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fme_674596 - CONSULATE Médaille, Bataille de Marengo

CONSULATE Médaille, Bataille de Marengo AU
200.00 €(Approx. 210.00$ | 166.00£)
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Type : Médaille, Bataille de Marengo
Date: 1800
Mint name / Town : Italie, Marengo
Metal : bronze
Diameter : 49,5 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Engraver BRENET Nicolas-Guy-Antoine (1773-1846)
Weight : 63,62 g.
Edge : lisse
Puncheon : sans poinçon
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire anciennement nettoyé présentant quelques coups et rayures. Patine hétérogène et sombre à l’avers

Obverse


Obverse legend : BONAPARTE PREMIER CONSUL DE LA RÉP. FRANCE // BATAILLE DE MARENGO / 25 ET 26 PRAIRIAL / AN 8..
Obverse description : Buste habillé à gauche de Napoléon, tête nue, entouré d’une couronne de laurier. Signé sur le tranché du bras : BRENET et D’AOUSTE prés de la couronne de laurier.

Reverse


Reverse legend : LE PREMIER CONSUL / COMMANDANT / L’ARMÉE DE RÉSERVE / EN PERSONNE : / ENFANS / RAPPELEZ-VOUS / QUE MON HABITUDE EST / DE COUCHER SUR LE CHAMP / DE BATAILLE..
Reverse description : Légende en neuf lignes horizontales.

Commentary


La bataille de Marengo (14 juin 1800), vit s'opposer une force française commandée par le général Napoléon Bonaparte, alors Premier consul, à l'armée impériale du Saint-Empire sous la direction du feld-maréchal baron Michael Friedrich Benedikt von Melas à Alexandrie, dans le Piémont, en Italie.
Les Impériaux tentent de profiter de l'allongement des lignes françaises, occupées à rechercher leur adversaire après la bataille de Montebello, pour traverser l'armée française. Les troupes des généraux Victor et Jean Lannes, obligées de faire retraite devant le gros de l'armée de Melas qui les attaque par surprise, sont soutenues en milieu de journée par les troupes que Bonaparte mène à leur secours. En fin de journée, l'arrivée des cavaliers du général Desaix permet aux Français, fort mal en point, de faire basculer l'issue de la bataille en leur faveur, au point de transformer leur retraite en déroute des Impériaux.
Après la défaite, les Impériaux négocient avec le général Bonaparte la fin de la guerre en Italie qui oblige notamment les troupes impériales à se replier au-delà du Tessin.
Ce fait d'armes permit à Napoléon d'asseoir un peu plus sa position au sein du triumvirat consulaire en tant que Premier consul après son coup d'État, au mois de novembre précédent. Malgré la mort de Desaix, la victoire est décisive pour la campagne d'Italie, et permet à Bonaparte de monter une opération de propagande fort importante, faisant passer la bataille à la postérité..

Historical background


CONSULATE

(9-10/11/1799-18/05/1804)

Supported by supporters of a strong power, Napoleon Bonaparte, victorious general in the Italian and Egyptian campaigns, overthrew the Directory on 18 and 19 brumaire year VIII (9 and 10 November 1799). The Revolution is over, the destiny of France now rests in the hands of a strong executive. A new constitution, the Constitution of Year VIII, comes into force in December. It defines the powers and reinforces Bonaparte in his role as strong man of the country: First Consul, at the head of the executive, he appoints to the main public functions, holds a certain power of initiative in legislative matters, and retains his role military. The Senate, the Tribunate and the Legislative Body compose three assemblies which possess the other part of the legislative function.. On November 11, 1799, Bonaparte took an important decision: he appointed Gaudin Minister of Finance. This one will keep his post until April 1, 1814, and will find it again during the Hundred Days. Restoring the finances of the State is the number one priority of the First Consul. Thus, the Banque de France was created on February 18, 1800. With the help of the Sinking Fund, the budget of France is restored in 1802. And in 1803, as part of the great monetary reform, the Franc, a guarantee of stability, was reborn, under the name of Franc germinal. Bonaparte's second priority is the internal pacification of the country undermined by the divisions born of the Revolution. To reconcile the French, several measures were adopted: freedom of worship, end of the sale of national property, amnesty for emigrants. Only the West of France remains unsubdued. Insurgencies and robberies enliven this part of the territory and compromise the hopes of the First Consul, despite the signing of a truce with the Chouan chiefs in November 1799. However, with the support of the clergy, the Vendée was pacified during 1800. The religious framework is then definitively inscribed as the main element of the stabilization of society.. Negotiations with Pope Pius VII lead to the signing of the Concordat of 1801. Sixty bishops, appointed by Bonaparte, and invested by the Pope, then settled throughout the territory. Catholic priests, also named, are now civil servants. Many dissenters rallied, others continued to stir up trouble, mainly in Brittany and Normandy, where the Royalists, aided by England, awaited the arrival of Louis XVIII.. Outside, another challenge awaits Bonaparte: to restore peace. The Austrians were defeated at Marengo on June 14, 1800, then at Hohenlinden on December 3, 1800. The Peace of Lunéville was signed on February 9, 1801.. On March 25, 1802, the Peace of Amiens was signed with the English.. In 1802, the Consulate took a new direction, more authoritarian. The Jacobins are excluded from political life (the most virulent are arrested by Fouché, Prefect of Police), the press is controlled, and the Royalists hunted down. It is in this context that the Constitution of Year X was adopted: it considerably reduced the powers of the assemblies, and named Napoleon Bonaparte Consul for life.. The foundations of the first Empire are in place.

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