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HV V ' A soldiers were taken onnassinK t...
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ITALY. THE SIEGE OF ROME.—GLORIOUS DE
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Hv V ' A Soldiers Were Taken Onnassink T...
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Italy. The Siege Of Rome.—Glorious De
ITALY . THE SIEGE OF ROME . —GLORIOUS DE
FENCE OF THE ETERNAL CITY . ( From the * Daily News . ' ) On tne 12 th , brigand Oudinot sent the following letter to the Roman Assembly ;—1 Head quarters cf Villa Pamfili , June 12 , 5 pm . * 3 J . President of the Naiional Assembly ,-rTbe events of war have , as yon are aware , brought the French army to the gates of Rome . In case my entrance into the city were still opposed , I should be obliged to employ immediately the means of action which France has placed at my disposal . Before having recourse to this terrible necessiiy , I consider
it iny duty to make a last appeal to a population *« ho cannot harbour hostile sentiments towards Trance . The National Assembly , no doubt , Wishes , as I do , not to expose the capital of the Christian world to bloody calamities . "With this conviction , 1 beg of yon . M . President , to give the greatest publicity to the proclamation which I here inclos- * If , twelve hoare after the reception of this despatch , I shall not have received an answer in conformity roth the intentions and the honour of France , I shall consider myself obliged to attack the place by open force . _^ Receive , sir , the assurance of my very distinguished consideration .
The 6 eneral-ic-Chief of the French expeditionary _armyi " " ' Oudinot de Reggio . ' The following is the answer transmitted by tbe Triumvirate to the French 3 eneral : — f General , —We have the honour to transmit to _JGU the answer ofthe Assembly , extraerdinarily convoked , to your communication , dated i be 12 th inst . We never betray our engagements . In the execution of ths orders of the Assembly and of the _"Ru-nan people , we have undertaken the engagements of defending tbe standard of the Republic , the honour of the country , and tbe sanctity of the capital oi the Christian world . We will do so . ' Receive , General , the assurance of our consideration . '( Signed- ) Mazzini , Armellina , Saffi , Trinmvirs . '
By a decree of General _Avezzana , all projectiles thrown into Some by the enemy are to be brought to the chief of the section ofthe artillery , and , if in a servicable state , tbey will be paid a bajocco and a half { about a sou ) per pound weight . June 11 . —No striking military op ? rations have taken place since my last , although skirmishes and partial cannonadings are always going on . The ] Soaian government holds firm to the treaty in its possession , a treaty made and signed by the French plenipotentiary Lesseps , and , until that treaty shall be annulled by the French government , it considers the efforts of Oudinot merely as a furious brigandage , on a large scale , excited by the bribes and bigotry of despots and priests .
On Saturday afternoon , shortly after posting my last , a few companies made a hold sortie from the gate of San Pancrazio , with the intention of molesting tha French in their fortifications . They advanced , driving the enemy before them , as far as the third line of entrenchments , when a house strongly occupied by the French , and surrounded with barricades , stopped their progress . After having destroyed a considerable part of the works , the Romans returned to the city , leaving a garrison in one of _theintfcrvemiighonses , from which the enemy had been dislodged , and which afforded an advantageous position for checking any onward movement . "Ilie fusillade was very brisk for a couple of hours ,
but the Romans had only one officer and ten soldiers wounded . I was on the Aventine hill at the time , and witnessed the cannonading between the batteries placed there and the French covered batteries , which are situated on a little eminence close to the fortified house to the south of Porta San Pancrazio . Two French cannons-were dismounted . They fired chiefly grenades , wbich were true in direction , bnt usually burst inthe air after passing a yard over our ieads _, probably from their battery being _Ioffer than the Aventine . Reinforcements continue to anive from the provinces , and tbey have been able , as yet , to pass without molestation from the French . Yesterday afternoon I reconnoitred the whole position of the besiegers and besieged from tbat noble observatory which commands no * only the city and its environs , but also the vast sweep of the
Roman Campagna from the Abrozzi to the Tyrrhene Sea , 1 mean the summit of St . Peter ' s . The principal French force and the general ' s head-q _* _aarters are at "Villa Santucci , about two miles smith of the Porta San Pancrazio . About 15 , 000 men are supposed to occupy that camp , and to garrison the numerous strong houses , -villas , and farms aremid it , stretching their outposts within musket-range of the Soman advanced sentries . Another camp is situated at the Villa Maffei , three or four miles west of the Porta _Cavalleggieri ; and a third occupies _th- _* - snmmit ef Monte Mario , to the north of St . Peter ' s and the Castle of St . Angelo . Besides these principal corps , smaller detachments are at St . Paul ' s extra muros , Ponte Molle , Acqua Acetosa , and Ponte Saiaria , so that the circumference of the city is only free from Porta Pia to Porta San Giovanni .
