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MON

Gerson to monks of all orders, 73. Their
controversy with the Humanists, 512.
Mons taken by the partisans of Louis of Nas-
sau, iii. 129. Menaced by the Duke of Alva,
129. The partisan Genlis sent to support it,
129. Captured by the French, 41. Ceded to
Holland, 116. Reduced by the French, 234
Mons, battle of, iii. 702

Mons en Puelle, defeat of the Flemings by the
French at, i. 334
Monsieur, peace of, iii. 173

Montagnards and Girondists, their struggle at
Lyons, iv. 565

Montague. Earl of, seized by Richelieu and
thrown into the Bastille, iii. 473
Montague escapes from court, iii. 158
Montagu, his power and gains under Charles
VI., ii. 77. Arrested by order of the Duke
of Burgundy, and executed, 78, 79. His
body taken down from the gibbet, 89
Montagu, Cardinal, Bishop of Laon, proposes
that Charles VI. should take the government
into his own hands, ii. 40. Appointed to the
care of the finances, 40

Montaigue, Michel de, present at the Estates of
Blois, iii. 227. His aversion for the license
of the Huguenots, 227

Montalembert, Count, minister of instruction,
v. 441. Advocates a compromise with the
president, 657

Montalivet, Count, becomes home minister, v.
424-449. Arrests the Carlists, 472. Commis-
sioned by the Queen to advise Louis Philippe,

581

Montargis captured by the English, ii. 186.
Repulse of the Germans at, iii. 213
Montauban, Madame de, cousin to the Queen
of Charles VI., arrested by the Parisians, ii.
96

Montauban, Admiral, favourite of Louis XI.,
his severity and rapacity, ii. 254
Montauban, Chancellor of Brittany, supports
the cause of the Duchess Anne, ii. 370
Montauban, demolition of the fortifications of,
iii. 88. Conflicts between the Catholics and
Protestants at, 47. Rising of the Huguenots
in, 151. Besieged by Louis XIII., 431.
Which he is compelled to raise, 432. Depar-
ture of the inhabitants, 432. Foucault's
atrocities to the Protestants of, iv. 17
Montbazon, Madame de, iii. 561. Her quar-
rel with the party of Condé, 561. Exiled by
the Queen, 561

Montbeliard, county of, awarded by the parle-

ment of Besançon to Louis XIV., iv. 23
Montbrun, his success in Dauphiné, iii. 29
Montcalm, Marquis de, governor of Quebec,
his successes over the English, iv. 264. His
imaginary line of the Ohio, 273. His death
on the Heights of Abraham, 274
Montdidier ceded to Philip III. of Burgundy,

MON

ii. 192. Secured by the Burgundians, 275.
Occupied by Duke Charles of Burgundy, 301.
Taken by the English under the Duke of
Suffolk, 479

Montebello, Battle of, v. 84, 85
Montebello, Duc de, his intrigues at Berne, v.

506

Montecuculli, threatens the French on the
Rhine, iii. 684. Takes Bonn, 686
Montefeltro, castle of, besieged and taken, i. 286
Montemarciano, Duke of, joins the Duke of

Mayenne with papal troops, iii. 279
Montenotte, battle of, v. 18
Montereau, murder of the Duke of Burgundy
on the bridge of, ii. 133. The Dauphia.
afterwards Louis XI., at the assault of, 205.
Battle of, v. 221

Montespan, Madame de, mistress of Louis XIV.
iii. 668. Got rid of by Louis XIV., 41
Montesquieu, of the Duke of Anjou's guar
shoots Condé, iii. 103

Montesquieu, Charles de, his works, and the
inquiries and discussions to which they gave
rise, iv. 210. His exposure of the French
government of the eighteenth century, 293
Montfort acquired by Louis, Duke of Brittany,
ii. 275

Montfort, Amaury de, raises the siege of To-
louse, on the death of his father, i. 186.
Offers his rights in Languedoc to Philip Au-
gustus, 186, 191. Which is declined by the
King, 186, 191. Bequest of Philip Augas-
tus to, 194. Difficulty with which he hell
his ground, 196. Relieves Carcassonne, 197
Resigns his claims to Toulouse to Louis VIII
197. Promised the office of constable, 1
Which is given to him, 199. Goes to t
Holy Land, 219. Taken prisoner in Syr
219. Ransomed by Richard of Cornwa

