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Dec 31, 2021
12/21
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if you think about it most of those in world history through napoleon and robert e. lee, and at some point he understood a basic strategic reality that becomes all-consuming and crucial that he didn't have to win the war the british had to win the war as long as he kept the continental army in power and as long as the colonies stayed united and he was right about that but there is a kind of resilience to him and the ordinary trips in the continental army was were ten or 15 percent that were african-americans. the other ones deserve the real credit it is seven.five year marathon and war that it's more barbaric than we imagined we think of it differently more americans died in the american revolution per capita than any man the civil war. so the countryside is really barbaric but the final battle the most important battle is that yorktown where washington gets the cornwallis surrender vet the french were indispensable why are they so interested in helping the americans what do they really just take the british more than they liked us? >> it was payback time for having
if you think about it most of those in world history through napoleon and robert e. lee, and at some point he understood a basic strategic reality that becomes all-consuming and crucial that he didn't have to win the war the british had to win the war as long as he kept the continental army in power and as long as the colonies stayed united and he was right about that but there is a kind of resilience to him and the ordinary trips in the continental army was were ten or 15 percent that were...
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Dec 31, 2021
12/21
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but at that moment, he was an think about it, this was caesar did rommel dead or what napoleon will doothers will do or castro will do. they tend to believe that they are the revolution, dictators do have a difficult separating themselves from it. >> okay we have questions from those viewing and i'll begin with some of them, fermanagh, listen to the path of becoming an historian and what sparked your interest in history. >> gosh, i think reading biographies, can history through biography and through lives and i love biographies since there was always a center of topic and i sort of thought look will come into this world the same way really the same way. what can we learn by people who lived before of this and some of them a thousand years before us so this perhaps an adolescent way to come to this but as i said, i didn't major in history predict i majored in philosophy and i decided to go forward in history because for many reasons, because it couldn't pay for law school. but also because through history, you can raise the intellectual questions that i thought philosophy usually addres
but at that moment, he was an think about it, this was caesar did rommel dead or what napoleon will doothers will do or castro will do. they tend to believe that they are the revolution, dictators do have a difficult separating themselves from it. >> okay we have questions from those viewing and i'll begin with some of them, fermanagh, listen to the path of becoming an historian and what sparked your interest in history. >> gosh, i think reading biographies, can history through...
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Dec 12, 2021
12/21
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and then the threat of napoleon, the kaiser, all of those five tracks were for the balance of power in europe. and churchill wanted to prevent that from happening, and so he worried about the kaiser. then, of course, 25 years later he was the first person and, indeed, for a long time the only person to warn about the threat with adolf hitler and the nazis and the balance of power in europe. you finally find, of course, in the speech in missouri in march 1936 that he makes the same statement potentially about the soviets and the way in which stalin posed a severe threat to eastern europe and the integrity and independence of those countries there. so it's warning, it's early warning, it's also incredibly brave and only him doing the warning. and these things, i think, really when we take all three together, they represent an extraordinary -- to civilization and something that completely outweighs the complaints with the facts of the day, in my view. >> andrew, i know you thought a great deal about this, have you decided what the wellsprings of this combination of indomitable -- [laughte
and then the threat of napoleon, the kaiser, all of those five tracks were for the balance of power in europe. and churchill wanted to prevent that from happening, and so he worried about the kaiser. then, of course, 25 years later he was the first person and, indeed, for a long time the only person to warn about the threat with adolf hitler and the nazis and the balance of power in europe. you finally find, of course, in the speech in missouri in march 1936 that he makes the same statement...
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Dec 30, 2021
12/21
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that's not what cromwell did or lookwhat napoleon will do . that's not what castro will do . dictators tend to believe that they are the revolution and difficult times separating themselves from it . >> we have questions from those that are viewing and let me begin with anna. what set you on the path to becoming a historian? what sparked your interest in history? >> gosh. i think reading biography. i came to history through biography. and i love biography cause there was always a center of this topic. i thought look, we all come into this world the same way and we all leave the same way . what can we learn from people who were here before us, some 1000 years before us. that's perhaps an adolescent way to come to this history but as i said they didn't i didn't major in history, i majored in philosophy and i decided to go in the history for many reasons as i said because i couldn't pay for law school and also because through history you could raise questions that philosophy usually addressed. i thought i was an intellectual historian whatever the heck that meant . and so it's a
that's not what cromwell did or lookwhat napoleon will do . that's not what castro will do . dictators tend to believe that they are the revolution and difficult times separating themselves from it . >> we have questions from those that are viewing and let me begin with anna. what set you on the path to becoming a historian? what sparked your interest in history? >> gosh. i think reading biography. i came to history through biography. and i love biography cause there was always a...
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Dec 4, 2021
12/21
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ALJAZ
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what may be objects about for many had deep cultural and spiritual significance for generations of napoleon. the 19 eighties and nineties thought the plunder of bronze de teeth and stones culture from gut mandate valley region, 2 important books, the gods and leaving the country and stolen images of the upon have painstakingly documented more than 200 missing artifacts. the books raised adamus about the theft and trafficking in the cultural heritage. heritage activists say there is increasing pressure on western collectors and museums to return to pass stolen treasures or is it it almost when they see how we worship and take care of our deities? i'm sure people will be happy to return them when they release what they haven't stolen. they must feel guilty while only a small percentage of menopause stolen items have found their way home. activists welcomed this happy homecoming as the start of the positive trend, remy at the limbo edges. eda gutman to a total solar eclipse has turned day light into darkness and antarctica. the icey continent was the only place on the planet where the spectacu
what may be objects about for many had deep cultural and spiritual significance for generations of napoleon. the 19 eighties and nineties thought the plunder of bronze de teeth and stones culture from gut mandate valley region, 2 important books, the gods and leaving the country and stolen images of the upon have painstakingly documented more than 200 missing artifacts. the books raised adamus about the theft and trafficking in the cultural heritage. heritage activists say there is increasing...
