MONETA ERNESTO TEODORO: (1833-1918) MONETA ERNESTO TEODORO: (1833-1918) Italian …
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MONETA ERNESTO TEODORO: (1833-1918)

MONETA ERNESTO TEODORO: (1833-1918) Italian journalist and nationalist, Nobel Peace Prize winner, 1907. A.L.S., E T Moneta, two pages (written to the first and final sides of the bifolium), Milan, 11th January 1904, to a colleague and friend (Monsieur Gaillard, a member of the French Society for arbitration between nations), on the printed stationery of Societa Internazionale per la Pace, in French. Moneta sends his warmest congratulations to his correspondent on the conclusion of the Franco-English and Franco-Italian arbitration treaties and continues ´Je suis profondement touche de l´honneur d´etre mis par votre bienveillante courtoisie, avec MM D´Estournelles et Barclay. Je fairai de mon mieux pour etre avec les amis et camarades de France le 22 fevrier. Mais vous comprenez que je ne peux pas de maintenant prendre un engagement definitif´ (Translation: ´I am deeply touched by the honour of being placed, by your kind courtesy, with Messrs D'Estournelles and Barclay. I shall do my best to be with my friends and comrades in France on 22 February. But you understand that I cannot now make a definite commitment´) and concludes by sending his thanks and deepest gratitude to his correspondent and Monsieur Passy. One small, neat split at the head of the vertical fold, otherwise VG Paul Henri Balluet d´Estournelles de Constant (1852-1924) French diplomat and politician, an advocate of international arbitration and Nobel Peace Prize winner, 1909. Thomas Barclay (1853-1941) British politician and an authority on international law who headed the British Chamber of Commerce in France 1899-1900 and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize on no fewer than ten occasions. Frederic Passy (1822-1912) French economist and pacifist, Nobel Peace Prize winner, 1901.

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MONETA ERNESTO TEODORO: (1833-1918)

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. DAVID (Jacques-Louis). Autograph letter signed to the Prefect of the Tuileries Palace, Louis-François-Joseph de Bausset. S.l.n.d. One p. in-4; recipient's name crossed out, one ink bite. . DAVID (Jacques-Louis). Autograph letter signed to the Prefect of the Tuileries Palace, Louis-François-Joseph de Bausset. S.l.n.d. One p. in-4; recipient's name crossed out, one ink bite. 2 000 / 3 000 € From 1805 to 1808, David worked on his famous Rite of Napoleon and Coronation of Josephine at Notre-Dame de Paris, and exhibited it at the Salon of 1808. "I cannot express too much my surprise, or rather my just indignation, on reading this morning's article in the Journal de l'Empire, in which it reports on the visit which Her Majesty the Empress has deigned to honour with my studio. In the note I had sent, I spoke of no other person than Her M[ajesty] the Empress and of the satisfaction she had shown me on seeing my work. In the event... that Her Majesty would like to convince herself of this, I would be honored to send you the note which I gave to the journalists and which he has completely distorted. It was written and signed by Mr [Alexandre] Lenoir, administrator of the Musée des Augustins. As for the delicate manner, not sufficiently appreciated by you, with which you praise my painting..., we don't think the same... I make much of it, your heart and your face naturally express what they feel; one [wouldn't] say the same to all men. Notify them in the next week, or Tuesday or Wednesday, having to work on Monday with Mr de Beaumont..." In its entry of November 30, 1807, the Journal de l'Empire had adopted the following wording: "The painting of the Coronation, by M. David, is finished, S. M. l'impératrice went to see it yesterday 28. The Dukes of Mecklenbourg and Coburg, and several other foreigners of distinction, also went to admire this painting, said to be one of the finest works by the first of our painters." Major General Marc-Antoine Bonin de La Boninière de Beaumont appears in the coronation painting in Madame Mère's Lodge: his effigy was completed on January 4, 1808, when the Empress accompanied Napoleon I to admire the painting in his turn. Having served in the two Italian campaigns, then at Austerlitz and Jena, he was made Madame Mère's first squire (February 1806), senator (August 1807) and Count of the Empire (April 1808). One of the figures of the Imperial Court, Louis-François-Joseph de Bausset (1770-1835) was appointed Prefect of the Tuileries Palace in February 1805, then Grand Master of Marie-Louise's household. He followed her to Vienna in 1814, then to Parma (1815-1816). In 1827-1929, the Marquis de Bausset, whom Napoleon made Baron d'Empire in 1810, published Mémoires anecdotiques sur l'intérieur du Palais [...] pour servir à l'histoire de Napoléon (Anecdotal Memoirs on the Interior of the Palace [...] to serve the history of Napoleon), which met with great success, but which, in fact reworked by "dyers" including Honoré de Balzac, are open to question. From 1805 to 1808, David worked on his famous Rite of Napoleon and Coronation of Josephine at Notre-Dame de Paris, and exhibited it at the Salon of 1808. "I cannot express too much my surprise, or rather my just indignation, on reading this morning's article in the Journal de l'Empire, in which it reports on the visit which Her Majesty the Empress has deigned to pay to my studio. In the note I had sent, I spoke of no other person than Her Majesty the Empress, and of the satisfaction she had shown me on seeing my work. In the event... that Her Majesty would like to convince herself of this, I would be honored to send you the note which I gave to the journalists and which he has completely misrepresented. It was written and signed by Mr [Alexandre] Lenoir, administrator of the Musée des Augustins. As for the delicate manner, not sufficiently appreciated by you, with which you praise my painting..., we don't think the same... I make much of it, your heart and your face naturally express what they feel; one [wouldn't] say the same to all men. Notify them in the next week, or Tuesday or Wednesday, having to work on Monday with Mr de Beaumont..." In its entry of November 30, 1807, the Journal de l'Empire had adopted the following wording: "The painting of the Coronation, by M. David, is finished, and S. M. l'impératrice went to see it yesterday 28. The Dukes of Mecklenbourg and Coburg, and several other foreigners of distinction, also went to admire this painting, said to be one of the finest works by the first of our painters." Major General Marc-Antoine Bonin de La Boninière de Beaumont appears in the coronation painting in Madame Mère's Lodge: his effigy was completed on January 4, 1808, when the empress accompanied Napoleon to the coronation.