General Garibaldi ascended the cupola whilst J was there , andlhad an opportunity of expressing ay admiration of his bravery and my good wishes for his final success . He replied with the utmost courtesy and simplicity ,- and stated his conviction that the French , with their present force , would he unable to gain admittance into the . city . After observing th . disposition of the enemy ' s camps , the general descended into the Piazza di San Pietro , in
whose ample area he reviewed the troops , about " 7 , 000 or 8 , 000 men , destined for a sortie by night . The expedition did not succeed in its object , whicli was that of surprising tbe . French camp , because the enemy ' s spies had already carried information of the movement , and , on the Soman forces approaching , tliey found cavalry , infantry , and artillery , drawn "np In order of battle , in numbers too supe-• nor io render an action adrisable . They therefore returned about daybreak and re-entered the cilv .
At an extraordinary sitting of the Roman Constituent held on the 12 th inst ., Galletti in the chair , Ihe secretary read a despatch from General Oudinot to the President cf the Assembly , and the proclamation of the General to the inhabitants of Some . At the conclusion of the dtspatcb _, which was listened to with the most complete silence , a cry was raised by ths entire Assembly of ' War . ' Vive la Repcbliquel '
The deputy Andinet rose and said— ' It is necessary to lay aside declamation and to reason coolly . "We have signed a convention with M . Lesseps , _whiefc has not been disavowed by the French Government . It ought , therefore , to be in full force as regards the two parties . "We must send a message to General Oudinot by some deputies . In this message we must make him comprehend that he is attacking us contrary to good faith , and that he is violating the law ofnations . ' ( Applause . )
The president , with the unanimous assent of the Assembly , appointed the deputies Audinot , Sturb ' snetti _, and Agostini to prepare a reply . The sitting was then suspended , hut was shortly afterwards resumed . M . Starbinetii read the following reply : — * General , —The Roman Constituent Assembly , in reply to yonr despatch , declares to yon that , having concluded with M . Lesseps , the French Minister Plenipotentiary , of the 31 st of March , 1849 . a con--vention , confirmed by the said M . Lesseps , according to yonr declaration , it ought to consider this convention as obligatory on the two parties and under the protection of the law of nations until the French Republic shall have ratified or repudiated it . In the meantime the Assemhlv must regard every act of
hostility of the French army as a "violation of that convention , or any other hostile act which may be committed before the answer of yonr government be communicated , and before the armistice concluded shall have expired . General , you demand a reply in conformity with the intentions and honour of France : bnt none can ha more in conformity with the intentions and honour of Prance than a halt in a _flagrant violation of the laws of nations . Whatever may be the effect of this violation , the people of Rome can never be responsible for it . The people of Rome are strong in their right ; firm in their resolution to maintain the pact by which they are bound to your nation ; and compelled by necessity alone to defend and repel every unjust aggression . ' ( Applause . )
The Assembly adopted this reply , which was ordered to he carried to the French camp by a flag of truce . The assembly adjourned with the cries of ' _" _vwelaRepnblii-rae !' The following is the reply of the General com _fflaadwg the _Itoional Guards of Rome to General _Oudmot-. ~ « General , —The treaty of which the ratification is expected assures this tranquil city against every'disaster . _JThe N ational Guards , formed to maintain order , must support the resolution of the _governmentrandthey devote themselves willinjrly to this dnty with zeal , and without reference to the fatigue attached to it . Tbe National Guards have not long since shown their sympathy for the French nation by their treatment ofthe French prisoners-
