a 
=F 
A 
Index. Abbeville, manufacture of fine 
—— 
‘cloth at, p. 717 
lture of France, 694. Va- 
By the produce of, 730 
Aix, mineral waters of, 691 
Aix-la-Chapelle, treaty of, 616 
Alencon, Duke of, puts himself 
at the head of the malcon- 
tents, 579. Unites with the 
Protestants, ib. 
Almonds, trade, &¢. of, 711 
Alps, mountains of the, 677 
Alsace, its divisions, 675 
Artois, its divisions, by 
Augsburg, league of, a- 
gainst Louis XIV. 607 © 
Austerlitz, battle of, 646 
Austria prepares for war against 
France in 1808, 649. State 
* parte, 
Aavergne, its division, 676. Ba- 
saltic mountains of, 686 
Avignon, its wang 677 
jos taken by the British, 
pr 
ae ee Petts sets 
Bank of France, 735 ee 
Bareges, mineral waters of, 6! 
Barley, cultivation of, 700 
Barometer, state of the, in 
France, 684 
a district of Auvergne, 
Bastile destroyed, 626 
Bayard, the Chevalier, his cou- 
rage, 556; and death, 559 
Beans, cultivation of, 700 
Bearn, its divisions, 676 
Beech oil, 711 
Belleisle’s, Marshal, famous re- 
treat from Prague, 614 
or entered by Bonaparte, 
Berries, French, abundant in 
the south of France, 704 
“Berry, its divisions, 675 
Beza, Theodore, disputes with 
Cardinal Lorraine at Paissi, 
574 
Biron, Marshal, treacherous to 
the King, 587. Discovered 
and pardoned, ib. Resumes 
his ambitious projects, ‘ib. 
Enters into a conspiracy, ib. 
Delivers himself up to Hen- 
ry, ib. Condemned and ex- 
ectited, ib. 
Bisrnuth found in Brittany, 
&e. 690 
FRANCE. 
INDEX. 
Bonaparte appointed to the 
command in Italy, 637. His 
great successes, ib. Defeats 
the Austrians at Rivoli, 638. 
Compels the Pope to sign a 
peace, ib. Obliges the Aus- 
trians to make the peace of 
Campo Formio, ib. Returns 
from Egypt, and is declared 
First Consul, 640. Proposes 
peace to Britain, which is re- 
jected, ib, His extraordina- 
ry passage of the Alps, ib. 
Defeats the Austrians at Ma- 
rengo, ib. Grants them an 
armistice, ib. Extent of his 
power, 641. Re-establishes 
the Catholic religion, and con- 
cludes a concordat with the 
Pope, ib. Appointed Consul 
for life, ib. Declared Em- 
peror, ib. The vote for this 
carried by acclamation in the 
tribunate, 642. Commences 
hostilities against Germany 
in 1805, 646. Captures the 
Austrian army under Mack, 
and defeats the combined ar- 
mies of Austria and Russia 
at Austerlitz, ib. Makes the 
treaty of Presburg with Aus- 
tria, ib. Is recognised as 
King of Italy, ib. Defeats 
the Prussians at Jena, 647. 
Enters Berlin, ib. Defeats 
» the Russians at Pultusk, ib. 
Fights an indecisive battle 
with them at Eylau, ib. His 
operations against Sweden, 
648. Defeats the Russians at 
Friedland, ib. Concludes the 
peace of Tilsit with Russia, 
ib. Prepares for the inva- 
sion of Portugal, ib. His 
schemes against Spain, ib. 
His operations there, 649. 
Prepares for war with Aus- 
tria, ib. Holds a conference 
with the Emperor of Ruésia 
at Erfurth, ib. His ambi- 
tious and aggrandizing mea- 
sures in different parts of 
Europe, ib. Enters Vienna, 
ib. Fights the indecisive 
battle of Aspern, ib. De- 
feats the Archduke Charles 
at Wagram, 650. Makes 
peace with Austria, ib. His 
speech to the legislature, ib. 
Divorces Josephine, and mar- 
ries Maria Louisa, ib. His 
decrees, 651. Has 
ason born to him, ib. His 
measures in Holland, 652. 
Disputes with the Emperor 
of Russia, ib. Prepares for 
War with Russia, 653. Cros. 
ses the Niemen, ib. Enters 
Wilna, 654. Fights the in- 
decisive battles of Smolensk 
and Borodino, ib. Enters 
Moscow, 655. Dreadful si- 
tuation of his army, ib. He 
leaves Moscow, ib. His dis- 
astrous retreat, ib. ‘Quits his 
army, 656, Plot at Paris 
against hin, ‘ib. ‘Deserted 
by the Prussians and Aus- 
trians, ib» Prepares for an- 
other campaign, ib. De- 
feated at Lutzen, 657. De- 
feats the allies at Bautzen, 
ib. Sustains’ a terrible de- 
feat at Leipsic, ib. Arrives 
in Paris, 658. Tries in 
vain to rouse the French 
people, ib.- State of his af- 
fairs in Spain, ib, Leaves 
Paris to join his army, 660. 