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Dec 5, 2021
12/21
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ALJAZ
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our reporter, i'm jasa limbo, joined napoleon, worshippers as they welcome the return of their long lost treasure. the peoples of political button waited a long time for this to catch a glimpse of their long lost and much loved. idle. the 12th century sat you of luxury with worshipped with centuries before it disappeared from the town in 1984. we were sad when the day she worship disappeared. what happy to get it back. later, it is back where it belonged. the statue was briefly seen at sotheby's auction house new york in the early nineties before vanishing again. it then reappeared at the dallas museum of art and texas artist and researcher joined in davis, spotted it in an online image 36 years ago. since then. she's been working with net poly heritage activists and f b i. agents to ensure it's returned to me. it feels like a bit of a bit of justice in the world and also just to, oh, wonderful happiness. to see that she returned and actually back in worship again in the original tempo. and it's, it's the dream. it's a dream come true for many of us custodians conducted religious rights
our reporter, i'm jasa limbo, joined napoleon, worshippers as they welcome the return of their long lost treasure. the peoples of political button waited a long time for this to catch a glimpse of their long lost and much loved. idle. the 12th century sat you of luxury with worshipped with centuries before it disappeared from the town in 1984. we were sad when the day she worship disappeared. what happy to get it back. later, it is back where it belonged. the statue was briefly seen at...
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Dec 10, 2021
12/21
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. >> if you look at, let's call it elf with a napoleonic complex bureaucrat fauci, he doesn't know whattalking about he's a bureaucrat. he's not a good doctor he's better at being a bureaucrat, and as long as we keep giving that clown his 15 minutes of fame, the tv that he so desperately craves, we're going to be in these lockdown situations forever >> seth: i'm sorry, he's an elf with a napoleonic complex? you're so desperate to look taller, you stand with your nipples pointed out like you're using them as weapons. "stay away from me, antifa these bad boys will hurt you!" also i wouldn't call anyone an elf when you literally posed for a photo on a stump in the woods, like a troll who got kicked out of the fellowship of the rings and yes, and i'm aware there were no trolls in that fellowship that's why they go sit on stumps so republicans are, as usual, lying about lockdowns and vaccines instead, they'd rather focus on absurd, unproven remedies like hydroxychloroquine or ingesting bleach or this new one from wisconsin senator ron johnson, mouth wash >> i want you to listen to republican
. >> if you look at, let's call it elf with a napoleonic complex bureaucrat fauci, he doesn't know whattalking about he's a bureaucrat. he's not a good doctor he's better at being a bureaucrat, and as long as we keep giving that clown his 15 minutes of fame, the tv that he so desperately craves, we're going to be in these lockdown situations forever >> seth: i'm sorry, he's an elf with a napoleonic complex? you're so desperate to look taller, you stand with your nipples pointed out...
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Dec 23, 2021
12/21
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this is a guy who was alongside napoleon bonaparte and the contrast between them is quite clear.appened to completely agree with that interpretation of washington. the gap silly wanted to be commander-in-chief of the continental army and that was his great dream and when it came time for duty present he was like he was dragged from mt. vernon buddy was dragged from mt. vernon. he didn't want to do it so i think because of that, that's where lafayette is spontaneously a more appealing person to think about and talk about but also would have been one of his persistent defects about him. he didn't quite, there were other political mistakes he made but one of them is just that he always was kind of like if somebody offers him the presidency he's like i don't want to be president. i don't actually want that job and he was not president in the way that his old mentor was. >> i would be remiss if i didn't ask you a question. he wants to know if you have alluded to project the one and only mike duncan. >> i'm not telling anybody. because the thing is i'm wrapping up the revolution so i'v
this is a guy who was alongside napoleon bonaparte and the contrast between them is quite clear.appened to completely agree with that interpretation of washington. the gap silly wanted to be commander-in-chief of the continental army and that was his great dream and when it came time for duty present he was like he was dragged from mt. vernon buddy was dragged from mt. vernon. he didn't want to do it so i think because of that, that's where lafayette is spontaneously a more appealing person to...
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Dec 24, 2021
12/21
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i have written about napoleon. so, one of the things that sort of low-key drove me to him, is that he seemed more like a good man than a great man, right? people have asked me this before, is he a great man? have you written a great man biography? i feel like he wrote a good man biography. he never got to that supreme level that even washington, or napoleon got to, or his contemporaries got, to because he did not quite have that really ruthless street and him to be like sociopathic, or narcissistic, or so blind to the damage that he was causing by his actions that he could go out and do the kinds of things that are required to make your mark in history. so he made his mark in history, he is heavily involved in so many really, really important events. i think he was a transformative figure. but, along the way, he was mostly a good person who is trying to make the world he lived in a better place. i think that was one of my thoughts about him going into it, that was more or less confirmed as i went through the detail
i have written about napoleon. so, one of the things that sort of low-key drove me to him, is that he seemed more like a good man than a great man, right? people have asked me this before, is he a great man? have you written a great man biography? i feel like he wrote a good man biography. he never got to that supreme level that even washington, or napoleon got to, or his contemporaries got, to because he did not quite have that really ruthless street and him to be like sociopathic, or...