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Montfort, John de, Duke of Brittany, invasi
of his duchy by the French, i. 533. Loses
Brittany, and flies to England, 546. D-
clared to have forfeited his duchy, 546. K-
turns to his duchy, 547. Acknowledges tür
suzerainty of Charles VI., ii. 10. Protect
by the Count of Flanders, 15. Seizes at
imprisons the Constable de Clisson, "
Who is released, on payment of a he
fine, 38. Refuses to give up the furt
assassin, Craon, 42. An army led towar
Brittany by Charles VI., who is attacked
insanity on the road, 43. War levie!
the Constable Clisson upon the duke, 44
Montfort, Philip de, becomes Count of Castr

i. 212

Montfort, Philip de, Earl of Leicester, abse

MON

himself from the meeting at Amiens, i. 252. |
Killed at the battle of Evesham, 253. Mur-
der of Henry Plantagenet by his two sons,

278

Montfort, Simon de, Earl of Leicester, joins a
crusade against the Albigenses, i. 176. Ob-
tains the viscounty of Beziers, 179. His
character, 180. Has charge of the betrayed
Viscount of Beziers, who dies in prison, 180.
Establishes himself in Beziers and the Li-
mousin, 180. Becomes master of the castle
of Toulouse, 180. Besieges and captures
Lavaur, 181. Repulsed before Toulouse,
181. Defeats Peter II. of Aragon at the
battle of Muret, 183. Becomes sovereign of
the south of France, 183. His sovereignty
confirmed by the Fourth Council of Lateran,
184. The standard of war raised by the
deposed count and his son, 185. Obtains

a hundred knights from Philip Augustus,
185. Driven out from Toulouse, which he
blockades during the winter, 185. His
brother and nephew killed before the city,
185. His assault on the city, 186. His
death there, 186. His fitness for the work
he undertook, 203
Montfort, Simon de, Earl of Leicester, joins
St. Louis in the Fifth Crusade, i. 232
Montgomery, captain of the guard to Henry
II., carries the Protestant judges to the Bas-
tille, ii. 647. Accidentally kills the King, 647,
648. Escapes from the St. Bartholomew mas-
sacre, iii. 144. Opens communications from
England with La Rochelle, 151. Appears be-
fore the town with a fleet from England, 153.
Lands on the coast of Normandy, and reduces
the Cotentin, 158. The Maréchal Matignon
sent against him, 158. Taken prisoner in
Domfront, 159. Sent to the scaffold, 162
Montjoye, tower of, burned by the English,
i. 424

Montlheri, fortress of, reduced by Louis the
Fat, i. 115. Destroyed by the King, 115.
Besieged by the most ferocious of the mob of
Paris, ii. 126. The village occupied by
Louis XI., 270. The battle of, 270
Montlosier, M., denounces the Jesuits, v. 348,
353

Montlue, his opinion of the Turks as soldiers,
ii. 558, note. His interview with Francis I.,
559. Sent by Catherine de Medicis to
Guyenne, iii. 48. Succeeds in restoring
order in Guyenne, 65. His atrocities, 66.
Takes Agen, and threatens Montauban, 68
Montlucon, captured by Louis XII., ii. 269
Montmeillan taken by Sully, iii. 349.
stored to Savoy, iv. 59

Montmirail, battle of, v. 220

Re-

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MON

Montmorency occupied by John, Duke of Bur-
gundy, ii. 122

Montmorency, Duke of, created constable by
Henry IV., iii. 309. Enters Lyons for
Henry IV., 314. Defeats the forces of Savoy
at Veillane, 491. Made a marshal, 500.
His power in Languedoc, 506. His revolt
against the authority of Richelieu, 506, 507.
Defeated at Castelnaudary, 509. Executed,
510

