manuel cohen

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  • Map showing the movement of armies during the Gallic Wars, in 52 BC, in the permanent exhibition of the Musee Archeologique de la Bataille de Gergovie, or Archaeological Museum of the Battle of Gergovia, designed by Jean Paul Reuillard, built 2015-19 and opened 19th October 2019, on the Plateau de Gergovie, or Gergovia Plateau, site of the Battle of Gergovia between Vercingetorix, Gaulish Arverni chieftain, and Julius Caesar in 52 BC, which the Gauls won, in the Massif Central, Auvergne, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_FRANCE_MC_0434.jpg
  • Map showing Celtic villages, 3rd - 1st centuries BC, in the permanent exhibition of the Musee Archeologique de la Bataille de Gergovie, or Archaeological Museum of the Battle of Gergovia, designed by Jean Paul Reuillard, built 2015-19 and opened 19th October 2019, on the Plateau de Gergovie, or Gergovia Plateau, site of the Battle of Gergovia between Vercingetorix, Gaulish Arverni chieftain, and Julius Caesar in 52 BC, which the Gauls won, in the Massif Central, Auvergne, France. At this time the Celtic world consisted of groups of peoples with their own names and territories. Settlements were originally not fortified and craft/artisan based. Oppidums then developed, which were defensive and grew at a time of economic development. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_FRANCE_MC_0436.jpg
  • Audiovisual production relating the Battle of Gergovie between Vercingetorix and the Romans, in the permanent exhibition of the Musee Archeologique de la Bataille de Gergovie, or Archaeological Museum of the Battle of Gergovia, designed by Jean Paul Reuillard, built 2015-19 and opened 19th October 2019, on the Plateau de Gergovie, or Gergovia Plateau, site of the Battle of Gergovia between Vercingetorix, Gaulish Arverni chieftain, and Julius Caesar in 52 BC, which the Gauls won, in the Massif Central, Auvergne, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_FRANCE_MC_0457.jpg
  • Audiovisual production relating the Battle of Gergovie between Vercingetorix and the Romans, in the permanent exhibition of the Musee Archeologique de la Bataille de Gergovie, or Archaeological Museum of the Battle of Gergovia, designed by Jean Paul Reuillard, built 2015-19 and opened 19th October 2019, on the Plateau de Gergovie, or Gergovia Plateau, site of the Battle of Gergovia between Vercingetorix, Gaulish Arverni chieftain, and Julius Caesar in 52 BC, which the Gauls won, in the Massif Central, Auvergne, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_FRANCE_MC_0458.jpg
  • Map of the island of Martinique, watercolour engraving published c. 1762 in Nuremberg, with text explaining the island's history, in the Musee d'Aquitaine, Cours Pasteur, Bordeaux, Aquitaine, France. Martinique was occupied by the French in 1637, attacked by the Dutch in 1674 and the English in 1693 and taken by Amiral Rodney in 1762. On the left is the attack of the royal fort by the English fleet. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_FRANCE_MC_1361.jpg
  • War Room, with maps plotting the operations of 7th May 1945, in the Musee de la Reddition, or Surrender Museum, a history museum commemorating the Nazi surrender in 1945 ending WWII, opened in 1985, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. In this room, the Allied Forces received the surrender of the Third Reich. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1984.jpg
  • War Room, with maps plotting the operations of 7th May 1945, in the Musee de la Reddition, or Surrender Museum, a history museum commemorating the Nazi surrender in 1945 ending WWII, opened in 1985, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. In this room, the Allied Forces received the surrender of the Third Reich. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1983.jpg
  • War Room, with maps plotting the operations of 7th May 1945, in the Musee de la Reddition, or Surrender Museum, a history museum commemorating the Nazi surrender in 1945 ending WWII, opened in 1985, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. In this room, the Allied Forces received the surrender of the Third Reich. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1982.jpg
  • Signing of the act of German surrender on 7th May 1945 at 2.41 am in Reims, painting by Jonnas, 1946, in the Musee de la Reddition, or Surrender Museum, a history museum commemorating the Nazi surrender in 1945 ending WWII, opened in 1985, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1988.jpg
  • Signing of the act of German surrender on 7th May 1945 at 2.41 am in Reims, photograph, in the Musee de la Reddition, or Surrender Museum, a history museum commemorating the Nazi surrender in 1945 ending WWII, opened in 1985, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1987.jpg
  • Exhibition of weapons, models and cartography, about the Battle of Gergovie in the Gallic Wars, in the permanent exhibition of the Musee Archeologique de la Bataille de Gergovie, or Archaeological Museum of the Battle of Gergovia, designed by Jean Paul Reuillard, built 2015-19 and opened 19th October 2019, on the Plateau de Gergovie, or Gergovia Plateau, site of the Battle of Gergovia between Vercingetorix, Gaulish Arverni chieftain, and Julius Caesar in 52 BC, which the Gauls won, in the Massif Central, Auvergne, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_FRANCE_MC_0461.jpg
  • Eve of the Battle of Austerlitz in 1805, with Napoleon sleeping, hand coloured intaglio print by unknown artist, in the Musee Napoleon or Museum of Napoleon I, opened 1969 in the former Ecole Royale Militaire or Royal Military School, where Napoleon trained 1779-84, at Brienne-le-Chateau, Aube, Grand Est, France. The Battle of Austerlitz during the Napoleonic Wars was a victory for Napoleon against the Austrians, ending the War of the Third Coalition. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2493.jpg
  • Plan of the Siege of Belfort, 1870-71, during the Franco-Prussian War, in the Musee d'Histoire or History Museum, at the Citadelle de Belfort, at Belfort, Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France. The museum houses collections on archaeology, Bartholdi sculpture and military history. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0197.jpg
  • Front cover of issue no. 239 of Historia, a monthly history magazine, published October 1966, featuring an article on the 1956 Hungarian Revolution in Budapest and the retaking of Fort Douaumont in 1916. Historia was created by Jules Tallandier and published 1909-37 and again from 1945. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_HISTORY_MC_0456.jpg
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