Italy. The Siege Of Rome.—Glorious De
bu- ihey esteem , above _adj their own dignity _ai-d the honour of Rome . Any misfortune w hich ; may befal the capital , the ' City _^ ohMonu menl _^ ( CBnnhi _^ attribHted to the peaceable citizens compelled to defend themselves , but solely to that party which has provoked the aggression . Accept , General , my _distingnished consideration . : . « _STTJRniXETTr , i "Representa tive of the people and Coihmanderin-Cbiet of the _; National Guard . ' The reply of the Commander-in-Chief of the army of tbe Roman Republic to General Oudinot is as follows : —' Citizen General , —A fatality causes the armies of the two Republics to engage in
battle , which a better destiny would have united together to fight against their common enemy ; for the enemies of the one cannot but be the enemies of the other . We cannot allow ourselves to countenance any illusion , and for that reason we shall by every possible means resist whoever shall attempt to destroy our institutions . The brave alone , moreover , are worthy of resisting French soldiers . We must likewise consider that there is a condition lor brave men worse than death . If the war " which you are _waging against ns should place us in tbat position , it would he better for us to close our eyes for ever than to assist at the interminable oppression and misery of our country . Good health and fraternity ' _Rosrw-i _. ' -
The ' Piedmontese Gazette' of the 18 lh inst . contains the following intelligence from Rome : — 'On the morning of the 13 th the French begun to bombard Rome , without , boweyer _. _mflictingmuch injury on the city . They at the same time attempted a fruitless assault . The firing was kept up until eight o ' clock p . m . and then ceased during three hours . At eleven o ' clock it recommenced and lasted until tour o ' clock , a . m ., on the 14 th . It then ceased again , but was soon afterwards resumed with greater
intensity and destructive effects . At four o clock m the afternoon ofthat day the French had opened a breach close to the gate of San Pancrazio . At eight o ' clock p . m . the firing continued with violence . The breach ' , however , must not have been considered sufficiently wide for an assault , as on the 15 th the cannonade bad not relaxed . " The French have cut off several aqueducts which supplied Rome with -water , and their cavalry intercepts all communication between the besieged and the country . ; The infuriated _Iransteverines twice waited on the
Triumvirs , with knives in their hands , entreating them to allow them to sally out in a mass to exterminate the French . The Triumvirs dissuaded them from their purpose , saying that everything would end well if they preserved their order to fight behind the barricades , should the French enter the city . ( Fromthe ' Morning Chronicle . ' ) Jd * ne 14 . — After ; the rejection of the French overtures , which were couched in language as insulting as their tenor was unworthy , Oudinot made another attempt , of a more private nature , to draw the Romans , to his .. will . ;* Cernuschi , one of the deputation of the Assembly which negotiated with Lesseps , was invited to the French camp , whither he proceeded yesterday morning . Oudinot had the modesty to propose to him tbat a breach
should be made in the walls of the Transtevere , over which the Fiench army , should march into the Eternal City with flying colours and music sounding ! Cernuschi replied by asking the French General pointedly whether he meant to restore the temporal sovereignty of the Pope , telling him that if he did not , the gates wou _' . d be immediately opened to his army . Tbis question Oudinot declined to answer . No assault , as threatened is Oudinot ' s communication , has yet taken place , but itais expected that one will be given on Saturday ( June 16 th ) , that being the anniversary of the accession of Pius IX . What a melancholy - contrast is presented by the state of the Christian Jerusalem , and the sentiments of its _population , to that which prevailed when the reforming Pontiff took his seat inthe chair of tne Fisherman !
