US president Donald Trump came over all French this weekend, tweeting 'He who saves his Country does not violate any Law', a quote most commonly attributed to French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte.
A peace settlement to end a major war can be an opportunity to reorder the world. After the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte in ...
Lafayette, a hero of the American Revolution, refused to support ... through to fight for freedom and human rights, is this what you want?” Lafayette wrote about his letter to Bonaparte in ...
Famous foreigners have often attracted large American crowds, but neither the Beetles nor the Rolling Stones nor Winston ...
Supporters of the French Revolution killed Louis XVI and his ... may even depict French emperor and military commander Napoleon Bonaparte being hanged ...
The French Revolution. Hunt ... advanced rapidly. The career of Napoleon Bonaparte, a young upstart, personified the new reliance on personal ambition and, ironically, his dictatorship was ...
“So Lafayette was in a sense indebted to Napoleon,” Kramer said. Initially, Lafayette gave Napoleon the benefit of the doubt and wrote to Washington that he hoped Bonaparte would eventually ...
But it resembles one attributed to Napoleon Bonaparte, by way of actor Rod Steiger who portrayed the messianic, self-appointed emperor of the French in ... that triggered a revolution and the ...
It came days after Trump issued a similar post echoing France's Napoleon Bonaparte. Trump wrote: 'He who saves his Country does not violate any Law.' That phrase has been attributed to the French ...