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#Jean-Andoche Junot
meneeddeadmenyaoi · 18 days
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*patpat*
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kririawhahha · 1 month
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Gotta love napjuno fr (bro is not becoming a marhsal)🔥🔥 + real footage of alexander after austerlitz
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The ULTIMATE twink off
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Tops it off wirh napalex art :3
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I loaf him so much
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id0lpareo · 24 days
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alright now who put doomed yaoi in my history.
finally drew junot after a bajillion years of telling myself to draw him
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captainknell · 7 months
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Happy birthday General Junot! September 25, 1771
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joachimnapoleon · 7 months
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It’s been a while since I’ve done some Gourgaudposting. Here is his entry from 18 September 1817, featuring Napoleon’s commentary on Junot, which shares some noticeable parallels to Napoleon’s St Helena rants about Murat—he committed nothing but sottises (follies/stupidities), he was a womanizer, he never should’ve been promoted so high etc.
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Thursday, 18 (September 1817) – At 5 o’clock, the Emperor pays a visit to Mme de Montholon. The colonel of the 12th Regiment, arriving to the island from France, goes to Bertrand’s, asks to be received, but His Majesty responds that he is indisposed.
After my dinner, His Majesty summons me, treats me well, and speaks to me of the Russian campaign. “At Ostrowo and Witebsk, I managed to cut the Russian army off from the road to Petersburg. At Smolensk, Junot committed nothing but follies, as well as at Valoutina; I sent you there. It was you who came to tell me he could cut off the Russian rearguard, but that he couldn’t decide to go ahead with it. You asked him: Monsieur le Duc, if the Emperor inquires why you have not marched, how should I answer him? He replied in an embarrassed tone: ‘You say that night has come and that I’ve taken position.’ So, I dismissed him at night.” – “In the morning, Your Majesty, on horseback, sent General Denorval to prevent me from waking up, because I was tired. This surprised everyone, and they thought my fortune had been made.”
The Emperor, after a moment of silence, resumed the conversation: “I met Junot at the siege of Toulon. He was quartermaster in a battalion of the Côte-d’Or; I needed writers, I had requested one from Gavais, commandant at Fontainebleau in 1814, who was then at the head of this battalion. He sent me two of them. Junot arrived first, I took him, he pleased me. Being, the same day, in my battery, I had him write a letter; a cannonball covered us with earth, and he exclaimed: Good, there’s the ash for the letter! He had a superb hand, and he remained with me. The other quartermaster was, a long time afterwards, still a noncommissioned officer, while Junot had a great advancement. Such is fate. Junot has never been anything but a swashbuckler, a ferocious philanderer. He loved to surround himself with nobles. I never should have given him command; in the last days, he wanted to be marshal. At Valoutina, he was already insane.”
His Majesty critiques the book attributed to him.
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Source: General Gourgaud, Sainte-Hélène - journal inedit de 1815 à 1818.
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empirearchives · 10 months
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Found another painting of Junot
By Hector Jean Louis Viger-Duvigneau
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kaxenart · 1 year
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@snowv88 replied to your post “For the purposes of suggestions, I do consider...”:
Junot with all his swagger if possible, not that much art around either...
​It used to be listed as like 15000 euros to get one Junot ensemble made (and I don't think it includes the boots because Empire Costume suggests you go to other shops for boots), but Empire Costume swapped it for "ask for pricing" which probably means it's more expensive now.
The wording on the listing still makes me laugh
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a-system-of-nerds · 11 months
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History help?
Hey, I was wondering if anybody knew about some good books or biographies about Jean-Andoche Junot? I'm very new to the Napoleonic Era, and so I don't know very good resources in general, and I haven't been able to find much on him! Any sort of help would be appreciated; thank you!
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rabbitcruiser · 5 months
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Jean-Andoche Junot's French army entered Lisbon on the November 30, 1807, whereupon the Portuguese royal family departed for Brazil where they would remain until 1821.  
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rosalieluka · 1 month
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Jean Lannes/Napoléon Bonaparte/Jean-Andoche Junot
Alexander the Great/Hephaestian
King Arthur/Sir Lancelot
I want to post it here in case my laptop breaks down.This is a Chinese song with lyrics that perfectly match the characters. If anyone is interested, see here translation ↓
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meneeddeadmenyaoi · 25 days
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junot's doodles again+ 1 marjuno ^^
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I'm still pretty new to everything Napoleon. I know about Lannes but what happened with Junot?
