IMPORTANT: Cette musique ne m'appartient pas IMPORTANT: I don't own this music Musique originale composée par Richard Grégoire - Original tracks composed by Richard Grégoire
Пікірлер: 53
@tomurg5 жыл бұрын
I want this song played when I become emperor
@BatPierrot3 жыл бұрын
Ok...Gangnam style it is !
@a-malikouriachi67022 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣😇
@xoconostleproduction8906 Жыл бұрын
@@a-malikouriachi6702 🤣🤣🤣 yes !!!!
@veilumn43695 жыл бұрын
Vive La France ! J'adore ce film !
@j.d.d74165 жыл бұрын
Napoléon Bonaparte mes respects ... Sire ..
@nino37585 жыл бұрын
Vive la France et vive l’Empereur
@hellonearth-thehistoryofwa12705 жыл бұрын
Vive Empereur!
@purpleguythomas5 жыл бұрын
Vive l’Empire et vive l’Empereur
@apollonvideo63185 жыл бұрын
Vive l'EMPEREUR, Vive NAPOLÉON !
@kaox279103 жыл бұрын
VIVE LA FRANCE !!!
@alfredovictoria90053 жыл бұрын
This song is amazing. When I was a young I used to listen it every day.
@irov58845 жыл бұрын
Vive l'empereur et vive la France !
@Franck-jb7do11 ай бұрын
merci pour tes musique, je vais les utiliser pour mon mariage en septembre où le thème est "le sacre de Napoléon", choisi par ma femme (sans blague)
@alvarotolentino1589Күн бұрын
You are a very lucky man, hope your wedding went nicely
@oberynmartell88507 жыл бұрын
I want this played at my funeral
@mr.grenade66547 жыл бұрын
Why not a GoT music ? ;)
@FrenchTouchnationaliste6 жыл бұрын
Rains of Castamere.
@bernardrubin9336 жыл бұрын
same
@vosv.o.s4 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@raphaelbouchara6 ай бұрын
Vive l'Empereur ! Sentiment d'amertume et de déception après tant d'attentes et d'espoir placés dans le nouveau film de Ridley Scott 🥲
@uncitoyen_86145 ай бұрын
Cette série est bien au dessus même en ce qui concerne la relation entre Napoléon et Joséphine.
@yvesfromentelle34593 жыл бұрын
Instant émouvant le couronnement .
@thomasitierfuentes33002 жыл бұрын
Jouez cette musique à mon enterrement.
@vastekich40394 жыл бұрын
magnifique
@georgeevstafyev74173 жыл бұрын
200 years
@yvesfromentelle34592 жыл бұрын
Vive l Impératrice ! Vive Joséphine !
@antonioluisvecinoelices72583 жыл бұрын
I am Spaniard, I remember the napoleonic's damage in my country (like the Spanish America's independence or our own war of independence) but I respect his memory because he represents "la grandé" of the French Nation.
@Gingy5783 жыл бұрын
He was just a human. He did great things and horrible mistakes. For some he was a savior and for others a destroyer.
@JR7noir3 жыл бұрын
Hahahahahahahahhaha
@cedmanced2 жыл бұрын
Kings of Spain were prisonners from the catholic church, who wanted another 1000 years of serfdom. but archaic economy and religious illusions turned spanish people to fight for their own slavery. But we had to keep Catalunya at final (just to spare you this problem ;))
@eirtars Жыл бұрын
French and Spain histgory are very intertwined. Spain was the big rival and somehow the dominator of France who was later on vassalised by a rising France, with Richelieu, and later Phillipe V (Felipe V), as a Bourbon King. Now the bourbons descendants are from spanish descent because of this link. Spain was a dominion of France when Napoleon ruled, but he made the mistake to vassalise it totally, when Spanish were attached to their integrity and soveignty. It's too bad in my opinion, that France and Spain just weakened each other for the profit of protestant nations, such as England and Prussia. Our valors, ethic and nobility is very close. This is a great link, despite rivalries, who were always virtues.
@eirtars Жыл бұрын
@@cedmanced Révolution didn't arise the era of freedom and equality, but in contrary, of bourgeoisie allmighty and rise of inqequalities throughout the 19th century. It was more a fight between conservatism and traditionnal structures and rise of the merchant class and of the bourgeoisie, fall of the traditionnal carcans. It's not so much about serfdom than social fluidity and structure. Either you believe evolution gonna lead on better or not, it is not written. Church always been a vector of stability in the transitionnal periods, it played it's historical role i guess, probably too intertwined with the temporal power, but did it have a choice ?
