Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne (July 19th 1769 - February 7th 1834), Diplomatic and French politician, born with Direction, died with Caen.
It was high at the school of Brienne out of Champagne with Napoleon Bonaparte and bound to it with him of a narrow friendship (1785). When this one was named general-in-chief of the Armée with Italy, Bourrienne was called close to him and became its intimate secretary; but at the end of a few years it was disgrâcié. However in 1804, Napoleon named it with Hamburg. In 1814, it adopts the Bourbons; he was initially prefect of police, then minister of state. The Revolution of July 1830 and the loss of its fortune, which was the continuation, mislaid its reason.
The Memoires of Bourrienne (10 volumes in-8, 1829 - 1831) are announced by the Dictionnaire Bouillet like interesting, but are not for him free from partiality.
One published in 1830, Bourrienne and his errors (2 volumes, in-12, by Antoine-Henri-Philippe-Leon d' Aure).
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