Hello! Thank you for the ask - I'll give a brief account of Junot which just mostly focusses on him and Napoleon, so lots of stuff is left out. This is very much a nutshell version.
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Junot and Napoleon were close friends when they were in their 20s. Super close - had a flat together, that sort of thing. Laure Junot, whose memoires one should treat cautiously, intimated that there was more than just friendship between them at this point. But if that is the case, we'll never know for certain.
They met in Toulon in '93 - Napoleon's account of their first meeting from Las Cases' memoirs of Saint Helena:
During the construction of one of the first batteries that Napoleon, on his arrival at Toulon, ordered built against the English, he asked in the field for a sergeant or corporal who knew how to write. Someone stepped out of the ranks and wrote what [Napoleon] dictated, on the retaining wall itself. The letter was barely finished when … cannon-fire sprayed it with dirt. ‘Good,’ said the writer, ‘now I won’t need any sand [to dry the ink].’ This joke and the calm with which it was made, drew Napoleon’s attention and made the sergeant’s fortune: this was Junot.
As Napoleon climbed up the greasy pole, the power and expectations of interpersonal relationships being more formal but a strain on his and Junot's friendship. Junot, like many who knew Napoleon from the early days, loved Bonaparte, not the emperor. They put up with the emperor out of love for who he was and who he could still be if you wrenched his head out of his own arse long enough (I say with affection).
Junot was always a bit of a high-low person when it came to mood, I definitely suspect he suffered from some form of mental health issue that was absolutely untreated because you know, it was the late 18th and early 19th century.
Napoleon's ability to have sympathy for others was never his strongest point. When it was someone who had mental health issues, an issue Napoleon most likely thought* was something you just needed to "buck up" and "try harder" etc., well, Napoleon's grace over the situation only extended so far. (And by so far I mean like, 5 centimeters.)
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*Note: Napoleon, of course, had his own mental health issues for sure. He just did the classic "if I bury it deep enough, and never ever look at it, I'm sure it will never bother me again or impact my decision making and ability to have fulfilling relationships in my life. I am fine. I have never been better." [Cue Josephine staring into the camera like she's on the Office]
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In 1800, Napoleon named Junot Commandant of Paris on the condition that he marry because, it seems, there were too many rumours flying around about the two of them. (Talleyrand speculated about Napoleon and either Junot or Bourienne - I can't remember which one.) Dutifully, Junot married Laure.
Junot was an excellent Commandant. He excelled in his more ambassadorial/representative roles to a degree that he never quite matched militarily (though he was no slouch as a general). It has been speculated that one of the reasons Napoleon never made Junot a marshal was the same reason as why he didn't make Duroc a marshal: he needed his talents in less militarial roles and as a marshal it wouldn't be appropriate to appoint him to certain positions.
I don't know that there's much proof of this, but we really never get a clear glimpse into Napoleon's early reasons for withholding the baton from Junot. It's obvious why, later, circa Russia, but ahead of that? Unclear.
(Side note: Duroc was like "why would I want to be a marshal of France when I can be the head of Napoleon's household and literally never leave his side?? One is better than the other and it's not the marshalate.")
At some point in Junot's military career, I want to say when he was in Spain with Massena, he had a severe head wound which exacerbated whatever existing troubles he had. (And note that this was one of many wounds - nor was it his first head wound. It's just the one people in his own life pointed to as a moment of change.)
Junot had jealous and possessive tendencies, something that drove Napoleon a little batty, and they got worse. He also became more moody, suspicious of people, emotional regulation became more difficult and so on and so forth.
I really do feel for Junot. I really, really do. Especially because he so very much loved Napoleon (fought a duel for him in Egypt, though Napoleon was like: maybe...don't) and Napoleon was the least sympathetic person to be around if you're suffering from mental health challenges.
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Napoleon: have you tried fresh air? going for a walk? a ride? touching grass?
Junot: Pretty sure that won't help the root cause but ok.
Napoleon: How about just...trying harder? to be normal?
Junot, stares at Napoleon: define "normal". Napoleone. We were roommates.
Talleyrand: OH MY GOD THEY WERE ROOMMATES.
Napoleon: Charles, get out.
