MARTIN DE BEURNONVILLE Maurice (1826-1895) capitaine d'infanterie, petit-neveu du maréchal de Beurnonville

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MARTIN DE BEURNONVILLE Maurice (1826-1895) capitaine d'infanterie, petit-neveu du maréchal de Beurnonville
61 L.A.S. "your son Maurice" and 5 L.A. (one incomplete), 1859-1860, to his father, General Étienne MARTIN DE BEURNONVILLE (3 to his brother Edmond); 290 pages in-8 tabbed, half-bound in red damaged binding (detached covers, part of the spine is missing). Very interesting correspondence on the Italian campaign of 1859. The first letters of this captain of the 4th Army Corps (General Niel), written by Pecetto, Sale, Fontana Fredda, Valeggio, Cremona, Plaisance, Nice, Cannes, etc, are filled with new military: arrival of Napoleon III and new troops divided between the King of Piedmont, Marshal CANROBERT, and General NIEL; retreat movement of the Austrians, who evacuate Vercelli and Casteggio but keep the line of the Sesia on the left bank of the Po and the squares of Novara, Mortara, etc.; positions of the 4th Corps and the Piedmontese army; proud attitude of the Imperial Guard; state of readiness. Echoes of the battle of MONTEBELLO, of 20 May 1859 (in which the captain did not take part); doubts about the forces and designs of the Austrians; details about the superiority of the French armament. The officer reports what he knows or guesses about the operations: once the Po is over, one tries to "reject the enemy beyond Ticino, if not to join him and beat him; [...] one can hope that the enemy is threatened on his right flank by the whole French army, which relies on Novara (a place still susceptible of a good defense, although dismantled), one can hope that the enemy will find nothing simpler than to cross Ticino again [...]....] for it is assumed that its main forces are towards Mortara, and that there are only a few troops on the road from Novara to Milan, which passes from Ticino to Buffalora. It would withdraw to its strongholds, Pavia, Piacenza, the Mincio. The goal that the Emperor seems to have proposed to himself is to put the Austrian army on notice to evacuate the country quickly and under disadvantageous conditions, since we are as cl
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