one Polish—complicated his life immensely, though his faithful Queen, Catherine of Württemberg, sedulously avoided noticing her “Frifi’s” adventures. Jerome’s court had been a source of scandal since his arrival in 1807. “A Roman circus!” wrote Goethe.