Mémoires du maréchal Marmont, duc de Raguse (9/9) by Marmont

(7 User reviews)   4610
By Elizabeth Stewart Posted on Dec 25, 2025
In Category - Work Habits
Marmont, Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de, duc de Raguse, 1774-1852 Marmont, Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de, duc de Raguse, 1774-1852
French
You know Napoleon's marshals as heroes on paintings and statues. But what happens when one of them becomes the ultimate traitor? Marmont's memoirs are his nine-volume attempt to justify the unforgivable: his surrender of Paris in 1814, which directly led to Napoleon's first downfall. This final volume is where he makes his last stand, not with soldiers, but with words. He argues, defends, and pleads his case to history. It's less a dry military account and more a desperate, 200-year-old courtroom drama where the author is both defendant and lawyer. If you've ever wondered how a man lives with the label 'Judas of the Empire,' here's his side of the story.
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This isn't your typical history book. Marmont's Memoirs is a man fighting for his legacy with everything he's got. The ninth and final volume brings his massive life story to a close, but it's dominated by one event: the fateful decision in 1814 to hand over Paris to the allied armies while Napoleon was away. That act branded him a traitor and made his name—'Raguser'—synonymous with betrayal in France.

The Story

There's no traditional plot. Instead, Marmont walks us through the chaotic final days of Napoleon's first reign. He paints a picture of a collapsing empire, a city on the brink of ruin, and himself facing an impossible choice. He argues he saved Paris from destruction and acted for France's greater good, not out of personal disloyalty. The rest of the volume is his detailed rebuttal to the accusations that have haunted him, mixing military strategy with deeply personal justification.

Why You Should Read It

What's fascinating is the raw human emotion. You can feel his frustration and pride bleeding through the pages. This is a primary source at its most personal—flawed, biased, and utterly compelling. It forces you to think about history's 'villains' as complex people who believed they were making the right call. You don't have to agree with him to be gripped by his defense.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history buffs tired of dry facts and anyone who loves a good, messy character study. This isn't a balanced account of the Napoleonic Wars; it's one man's testimony from the dock. Read it to get inside the mind of a figure history condemned, and decide for yourself: was he a pragmatic savior or the empire's ultimate turncoat?



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Ava Miller
7 months ago

High quality edition, very readable.

Michelle Wilson
9 months ago

Helped me clear up some confusion on the topic.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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