Null ITALIAN CAMPAIGN 1859. Pierre-Sosthène MORLAN (1830-1894) Zouave captain. 1…
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ITALIAN CAMPAIGN 1859. Pierre-Sosthène MORLAN (1830-1894) Zouave captain. 16 L.A.S. "Sosthène", April 29-July 1859, to his mother Émilie Morlan in Fargues (Landes); 71pages in-8, one address. Interesting correspondence recounting the various battles: Montebello, Magenta, Melegnano, by this captain in the 2nd Zouaves. We can only give a brief overview here.Athens April 29, on his crossing from Algeria, with a stopover in Athens... - Voltaggio May 4. Landing in Genoa to great applause; march to Voltaggio, where the division commanded by General Espinasse and the 2nd Corps commanded by Mac Mahon are concentrated: "My regiment forms the 2nd infantry brigade, with the 72nd of the line which comes from Africa"... - Tessarolo May 14, before departure for Alexandria; the Emperor passed by rail; Marshal Vaillant will be the Emperor's Chief of Staff... - Voghera May 23: marches in the rain, without encountering the enemy: "all the houses were decked out with French and Sardinian flags. The campaign was inaugurated nearby, at Montebello, by a very brilliant feat of arms"; the Austrians were beaten; 250 prisoners were taken, including a colonel... - Casal May 30: the Austrians are entrenched at Stradella, a central point between Pavia and Piacenza. "Bivouac at Magenta June 5: brief account of the battle. - Milan June 7: exhausting marches in pursuit of the enemy, to complete their rout by preventing them from rallying and taking as many prisoners as possible; lively cannonade at Melegnano, which puts the enemy in full retreat... - Calcio June 15: the Austrians have decided to leave their positions and go to Lodi; the battle at Melegnano did not have the expected results; but the Austrians have evacuated all the country as far as the Adda and the Oglio line; they are rallying behind the Mincio.... - Brescia June 19. The Austrians are concentrated at a short distance from the strong positions of Montechiaro, Castiglione, Lomato, and supported by the stronghold of Peschiera; Morlan met the Emperor who was riding in a carriage. Distribution by Mac Mahon of awards and decorations; the 2nd Zouaves received the Légion d'honneur for its bravery at Magenta... - June 20: new details on the battle of Magenta; this victory opened the road to Milan, and caused the enemy to lose nearly 20,000 men, either prisoners or hors de combat... - Bivouac at Castellaro June 29: account of the "immense and brilliant battle" of Solferino, near Castiglione, on June 24: "We fought for fifteen or sixteen hours, without a moment's truce [...] The Emperor of Austria personally commanded this battle, which he believed he would win. [...] The enemy was pursued [...] until around 9 p.m., with cannon fire"... - At the bivouac in Santa-Lucia July 9: crossing of the Mincio; investment of Peschiera; announcement of armistice... - July 15: the two Emperors signed the peace at Villafranca: "Piedmont gains a beautiful province, Lombardy, which will not have cost it much [...] Venetia is no longer part of the Austrian Empire; it is independent"... They can now return to Africa... - Castiglione July 17: visit to the battlefield; details of the fighting... - Brescia July 26: account of Austrian exactions after Radetzky's defeat at Novara... - Lodi July 29: visit to Marignan; enthusiasm of the population; arrival in Milan on July 31... Etc.About twenty family letters and miscellaneous documents, 1859-1870, including13 letters from Morlan in Italy in 1864 (Florence, Genoa, Naples and Pompeii, Pisa, Rome, with descriptions of monuments, museums, masses and festivals, etc.); family correspondence, information after the battle of Reichshoffen, where Morlan was taken prisoner...

