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History And Myth Of Dutch Popular Protest In The Napoleonic Period (1806–1813)

open access: yes, 2009
The 'Napoleonic period' was a time of great importance in Dutch history. In this chapter the popular protest in Holland in the Napoleonic period is studied in more detail. The focus is firstly on the popular protest in general. After this the attention is directed towards the introduction of the civil registration and the supposed popular protest ...
Joor, J.
exaly   +5 more sources
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Britain and the Black Legend: The Genesis of the Anti-Napoleonic Myth

2016
Few leaders have managed their reputations as successfully as Napoleon Bonaparte. So beguiling was his image that just thirty-three years after the disaster of Waterloo, his untested nephew, Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, was elected President of the Second Republic with an overwhelming popular mandate.
exaly   +2 more sources

Napoleonic Expedition to Egypt: Myth and Reality

Korean Society for European Integration, 2020
exaly   +2 more sources

Myth and reality: a review of Bonaparte and the British prints and propaganda in the age of Napoleon

National Identities, 2016
Room 90, British Museum 5th February–16th August He is not dead, he breathes the air in lands beyond the deep!
openaire   +1 more source

Napoleonic Legacies, Postcolonial State Legitimation, and the Perpetual Myth of Non-Intervention: Family Code Reform and Gender Equality in Mali

Social & Legal Studies, 2020
In May 2018, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights held that Mali’s 2011 Family Code violated women’s and children’s rights. Widespread protests halted the adoption of a more progressive draft Code passed by the Malian National Assembly in 2009.
openaire   +1 more source

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