Napoleonic miscellany

  • Bonaparte, Joséphine, Empress, Consort of Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, 1763-1815
Date:
1799-1891
Reference:
MS.7917
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

Miscellaneous letters and papers relating to Napoleon I and his family

1. Letter from Joséphine Bonaparte (1763-1814), first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte, signed 'Lapagerie Bonaparte', to citizen Caille, 'Secrétaire Intime du Ministre de la Police Générale'. Paris, 14 pluviôse an ?VII [?2 February 1799]

2. Letter from Marie-Louise (1791-1847), Empress of the French and Duchess of Parma, second wife of Napoleon I, to a personal correspondent named 'Victoire'. N.p., 19 January 1803

3. Letter from [Jean] Maximilien Lamarque (1770-1832) to Lucien Bonaparte (1775-1840), prince of Canino and Musignano, Napoleon's younger brother, presenting his respects. Paris, 16 vendémiaire an XIV [7 October 1806]. Annotated by Lucien Bonaparte with his instructions to invite Lamaque to dinner, signed 'L.B.'

4. Letter from Napoleon I to Jean-Nicolas Corvisart (1755-1821), baron Corvisart, his physician, thanking him for his loyalty and enquiring after the Empress Marie-Louise. N.p., 28 April 1814. Lithograph facsimile with 20th cent transcription.

5. Letter from the Empress Marie-Louise to 'Victoire', about personal and family matters. N.p., 27 March 1815

6. Memorandum by [Barry Edward O'Meara (1786-1836), naval surgeon], on the circumstances surrounding Napoleon's surrender to the British aboard HMS Bellerophon in Torbay on 7 August 1815. Attested by M. Gunthorpe, former commander of H.M. cruizer Vigilant.

7. Letter from Sir Hudson Lowe (1769-1844), army officer and governor of St Helena, to an unidentified correspondent, sending a copy of Mme de Staël's Considérations sur les principaux événements de la Révolution française for Napoleon. N.p., 25 September 1818.

8. Memorandum by [René-Eustache (1751-1838), marquis d'Osmond, French ambassador in London], on medical and other personnel destined for Napoleon's service on St Helena. N.p., January 1819. Subscribed 'pour M. de Fossombrony'.

9. Letter from Countess Françoise-Elisabeth ('Fanny') Bertrand, wife of Henri-Gratien Bertrand, Napoleon's Grand Marshal of the Palace, to Sir Hudson Lowe, asking him to allow daily visits to her family by Napoleon's physician Dr Verling. Longwood, [St Helena], 26 September, [1819].

10. Notification by Aleksandr Antonovich Balmain (d. 1848), Russian Commissioner on St Helena, to Messrs Harman and Co., [bankers] of London, relating to his expenses. St Helena, 18 April 1820. Pasted onto a paper mount on which a specimen of the signature of Admiral Sir George Cockburn (1772-1853), who 'conveyed Napoleon Bonaparte to St Helena' is also affixed.

11-13. Facsimiles of handwritten extracts from Napoleon's memoirs written or dictated on Saint Helena. Engraved by Pierre Tardieu. N.d.

14. Letter of thanks from Letizia Bonaparte (1750-1836), mother of Napoleon I, to her granddaughter Christine Charlotte Bonaparte (1795-1865), Princess Gabrielli. Albano, 15 August 1826.

15. Letter from Joseph Fesch (1763-1839), cardinal, uncle of Napoleon I, to François Marius Granet (1775-1849), 'Conservateur de Tableaux des Musées Royaux', requesting the despatch of medicaments from Paris. Rome, 26 September 1830.

16. Letter from the Empress Marie-Louise to an unidentified correspondent ('mon cher chevalier') about her health. Ischia, 5 September 1839.

17. Petition from Jean-Nicolas Gannal (1791-1852), French chemist, to 'MM les Membres Du Conseil de Salubrété et MM les Membres de la Commission Chargé de Veiller à la translation des restes de l'empereur Napoleon', to allow him to conserve the mortal remains of the late Emperor. N.p., [c. 1842].

18. Letter from Pauline Bonaparte (1780-1825), sister of Napoleon I, to [Lucien] Bonaparte (1775-1840), her brother, on personal matters. [Place indecipherable], 3 September, n.y

19. Letter from the Empress Marie-Louise to an unidentified correspondent ('Monsieur le comte') on private matters. Paris, n.d.

20-22. Letters from Louis Lucien Bonaparte (1813-1891), third son of Napoleon's second surviving brother, Lucien Bonaparte, to various English-speaking correspondents, 1863-91.

Publication/Creation

1799-1891

Physical description

22 pieces in one file 22 loose documents of various sizes

Acquisition note

Nos. 3 and 19-22 were purchased from Stevens, London, in August 1930 (acc.90163), and no. 10 from the same source in August 1931 (acc.68238). Nos. 1 and 14 were purchased at Puttick & Simpson's sale, London, 9 April 1931, lots 275-276 (accs.67564 and 67563 respectively). No. 2 was transferred to the Library from the Wellcome Historical Medical Museum sometime in 1939, its earlier provenance being unknown (acc.91800), and no. 4 likewise transferred in 1964 (acc.311223). No. 11 was purchased from Mrs Watson of Burnley in March 1945 (acc.72200). The majority of the remainder were purchased from Charavay, Paris, in May and November 1932 (accs.65655, 65657 respectively), September and November 1934 (accs.67126, 67129), and sometime in 1935 (acc.68515). The provenance of no. 6 is unrecorded.

Ownership note

Nos. 3 and 9 was formerly part of the Bibliotheca Lindesiana dispersed at auction at Sotheby's in 1925.

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