Tag: Orient

L’art de gouverner (Sagesse de l’Orient)


Free Download L’art de gouverner (Sagesse de l’Orient) de Han Fei Zi
Français | 7 avril 2010 | ISBN: 2845923074 | True EPUB | 138 pages | 1.1 MB
Peu d’ouvrages ont eu une importance aussi décisive que le Han Fei Zi, car peu ont su décrire avec autant de précision l’art de gouverner, c’est-à-dire d’obtenir le pouvoir et, surtout, de le conserver. On rapproche souvent ce recueil des écrits de Han Fei et du Prince de Machiavel.

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Russia’s Orient Imperial Borderlands and Peoples, 1700-1917


Free Download Russia’s Orient: Imperial Borderlands and Peoples, 1700-1917 By Daniel R. Brower
1997 | 339 Pages | ISBN: 0253332745 | PDF | 8 MB
Investigates the impact of the Russian Empire on its non-Russian peoples of the southern and eastern borderlands from the eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries. This title includes the study of ethnic and religious differences that emerged from the Russian encounter with peoples whose cultures differed profoundly from their own.

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The French Army of the Orient 1798-1801 Napoleon’s beloved ‘Egyptians’


Free Download Yves Martin, "The French Army of the Orient 1798-1801: Napoleon’s beloved ‘Egyptians’ "
English | ISBN: 1911512714 | 2017 | 160 pages | PDF | 13 MB
More than 200 years ago – under the inspiration and leadership of Bonaparte – a revolutionary French Army invaded Egypt, then part of the Ottoman Empire; this presence lasted beyond Bonaparte’s own departure and subsequent rise to power as First Consul. It ended with another invasion – this time by the British – and the repatriation in France of what was left of the ‘Army of the Orient’. The birth of Egyptology; the rise of modern Egypt; the demise of the Ottoman Empire; and start of ‘the great game’ have all been often told and studied, but what is less well known is that as the French found themselves stranded in a foreign land – profoundly alien to them in culture and climate – they had to adapt to survive. Egypt was a proving ground for many officers and ordinary soldiers who were to rise to prominence during the Napoleonic period. Some of Napoleon’s future inner circle – like Davout, Savary and Lasalle – were first spotted by the young Bonaparte in Egypt, and although initially unplanned as such, it turned out to be the first attempt by the French to build a colony on the African continent. It especially led the French Army to adopt totally new clothing and equipment; to organise native units; and even to draft men from faraway Darfur into its own ranks. Drawing from a wealth of original primary material – much of it never published or even seen before – this study focuses on the French Army of the Orient and its organization, uniforms, equipment and daily life. It aims at providing a renewed and updated image of the French soldier, as told by the surviving archives, memoirs and rare contemporary iconography.

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