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   Book Info

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Jerome Bonaparte: The War Years, 1800-1815, Vol. 189  
Author: Glenn J. Lamar
ISBN: 0313309973
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


Book Description
Napoleon's youngest brother, Jerome, has over the centuries been portrayed as a military commander who was completely incompetent and unimportant to his famous sibling. This first biography of Jerome by an American author utilizes many firsthand accounts of Jerome's abilities that have never before been available to readers in English, as well as archival material that has never been published in any language, to challenge this view. Focussing on the lesser-known theaters of operation 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 maneuvers during the invasion of Russia, nor did he lose the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.


About the Author
GLENN J. LAMAR is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.




Jerome Bonaparte: The War Years, 1800-1815, Vol. 189

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Napoleon's youngest brother, Jerome, has over the centuries been portrayed as a military commander who was completely incompetent and unimportant to his famous sibling. This first biography of Jerome by an American author utilizes many firsthand accounts of Jerome's abilities that have never before been available to readers in English, as well as archival material that has never been published in any language, to challenge this view. Focussing on the lesser-known theaters of operation 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 maneuvers during the invasion of Russia, nor did he lose the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

SYNOPSIS

Retelling of the career of Napoleon's youngest brother, this book uses previously unpublished material to shed new light on one of the most maligned figures of the Napoleonic era.

     



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