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    Usar "napoleon i" en una oración

    napoleon i oraciones de ejemplo

    napoleon i


    1. After the final defeat of Napoleon in 1815, two major changes started to reshape Prussia: Industrialization and Expansion


    2. In 1812 Napoleon invaded Russia where he would finally discover the limits of himself


    3. It was that kind of disunity that has been cited as a contributing reason for increasingly autocratic rule under men like Julius Caesar in Rome and Napoleon in France


    4. Putin is as little dependent on the Duma as Napoleon III was on his parliament


    5. Napoleon III tried to co-opt the tidal wave of modern, revolutionary, nationalism to achieve the revitalization of France and the concomitant restoration of its glory


    6. Napoleon III struggled to establish a new, inclusive European order - as does Putin with NATO and, to a lesser degree, with the European Union today


    7. Should Putin fail in his military adventures as Napoleon III did in his and be deposed as he was - these eerie similarities will have come to their natural conclusion


    8. There are the public English Gardens that were laid out during the reign of Napoleon III; before I ran off to sea, I visited them as often as I could


    9. wouldcheck French influence in the Peninsula, but Ferdinand wasforced by Napoleon into a


    10. Until the final debacle of Napoleon invading Russia happened

    11. Roman Empire, and ending with the capture of the Pope by Napoleon in 1798


    12. wounding of the first Vatican by Napoleon in 1798 and the social and political ramifications that


    13. Napoleon is the Mahomet of the West, and is worshipped by his commonplace but ambitions followers, not only as a leader and lawgiver, but also as the personification of equality


    14. Then who reigns in France at this moment—Napoleon II


    15. And as for France, that weak imitation of Napoleon is far too busy establishing the French in Mexico to be bothered with us


    16. "Look here!" said the old miser, "you know what a napoleon is?


    17. South America got its chance to throw its rulers out partly because of ideas of liberty and equality inspired by the French Revolution (details in European History For Dummies by Sean Lang) but mainly because in 1808 Napoleon invaded Spain and Portugal and forced their rulers to flee


    18. ’ But before Pierre- who at that moment imagined himself to be Napoleon in person and to have just effected the dangerous crossing of the Straits of Dover and captured London- could pronounce Pitt’s sentence, he saw a well-built and handsome young officer entering his room


    19. To the joy and pride of the whole army, a personal interview was refused, and instead of the Sovereign, Prince Dolgorukov, the victor at Wischau, was sent with Savary to negotiate with Napoleon if, contrary to expectations, these negotiations were actuated by a real desire for peace


    20. But though he firmly believed himself to be King of Naples and pitied the grief felt by the subjects he was abandoning, latterly, after he had been ordered to return to military service- and especially since his last interview with Napoleon in Danzig, when his august brother-in-law had told him: ‘I made you King that you should reign in my way, but not in yours!’- he had cheerfully taken up his familiar business, and- like a well-fed but not overfat horse that feels himself in harness and grows skittish between the shafts- he dressed up in clothes as variegated and expensive as possible, and gaily and contentedly galloped along the roads of Poland, without himself knowing why or whither

    21. The French alphabet, written out with the same numerical values as the Hebrew, in which Writing the words L’Empereur Napoleon in numbers, it appears that the sum of them is 666, and that Napoleon therefore the beast foretold in the Apocalypse


    22. Russian authors are still fonder of telling us that from the commencement of the campaign a Scythian war plan was adopted to lure Napoleon into the depths of Russia, and this plan some of them attribute to Pfuel, others to a certain Frenchman, others to Toll, and others again to Alexander himself-pointing to notes, projects, and letters which contain hints of such a line of action


    23. The luring of Napoleon into the depths of


    24. We should have attacked Napoleon in the center or on the right, and the engagement would have taken place on the twenty-fifth, in the position we intended and had fortified


    25. Then all these Westphalians and Hessians whom Napoleon is leading would not follow him into Russia, and we should not go to fight in Austria and Prussia without knowing why


