Null PREMIER EMPIRE - MANUSCRIT - IMPERATRICE JOSEPHINE - Historical memories of…
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PREMIER EMPIRE - MANUSCRIT - IMPERATRICE JOSEPHINE - Historical memories of Madame RIBLE, Madame Bonaparte's first chambermaid. 1793-1804. Contemporary soft leather notebook in-8. 132 pages. Souvenirs collected by her grandson Commandant E. Belleville and arranged by D. Sutter. This manuscript, which has remained completely unpublished, contains intimate details of the life of José^phine de Beauharanis, wife of Emperor Napoleon I, of the utmost interest in this "truly extraordinary" existence. Madame Rible's notes, preserved in the family, shed new light on the life of "the famous woman who saw her first husband, Viscount Alexandre de Beauharnais, die on the scaffold, and who learned at Malmaison of the fall of her second husband, the great Emperor Napoleon".It includes previously unknown circumstances surrounding the arrest of the Viscountess de Beauharnais, as well as an account of intimate events that took place at Fontainebleau when Madame Rible and her husband were appointed to oversee the imperial residence. Madame Rible's recollections also provide information that corrects or contradicts many of the assertions made in various memoirs on the imperial family, such as those by Mlle Avrillon. At the end of the volume we find the inventory of objects belonging to Empress Josephine at the time of her divorce, a "rare and precious document which has never been published and which offers a most curious retrospective interest"... This precious manuscript was intended for publication, but we have found no trace of an edition. It is therefore completely unpublished and of the greatest historical interest.

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PREMIER EMPIRE - MANUSCRIT - IMPERATRICE JOSEPHINE - Historical memories of Madame RIBLE, Madame Bonaparte's first chambermaid. 1793-1804. Contemporary soft leather notebook in-8. 132 pages. Souvenirs collected by her grandson Commandant E. Belleville and arranged by D. Sutter. This manuscript, which has remained completely unpublished, contains intimate details of the life of José^phine de Beauharanis, wife of Emperor Napoleon I, of the utmost interest in this "truly extraordinary" existence. Madame Rible's notes, preserved in the family, shed new light on the life of "the famous woman who saw her first husband, Viscount Alexandre de Beauharnais, die on the scaffold, and who learned at Malmaison of the fall of her second husband, the great Emperor Napoleon".It includes previously unknown circumstances surrounding the arrest of the Viscountess de Beauharnais, as well as an account of intimate events that took place at Fontainebleau when Madame Rible and her husband were appointed to oversee the imperial residence. Madame Rible's recollections also provide information that corrects or contradicts many of the assertions made in various memoirs on the imperial family, such as those by Mlle Avrillon. At the end of the volume we find the inventory of objects belonging to Empress Josephine at the time of her divorce, a "rare and precious document which has never been published and which offers a most curious retrospective interest"... This precious manuscript was intended for publication, but we have found no trace of an edition. It is therefore completely unpublished and of the greatest historical interest.

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[JOSÉPHINE (Empress)]. Set of two letters addressed to her. Beautiful letters from the wife and father-in-law of Prince Eugène de Beauharnais, viceroy of Italy, son of the empress and adopted son of Napoleon I. - Bavaria (Augusta de). Autograph letter signed to Empress Josephine. Palais de Monza [near Milan], September 18, 1806. "Mr de La Feuillade [Pierre-Raymond-Hector d'Aubusson de La Feuillade, chamberlain to Empress Eugenie, on his way to Florence to take up his post as French minister to the Queen of Etruria, Elisa Bonaparte] gave me Your Majesty's letter, which could not have been more kind, It has filled me with joy, and the joy you have deigned to show for the happiness I shall soon experience in becoming a mother has not diminished it [Augusta of Bavaria would soon give birth to Prince Eugène's first child, Joséphine, future Queen of Sweden, on March 14 1807]... My respectful homage to His Majesty the Emperor..." (3 pp. in-4 on paper from the English firm of Charles Dobbs bearing an embossed frame with tinted border on the first page). - MAXIMILIEN I OF BAVIERE. Autograph letter signed to Empress Josephine. Nymphenburg Castle near Munich, June 3, 1807. "Your Imperial Majesty never ceases to give me marks of kindness and friendship, the latest consignment of exotic plants sent to me by his orders is proof of this..." He then mentions the death of Empress Josephine's grandson, Napoléon-Charles Bonaparte, son of Hortense de Beauharnais and Louis Bonaparte, as well as the birth of Joséphine de Beauharnais, first child of Prince Eugène and Augusta de Bavière (one p. 3/4 in-4).