Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Vor 4 Tagen · "How do you say 'Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte'?Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, also known as Napoléon III, was the ruler of France from 1848 to 1870, first as the Pres...

    • 1 Min.
    • Dr. Franz Lang
  2. 23. Apr. 2024 · Pourtant, Napoléon Bonaparte devenu chef d’État, du fait de sa petite enfance passée dans l’île, retrouve les mêmes réflexes, les mêmes aspirations, qui expliquent l’originalité de la politique qu’il met en œuvre. À cette source natale, s’ajoute les sources historiques. Car, la culture des deux hommes d’État dépasse leur seule époque pour puiser jusque dans le Moyen ...

  3. 19. Apr. 2024 · France Declares War On Prussia. The Franco-Prussian War or Franco-German War ( Deutsch-Französischer Krieg, Guerre franco-allemande ), often referred to in France as the War of 1870 (19 July 1870 – 10 May 1871), was a conflict between the Second French Empire of Napoleon III and the German states of the North German Confederation led by the ...

  4. Napoleon Bonaparte, als Kaiser ... Damit trugen sie wesentlich zum Aufstieg Napoleons III. bei. Auch nach dessen Sturz im Jahr 1870 übten sie auf das Heer und die Beamtenschaft großen Einfluss aus. Erst in den 1880er Jahren verlor der ...

  5. Bonaparte employed himself better than in discussing with the Imans the theology of the children of Ismael. The ceremonies, at which policy induced him to be present, were to him, and to all who accompanied him, mere matters of curiosity. He never set foot in a mosque; and only on one occasion, which I shall hereafter mention, dressed himself in the Mahometan costume. He attended the festivals ...

  6. 6. Apr. 2024 · While Napoleon did defeat a Prussian army at Jena, some ten miles to the north at Auerstedt Davout’s III Corps ran into the Duke of Brunswick’s main Prussian army of 65,000 men. Despite being outnumbered almost three-to-one, Davout not only repulsed the Prussian attacks but launched a successful counterattack after Brunswick was mortally wounded, driving the Prussians from the field.

  7. 23. Apr. 2024 · Émile de Girardin (born June 21, 1806, Paris—died April 27, 1881, Paris) was a popular French journalist, called the Napoleon of the press for his success in publishing inexpensive newspapers with massive circulations. The illegitimate son of Count Alexandre de Girardin by the wife of a Parisian lawyer, he took his father’s name upon the ...