Version qui à mon avis ressemble très fort à celle qui devait être de mise à l'époque du Consulat..! Une musique de marche d'un Corps d'Armée d'élite. La Garde consulaire ; "Une colonne de granit," d'après Napoléon Bonaparte..
Oui , c'était la France des Lumières et des Droits de l'homme , magnifiée et incarnée par le 1er Consul qui donnait un Flambeau d' espoir de liberté à l'Europe des Monarchies de Droit divin : toutes les réformes juridico - administratives du Consulat et la gloire militaire de ses batailles, Lodi, Arcole et Marengo...!
Except rulers like Napoleon, Hitler etc, who think that their own vain "glory" is more important than the lives of the hundreds of thousands of soldiers who die in the wars that they cause!
@@Alainmontpellier1000 fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerres_de_la_R%C3%A9volution_fran%C3%A7aise "From 1791, the monarchies of Europe watched with concern the French Revolution and its upheavals and wondered whether they should intervene, either to help Louis XVI or to take advantage of the chaos in France. The key figure in the situation was Emperor Leopold II, brother of Queen Marie Antoinette, the wife of Louis XVI. Leopold had initially viewed the Revolution with serenity but he became more and more worried when the Revolution became more radical. On August 27, Leopold II and King Frederick William II of Prussia, after consulting French noble émigrés, published the Pillnitz Declaration which declared the interest of the monarchs of Europe in the well-being of Louis XVI and his family and threatened serious but vague consequences to anyone who attacked them. Although Leopold II viewed Pillnitz's declaration as an evasive gesture to appease the French monarchists, the declaration was seen in France as a serious threat and denounced by revolutionary leaders."
Une superbe interprétation...On s' y croirait à Marengo..!
This piece has such a grand and melancholic sound to it , feels exactly like the rise and fall of Napoleon's reign
Version qui à mon avis ressemble très fort à celle qui devait être de mise à l'époque du Consulat..! Une musique de marche d'un Corps d'Armée d'élite. La Garde consulaire ; "Une colonne de granit," d'après Napoléon Bonaparte..
Vive La France, vive le Général Bonaparte, vive la République..
Vive le 1er Consul , le général Bonaparte, vive la République...!
2:11 "La Victoire est a nous"! 💪
De Méhul qui a aussi composé l'opéra Guilhaume Tell.
*Aujourd'hui, c'est l'anniversaire de Friedland, et de Marengo, qui deux fois ont décidé du sort de l'Europe*
🦁 ☀️ 🐝 ⚡ 🦅 ⚡ 🐝 ☀️ 🦁
Comme Austerlitz , Iena et Wagram ..
Marche de la Garde Consulaire à Marengo: Ça c'était Napoléon, Ça c'etait L' Armée Française🇨🇵👍🇨🇵👍🇨🇵👍🇨🇵👍Une Grande Armée, une France redoutée.
Oui , c'était la France des Lumières et des Droits de l'homme , magnifiée et incarnée par le 1er Consul qui donnait un Flambeau d' espoir de liberté à l'Europe des Monarchies de Droit divin : toutes les réformes juridico - administratives du Consulat et la gloire militaire de ses batailles, Lodi, Arcole et Marengo...!
Excellent 👌
Merci😉
Great video
Thanks
Muss immer bei dem marsch an War & Peace denken 👌🏼🇫🇷 es lebe Frankreich!! 🇫🇷
Is this Napoleon's march?
Yes
It litterlay says "March of the 1 counsal" and napoleon was the 1st counsal till 1804
Vive le Premier Consul Bonaparte !
Vive l'empereur !
"La Splendeur et la Gloire " soit dit en passant.. un roman de William Faulkner...
👑⚔️⚜️⚜️⚜️⚔️👑
46 ém RI BERLIN
Nobody likes & wants a War!
Except rulers like Napoleon, Hitler etc, who think that their own vain "glory" is more important than the lives of the hundreds of thousands of soldiers who die in the wars that they cause!
Very Bad men figures!
Horrid!
@@FrLawRE It was European royalty who attacked Revolutionary France. Not the opposite.
Comparing Napoleon to Hitler is stupid.
@@hugovictor4651 Nah, Revolutionary France declared war on Austria in 1792 and later on, the other great European powers.
@@Alainmontpellier1000
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerres_de_la_R%C3%A9volution_fran%C3%A7aise
"From 1791, the monarchies of Europe watched with concern the French Revolution and its upheavals and wondered whether they should intervene, either to help Louis XVI or to take advantage of the chaos in France. The key figure in the situation was Emperor Leopold II, brother of Queen Marie Antoinette, the wife of Louis XVI. Leopold had initially viewed the Revolution with serenity but he became more and more worried when the Revolution became more radical. On August 27, Leopold II and King Frederick William II of Prussia, after consulting French noble émigrés, published the Pillnitz Declaration which declared the interest of the monarchs of Europe in the well-being of Louis XVI and his family and threatened serious but vague consequences to anyone who attacked them. Although Leopold II viewed Pillnitz's declaration as an evasive gesture to appease the French monarchists, the declaration was seen in France as a serious threat and denounced by revolutionary leaders."