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Dec 22, 2021
12/21
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that's the word from our botox napoleon. otherwise, you can't celebrate christmas. how long until they tell us you can't vote in person without the vaccine? that's coming, obviously. but for now, joe biden cancelled christmas for the working class for now known as the unvaccinated. they didn't vote in the last election so they can't celebrate christmas. the whole pan democrat sick their fault. before we unpack what he said, a word about the language they use. they call these injections a vaccine. that's not quite right. a vaccine prevents disease. you take a shot, you don't get polio. that's not what the shots are. as biden himself conceded from the stage today many thousands of fully vaccinated people have been infected with covid recently. biden claims these people are in better shape because he got the shot. he didn't prove that. so far, no one has proved that. let's assume biden is right, which is fine. it's not really a vaccine if you can get and transmit the virus, it's an experimental health supplement. that's fine too. we're not against experimental health s
that's the word from our botox napoleon. otherwise, you can't celebrate christmas. how long until they tell us you can't vote in person without the vaccine? that's coming, obviously. but for now, joe biden cancelled christmas for the working class for now known as the unvaccinated. they didn't vote in the last election so they can't celebrate christmas. the whole pan democrat sick their fault. before we unpack what he said, a word about the language they use. they call these injections a...
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Dec 12, 2021
12/21
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and then the threat of napoleon, the kaiser, and hitler. all of those five threats were to the balance of power in europe. and churchill wanted to prevent that from happening. until he worried about the kaiser. then, of course, 25 years later he was the first person, and deed for a long time the only person mounted power tomorrow afternoon. and missouri makes the same statements about soviet economists or the way in which stalin with integrity and independence of those countries there. it's an early warning it's incredibly brave we take them all three together represents an extraordinary something that is completely outweighs. >> is a great deal about this and decided the combination is an insight but also a certain self regard and sense of destiny? [laughter] yes i mean, of course, subtitled my book walking with destiny. it was a reference to his remark about the day he became prime minister in may of 1940 when he said i felt as if i was walking with destiny. in all my past life was in preparation for this hour and this trial. so, i think
and then the threat of napoleon, the kaiser, and hitler. all of those five threats were to the balance of power in europe. and churchill wanted to prevent that from happening. until he worried about the kaiser. then, of course, 25 years later he was the first person, and deed for a long time the only person mounted power tomorrow afternoon. and missouri makes the same statements about soviet economists or the way in which stalin with integrity and independence of those countries there. it's an...
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Dec 29, 2021
12/21
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the first man was called eve lacorn, the first immigrant, and he was a sailer in napoleon's navy. as you will learn in school, napoleon was involved in war from one end of the earth to the other, and eve was one of his junior officers. so the emperor napoleon sent ships because there was an uprising in the place they now call haiti. when the ship arrived, eve got off and never got back on. he put down his roots here. he found himself a bride, who was about 19, whose name was marguerite zurang. marguerite zurang. this is eve lacorn's grave and signature. shortly after he arrived in new orleans, in 1820. after this man married marguerite, he married himself into a fine creole family, who had this plantation on the mississippi river. but he married one of the daughters who was from a branch that was less wealthy than the other branch. her branch of the family was in decline. so, eve and marguerite moved into a creole cottage in the french quarter and had five children. my aunt maude continued the story. they had five children and among them was my grandfather, constant lecorn. consta
the first man was called eve lacorn, the first immigrant, and he was a sailer in napoleon's navy. as you will learn in school, napoleon was involved in war from one end of the earth to the other, and eve was one of his junior officers. so the emperor napoleon sent ships because there was an uprising in the place they now call haiti. when the ship arrived, eve got off and never got back on. he put down his roots here. he found himself a bride, who was about 19, whose name was marguerite zurang....
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Dec 23, 2021
12/21
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i mean, this is a guy who's, like, alongside napoleon bonaparte. the contrast between them is quite clear. and i happen to completely agree with that interpretation of washington. i think he absolutely wanted to be commander in chief of the continental army. that was his great dream. and when it came time to be president, people are like, oh, he was dragged from mount vernon. but he was kind of actually dragged from mount vernon. he didn't want to do it. and so i think that because of that, that's where lafayette is both simultaneously a more appealing person to think about and talk about but also would have been one of his deep -- is a persistent defect about him is that he didn't quite -- you know, there's other political mistakes that he made. but one of them is just that he always was kind of, like -- like, if somebody offers him the presidency, he's, like, i don't want to be president. i don't actually want that job. and he successfully was not president in the way his old mentor washington failed to not be president. >> twice. >> yeah, twice
i mean, this is a guy who's, like, alongside napoleon bonaparte. the contrast between them is quite clear. and i happen to completely agree with that interpretation of washington. i think he absolutely wanted to be commander in chief of the continental army. that was his great dream. and when it came time to be president, people are like, oh, he was dragged from mount vernon. but he was kind of actually dragged from mount vernon. he didn't want to do it. and so i think that because of that,...
