Maximilian in Mexico: A Woman's Reminiscences of the French Intervention 1862-1867

audiobook

Maximilian in Mexico: A Woman's Reminiscences of the French Intervention 1862-1867

by Sara Yorke Stevenson

EN·~6 hours·9 chapters

Chapters

9 total

PRELUDE

5:38

PART I. - THE TRIPLE ALLIANCE

1:13:37

MAXIMILIAN IN MEXICO - I. EL DORADO

9:12

PART II. - THE FRENCH INTERVENTION

56:52

PART III - THE EMPIRE OF MAXIMILIAN I 1864-65 - I. MARSHAL BAZAINE

53:49

PART IV. - THE AWAKENING - I. "A CLOUD NO BIGGER THAN A MAN'S HAND"

2:16:36

PART V - THE END - I. QUERETARO, 1867

45:10

APPENDIX A - THE BANDO NEGRO (BLACK DECREE) PROCLAMATION OF EMPEROR MAXIMILIAN, OCTOBER 3, 1866

9:48

APPENDIX B - TREATY OF MIRAMAR, SIGNED ON APRIL 10, 1864

7:28

Description

The book offers a rare, intimate glimpse into Mexico’s turbulent years under the French Intervention, seen through the eyes of a woman who was more than a passive observer. Rather than a scholarly chronicle, her recollections bring the era’s politics, ambitions, and daily life into sharp, human focus, revealing how personal hopes and rivalries shaped the course of events. Readers hear the whispered conversations, the hurried notes, and the fleeting moments that textbooks usually omit.

She paints vivid portraits of generals, captains, and ordinary citizens whose lives intersected with the imperial experiment, from grand banquets to desperate guerrilla raids. Through letters, photographs, and even a stray Havana dog, the narrative breathes life into the personalities that once dominated Mexico’s headlines. Listeners will feel the pulse of a nation caught between foreign ambition and home‑grown resistance, experiencing history as lived memory rather than distant fact.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (383K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-06-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Sara Yorke Stevenson

Sara Yorke Stevenson

1847–1921

A pioneering Egyptologist and early museum builder, she helped shape the University of Pennsylvania Museum while also pushing for women’s rights in Philadelphia. Her life joined scholarship, public leadership, and reform in a way that still feels strikingly modern.

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