Is defeated at La Rotherie, 
ib. His desperate attacks'on 
Blucher, 661. Attacks Blu- 
cher at Laon unsuccessfully, 
ib. Throws himself into the 
rear of the allies, 662. Is 
deposed by the senate, 663. 
Renounces the sovereignty, 
664. Departs for Elba, ib. 
Causes of his downfal, 665. 
Escapes from Elba, and lands 
in France, 668. His pro- 
gress, 669. Arrives at Paris, 
ib. His addresses to the na- 
tion and the army, ib.. His 
letter to the sovereigns of 
Europe, ib. Promises the 
French a free constitution, ib. 
His inadequate forees, 670. 
Joins his army, 671. De- 
feats the Prussians at Ligny, 
ib. Defeated by the Duke of 
Wellington at Waterloo, ib. 
Flies to Paris, and abdicates 
the throne, 672. Is sent in- 
to perpetual banishment in 
St Helena, 672 
Boniface VIII. Pope, interdicts 
Philip IV. 548 
Bon mot of Triboulet, the fool 
at Francis’s court, 561 
Bordelais, cultivation of the 
vine in the, 714 
Botero, G his t 
of France in’ the 16th centu- 
ry, 717 
Bouillon, Duke of, joins in the 
conspiracy of the Marshal 
Biron, 587. Is repeatedly 
pardoned by the king, ib. 
Boulogne purchased from the 
English, 564 
Bourbon, the Constable, con- 
Spires against Francis I. 558. 
Lays siege to Marseilles, 559. 
Marches against Rome, 560. 
Succeeds, but is killed in the 
attack, ib. 
Bourbonnois, its divisions, 675. 
Bourdeaux declares for the 
Bourbons, 662 
Brandies, quality, &c. of the, 
715 
Breda, peace of, 602 
Briare, canal of, 680 
-Brissot executed, 635 
Brissotines, the, 632 
Britain attempts to make peace 
with France, 646 
Brittany, its divisions, 675, Li- 
nen manufactures of; 721 
(735) 
Brunswick, Duke of, his mathi- 
» 631 
Balbiferoue plants, 693 
Burgundy and Orleans, Dukes 
of, quarrel, 551 
Burgundy, ‘its divisions, 675. 
Wines of, 77% 
c 
Cabbages, cultivation of, 701 
Cadeau, Nicolas, a great manu- 
facturer, 717 
Calais besieged by the Duke of 
» ‘Guise, 569. Reduces it, ib. 
Calonne at the head of ‘the fi- 
nances in France, 622. Pro- 
poses to assemble the Nota- 
bles, 623. His plan for re- 
establishing the finances, ‘ib. 
Resigns, 624. 
Caivinten pevigries of, in France, 
570, 571 
Calvinists send-a-petition"to the 
king, 573 
Camargue famous for feeding 
oxen and sheep, 708 
Cambray, league of, 555 
Campo Formio, treaty of, 638 
Canals of France, 679. Of Lan- 
guedoc, ib. Of Briare, 680. 
~ Of Orleans, ib. 
Caper shrub, the, 711 
Capillaire abundant near Mont- 
- pellier, 704 
Capitainries explained, 695 
Capital of the farmers, 697 
Carcassone, woollen manufac- 
ture at, 720 
Carlovingian race, 543 
Carnot speaks against the de- 
cree of the tribunate making 
Bonaparte emperor, 642 
Carraway, cultivation of, 703 
Catherine de Medicis, her cha- 
racter, 570. Her conduct du- 
» ring the minority of Charles 
TX. 574. Tries to unite’the 
Protestants on herside against 
- the Duke of Guise, 575. In- — 
trigues with the King against 
the Protestants, 577 
Catholic religion re-established 
in France, 641 
Caves, 692 
Cerignoles, battle of, 554 
Cerizoles, battle of, 562 
Cevennes, revolt of the Protes- 
tants in the, 600. Mountains 
of, 677. Fertilized by irriga- 
tion, 705 
Chalk district of France, 681. 
Chambres Ardentes, | courts: for 
persecuting the: Protestants, 
572 
Cha e, its divisions, 675. 
Wines, 712. Classified, 714 
Champ de Mai, por igene the, 
670 
Charlemagne, reign of, 543 
Charles the Bald’s reign, 544 
Charles the Fat disgraces him- 
self, and is deposed, ib. 
Charles the Simple deposed, and 
dies in prison, ib. 
Charles II. of England obliged 
by the Parliament ‘to make 
peace with Holland, 604 
Index. 