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Dec 30, 2021
12/21
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the first man was called even, he was a sailor in napoleon's navy, and as you will learn in school, napoleon was involved in a war. from one end of the earth to the other, yves was one of his junior officers. the emperor of napoleon sent ships to the caribbean because there was an uprising in san domingue, where they now call haiti. you've got all, he never got back, on and he put his roots down here. he found himself a bride, who was about 19, her name was margaret. this is even great -- his signature shortly after he arrived in new orleans in 1820. after this man married margaret, he married himself into a fine kriel family who had this plantation on the mississippi river. he married one of the daughters who was from a branch that was less wealthy than the other branch, and her branch of the family was in decline. so yves and margaret moved into a cottage, they had five children, and my and maude continued the story. they had five children, among them was my grandfather, constant. constant lecorgne. he was a redeemer. redemption, she said. that was after the civil war when the colored peop
the first man was called even, he was a sailor in napoleon's navy, and as you will learn in school, napoleon was involved in a war. from one end of the earth to the other, yves was one of his junior officers. the emperor of napoleon sent ships to the caribbean because there was an uprising in san domingue, where they now call haiti. you've got all, he never got back, on and he put his roots down here. he found himself a bride, who was about 19, her name was margaret. this is even great -- his...
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Dec 31, 2021
12/21
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i spent six years writing about napoleon, six years writing about lord salisbury. it's pretty much par for the course. it was the exact on which your friend oliver wendell holmes, actually, because i woubd up liking chuvl more than when i started, and so that's a rather pleasing thing. i have written about people i wound up despising, but i didn't call off the book. you write the way you feel about the person. what you're scared of is starting off a book that you think is going to be about someone you like you and wind up despising them. >> we have some questions from the audience i'm going to go to. the first one says, many people in the united states are advocating the removal of confederate statues because they represent the tragic legacy of slavery despite any contributions they may have made to shape military leadership. do you see criticisms of churchill and his potential toppling, i think one of his statues was defaced, as a similar situation? >> no, i don't, really. it strikes me that some of the confederate statues at least were put up in a deliberately pr
i spent six years writing about napoleon, six years writing about lord salisbury. it's pretty much par for the course. it was the exact on which your friend oliver wendell holmes, actually, because i woubd up liking chuvl more than when i started, and so that's a rather pleasing thing. i have written about people i wound up despising, but i didn't call off the book. you write the way you feel about the person. what you're scared of is starting off a book that you think is going to be about...
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Dec 7, 2021
12/21
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these were said to have belonged to napoleon bonaparte's first wife. wore these head part -- headpieces. they sold for $760,000 in london. she had matchg jewelry sets. i am laura trevelyan. thank you for watching bbc world news america. have a narrator: funding for this presentation of this program is provided by... narrator: financial services firm, raymond james. narrator: funding was also provided by, the freeman foundation. by judy and peter blum kovler foundation; pursuing solutions for america's neglected needs. and by contributions to this pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. ♪ ♪ narrator: you're watching pbs. ♪ da-da-da-duh-da-da-da♪ ♪ da-da-da-da-da-da ♪♪ captioning sponsored by newshour productions, llc >> woodruff: good evening. i'm judy woodruff. on the newshour tonight: tense talks. president biden holds a virtual meeting with vladimir putin, amid rising fears over a potential russian invasion of ukraine. then, investigating the insurrection. the inquiry into the january 6 attack on the capitol intensifies as more trump officials
these were said to have belonged to napoleon bonaparte's first wife. wore these head part -- headpieces. they sold for $760,000 in london. she had matchg jewelry sets. i am laura trevelyan. thank you for watching bbc world news america. have a narrator: funding for this presentation of this program is provided by... narrator: financial services firm, raymond james. narrator: funding was also provided by, the freeman foundation. by judy and peter blum kovler foundation; pursuing solutions for...
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Dec 29, 2021
12/21
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stuart has this idea could he have -- something they used on napoleonic outfield to move from point to point. he has some trouble finding a commander. first he thinks it's going to be john cook. cook spends half his time in richmond it doesn't have a lot of interest at this point in forming an artillery unit. then james brett is the confederate military are not so into him at the moment and the third time is a charm pelham's name. pelham has been active with the artillery and is definitely helping to form and train units that are coming to the confederates at that point in time. for one reason or another the confederate military in richmond say yes pelham will be the commander of the force artillery paid on november 29 come 1861 in order number 557 pelham is transferred to the artillery spends the winter for creating and training. he still just a lieutenant at this time. he recruits from across the south and when the stuart artillary rolls towards the potential in the spring of 1862 they had 141 artillerymen 130 horses and six canons. the canons are to come six-pound howitzers one napo
stuart has this idea could he have -- something they used on napoleonic outfield to move from point to point. he has some trouble finding a commander. first he thinks it's going to be john cook. cook spends half his time in richmond it doesn't have a lot of interest at this point in forming an artillery unit. then james brett is the confederate military are not so into him at the moment and the third time is a charm pelham's name. pelham has been active with the artillery and is definitely...
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Dec 15, 2021
12/21
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their cannon are two six pound howitzers, one napoleon, 13 inch rifle cannon at this point in time, so let's talk about a little about horse artillery and the tactics. so it comes from the european battle fields and one thing thing that can be kind of challenging to wrap our minds around is we look back to this area of warfair and think yeah, horse artillery, they pull cannons all over the place, that's true, but horse artillery is very specific horse artillery accompanies cavalry, move, and fire, so it's not horses pull the cannons into a battery position and set up there. this is very rapid fire. it's very mobile fire power and this is what stuart wants to experiment with and they are going to be the ones to help define this with stuart's cavalry, in may of '62, pelham finally gets to captain, and the first fight he leads is at willisburg, he holds the position at the crossroads until he is out of ammunition. report says he fires 360 rounds. this will become hallmark of pelham on battle fields. he tends to hold position until he's out of ammunition whether he's supposed to or not. no
their cannon are two six pound howitzers, one napoleon, 13 inch rifle cannon at this point in time, so let's talk about a little about horse artillery and the tactics. so it comes from the european battle fields and one thing thing that can be kind of challenging to wrap our minds around is we look back to this area of warfair and think yeah, horse artillery, they pull cannons all over the place, that's true, but horse artillery is very specific horse artillery accompanies cavalry, move, and...
