Napoleon's Wars_ An International History, 1803-1815 - Charles Esdaile [360]
26 Cited in Londonderry (ed.), Correspondence, Dispatches and other Papers of Viscount Castlereagh, vol. V, p.81.
27 Cited in C. Fedorak, ‘In search of a necessary ally: Addington, Hawkesbury and Russia, 1801- ’,1804 International History Review, XIII, No.2 (May 1991), p.242.
28 Cited in R. Garner, The Campaign of Trafalgar (London,1997), p.11.
29 Cited in Rosebery, Wellesley Papers, vol. I, p.170.
30 Cited in ibid., p.171.
31 Cited in Rosebery (ed.), The Windham Papers, vol. II, p.235.
32 Cited in P. Ziegler, Addington: a Life of Henry Addington, First Viscount Sidmouth (London,1965), p.197.
33 Cited in Malmesbury, Diaries and Correspondence, vol. IV, p.313.
34 Cited in M. de Klinkowstrom (ed.), Memoirs of Prince Metternich, 1733 - 1815 (London, 1880), vol. I, p.49.
35 Cited in A. Paget (ed.), The Paget Papers: Diplomatic and other Correspondence of the Right Hon. Sir Arthur Paget, G. C. B., 1794 - 1807 (London,1896), vol. II, p.108.
36 Cited in Minto, Life and Letters, vol. III, p.355.
37 Cited in Malmesbury, Diaries and Correspondence, vol. IV, p.271.
38 Cited in P. Dwyer, ‘Two definitions of neutrality: Prussia, the European states-system and the French invasion of Hanover in ’, International History Review, XIX, No.3 (August 1997), p.536.
39 C. von Muffling, Passages from my Life, together with Memoirs of the Campaign of 1813 and 1814 (London, 1853), pp.6-7.
40 Cited in Malmesbury, Diaries and Correspondence, vol. IV, pp. 246-7.
41 J. Fouché, Memoirs of Joseph Fouché, Duke of Otranto, Minister of the General Police of France (London,1892), p. 178.
42 Mazade (ed.), Mémoires du Prince Adam Czartoryski, vol. I, p. 38.
43 Ibid., pp.385-8.
44 For Napoleon’s treatment of Morkov, cf. Earl of Ilchester (ed.), The Journal of Elizabeth, Lady Holland, 1791 - 1811 (London,1909), vol. II, p.159.
45 Mazade (ed.), Mémoires du Prince Adam Czartoryski, vol. I, p. 359 .
46 G. S. Hellman (ed.), Memoirs of the Cmte de Mercy Argenteau, Napoleon’s Chamberlain and his Minister Plenipotentiary to the King of Bavaria (New York,1917), p.94.
47 J. Hanoteau (ed.), Mémoires de la Reine Hortense (Paris,1927), vol. I, p.161.
48 Ibid. General Monk had sealed the fate of the Commonwealth in 1660 by taking his troops over to the cause of Charles II.
49 Duc d’Audiffret-Pasquier (ed.), Mémoires du Chancelier Pasquier - Première Partie; Révolution, Consulat, Empire (Paris,1895-1914), vol. I, p.179.
50 Cited in R. Johnston (ed.), In the Words of Napoleon: the Emperor Day-by-Day (London,2002), p.136.
51 Bourrienne, Memoirs, p.247; for Staël’s views, cf. Considérations, vol. II, pp.327-8.
52 C. de Rémusat, Mémoires de Madame de Rémusat, 1802 - 1808, ed. P. de Rémusat (Paris,1884), vol. I, p.387.
53 So at least goes the traditional version. In Fouché’s memoirs, we rather see, ‘It is more than a crime; it is a political fault.’ See Fouché, Memoirs, p.182.
54 A. du Casse (ed.), Mémoires et Correspondance Politique et Militaire du Prince Eugène (Paris,1858), vol. I, p.91.
55 Comtesse de Choiseul-Gouffier, Historical Memoirs of the Emperor Alexander I and the Court of Russia, ed. M. Patterson (London,1904), p.53.
56 Mazade (ed.), Mémoires du Prince Adam Czartoryski, vol. I, p.378.
57 A. Thibaudeau, Bonaparte and the Consulate, ed. G. Fortescue (London,1908), p.310.
58 Cited in Rémusat, Mémoires, vol. I, p.393.
59 Cited in Malmesbury, Diaries and Correspondence, vol. IV, pp.331-2.
60 Fouché, Memoirs, p.192.
61 Klinkowstrom (ed.), Memoirs of Prince Metternich, vol. I, p.48.
62 Rambaud, Memoirs of Comte Roger de Damas, pp.321-2.
63 Ibid., p.332.
64 H. Bunbury, Narratives of some Passages in the Great War with France (London, 1854), pp.212, 215.
65 Fouché, Memoirs, p.195.
66 Ibid., pp.195-6.
67 Cited in Rémusat, Memoires, vol. I, p.384.
68 L. Aldersey White (ed.), The Adventurous Life of Count Lavallette, Bonaparte’s Aide-de-Camp and Postmaster-General, by Himself (London,1936), vol. I, pp.256-7.
5 Austerlitz
1 J. L.