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Napoleon's Australia / Terry Smyth.

Napoleon's Australia / Terry Smyth.
Item Information
Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Branch Status Due Date
994.02 SMYT
Adult Non Fiction   Riverwood . . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 1123923 ItemInfo . Catalogue Record 1123923 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9780143787280 (paperback)
Name Smyth, Terry author.
Title Napoleon's Australia / Terry Smyth.
Published North Sydney, NSW : Penguin Random House Australia Pty Ltd, 2018.
©2018
Description xii, 318 pages, 16 pages of unnumbered plates : illustrations (some colour), portraits ; 24 cm
Notes An Ebury Press book.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary In the northern winter of 1814, a French armada set sail for New South Wales. The Armada's mission was the invasion of Sydney, and its inspiration and its fate were interwoven with one of history's greatest love stories - Napoleon and Josephine. The Empress Josephine was fascinated by all things Australian. In the gardens of her grand estate, Malmaison, she kept kangaroos, emus, black swans and other Australian animals, along with hundreds of native plants brought back by French explorers in peacetime. And even when war raged between France and Britain, ships known to be carrying Australian flora and fauna for 'Josephine's Ark' were given safe passage. Napoleon, too, had an abiding interest in Australia, but for quite different reasons. What Britain and its Australian colonies did not know was that French explorers visiting these shores, purporting to be naturalists on scientific expeditions, were in fact spies, gathering vital information on the colony's defences. It was ripe for the picking. The conquest of Australia was on Bonaparte's agenda for world domination, and detailed plans had been made for the invasion and for how French Australia would be governed. How it all came together and how it fell apart is a remarkable tale - history with an element of the 'What if?' No less remarkable is how the tempestuous relationship between Napoleon and his empress affected the fate of the Great Southern Land. Today, on the island of Saint Helena, where Napoleon was exiled after his defeat at Waterloo, Sydney golden wattle grows wild. Napoleon planted it there to remind him of Josephine.
Subjects Napoleon -- I, Emperor of the French, 1769-1821
Josephine, -- Empress, consort of Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, 1763-1814
French -- Sydney (N.S.W.) History -- 19th century
Australia -- History -- 1788-1900
Australia -- Discovery and exploration
Australia -- Discovery and exploration -- French
France -- History -- Consulate and First Empire, 1799-1815
Australia -- History -- 19th century
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