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Dec 28, 2021
12/21
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their cannon are two six pound howitzers, one napoleon an one three inch blakely rifle cannon at this point in time. so let's talk about horse artillery and the tactics. so it comes from the european battlefields and one thing that could be kind of challenging to wrap our minds around is we look back to this era of warfare and we think, well, yeah, horse artillery, they used horses to pull the cannons all over the place. that is true. but, horse artillery is very specific. horse artillery accompanies cavalry and will take a gun and move and fire. and then hitch to the horses again and take it to another place and move and fire. so it is not horses pull the cannons into a battery position and set up there. this is very rapid fire. it is very mobile fire power and this is what stuart wants to experiment with and pelham is going to be the one to help define this for stuart's cavalry. so in may 1862, pelham finally promotes to captain. the first battle that he will fight leading the stuart horse artillery is at williamsburg and he positions near ft. mcgruder until he's out of ammunition.
their cannon are two six pound howitzers, one napoleon an one three inch blakely rifle cannon at this point in time. so let's talk about horse artillery and the tactics. so it comes from the european battlefields and one thing that could be kind of challenging to wrap our minds around is we look back to this era of warfare and we think, well, yeah, horse artillery, they used horses to pull the cannons all over the place. that is true. but, horse artillery is very specific. horse artillery...
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Dec 17, 2021
12/21
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but at the end of the napoleonic wars and then to give finland to the russians and give norway asns alation prize. but increasingly in the 19th century. and that is the basis. in many concessions as they could. and without control altogether and there was that desire and respect. >> and then to gratify with that nationalist movement. and then to be too demanding. and then to get its independence. but then i i remember as a boy once and go through other countries like panama and romania and bulgaria. >> and then to say swedish? [laughter] t so yes. and then as i learned about history and then betrayal. >> because as an art as a curator i don't doubt but then the first opera house but then to be civilized people. >> and there is an effort to integrate the scandinavian countries into mainstream and civilization. not at the same time recognizing that also in the discovery of their viking roots and that this is a whole other chapter four scandinavians generally and then to have a national identity and then to bind those two together and then on the other. >> . >> so with the geography of t
but at the end of the napoleonic wars and then to give finland to the russians and give norway asns alation prize. but increasingly in the 19th century. and that is the basis. in many concessions as they could. and without control altogether and there was that desire and respect. >> and then to gratify with that nationalist movement. and then to be too demanding. and then to get its independence. but then i i remember as a boy once and go through other countries like panama and romania...
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the ginger jada to people are starting to get fed up with his coercion job and pushing back the napoleon. it's a chain reaction to those houses. egos. i'm so you only doesn't have cornelia who's with either handled a tight. yeah. but this democratization process costs money. a whole democracy requires a strong economy to work and your g. i'll do that. i don't what, how can we continue on this powerful, if the economy collapses? now cindy, having to her, you know, what can j wailin say to that? his father knows what life under a dictatorship is like, and yet still he would sacrifice individual liberties if it meant keeping his wallet full. he still moans a paradise that went away at the end of the 1980s, with the rise of democracy. j way. lin, meanwhile, prizes political transparency. it's a fundamental divide that's not easy to overcome or sins. also, it's a guy the caf ounce of all. she says why she all sang of little much else alive, life joy without the an open government and done requires 3 things. i mean, i ain't as of the functionality, jenkins. one word i as a citizens who are wil
the ginger jada to people are starting to get fed up with his coercion job and pushing back the napoleon. it's a chain reaction to those houses. egos. i'm so you only doesn't have cornelia who's with either handled a tight. yeah. but this democratization process costs money. a whole democracy requires a strong economy to work and your g. i'll do that. i don't what, how can we continue on this powerful, if the economy collapses? now cindy, having to her, you know, what can j wailin say to that?...
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Dec 21, 2021
12/21
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KPIX
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. >> napoleon found that out 200 years ago. have you ever seen them do these sculptures? they use chainsaws.? it's amazing. they have to melt it down to a certain extent to get the shape and then freeze it back. it is unbelievable how to do that. he was looking sculptures and think of limestone and things like that. >> it's just frozen ter. captioning sponsored by cbs .>> garrett: tonight, president biden's plan to combat an omicron surge as the variant takes hold just four days before christmas. the president vows to step up testing and send help to overwhelmed hospitals, pleading with americans to get vaccinated. the commander in chief tonight trying to calm an anxious nation. >> we should all be concerned about omicron, but notanke asropl moriesimplemccineuiremens e season. holiday shipping crunch-- the last-minute shopping rush as millions of americans scramble to get their packages delivered in time. winter weather warning-- snow and ice headed for both coasts. how could it impact your holiday travel plans? supply chain chaos-- how one of the largest ports in the cou
. >> napoleon found that out 200 years ago. have you ever seen them do these sculptures? they use chainsaws.? it's amazing. they have to melt it down to a certain extent to get the shape and then freeze it back. it is unbelievable how to do that. he was looking sculptures and think of limestone and things like that. >> it's just frozen ter. captioning sponsored by cbs .>> garrett: tonight, president biden's plan to combat an omicron surge as the variant takes hold just four...