M _eantime , the bombardment is being prosecuted as vigorously as ever , and even nightfall brings no cessation . In the course of yesterday afternoon aud this morning several hundred shells , balls , and rockets have fallen in the city , on both side 1 * ofthe Tiber . Between seven and eight a . m . to-day , three shells burst in the air , in the immediate neighbourhood of my hotel , in the Piazza Minerva . It makes one heart . siek to reflect on the danger to which the noble library of the Dominican monastery of Santa Maria supra Minerva ( so called because occupying tiie site and partly erected with the materials of an ancient temple of Minerva ) is exposed . This library , which is the largest in Rome , and one of the richest and most cniions collections in the
whole world , contains 120 , 000 volumes , besides manuscripts , and was left in the convent for public nse y Jerome _Cas-anate , of Naples . If burned down the loss will be irreparable , as many of the editions are almost unique . The Palazzo Braschi , one of the finest buildings in the city , the flying staircase of which , is thought a miracle of art , was struck several times yesterday , and seriously injured . It is close to the statue _ofPasquin . At the Palazzo Spada yesterday a bomb fell , but was prevented from expoding by the bravery and devotion of Montesanti _, a _sergeant of firemen , who plucked out the fusee . The firemen ( pompieri ) , ' a hue body of men , most active lads , have been distributed about the city at various points for some days past , and are inconstant readiness . The circumstances under which I
record these hurried anecdotes are far from pleasant , as every three minutes I am disturbed by the horrid whistling of a shell or rocket ; some of them apparently quite near . We , however , take things as coolly as possible ; and to make good the old proverb , ' Tbat it is" an ill wind that blows nobody good , ' the little beggar boys about the streets have opened a matket ot French balls , and find ready customers at a baioccho e mezzo ( not quite three farthings . ) The Algerines . outside have now completed a
breaching battery , masked , forthe nature ofthe ground near the walls affords admirable facilities for eoneealmen ' , but supposed to mount sixteen guns and mortars . Oudinot has been heard to boast that his arrangements are so perfect that he can enter the city in three hours—nous verrons ; be bas not yet made the attempt . Yesterday , by the by , the French posts at Pontemolle , on the eastern side of the Tiber , were driven . across the river with considerable loss , by Arcioli . In this very gallant affair the Romau loss has been twenty killed and wounded .
Two more proclamations on the present crisis have appeared ( one before the post left yesterday , but 1 had not lime to translate it ) , which I subjoin _•* . — ' nOMA _*** - B . EPDBIJC . —COMMISSION OF THE
DARKICADES . 'People !—To the sew despatches of General Oudinot , tbe Assembly , the Triumvirate , the General of the National Guard , _Sturbiaetti , and tbe General-in-Chief , Roselli , have repeated the old answer , ' Rome does not perpetrate vileness ; go on with your bombardment . ' At tbis moment yonr Rome is being baptised capital of Italy ; it was the prophecy , of Napoleon , and his nephew worthily fulfils it . - - ..
« To save this capital of Italy we will gladly burn and bury suburban villas and delicious retreats ; then may we not well stand by ' undisturbed when less magnificent ruins are made by these most Chris tian bombs ? '¦ To provie that they . may be advisedly so called , tbe Papal . seal was last night seen on the-table of Oudinot , at his head-quarters at Villa Santucci , not yet at "Villa Pamfili , whence , however , perhaps for a strategic purpose , he pretended to date his last despatches . One falsehood themore .
