1803 in France

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1803
in
France

Decades:
  • 1780s
  • 1790s
  • 1800s
  • 1810s
  • 1820s
See also:Other events of 1803
History of France  • Timeline  • Years

Events from the year 1803 in France.

Events[]

  • 30 January
    • Monroe and Livingston sail for Paris to discuss, and possibly buy, New Orleans: they end completing the Louisiana Purchase.
    • Napoleon authorizes the celebration of a Joan of Arc feast in Orléans on 8 May.[1]
  • 30 April - Louisiana Purchase made by the United States from France.
  • May - The First Consul of France Citizen Bonaparte begins making preparations to invade England.
  • 18 May - The United Kingdom redeclares war on France, after French refuse to withdraw from Dutch territory.
  • 5 July - Convention of Artlenburg, the surrender of the Electorate of Hanover to Napoleon's army.
  • 18 November - Haitian Revolution: Battle of Vertières, decisive Haitian victory over the French colonial army.

Births[]

January to June[]

  • 16 February - Louis-Antoine Garnier-Pagès, politician (died 1878).
  • 3 March - Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps, painter (died 1860).
  • 15 March - Alexandre Boreau, pharmacist and botanist (died 1875).
  • 7 April - Flora Tristan, socialist writer and activist (died 1844).[2]
  • 24 April - Jean Étienne Bercé, entomologist (died 1879).
  • 24 May - Charles Lucien Bonaparte, naturalist and ornithologist (died 1857).

July to December[]

Full date unknown[]

Deaths[]

January to June[]

July to December[]

  • 16 August - Gabriel Sénac de Meilhan, writer (born 1736).
  • 5 September
    • François Devienne, composer and flautist (born 1759).
    • Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, General and novelist (born 1741).
  • 7 October - Pierre Vachon, composer (born 1731).
  • 12 October - Jacques Gamelin, painter and engraver (born 1738).
  • 7 November - Pierre Brugière, priest and Jansenist (born 1730).
  • 27 November - Antoine Guenée, priest and Christian apologist (born 1717).

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ William Fortescue (2002). The Third Republic in France 1870-1940: Conflicts and Continuities. Routledge. p. 99. ISBN 1134740220.
  2. ^ Howe, Patricia (2010). "Appropriation and Alienation: Women Travellers and the Construction of Identity". In Gifford, Paul; Hauswedell, Tessa (eds.). Europe and Its Others: Essays on Interperception and Identity. Oxford: Peter Lang. p. 78. ISBN 978-3-03911-968-4.
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