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Dec 29, 2021
12/21
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CSPAN3
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he was older than napoleon and some say perhaps he should have been in a more -- position in command the field. he suffers a series of heart attacks during the war. the first of the heart attacks occurs in the spring of 1863 during his pennsylvania campaign but he bounces back from that heart attack. there's no real evidence during his campaign that he was experiencing a health distress that affected his decision-making and i would take a step further and say that his decision-making was actually quite sound. think of it this way. for the previous two days of the battle of gettysburg lee's army had pounded the army at the potomac. the seventh entry for terry kor at potomac five of those inch infantry corps had been wrecked by lee's army. they were next to useless in terms of combat readiness. the only things that were left were the 12 core in the 64 and the six core he needs it is reserved in the 12 core -- and it leads to divisions of the second core holding cemetery ridge and each one of the divisions were lost in the brigade so what's holding the backdoor? not much more than 3500
he was older than napoleon and some say perhaps he should have been in a more -- position in command the field. he suffers a series of heart attacks during the war. the first of the heart attacks occurs in the spring of 1863 during his pennsylvania campaign but he bounces back from that heart attack. there's no real evidence during his campaign that he was experiencing a health distress that affected his decision-making and i would take a step further and say that his decision-making was...
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Dec 30, 2021
12/21
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CSPAN3
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first man was called eve lacorn and was a sailor in the boy in's maybe it as you learn in school napoleon was involved in war from one end of years to the other, eve was one of his junior officers so the emperor napoleon sent of the teller of ships to the caribbean because there was an uprising in the place they now call haiti. when the ship got off, eve got off and never got back on and put down roots here. he found himself the bride who was about 19 named marguerite's orang. this is eve the corn's grave and his signature shortly after he arrived in new orleans in 1820. after this man married marguerite he married himself into a fine creole family who had this plantation on the mississippi river but he married one of the daughters was from a branch less wealthy than the other branch and her branch of the family within decline so they moved into a little creole cottage in the french quarter and had 5 children and my aunt mod or he, had 5 children and among them was my grandfather constant acorn. he was redeemer. redemption, as she said. that was after the civil war when the colored people
first man was called eve lacorn and was a sailor in the boy in's maybe it as you learn in school napoleon was involved in war from one end of years to the other, eve was one of his junior officers so the emperor napoleon sent of the teller of ships to the caribbean because there was an uprising in the place they now call haiti. when the ship got off, eve got off and never got back on and put down roots here. he found himself the bride who was about 19 named marguerite's orang. this is eve the...
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Dec 28, 2021
12/21
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CSPAN3
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name with napoleon iii in the north italian war in 1859.erything that people could have learned from military example in the 1850s would have suggested that lee is doing exactly the right thing. the proof is in the pudding. it almost worked. the confederate forces came within an ace of breaking through that federal line. and if they had, claire, what was there behind that line to keep them from going on? next to nothing. it was a close run thing there that afternoon at gettysburg. vo success. it was not a rash decision and it was not an unprincipled and thoughtless decision. it almost worked and i have say this bluntly i for one and grateful that it did not because the consequence of that if we had been successful at gettysburg oh my goodness the army of the potomac having been beaten on so many fields so many times could very likely have gone to pieces. lee had a full and open field in front of him. there would have been a demand for peace negotiations. alexander stevens the vice president of the confederacy was on the boat in the chesapea
name with napoleon iii in the north italian war in 1859.erything that people could have learned from military example in the 1850s would have suggested that lee is doing exactly the right thing. the proof is in the pudding. it almost worked. the confederate forces came within an ace of breaking through that federal line. and if they had, claire, what was there behind that line to keep them from going on? next to nothing. it was a close run thing there that afternoon at gettysburg. vo success....
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said tyler napoleon paused. you'll have to think you'd be mold munoz. he signed on to look by yost, who propagates climate skeptical, fought and why. let's go back to the posts. take for example, this twitter account called part land institute. what is there behind this dot? ah, the heartland institute is this house set off a quiet street. its offices are completely calm. and yet read one of the most reputed thing tanks in the world. here they produce tweets, but also articles, conferences and books. the heartland institute has its expert on climate matters and its director of communication. neither of them is a scientist which doesn't prevent this organization from massively spreading contrarian science on the climate. the best scientific evidence indicates there is no climate crisis. in fact, it's pretty strong that we're not facing on either. the harlot institute is globally known for our work. oh it with scientists who are skeptical that humans are causing a climate crisis. and we are actually paid it probably by law heavily people around the world
said tyler napoleon paused. you'll have to think you'd be mold munoz. he signed on to look by yost, who propagates climate skeptical, fought and why. let's go back to the posts. take for example, this twitter account called part land institute. what is there behind this dot? ah, the heartland institute is this house set off a quiet street. its offices are completely calm. and yet read one of the most reputed thing tanks in the world. here they produce tweets, but also articles, conferences and...
