Chronique de 1831 à 1862, Tome 4 (de 4)

audiobook

Chronique de 1831 à 1862, Tome 4 (de 4)

by duchesse de Dorothée Dino

FR·~13 hours·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total
1

Note sur la transcription: Les erreurs clairement introduites par le typographe ont été corrigées. L'orthographe d'origine a été conservée et n'a pas été harmonisée. Les numéros des pages blanches n'ont pas été repris.

0:13
2

CHRONIQUE DE 1831 A 1862

0:33
3

1851

50:01
4

1852

32:40
5

1853

1:51:52
6

1854

56:15
7

1855

45:57
8

1856

26:30
9

1857

33:09
10

1858

37:45

Description

A private chronicle unfolds from the desk of a 19th‑century duchess, whose entries blend intimate daily concerns with the sweeping political currents of Europe. As she journeys to Berlin in early 1851, she records the grip of an epidemic, the tense negotiations in ministries, and the restless mood of courts from Dresden to Vienna. Her observations of ministers, diplomats, and fleeting social gatherings give a vivid sense of a continent caught between hope and uncertainty.

The diary also captures the texture of everyday aristocratic life—quiet evenings at concerts, the awe inspired by a newly built Byzantine‑style chapel, and the endless ribbon of small obligations that shape her world. Through her precise yet lyrical prose, listeners glimpse the delicate balance of personal longing and public duty that defined an era. The narrative invites you to travel back in time, hearing history spoken not from distant archives but from a thoughtful, lived perspective.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~13 hours (791K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Clarity, Hélene de Mink, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)

Release date

2016-11-13

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

duchesse de Dorothée Dino

duchesse de Dorothée Dino

1793–1862

A sharp-eyed memoirist of Europe's diplomatic world, she moved through the salons and statecraft of the early 19th century with unusual proximity to power. Her journals and memoirs offer a lively firsthand view of Talleyrand's circle, the Congress of Vienna, and the society around them.

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