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"Fighting with Napoleon's Light Infantry: The Memoirs" Topic


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Tango01 Supporting Member of TMP27 Mar 2025 5:24 p.m. PST

… of Captain Vincent Bertrand 1805-1815


"aptain Vincent Bertrand was a French light infantry soldier who survived the key campaigns of Napoleon. Called to arms through conscription, he was directed from his hometown of Nîmes to the depot of the 7ème Régiment Léger (7th Light Infantry Regiment), in Huningue, where he arrived on 16th November, 1805. He did not leave this regiment composed almost exclusively of sons of the department of Gard, until 1815.

His recollections focus on his loves, adventures and mishaps, as well as the pride of being part of an elite unit. It was this pride that kept him with his regiment and his musket operational during the retreat from Moscow in 1812, unlike his fellow soldiers. He tells of the discipline and organisation of the few soldiers still able to pull their triggers and thrust their bayonets, amidst the frostbite and chaos of those who had become stragglers or marauders. Bertrand's unfailing bravery and composure are evident throughout his memoirs, demonstrating character, discipline and patience, as well as dedication to his regiment and its values and standards. The non-combatants he saved, the esteem he earned from his comrades in battle, and the comfort he gave to a fellow convalescent on the brink of death, would all indicate he was a hero to some, and an admirable soldier to all. Bertrand gives sincere accounts of his time on the battlefields, in the cantonments in Austria, in Germany, in Poland, and finally of the painful stages of his captivity as an Austrian prisoner of war. His writing is entertaining and fast paced, but with plenty of unique detail"

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Armand

Tango01 Supporting Member of TMP27 Mar 2025 5:28 p.m. PST

ROUGH SKETCHES OF THE LIFE OF AN OLD SOLDIER Lieutenant-Colonel Jonathan Leach

"This is one of the great classics of military service during the Napoleonic Wars. The full title of this tome is "ROUGH SKETCHES OF THE LIFE OF AN OLD SOLDIER during a service in the West Indies; at the siege of Copenhagen in 1807; in the Peninsula and the south of France in the campaigns from 1808 to 1814, with the Light division; in the Netherlands in 1815; including the battles of Quatre Bras and Waterloo: with a slight sketch of the three years passed by the army of occupation in France, etc."…"

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Armand

Gazzola28 Mar 2025 5:48 a.m. PST

Nooooooooooooooooooo! Not more books! LOL Nah them coming Armand. They both look worth a read.

Tango01 Supporting Member of TMP28 Mar 2025 3:47 p.m. PST

Ha!Ha!Ha!…


Sorry my good friend!… (smile)


Armand

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