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While Junot was in Portugal, and later Spain, he wrote Napoleon a series of desperate letters begging him to reappoint Junot as his aid-de-camp. We unfortunately don't have these letters anymore, Napoleon was notoriously secretive and private when it came to personal correspondence and had a habit of burning lots of it (e.g., all of Josephine's letters to him).
However, we do have Laure Junot's account of Napoleon's reception of Junot's pleading. Laure writes:
‘Look here, Madame, what your husband writes to me!’ said the Emperor, ‘Read this and tell me if he sends you such letters.’
I read these letters, and this caused me some pain: my husband sent me affectionate missives, but never in the tone of a lover; here were letters that resembled those between Julie and Saint-Preux, or those of the Portuguese nun.*
Napoleon then goes on and says:
“In admitting that Junot loves me more than anything in the world … [he demonstrates] that he does not love me more than his own ambition”
To which Laure replies:
"He loves you, Sire, more than all the honors that you can give, more than your crown, more than me perhaps, for it was pride that made me say the contrary just now, perhaps even more than his children!”
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*Note: She's referencing Guilleragues’s Portuguese Letters (1669) and Rousseau’s Julie or the New Héloïse (1761)
Also, as I said above, treat Laure's accounts cautiously. As with all memoirs, she is positioning certain scenes with a purpose and some things are downplayed, or exaggerated, accordingly.
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Anyway, Junot's mental stability decreased over the course of the 1810s, and it didn't help that it was pretty clear he was out of favour with Napoleon and really, his love for Napoleon, and Napoleon's frienship, was the be-all end-all of his life. Even Duroc noted: “Poor Junot! It’s that he’s like me! The Emperor’s friendship is our whole life.”
His downfall was the Russian campaign where Napoleon blamed him for allowing the Russian army to retreat after the Battle of Smolensk. Junot's record during the campaign was hit and miss - he performed well in some instances and not-great/erratically in others. But it was Smolensk that made Napoleon vow to never make Junot a marshal (which was something Junot desperately wanted). With regards to Smolensk, Junot always claimed he never received an order to attack and so the wasn't to blame for Russian retreat.
In 1813, Napoleon dismissed Junot from military duty and sent him off to be ambassador in Illyria, a more marginal/not prestigious post which Junot, rightly or wrongly, saw as a form of exile.
During his ambassadorship he famously entered a ballroom wearing nothing but his epaulettes and his medals.
Brian Martin writes in Napoleonic Friendship:
While one could blame Junot’s naked diplomacy on his progressive dementia, his shocking entrance can also be seen as a kind of buff rebuff to Napoleon. After a lifetime fighting for Bonaparte, watching shrapnel rip into young men’s bodies, leading thousands of soldiers to their deaths, and suffering twenty-seven wounds* of his own, Junot offered his own ravaged body as a hideous and spectacular product of Napoleon’s violence.
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*Note: Junot says he had 17 wounds, not sure where Marin got 27 - unless there were wounds Junot wasn’t counting. Definitely possible.
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After this incident, Junot was swiftly recalled back to France where he soon after died by suicide.
In his final letter to Napoleon he wrote:
“I who love you with the affection of a savage for the sun, I who am entirely yours. Well then: this eternal war that we must fight for you, I want no more of ! I want peace! I want finally to repose my tired head, my sore limbs … to enjoy that which I earned … with my blood! The blood of an honest man, of a good Frenchman, of a true patriot. I therefore ask, at last, for that tranquility that I earned through twenty-two years of effective service and seventeen wounds from which my blood has flowed for my country, and for your glory." (emphasis in original)
After Junot's tragic death, Napoleon ordered that Junot's personal papers be seized and destroyed as he was afraid their personal correspondence might make its way to a public forum.
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As I said at the front, this is a very fly-by-seat-of-pants overview of Junot's life. But he is a truly tragic figure in Napoleonic France and I just...want to give him a hug and get him some mental health support.
Thank you again for the kind ask!
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Junot + blood color palette
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bambooale · 1 year
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Your art is so cute! I want to hug your chibis!
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Thank u soooo much!U gave me a new idea!When I got ur message,Suddenly,i thought:Ohhh ! Yeee ! maybe u really can hug them as long as i draw it ! I am not sure what is ur image.So i used that cat in ur meme,and also used ur profile picture.Thank u again!U are amazing too!ʕ ᵔᴥᵔ ʔ♡
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sunsolii · 2 years
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My interpretation of Vincent-Nicolas Raverat's painting of Junot
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