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Dec 29, 2021
12/21
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CSPAN3
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so napoleon sent ships to the caribbean because there was an uprising in haiti. when the ship arrived, eve got off. he never got back on. he put down his roots here. he found himself a bride, was about 19. marguerite zurang. marguerite -- this is eve lecorn's grave and his signature. shortly after he arrived in new orleans in 1820, after this man married marguerite, he married himself into a fine creole family who had this plantation on the mississippi river. daugh was from a branch less wealthy than the other branch and her branch of the family within decline so they moved into a little creole cottage in the french quarter and had 5 children and my aunt mod or he, had 5 children and among them was my grandfather constant acorn. he was redeemer. redemption, as she said. that was after the civil war when the colored people had taken over the state and restarting businesses, acting as though everything was theirs and they were voting the redemption was after the time they called reconstruction, that awful time. reconstruction was not when the south tried to build i
so napoleon sent ships to the caribbean because there was an uprising in haiti. when the ship arrived, eve got off. he never got back on. he put down his roots here. he found himself a bride, was about 19. marguerite zurang. marguerite -- this is eve lecorn's grave and his signature. shortly after he arrived in new orleans in 1820, after this man married marguerite, he married himself into a fine creole family who had this plantation on the mississippi river. daugh was from a branch less...
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Dec 22, 2021
12/21
by
ALJAZ
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one moment i'll be very proud of was when we covered the napoleon earthquake of 2015, a terrible natural disaster and a story that needs to be told from the heart of the affected area to be then to tell the people story was very important at the time lou up to all of al jazeera correspond that is on the way. but 1st a look at the headlines on al jazeera and u. s. president joe biden has announced to measures to limit to surge of alma chron . cases includes expanded testing support for hospitals, more vaccinations as well, bumps. he has stopped short of calling for another locked on all these people who have not been back. you have an obligation to yourself to your family. and quite frankly, i know we criticize this to your country, get factions it now it's free.
one moment i'll be very proud of was when we covered the napoleon earthquake of 2015, a terrible natural disaster and a story that needs to be told from the heart of the affected area to be then to tell the people story was very important at the time lou up to all of al jazeera correspond that is on the way. but 1st a look at the headlines on al jazeera and u. s. president joe biden has announced to measures to limit to surge of alma chron . cases includes expanded testing support for...
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Dec 19, 2021
12/21
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ALJAZ
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eye 22
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counselor, parkman, song, money from park, also flowed further afield. hortshoi, a new toyota in napoleon going in to muscle women to were hunter some were put into the go cru, punky little earlier jewish, alaska. and it appears the connections benefited limb young soon to over the next couple of decades. the former pastor and director of the infamous brothers home became a thing you figure in the st radian korean press, korean church featuring on youtube and in local christian magazines. after establishing a family church in 1995 park set up a family company in australia, the directors were himself, his wife limb, sung soon her impostor, limb sister li mean soon married to former brother's home director ju, john, john, a new son in law, alex mean just a few months later, the company bought this gulf driving range and sports complex for $1400000.00, hulu in tip, corporate or hassle to 100 hilldale children toys into parking issue to hunter valuable. who are you did or didn't? she didn't do really short term medical motion cookies in there. and according to these 2003 accounts sees from on
counselor, parkman, song, money from park, also flowed further afield. hortshoi, a new toyota in napoleon going in to muscle women to were hunter some were put into the go cru, punky little earlier jewish, alaska. and it appears the connections benefited limb young soon to over the next couple of decades. the former pastor and director of the infamous brothers home became a thing you figure in the st radian korean press, korean church featuring on youtube and in local christian magazines. after...
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but high terrace, imposed under napoleon drove up the prices for cocoa beans and pushed one inventive confectionary to stretch his cocoa by mixing in local, hazelnut, maybe as his ear. okay, i assume that his wife had the idea and said busty try using not they still, my problem is that it's always the women get the cleverest idea. notice pulled up, you know, and you turned out only on a new taste was created. even that is now known the world over houston, as john do yet, or go newton and mando. my ghost agenda we're new get can be found all over toryn. at giordano, they still shaped the little chocolate jung loyalty by hand to the cafe. about about the m. milano has been famed for its newgate interpretations for over 150 years. that gothic moreno serves the new get moose new get ice cream is found in every variety on a stick at that peano in a cone or as ice cream confectionary at gabino. at the gothic eugene french author, alexandra dumont, and italian author umberto eco enjoyed the famous beach in a hot chocolate coffee cream specialty. i probably when i tried the theory, koreans ow
but high terrace, imposed under napoleon drove up the prices for cocoa beans and pushed one inventive confectionary to stretch his cocoa by mixing in local, hazelnut, maybe as his ear. okay, i assume that his wife had the idea and said busty try using not they still, my problem is that it's always the women get the cleverest idea. notice pulled up, you know, and you turned out only on a new taste was created. even that is now known the world over houston, as john do yet, or go newton and mando....
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think of napoleon, think of the nazi dictatorship, the communist one. it is a fashion of a watered down secularism, distilled water. it is something that throughout history hasn't worked well that document was canceled last week after a firestorm of criticism with politicians across the block describing it is lacking common sense. now they also said that the commission was trying to cancel christmas . why? well, one of the guidelines within that document said that people shouldn't say christmas can be stressful. and there was the idea of saying you shouldn't ask people for their christian name. now this idea of inclusive language is something that the commission president herself on de leon has in the past, backed and said she wants to move towards. but this document which contained many other examples like not greeting people as ladies and gentlemen, because that wasn't inclusive enough and saying you couldn't describe something as being man made because that would be sexist, was just as step too far. and as a result, the commission has had to make an
think of napoleon, think of the nazi dictatorship, the communist one. it is a fashion of a watered down secularism, distilled water. it is something that throughout history hasn't worked well that document was canceled last week after a firestorm of criticism with politicians across the block describing it is lacking common sense. now they also said that the commission was trying to cancel christmas . why? well, one of the guidelines within that document said that people shouldn't say christmas...