Montmorency Boutteville, executed for duel-
ling, iii. 471

Montmorency, Matthew, Constable of France,
i. 197

Montmorency, Grand-master, sides with the
party of Louise of Savoy, ii. 517
Montmorency, Constable, in reign of Francis I.,
his influence with the King lessened by the
Cardinals of Grammont and Tournon, ii.
528. Placed in command of an army to
oppose the Emperor in Provence, 539.
Created constable, 544. Disgraced by
Francis I., 549. His influence over Henry
II., 593. His negotiations with the Em-
peror and his sister, 599. His punishment
of the insurgents of Bordeaux, 601. Forces
his way into Metz, 609. His contempt for
civic pretensions and municipal rights, 610.
Puts his son in command of Therouanne,
614. Which he loses, and is captured, 614.
At the conference of La Marcq, 616. Refuses
consent to the Imperialist propositions, 617.
Negotiations for his liberation, 632, 633.
Defeated at the battle of St. Quentin, 625.
Taken prisoner there, and wounded, 626.
His hatred of learning and letters, iii. 6. Com-
pelled to retire from court, and cede the grand
mastership to Guise, 7. Attends the meet-
ing at Fontainebleau, 27. Assumes authority
on the accession of Charles IX., 33. League
between him, St. André, and Guise, 40.
Taken prisoner at Dreux, 71. Where his
son is killed, 71. Liberated by the treaty
of Amboise, 75. Retires in dudgeon from
court, 84. Commands an army to oppose
Condé at St. Denis, 95. Where he is slain,
96. Keeps aloof from court, 360. His luke-
warmness in the cause of Queen Marie de
Medicis, 422

Montmorency, Marshal, son of the Constable,
taken prisoner at Therouanne, ii. 614. Ap-
pointed marshal by Francis II., iii. 7. Dis-
bands the Paris militia, 88. Disperses the
guard of the Cardinal of Lorraine, 89, 91.
At the battle of St. Denis, 96. Sent to curb
the excesses of the Catholics in Rouen, 115.
His ascendancy at court, 116. Disperses a
Paris mob, and removes the cross of Gas-
tines, 120. Withdraws to Chantilly, 133.
His enmity to Catherine de Medicis, after
the St. Bartholomew massacre, 156. Favours

MON

the designs of the King of Navarre and
Alençon, 156. Arrested, 158. Kept in
prison by Catherine de Medicis, 162. Libe-
rated, in order to further the peace with the
Huguenots, 170. Joins the King of Navarre
in his answer to the Edict of Reunion, 205.
Defeats the Huguenot fleet under Soubise, 458
Montmorency, Monberon, killed at Dreux, iii. 71
Montmorency, Eleanor de, married to the Prince
of Condé, iii. 11

Montmorency, M. de, chevalier d'honneur to
the Duchess d'Angoulême, v. 320. Sent to
Congress at Vienna, 321. Created duke,

322

Montmorency, M. de, minister of foreign affairs,

v. 313

Montmorillon, taken by Bertrand du Guesclin,
i. 529

Montmorin, Count de, appointed to the foreign
office, iv. 387. Proposes the recall of Necker,
387. Resigns his office, 473. His death,

526

Montpellier places itself under the sovereignty
of France, i. 183. Depopulated by the
plague, 439. Given by treaty to the King
of Navarre, 508. Its rebellion against the
Duke of Anjou, 548. Who cruelly punishes
them, 549. The bishop killed by the Hu-
guenots, iii. 48. Huguenot proclamation is-
sued from, 167. Besieged by Marshal Dam-
ville, 187. Given up to the Huguenots, 188.
Besieged by Louis XIII., 436. Surrenders
on conditions, 437. Destruction of Protes-
tantism in, iv. 15
Montpensier, Duke de, his treatment of the
Huguenots of Tours, iii. 64. At the battle
of Moncontour, 106. Protests against the
removal of the cross of Gastines, 120.
Unable to induce the Bretons to murder the
Huguenots, 149. Sent against La Noue, 158.
Opposes war against the Huguenots, 183.
Routs Brissac and the peasants in Normandy,
246. Recognises Henry IV. as king, 254.
Generosity of Henry IV. to the duchess, 311
Makes proposals to Henry IV. on behalf of
the nobility, 325. See Catherine de Medicis;
Charles X.; Henry IV.

