Should I draw Masséna in this
guysss where is the napoleonic confessions blog???
I was finally excited to have an actual active account to repost the absolute madness on there, and now it's just gone??
Uhh obligatory introduction post incoming-
Hello, I'm Em (19, he/any), I made this blog so that I can live out my historical hyperfixations on here instead of torturing my poor friends and family.
I'll post mostly art of:
- napoleonic era figures
- (historical) original characters being homoerotic
- old-timey surgeons covered in blood
- age of sail
- anything else that gets stuck in my brain and starts rotting there
Please talk to me, I promise I want to socialize and make new friends I just suck at it lol
(English isn't my first language, but I'll give it my best)
Has all the academically based napoleonic blogs disappeared, or is my tumblr algorithm jacked?
Stop guys I want to make something for pride month, but my exams are killing me, pretend I drew Napoleon and Wellington getting it on or something
more egyptian campaign shenanigans: The Junot/Lanusse duel
maybe I'll turn the entire thing into a comic one day when I have more time
text is from the translation of Laure's memoirs
Source : forum des Grenadies à pied de la Garde du Consul
Food:
Coffee (per pound): 8 francs
Sugar (per pound): 5 to 6 francs
A piece of venison: 5 francs
Chocolate sweets (per pound): 2 francs
Six oranges: 1.50 francs
One eel: 1 franc
Meat from butcher's shop (per pound): 70 cents
Butter (per kilo): 2 francs
Meat (beef, veal or mutton, per kilo): 70 cents
Bacon (per kilo): 80 cents
Bread (1st quality, per kilo): 30 cents
Bread (2nd quality, per kilo): 19 cents
Bread (rye, per kilo): 11 cents 2/3
Cheese (decaliter): 2.85 francs
Rye (decaliter): 1.90 francs
Butter (per kilo): 1.60 to 2.20 francs (1807)
Cheese: 0.60 to 1.80 francs
Eggs (per dozen): 0.45 to 0.70 francs
Poultry: 0.20 to 0.40 francs (in 1800)
Rabbit: 1.25 francs
Hare: 2.40 francs
Salted sardines (per dozen): 0.80 franc
Herrings (dozen): 0.80 franc
Eel: 1 to 3 francs
Small fishes (per dozen): 0.30 franc
Pike: 2 to 4 francs
Walnut oil (per kilo): 2.40 francs
Sugar (per kilo): 4 francs
Beans (per decaliter): 3 francs (in 1814)
Prunes (per decaliter): 1.40 francs (in 1814)
Drinks:
Ordinary red or white wine (per bottle): 1.97 to 2.96 francs
Champagne and fine wines (per bottle): 3.06 to 6.91 francs
Extra-fine liqueur wines (per half-bottle): 7.90 to 9.87 francs
“La chenette” or migraine: 2.50 francs
White wines: 3 francs
Chambertin: 5 francs
Clos Vougeot: 6 francs
Fine white wines: 8 francs
Vin du Cap : 10 francs
Vermoutte: 10 francs
Extra-fine liqueur wines: 13 francs
Regular Beaune wine: 2 francs
Extra-fine red wines: 18 francs
Livestock :
Horse: 150 francs
Cow : 60 francs
Heifer : 40 francs
Mule : 360 francs
Lamb: 8 francs
Bullock: 400 to 600 francs
Cow: 250 francs
Pig: 100 francs
Calf: 70 francs
Ram: 50 francs
Clothes:
Men's shirt: 3.75 francs (in 1814)
Cotton stockings (per pair): 6 francs (in 1800)
Clogs (pair): 1.20 francs
Shoes (pair): 5 francs (in 1805)
Boots (pair): 18 francs (in 1801)
Pair of sheets: 30 francs
Shirt: 8 francs
One pair of stockings: 4.75 francs
Lighting and heating :
Lamp oil (per kilo): 2.31 francs
Candles (per kilo): 2.33 francs
Wood (per stere): 14 francs (in 1807)
Charcoal (per 100 kilograms): 10 francs (in 1814)
Entertainment:
Admission to the Tivoli (drinks plus show): 3 francs
Also at the Tivoli, a garden party: dances, entertainment, shows, fireworks: 2.20 francs
Hameau de Chantilly (concert, illuminations, games, dances): 1 to 1.50 francs, including 0.75 francs for consumption.
Also at the Hameau de Chantilly, large decadal festivities: 2 francs
French theater :
Lodges: 6.60 francs
Galleries: 1.80 francs
Mardi gras ball 1801 at the Opéra: 2 francs
Other items:
Tea towel: 1 franc (in 1814)
Tobacco (per kilo): 4 francs
Soap (per kilo): 1.70 francs
Pardonnez-moi Monsieur le Maréchal
Should I draw Masséna in this
Sir John Franklin's Arctic Expedition in HMS Erebus & Terror sailed out from Greenhithe on Monday 19 May 1845. And as we all know, they sadly never returned.
[Illustrated London News, 24 May 1845. My collection]