Napoleon the Gaoler: Personal Experiences and Adventures of British Sailors and Soldiers During the Great Captivity"This century has seen the Centenary of the release of Napoleon's British Prisoners of War." "...between 1803 and 1814...the British prisoners numbered fewer than 12,000, and of these, speaking generally, more than a third were merchantman officers and sailors captured at sea by French frigates and privateers." -- preface and introduction. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 58
Page 15
... confined in various fortified places in Central France and in Languedoc . They occupied themselves , a great number of them , in making translations of French literature . As a rule , where they were allowed to congregate , they kept ...
... confined in various fortified places in Central France and in Languedoc . They occupied themselves , a great number of them , in making translations of French literature . As a rule , where they were allowed to congregate , they kept ...
Page 19
... confined under lock and key in various fortified places in Alsace and Lorraine , until , on the advance of the Allies in the spring of 1814 , they were removed south of the Loire . The 5,000 prisoners odd made at Borodino and in cavalry ...
... confined under lock and key in various fortified places in Alsace and Lorraine , until , on the advance of the Allies in the spring of 1814 , they were removed south of the Loire . The 5,000 prisoners odd made at Borodino and in cavalry ...
Page 23
... confinement in the dungeons there . Between these places shiftings of the prisoners in batches , from one fortress to another , were also constantly going on , as 24 ENTRANCE GATEWAY TO THE FORT OF BITCHE From a contemporary HOW THE ...
... confinement in the dungeons there . Between these places shiftings of the prisoners in batches , from one fortress to another , were also constantly going on , as 24 ENTRANCE GATEWAY TO THE FORT OF BITCHE From a contemporary HOW THE ...
Page 27
... confined in the common prison of the place where they halted for the night . Upon one occasion , after being placed in the cachot and shown the straw upon which they had to pass the night , a fierce mastiff was brought into the place ...
... confined in the common prison of the place where they halted for the night . Upon one occasion , after being placed in the cachot and shown the straw upon which they had to pass the night , a fierce mastiff was brought into the place ...
Page 31
... liable to summary arrest and confinement to their quarters for periods varying from twenty - four hours to eight days , with a fine at the discretion of the Commandant . Longer periods in close HOW BRITISH PRISONERS OF WAR FARED 31.
... liable to summary arrest and confinement to their quarters for periods varying from twenty - four hours to eight days , with a fine at the discretion of the Commandant . Longer periods in close HOW BRITISH PRISONERS OF WAR FARED 31.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
allowed army arrest arrived attempt Austrian Bitche Blayney's British Government British officers British prisoners Captain Brenton captivity citadel clothes Colonel Commandant confined convoy Cossacks Courcelles Demy 8vo depôt détenus dinner dungeons E. V. Lucas Edward Hutton England English Epinal escape escort Fcap feet fellow Fifth Edition fortress Fourth Edition France French French officers friends garrison gendarmes Givet guard hand hundred Illus Illustrated journey letter Lieutenant lodgings Lord Blayney ment Meuse Midshipman Boyes midshipmen months morning Napoleon naval night o'clock Oscar Wilde Paris parole party passed passport Phalsbourg prisoners of war quarters ramparts received regiments road rope round Russian sailors says seamen Second Edition sent Seventh Edition Sixth Edition soldiers soon Spanish taken Third Edition tion told took Tours town trated Valenciennes Verdun Verdun prisoners village walk Whitehurst Wirion Wolfe
Popular passages
Page 16 - A LITTLE BOOK OF ENGLISH SONNETS. Smith (Horace and James). REJECTED ADDRESSES. Sterne (Laurence). A SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY. Tennyson (Alfred, Lord). THE EARLY POEMS OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON. IN MEMORIAM. THE PRINCESS.
Page 18 - The Story of a Minor Siege. Sir GS Robertson. CONDITION OF ENGLAND, THE. GFG Masterman. DE PROFUNDIS. Oscar Wilde. FROM MIDSHIPMAN TO FIELD-MARSHAL. Sir Evelyn Wood, FM, VC HARVEST HOME. EV Lucas. HILLS AND THE SEA. Hilaire Belloc.
Page 9 - JC Cox and A. Harvey. Second Edition. ENGLISH COSTUME. From Prehistoric Times to the End of the Eighteenth Century. George Clinch. ENGLISH MONASTIC LIFE. Abbot Gasquet. Fourth Edition. ENGLISH SEALS. J. Harvey Bloom. FOLK-LORE AS AN HISTORICAL SCIENCE. Sir GL Gomme. GiLDS AND COMPANIES OF LONDON, THE. George Unwin. •HERMITS AND ANCHORITES OF ENGLAND.
Page 6 - O'Connor). THE MAKING OF AN ORATOR. Cr. too. 6s. net. Price (LL). A SHORT HISTORY OF POLITICAL ECONOMY IN ENGLAND FROM ADAM SMITH TO ARNOLD TOYNBEE.
Page 17 - English Version by Laurence Irving. Second Edition. The States of Italy Edited by E. ARMSTRONG and R. LANGTON DOUGLAS Illustrated. Demy Svo A HISTORY OF MILAN UNDER THE SFORZA.
Page 9 - DOMESDAY INQUEST, THE. Adolphus Ballard. ENGLISH CHURCH FURNITURE. JC Cox and A.
Page 19 - UMBRIA, THE. Edward Hutton. DAYS IN CORNWALL. C. Lewis Hind. FLORENCE AND NORTHERN TUSCANY, WITH GENOA. Edward Hutton. LAND OF PARDONS, THE (Brittany). Anatole Le Braz.
Page 14 - Guides are (l) a handy and charming form ; (2) illustrations from photographs and by well-known artists ; (3) good plans and maps ; (4) an adequate but compact presentation of everything that is interesting in the natural features, history, archaeology, and architecture of the town or district treated.
Page 7 - Stevenson (RL). THE LETTERS OF ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. Edited by Sir SIDNEY COLVIN. A New Rearranged Edition in four volumes. Fourth Edition. Fcap.
Page 12 - JAUNTS AND JOLLITIES. RS Surtees. Third Edition. ASK MAMMA, RS Surtees. THE ANALYSIS OF THE HUNTING FIELD. RS Surtees. THE TOUR OF DR. SYNTAX IN SEARCH OP THE PICTURESQUE.