Montpensier, Duc de, intrigues relative to his
marriage with Queen Isabella, v. 563, et seq.
And with Isabella's sister, 567. Presses his
father to abdicate, 594

Montpensier, Gilbert de, appointed by Charles
VIII. viceroy of Naples, ii, 387. Marches
out to meet Ferdinand II., 391. And is shut
up in the castle by the citizens, 391. Capitu-
lates, 391
Montpezat, Lord of, deprived by the French of
his castle of St. Serdos, i. 380. Which he
retakes and destroys, 380
Montpouillant, son of the Duc de la Force, his
death, iii. 435

MOR

Montreal, surrender of the French at, iv. 275
Montreuil ceded to Philip III. of Burgundy, ii.
192. Who takes it from the English, 193.
Recovered by France, 264. Besieged by the
English, 562

Montrevel, his endeavours to put down the
Huguenots in the Cevennes, iv. 87
Montserrat, affair of, iii. 480. Attacked by
Spain and Savoy, 491

Moors of Valencia depart for Africa, iii. 396
Moore, Sir John, with an English army pen-
trates Spain, v. 157. Pursued by Napoleon,
he encounters Soult at Corunna, 157. His
death, 158

Morals, French, of the reign of Louis XIV,
iv. 4

Morat, the Swiss besieged by the Burgundians
in, ii. 321. Destruction of the Burgundies
army at, 322

Moravia invaded by the Prussians under Schwe
rin, iv. 220. Becomes the seat of war, 279
Morbihan, Company of, formed by Richelieu,
iii. 468

Moreau, appointed commissioner for extirpating
heresy from Lorraine, iii. 16

Moreau, General, defeated by Archduke Charles
v. 24.
Defeated by Kray, 58. Defeated by
Suwarrow at Novi, 64. Commands the army
in Alsace, 83. Defeats Kray, 83, 88. Defea's
Archduke John at Hohenlinden, 89. Arriv
at Vienna, and agrees to a suspension of hos
tilities, 90. His complicity in George Ca-
doudal's plot, 114. Arrested, 114. Pardore !
and exiled, 116. His death, 209

Moret, Count of, a son of Henry IV., compe".
to leave France, iii. 502

Morey, harness maker, implicated in the Fies
plot, v. 495, et seq.

Morny, M. de, his conversation with Lo
Philippe on reform, v. 578, 581. Suggests
compromise between coalition and the polies
on the subject of the Banquets, 583. His
endeavours to preserve the public peace, 55i
Becomes chief confidant of Louis Napoles
660. Remarkable observation about t
coup d'état, 660. Surrounds the assenty
with a body of police, 663

Morocco, war with, v. 559, et seq.
Morosini, papal nuncio, endeavours to effect a
reconciliation between Henry III. and th
Duke of Mayenne, iii. 238
Mortaigne, town of, recovered by the Fre
crown, ii. 264

Mortara occupied by the French, ii. 406
Mortemart, Duke de, warns the King, v. 3

Appointed prime minister, 406. Propes
his counter-ordonnances to the munici
commission, 409. His hopes defeated
precipitancy of the Royalists, 410. Advs.
Duke of Orleans temporarily to be lieutena
general, 411

1

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lor to Louis XI., ii. 253. His embassy to the
Duke of Burgundy, 267

Moscow entered by the French, v. 188.

Burn-
ing of, 188. French retreat from, 190
Moulins, Edict of, iii. 89

Mounier, his speech at the estates of Dauphiny,
iv. 401. Abets Necker's idea of a constitu-
tional government, 405. His attempts to
coalesce with Barnave, 433

Mountain, the, denounce the temporising of the

Gironde, iv. 504. Denounce the Gironde,
537. Defend their conduct as to the dictator-
ship, 539, et seq. Propose trial and death
of Louis XVI., 546, 547, et seq. Their
struggle with the Girondists at Lyons, 565.
Propose a revolutionary tribunal, 566, et seq.
Demand the expulsion of the Girondists,
566. Propose to march on the Convention,
and kill the Girondists, 567. Destroy the
Gironde press, 568. Establish Comité de
Salut public, 570. Leaders of, disappointed
at not being elected to this committee con-
cert measures against the Gironde, 573. Vote
the arrest of the Orleanists, 574. Their violeut
proceedings, 580, et seq. Insurrection of the
31st May, 584. Move the arrest of twenty-two
Girondists, 585. Their proceedings against
the Convention, 585-589. Forming now the
dominant party in the Convention their reign
of terror commences, 590, et seq. Defeat
Girondist army at Evreux, 594. Their in-
surrection at Lyons, 596. Siege and capture
of Lyons, 599. Establish reign of terror at
Lyons, 598. Insurrection in La Vendée,
590. Battle of Les Aubiers, and capture of
Thouars, Fontenay, and Saumur, 599. Siege
of Nantes, 600. Depose and execute their
generals, 601. Supersede Kleber in La Ven-
dée, 602. Kleber crushes the Vendean in-
surrection, 602. Their disasters in Germany,
603. Their weakness and inability to resist
Continental powers, 604. Execution of Marie
Antoinette, 604, 610, 613, 614. Their New
Constitution, 606, et seq. Assassination of
Marat, 608. Renewal of the Committee of
Public Safety, 609. Robespierre and his
proceedings, 609, et seq. Renewal of hosti-
lities in Germany, 615, et seq. Successes
under Carnot, 616, 617. Trial and execution
of the Girondists, 618, et seq. Surrender of