    26. After breakfast Napoleon in de Beausset’s presence dictated his order of the day to the


    27. ‘Now then, what do you want?’ asked Napoleon in the tone of a man irritated at being


    28. ’ said Napoleon in a hoarse voice


    29. For Russian historians, strange and terrible to say, Napoleon- that most insignificant tool of history who never anywhere, even in exile, showed human dignity- Napoleon is the object of adulation and enthusiasm; he is grand


    30. If so much has been and still is written about the Berezina, on the French side this is only because at the broken bridge across that river the calamities their army had been previously enduring were suddenly concentrated at one moment into a tragic spectacle that remained in every memory, and on the Russian side merely because in Petersburg-far from the seat of war- a plan (again one of Pfuel’s) had been devised to catch Napoleon in a strategic trap at the Berezina River

    31. Alexander I- the pacifier of Europe, the man who from his early years had striven only for his people’s welfare, the originator of the liberal innovations in his fatherland- now that he seemed to possess the utmost power and therefore to have the possibility of bringing about the welfare of his peoples- at the time when Napoleon in exile was drawing up childish and mendacious plans of how he would have made mankind happy had he retained power- Alexander I, having fulfilled his mission and feeling the hand of God upon him, suddenly recognizes the insignificance of that supposed power, turns away from it, and gives it into the hands of contemptible men whom he despises, saying only:


    32. If power be the collective will of the people transferred to their ruler, was Pugachev a representative of the will of the people? If not, then why was Napoleon I? Why was Napoleon III a criminal when he was taken prisoner at Boulogne, and why, later on, were those criminals whom he arrested?


    33. Since we are making a portrait, and since we do not wish to conceal anything, we are forced to add that he was glacial towards Napoleon in his decline


    34. Napoleon indulged in many fits of this laughter during the breakfast at Waterloo


    35. For Napoleon it was a panic; 10 Blucher sees nothing in it but fire; Wellington understands nothing in regard to it


    36. Where is he? What is he doing? "Napoleon is dead," said a passer-by to a veteran of Marengo and Waterloo


    37. sleeping woman, and a child, also asleep, the child on the woman's lap, an eagle in a cloud, with a crown in his beak, and the woman thrusting the crown away from the child's head, without awaking the latter; in the background, Napoleon in a glory, leaning on a very blue column with a yellow capital ornamented with this inscription:


    38. The city of Voltaire and Napoleon is necessary


    39. The whole army of that day was present there, in the court-yard of the Tuileries, represented by a squadron or a platoon, and guarding Napoleon in repose; and that was the splendid epoch when the grand army had Marengo behind it and Austerlitz before it


    40. Perry remarks, the poet is evidently thinking, and with intense sympathy, of the aspirations of Napoleon I

    41. But Napoleon insisted; he still waited and hoped


    42. The “old fox,” Kutuzof, fully appreciated the necessity of keeping Napoleon in Moscow, and humoured Lauriston so cleverly that the poor envoy flattered himself with the most extravagant hopes of a speedy peace, and, what is more, inspired his Emperor with the same delusion


    43. Napoleon in his despatches gives the following account of the engagement—“A number of Cossacks have begun to make their appearance, and given our cavalry some trouble


    44. Even those highest in command now admitted that Napoleon in leading his army to Moscow had made the same error as Charles XII


    45. He was directed to spread the rumour that there was no want of bread in Moscow, and that Napoleon intended to remain there during the winter


    46. The former was set up when Napoleon intended to make a more or less protracted stay


    47. That is a state of affairs which has been twice repeated in the Russia of the nineteenth century,—the first time, when in the year '12 we repulsed Napoleon I


    48. , and the second time, when in the year '56 we were repulsed by Napoleon III


    49. "Was it Napoleon I


    50. The Toulon manifestations are one of the acts of that drama which is presented by the antagonism—the creation of Napoleon III
















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