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we have napoleon, this is right up to the doorstep. ok, george. and i think that anyone that doesn't take rushes red line seriously or not serious. people go ahead. no, i think that they are now serious people. 5 but you're absolutely right. you can see how this rhetorical inflation that has come from natives. and later on we are defensive alliance. russia is the rest. so what is your evidence that russia is an aggressive look what he's doing to ukraine? but your grade isn't a member of nato. so i mean, if you was trying to push your way into nato, you was trying to right, go right up again into russia's borders. and now you're saying, oh, it's russia that is the in wrestle. and they again saying that i was the wrestler in georgia, but it would be events in georgia, in 2008. we're a direct consequence of made those ridiculous promise to both georgia and your brain, that they will eventually be members of nature. nature is continually kind of creating its own problems and then why justifying existence while we are a defense of life isn't horrific a
we have napoleon, this is right up to the doorstep. ok, george. and i think that anyone that doesn't take rushes red line seriously or not serious. people go ahead. no, i think that they are now serious people. 5 but you're absolutely right. you can see how this rhetorical inflation that has come from natives. and later on we are defensive alliance. russia is the rest. so what is your evidence that russia is an aggressive look what he's doing to ukraine? but your grade isn't a member of nato....
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from the pandemic restrictions, equality i showed napoleon, the worse consequence of the pandemic has clearly been hunger. asked estella those in formal jobs. you don't know if i for government relief, spend one about nor do they have health insurance. i don't have a whole that the 2nd direct impact is not only the effects on health and the current of virus itself. but rather the interruption to wider vaccination distribution of all kind with 9th and deals. for example, that for national programs against missiles, yellow fever and whooping com, martha didn't get feedback inquiry was on the african continent alone, experts are predicting an additional 400000 deaths due to malaria and h r i v. along with another half a 1000000 deaths from tuberculosis. although these numbers are very high, few people were paying attention to the problem of tuberculosis. the same thing is happening in india, where all the focus is on covered 19 as young up to you when i started 20 years ago, around 500000 futilely here died frontier berkey los is on indian booklet rosa. as you see that has a slightly imp
from the pandemic restrictions, equality i showed napoleon, the worse consequence of the pandemic has clearly been hunger. asked estella those in formal jobs. you don't know if i for government relief, spend one about nor do they have health insurance. i don't have a whole that the 2nd direct impact is not only the effects on health and the current of virus itself. but rather the interruption to wider vaccination distribution of all kind with 9th and deals. for example, that for national...
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Dec 18, 2021
12/21
by
ALJAZ
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eye 35
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own counselor, parkman, song, money from park also flowed further afield, halter a new career in napoleon green meadow to solomon, poor hunter. some were put into the gold cru, punky little joys yoshika. and it appears the connections benefited lim young soon to over the next couple of decades. the former pastor and director of the infamous brothers home became the thing you figure in the st. radian korean per se . but korean church featuring on youtube and in local christian magazines. after establishing a family church in 1995 park set up a family company in australia, the directors were himself, his wife limb, sung soon her impostor, limb sister, li. mean, soon married to former brother's home director, ju, john john, a new son in law. alex mean, just a few months later, the company bought this gulf driving range and sports complex for $1400000.00, holiday inn to corporate or hassle. her held her books, your toys into baggage, to hunt valuable. who are you did or didn't? she don't do really short of political motion, cookie it in there. and according to these 2003 accounts sees from on
own counselor, parkman, song, money from park also flowed further afield, halter a new career in napoleon green meadow to solomon, poor hunter. some were put into the gold cru, punky little joys yoshika. and it appears the connections benefited lim young soon to over the next couple of decades. the former pastor and director of the infamous brothers home became the thing you figure in the st. radian korean per se . but korean church featuring on youtube and in local christian magazines. after...
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Dec 17, 2021
12/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 23
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counselor, parkman, song, money from park also flowed further afield. hortshoi, a new toyota in napoleon, good inmate to muscle woman tore her swollen. doesn't go crew. punky hm. so via julia, alaska. and it appears the connections benefited. lim young. soon to over the next couple of decades. the former pastor and director of the infamous brothers home became the thing you figure in the astray in korean presbyterian church featuring on youtube and in local christian magazines. after establishing a family church in 1995 park set up a family company in australia, the directors were himself, his wife limb, sung soon her impostor, limb sister li mean soon married to former brother's home director ju, john, john, a new son in law, alex mean just a few months later, the company bought this gulf driving range and sports complex. for $1400000.00 holiday inn to corporate of household hunter, helped able cio natoya into a package to hunt a valuable cooper. you had ordered p. m. do puerto rico 2 motion cookie it in there, and according to these 2003 accounts sees from when a parks bruce on wolfy c
counselor, parkman, song, money from park also flowed further afield. hortshoi, a new toyota in napoleon, good inmate to muscle woman tore her swollen. doesn't go crew. punky hm. so via julia, alaska. and it appears the connections benefited. lim young. soon to over the next couple of decades. the former pastor and director of the infamous brothers home became the thing you figure in the astray in korean presbyterian church featuring on youtube and in local christian magazines. after...