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MUS

Toulon, 623. Toulon recaptured by Carnot
and Napoleon, 624. Summary of their pro-
ceedings, 626, et seq. Dissensions among
them, 626, et seq. Their measures for sup-
pression of religion and religious worship,
633, et seq. Their conduct disapproved by
Robespierre, 633-635. The Lanterne party
denounced by Desmoulins, 637. Execution
of the Hebertists, 640. Trial and execution
of the Dantonists, 642-644. St. Just's de-
cree for proscribing the nobles and strangers,
646. Fête of the Supreme Being inaugu-
rated, 647, 648. Reorganise the revolution-
ary tribunal, 649. Sanguinary measures
adopted against Robespierre and his party,
649, et seq. Reign of Terror ceases with
Robespierre's execution, 659. Its measures
are adroitly neutralised by Tallien, for the
restoration of civil liberty, 662. Proceedings
of the Jeunesse dorée, 665, et seq. Struggles
with the Moderates and Tallien, 667. Bread
riots, 668. Arrest and exile of their leaders,
668-671. Temporary revival of their party,
which is however defeated by Legendre and
Tallien, 678. Surviving members of, arrested
and executed, 678-681. Banished from the
Assembly, 678, et seq. See Convention; Di-

rectory; Napoleon I. and III.; Louis XVIII.;
Charles X.; Louis Philippe; Provisional
Government

Mouvans, De, his success in Provence, iii. 29.
Flees to Piedmont, 47. Retreats from Sis-
teron to the Waldensian valleys, 65. De-
feated by the Duke of Nemours, 101
Mouzon, captured by the Imperialists, ii. 472
Movement party in France, its principles and
mode of operation, v. 428

Moyenvic, fortress of, captured by Louis XIII.,
iii. 505

Muhlberg, battle of, ii. 597
Mulhausen, exploit of Turenne at, iii. 691
Munich, threatened by Marlborough, iv. 89.
Ravaged by the Croats and Pandours, 219.
Occupied by the Austrians, 228
Municipal Commission, formation of the, its
acts and sittings, v. 403, et seq.
Municipial institutions. See Towns
Murat, Prince, occupies Madrid, v. 153. Forces
the Spaniards to insurrection, 154. Made
King of Naples, 172. Left in charge of the
Grand Army, 195. Captures 15,000 Aus-
trians at Dresden, 209. Joins Napoleon,

249. His death, 276

Murder, callous indifference in the fifteenth
century to the crime of, ii. 56. This indif-
ference originates in Italy, 57. Treatise of
Jean Petit on the right and justice of, 58
Muret, battle of, i. 183

Musciato, the Florentine banker, aids Philip
the Fair against the Pope, i. 330. And
against the Flemings, 333

MUT

Mutualists, of Lyons, formation of the society

of, and its prosecution, v. 483
Muyden, occupied by the French, iii. 679

NAARDEN, captured by the French, iii. 679.

But retaken by the Dutch, 686
Namur, besieged and taken by the French, iv.
43. Captured by William III. of England,
48. Ceded temporarily to the Duke of Ba-
varia, 117. Reduced by the French, 234,

