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
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Page 32
... friends and relatives at home , the letters in all cases being sent open , for official perusal at the Ministry of War in Paris . The privilege , however , was summarily withdrawn in the autumn of 1806 , and what private news the ...
... friends and relatives at home , the letters in all cases being sent open , for official perusal at the Ministry of War in Paris . The privilege , however , was summarily withdrawn in the autumn of 1806 , and what private news the ...
Page 43
... friend , the Chevalier Lawrence , the son of a wealthy West Indian planter , and also a literary dilettante , trapped in Paris in 1803 , " if many of our countrymen had never quitted the sober amusements of the club - room for the ...
... friend , the Chevalier Lawrence , the son of a wealthy West Indian planter , and also a literary dilettante , trapped in Paris in 1803 , " if many of our countrymen had never quitted the sober amusements of the club - room for the ...
Page 46
... friends in England . At first , subject to the usual conditions of liability to inspection en route , prisoners ' letters had been allowed to pass to and fro whenever a cartel was exchanged between England and France . All that had to ...
... friends in England . At first , subject to the usual conditions of liability to inspection en route , prisoners ' letters had been allowed to pass to and fro whenever a cartel was exchanged between England and France . All that had to ...
Page 47
... friends in England to prisoners , to supplement the pittance of pay doled out by the French Government , were also stopped after 1806 . Even the transfer of bills of exchange was prohibited , and the French bankers were forbidden to ...
... friends in England to prisoners , to supplement the pittance of pay doled out by the French Government , were also stopped after 1806 . Even the transfer of bills of exchange was prohibited , and the French bankers were forbidden to ...
Page 50
... friend of Wirion's , who , indeed , owed his appointment to Verdun to that Marshal , and every complaint from the British prisoners which managed to get to the Ministry of War - the majority of them were burked at Verdun - all the ...
... friend of Wirion's , who , indeed , owed his appointment to Verdun to that Marshal , and every complaint from the British prisoners which managed to get to the Ministry of War - the majority of them were burked at Verdun - all the ...
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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
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