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ITALIAN CAMPAIGN 1859. Pierre-Sosthène MORLAN (1830-1894) Zouave captain. 16 L.A.S. "Sosthène", April 29-July 1859, to his mother Émilie Morlan in Fargues (Landes); 71pages in-8, one address. Interesting correspondence recounting the various battles: Montebello, Magenta, Melegnano, by this captain in the 2nd Zouaves. We can only give a brief overview here.Athens April 29, on his crossing from Algeria, with a stopover in Athens... - Voltaggio May 4. Landing in Genoa to great applause; march to Voltaggio, where the division commanded by General Espinasse and the 2nd Corps commanded by Mac Mahon are concentrated: "My regiment forms the 2nd infantry brigade, with the 72nd of the line which comes from Africa"... - Tessarolo May 14, before departure for Alexandria; the Emperor passed by rail; Marshal Vaillant will be the Emperor's Chief of Staff... - Voghera May 23: marches in the rain, without encountering the enemy: "all the houses were decked out with French and Sardinian flags. The campaign was inaugurated nearby, at Montebello, by a very brilliant feat of arms"; the Austrians were beaten; 250 prisoners were taken, including a colonel... - Casal May 30: the Austrians are entrenched at Stradella, a central point between Pavia and Piacenza. "Bivouac at Magenta June 5: brief account of the battle. - Milan June 7: exhausting marches in pursuit of the enemy, to complete their rout by preventing them from rallying and taking as many prisoners as possible; lively cannonade at Melegnano, which puts the enemy in full retreat... - Calcio June 15: the Austrians have decided to leave their positions and go to Lodi; the battle at Melegnano did not have the expected results; but the Austrians have evacuated all the country as far as the Adda and the Oglio line; they are rallying behind the Mincio.... - Brescia June 19. The Austrians are concentrated at a short distance from the strong positions of Montechiaro, Castiglione, Lomato, and supported by the stronghold of Peschiera; Morlan met the Emperor who was riding in a carriage. Distribution by Mac Mahon of awards and decorations; the 2nd Zouaves received the Légion d'honneur for its bravery at Magenta... - June 20: new details on the battle of Magenta; this victory opened the road to Milan, and caused the enemy to lose nearly 20,000 men, either prisoners or hors de combat... - Bivouac at Castellaro June 29: account of the "immense and brilliant battle" of Solferino, near Castiglione, on June 24: "We fought for fifteen or sixteen hours, without a moment's truce [...] The Emperor of Austria personally commanded this battle, which he believed he would win. [...] The enemy was pursued [...] until around 9 p.m., with cannon fire"... - At the bivouac in Santa-Lucia July 9: crossing of the Mincio; investment of Peschiera; announcement of armistice... - July 15: the two Emperors signed the peace at Villafranca: "Piedmont gains a beautiful province, Lombardy, which will not have cost it much [...] Venetia is no longer part of the Austrian Empire; it is independent"... They can now return to Africa... - Castiglione July 17: visit to the battlefield; details of the fighting... - Brescia July 26: account of Austrian exactions after Radetzky's defeat at Novara... - Lodi July 29: visit to Marignan; enthusiasm of the population; arrival in Milan on July 31... Etc.About twenty family letters and miscellaneous documents, 1859-1870, including13 letters from Morlan in Italy in 1864 (Florence, Genoa, Naples and Pompeii, Pisa, Rome, with descriptions of monuments, museums, masses and festivals, etc.); family correspondence, information after the battle of Reichshoffen, where Morlan was taken prisoner...

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BAGETTI (Joseph-Pierre). Views of Napoleon's battlefields in Italy in 1796, 1797 and 1800. Drawn on the spot by M. Bagetti, captain engineer-geographer. Gravé et terminées au Dépôt de la Guerre, sous la direction de M. le Lieutenant-Général Pelet. Paris, 1835. In-plano (68.5 x 52 cm), [4] ff. and 68 large double-page plates, engraved by Perdoux, Desaulx, Cardano, Misbach, Schroeder, Lameau, Fortier, etc., after drawings by Bagetti; all mounted on green half-maroquin tabs, smooth spine (imitation binding). Spotting and foxing to some plates, trace of folding to title page. RARISSIVE SET OF MILITARY VIEWS of the Italian campaigns, depicting the cities, towns and battlefields that were the scene of operations in the two Italian campaigns led by Bonaparte. Complete with plate 40bis, announced in the table, depicting the town of Bignasco. It does not appear in the copies in public repositories, all of which list 67 plates. The Piedmontese landscape painter and engineer-geographer Giuseppe Pietro Bagetti (1764-1831) had two successive careers. The first, in the service of Victor-Amédée III, King of Sardinia, his natural sovereign, who had early noticed his talent, enabled him to accompany, from 1793, the Piedmontese troops stationed in the County of Nice and then sent to Toulon when this port was occupied by the English. On his return, he was appointed to teach military topography at the Ecole du Génie in Turin. It was in this capacity that he took part, albeit from a distance, in the first Italian campaign and the French conquest of Piedmont. His second career began at the end of fructidor an VIII [September 1800], when, at the suggestion of generals Dupont and Oudinot, he joined the Cabinet historique et topographique. Assigned to the Army of Italy in Year IX as Captain Engineer-Geographer, under the command of General Brune, he had to execute, from life and under the direction of Joseph-François-Marie Martinelli, known as de Martinel, a series of watercolors relating to the military actions of the two Italian campaigns under Bonaparte. Bagetti worked in this way for eight years, completing around 80 commissioned paintings, not just of Bonaparte's Italian period (he had, for example, followed the Emperor to Austerlitz, Russia, and also executed views there). Long after the end of the Empire and Bagetti's return to Turin (1815), 67 views of Italian battlefields were published under the order of Lieutenant-General Pelet, and they form the exceptional collection presented here, which seems to have had a relatively small print run. Three copies in the CCF (BnF, Sainte-Geneviève, Lyon).