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  2. Napoleon's Crimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napoleon's_Crimes

    Napoleon's Crimes: A Blueprint for Hitler (French: Le Crime de Napoléon) is a book published in 2005 by French writer Claude Ribbe, who is of Caribbean origin. In the book, Ribbe advances the thesis that Napoleon Bonaparte during the Haitian Revolution first used gas chambers as a method of mass execution, 140 years before Hitler and the Nazis.

  3. Adam Worth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Worth

    Adam Worth (c. 1844 – 8 January 1902) was a crime boss and fraudster. His career in crime, stretching from the United States to Europe and southern Africa, included the infamous theft of Gainsborough's celebrated Portrait of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, which he retained for 25 years. In London, he lived as a respected member of high ...

  4. Assassination attempts on Napoleon Bonaparte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_attempts_on...

    According to Napoleon’s Minister of Police Joseph Fouché, Juvenot was conspiring in mid-1800 with “some twenty zealots” to attack and murder Napoleon near Malmaison. [5] The plan was to block the road to Malmaison with carts and bundles of firewood; when Napoleon’s carriage was forced to stop, the conspirators would shoot him.

  5. Siege of Jaffa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Jaffa

    The siege of Jaffa was a military engagement between the French army under Napoleon Bonaparte and Ottoman forces under Ahmed al-Jazzar. On March 3, 1799, the French laid siege to the city of Jaffa, which was under Ottoman control. It was fought from March 3-7, 1799. On March 7, French forces managed to capture the city.

  6. Louis Antoine, Duke of Enghien - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Antoine,_Duke_of_Enghien

    Either Antoine Boulay, comte de la Meurthe [11] (deputy from Meurthe in the Corps législatif) or Napoleon's chief of police, Fouché, [12] said about his execution "C'est pire qu'un crime, c'est une faute", a statement often rendered in English as "It was worse than a crime; it was a blunder." The statement is also sometimes attributed to ...

  7. Gas chamber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_chamber

    General Rochambeau developed a rudimentary method in 1803, during the Haitian Revolution, filling ships' cargo holds with sulfur dioxide to suffocate prisoners of war. [1] [2] The scale of these operations was brought to larger public attention in the book Napoleon's Crimes (2005), although the allegations of scale and sources were heavily questioned.

  8. Plot of the rue Saint-Nicaise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plot_of_the_rue_Saint-Nicaise

    The path of Napoléon's carriage during the plot of the rue Saint-Nicaise in Paris (December 24, 1800) A late 18th-century watercolour of the Comédie-Française. On the late afternoon of 3 Nivôse Year IX of the French Republic (Christmas Eve, December 24, 1800) the plotter Carbon, who had made the machine infernale, harnessed the mare to the cart with the big wine cask and with Limoëlan ...

  9. Death of Napoleon I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Napoleon_I

    In accordance with Napoleon's wishes, his body was opened on May 6, 1821, at 2 p.m. by François Antommarchi (an experienced prosector), assisted by seven British physicians, in order to ascertain the physical cause of his illness and to take advantage of this document in the event of his son being attacked by some ailment offering analogies with the illness that was about to take him: for ...