@ironduke74234 жыл бұрын
Retour des cendres He gently pushed his way through the crowd, the streets where lined with men and woman eager to see the old emperor. He made his way too the front and looked to his left expecting to catch a glimpse of the funeral carriage, but he couldn’t see it yet. He heard the faint sound of the drums though, slowly beating the rhythm of the march as the parade made it’s way through the streets of Paris. On the opposite site of the road he saw some men in their 40’s. He made them out for Marie Louises, some still wearing faded, torn and patched up uniforms other in their scruffy civilian dress. He wondered if any of them had ever seen him in life, he had. He had marched with him, fought for him and if necessary he would have died for him. He still had the scars to prove it: the sabre cut from Jena, the part of his ear he lost from shrapnel at Austerlitz and the bullet an inch from his heart which nearly killed him at Borodino. He could hear the sound of the hooves approaching as the parade nearly reached him, then he saw the men carrying the banners. Great tricolours tipped with golden eagles. Eagles that had once marched across Europa and put the fear of god into the hearts of all enemies of France. As he looked up he saw the great carriage approaching, a grand structure topped with statues carrying a coffin on their hands, drawn slowly forward by more than a dozen horses. All was covered in gold apart from the black shrouds covering the coffin. As he looked at the horsemen preceding the carriage one face struck him as familiar. It was older and greyer than he could recall, but it was still very much him. A marshal of France, Soult one of the emperor’s last marshals still alive. A relic from the times that a lowly merchant’s son could make it to a marshal of the empire. As the carriage drew nearer his eyes fell on the crowd again. On the far side of the road an old man in a ragged blue greatcoat had pushed himself to the front. The people near him looked in awe at the man’s towering bearskin. Lasalle noticed the man’s ragged uniform: the red epaulettes nearly falling of his greatcoat in which he counted at least three bullet holes, the old man’s bearskin had several clear patches where the hair had fallen out. All of it was ragged and worn, all except for the golden earring in his left ear and the legion d’honneur pinned to his chest. The Marie Louises had noticed him now too, they exchanged baffled looks and hushed tones. It was one of them, the old guard. Far all they knew this man had fought everywhere; stormed the bridge at Arcole, stood in the squares in the shade of the pyramids, carried the eagle up the Pratzen heights or braved the horrid Russian winter and made it back alive. That man would have lost so much Lasalle thought; his friends to the snows of Russia and the bullets of all of Europe, his country to the men he had once liberated it from and his emperor to the cold clutches of death in some place far away he had never heard off. Lasalle saw the man stiffening to attention as he slowly disappeared behind the carriage. He looked up at the coffin on top of the great structure as a single tear rolled down his cheek. ‘All the forlorn glory’ he thought, ‘Never again would such an age come to France, never again would the eagles march like they had done all those years ago.’ As the carriage passed him he turned around and made his way back through the crowd. He walked along the street to the river. He looked into the Seine leaning on one of the stone railways as he closed his eyes. His thoughts drove back to those days, his ears filled with the sounds of guns and the drums beating the pas de charge as he slowly mouthed the words again: ‘’Vive l’empereur, vive l’empereur.’’
@hansivonwaffe83893 жыл бұрын
The stories that makes you pause and think.
@pierrelipani61323 жыл бұрын
Would you mind giving me the reference for this text ?
@ironduke74233 жыл бұрын
@@pierrelipani6132 actually I wrote this myself
@pierrelipani61323 жыл бұрын
@@ironduke7423 oh that's what I thought, nice story though
@agustintorres4789Ай бұрын
Magic soundtrack
@cedforever573 жыл бұрын
Vive l'Empereur ! Toi qui a fait renaître la France sur les cendres de la royauté ! Aujourd'hui cette France n'est plus...... Elle n'est plus que l'ombre de ce que la république lui donne.......
@BatPierrot2 жыл бұрын
C'était davantage une dictature qu'une république sous Napoléon. Mieux vaut le laisser à l'histoire, il y est très bien.
@pietrofarris46812 жыл бұрын
un grand voleur
@AmauryGato Жыл бұрын
Ced tu as été privé de chocolat chaud ?
@user-wo5oi6nd7z Жыл бұрын
Вашего императора рассорили с нашим русским царём англичане. Он ещё те интриганты. Что касается актрисы, играющую в дочь Жозефины, то актриса красавица!)
@FaMaSfrancais5 ай бұрын
@@pietrofarris4681 Notre empereur ne t'en deplaise tu sombrera dans l'oublis d'ici 50 ans , dans 10 000 ans on parleras encore de lui .