238

Nancy, reduced by Charles the Rash, ii. 317.
Re-occupied by Duke René II., 323. Who
is compelled by Charles of Burgundy to
evacuate it, 323. Occupied by the French, iii.
676. Military mutiny at, put down, iv. 454
Nanterre, burned by the English, i. 424
Nantes, taken by the Normans and Bretons, i.
46. Besieged by the French, 534. Terms
of its proposed surrender, 535. The duchy
of, gives itself to Geoffrey Plantagenet, 143.
At whose death it is appropriated by Henry
III. of England, 143. Declares for John de
Montfort, 411. Besieged by Charles of Blois,
412. The town and the duke betrayed by
the citizens, 413. Endeavours of Charles V.
to induce it to submit to him, 547. Un-
successfully besieged by the Earl of Buck-
ingham, ii. 10. Menaced by the forces of
Louis XI., 290. Besieged by La Tremouille
and the Royalists, 367. But the siege raised,
367. The fortress surrendered to the French
by the Count d'Albret, 371. The siege of,
iv. 600. Atrocities of Carrier at, 623. See
Convention.
Nantes, Edict of, published, iii. 339. Its chief
provisions, 340, 341. Its unsatisfactory
nature, 342. Resistance to it, 347. Re-
established by the treaty of Orleans, 483.
Confirmed by Louis XIV., iv. 6. The mixed
courts established by the, abrogated, 11, 12.
Revoked by Louis XIV., 18

Nantouillet, Marquis of, killed, iii. 624
Naples, foundation of the Norman power in, i.
86. Policy of Charles of Anjou in, 285.
Claims of Charles of Durazzo, and of Louis,
Duke of Anjou, to the throne of, ii. 6, 24.
The kingdom invaded and taken by Charles,
24. Claims of Charles VIII. of France to
the throne of Naples, 380. His march into
Italy, 381. Entry of Charles into, 385, 387.
Irritation of the people against their con-
querors, 386. Leaves De Montpensier viceroy,
387. Treaty between France and Spain for
the partition of, 410. Entry of a French
army into, 411. Which is accordingly par-
titioned, 412. Quarrels between the French
and Spaniards in, 413. The French driven
out by the Spaniards, 413-415. Failure of
Vaudemont's attempt on, 496. Besieged by

NAP

the French under Lautrec, 502, 503. Who
is obliged to raise the siege, 504. Promised
by the Pope to the second son of Francis I..
526. Insurrection in, against Peter of Toledo,
598. The coast ravaged by the Turks, 632.
Insurrection of Massaniello, iii. 574. The
kingdom conquered by Don Carlos, iv. 205,
Kept neutral by a British fleet, 228. Pulley
of the Bourbons at, v. 308. Revolution at,
308. The outburst of war at, 54. General
Mack takes command of its army, 54. De-
feated by Championnet, 54. Murat, King of,
172. See Directory; Napoleon I.

Naples, Bay of, defeat of the French fleet by
Loria, in the, i. 300

Napoleon I., Emperor of the French, his birth.
iv. 318. His remark on the insurrection (f
9th August, 518. Drives the English out
Toulon, 624. Commands the troops of the
Convention on the 11th Vendemiaire, 657.
Appointed second in command to Barras
687. Defeats the royalist insurgents at
saves the Convention, 688. Appointed
general-in-chief, 689. Recommends invasion
of Piedmont, v. 16. Blames Scherer for int
following up his successes, 17. Appointed
to the command of army against Piedmont,
17. Defeats the Austrians and Piedmontese
at Montenotte, Dego, and Millesimo, 18.
Concludes an armistice at Cherasco, 19.
Gains battle of Lodi, 20. Enters Milan.
and levies tribute on the Duke of Parma, 21.
Offended at appointment of General Keller-
man, and offers to resign, 20. Visits Lec-
horn, but fails to surprise the English, 2
Enters Venetia, and threatens its gover
ment, 20, 21. Informs Directory of E
unfortunate position, 21. Abandons sieg
of Mantua, 21. Repels diversion of Qu
danowitsch, 22. Defeats Wurmser at Loran,
22. Wins battle of Castiglione, 22. I-
feats Wurmser at Roveredo, 23. Repulse
at Caldiero, 25. Repulsed at Arcola, 20
Leading the attack in person, he at lengt
wins the battle of Arcola, 25, 26. Gains
battle of Rivoli, 26, 27. Defeats Wurrise
and Provera at Mantua, 27. Mantua s
renders, 27. Averse to propositions t
peace, 28. Revolutionary principles of, *
Defeats Archduke Charles at Tagliament
30. Encounters him again at Newmark ar
Huzmark, and agrees to a suspension
arms, 31. Signs preliminaries of Leche
31. Invades the Roman territory and
rives at Rome, 32. His policy at Ro
agrees with that of the Constitutionalists
and yet sends Roman spoils to Paris. *
Treaty of Tolentino, 32. Denounces
Conventionalists, 33. Designates the se
of the Directory one of lead,' 33.
fuses to sacrifice the Pope to Le Réveiber

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