' Let all who have courage , and wish to slay an enemy , be ready with their muskets . But , for charity ' s sake , let them not he impatient ; let them wait till the enemy is at hand , and the discharge will be sure to prevent his flight . "When the breach is open , let a crowd enter , and then let each do his duty . . Grape-shot , the musket , and the pike . Let the few who are afraid hide themselves and be silent ; they will help afterwards to shout for the victory . ; « The Representatives of the People , ' Ceenushi , ' Catabeni , ' Andreini , * _Callesi . ' ' roman _repdnlic—ministby of "war and *
: MAKING . 'Romans ! \ Vhen the country is in tbe enemy ' s grasp , every citizen ought to arm himself for defence , and to offer himself as a soldier . There is neither condition nor rank which can dispense from _thesacreddoty of . repulsing the enemy from our houses , from the tombs" of our fathers , from the sacred monuments bequeathed to us by the grandeur of our ancestors . Let the women and children' for whose sake the" feeble-minded excuse themselves from combating , command every one who truly loves them to do his best towards a heroic defence . Every man capable of bearing arms is base and cowardly _ifhedoesnotfieht . -
« The Cains who dishonour France have hoped to find in us the credulity of Abels ; they have envied tne purity of our waters , the smiles of our sk y , the richness of our fields . They have made an anneal
Italy. The Siege Of Rome.—Glorious De
to the people , inviting it to a shameful suicide-The people replies by . arms . France and : all n _# tions shall " see what a treasure of greatness and virtue is stored in this land , where every stone reminds us of a hero , where baseness is impossible , where sacrifice for our country is bnt a common matter , . _ .., .. . . ( , 'Citizens ! I call upon you to ; assemble speedily in your , respective districts ; armed with . muskets , pikes , knives , or anything that can serve to destroy a disloyal foe I The chiefs of the people ( capipopolo ) will organise j ou in companies , and will insure that your hands should be useful for the wellordered defence of the sacred walls of Rome . Arise ,
all of you ! There is no menace or danger which can stop the g enerous . Fear is unknown- to Roman breasts . The very ruins will form a monument of glory for a free people . Arise all—rise as one man Let Rome be Rome I . -. The Minister of "War and Marine , ' June 13 , 1849 . ' •* _'Ghjseppb Avezzana . ' The private letters from Rome to the 16 th , say . that the Romans will certainly defend themselves to " the last extremity . There is no truth in the report of dissensions having taken place in that city . - Men ,
women , and children of all ranks were busily engaged erecting- a breastwork , behind the breach which the - enemy was forming . ' On the 14 tb , a young married lady was killed on tbe breach . Tbe members of the National Assembly went on the 14 th in procession with music before it and flags flying , through the fouiteen arrondissements of Rome , to Show the people that they fully sympathised with them , and to encourage them to defend the city . It is melancholy to think that so much patriotism and devotion should be thrown away , _,-. _* w'i . _'*"
By the evening of the 15 th , the French cannon had destroyed 160 metres of masonry of the walls bf Rome . Tbe Romans have made a bold attempt to force the French to raise the siege . They sent some emissaries to Civita Vecchia to get the inhabitants of that place to surprise the French gam . son in the citadel . Tbeplan ' w ' as ' well laid ; but , unfortunately , the commander of the French forces got notice of it , and it failed . Had it succeeded , the French would have been cut off from their supplies , aud would have been forced . to abandon the siege of Rome in order to commence'that of Civita Vecchia . The Debats calls the affair a foul conspiracy . What name , then , onght it to give to an expedition which , under pretence of friendship and sympathy for the people , comes and batters down the city aboutjhe ears of the inhabitants . *
The ' Democrate du _Yar . ' publishes the following extract of a letter from a member of the National Assembly of Rome to his brothers residing at Civita Vecchia -. — ' It is impossible to conceal the fact that the war against Rome has become a war of extermination . Blood has been shed in abundance , and exasperation is at its highest pitch . The Romans have taken their determination , aid they will bury themselves under the ruins of their city rather than consent to return under the yoke of the priests . Every measure has been adopted ; the principal buildings are mined , and the streets are covered with barricaies . Up to the present time the French
soldiers have only had to combat against regular troops , who dispute every inch of ground ; and several of the positions have been taken and re-taken six times , with a courage and an audacity it is diffi . cult to describe . But when the French shall have opened a breach they will find themselves face to face with an armed population of 200 , 000 , who will fight foot to foot in each street . Men , women , and children—all are armed ; and when tne tocsin gives the signal of the entrance of the French into the city , then indeed we shall behold one of those dramas which are unique in history . May Heaven preserve both nations from it ' ! Such is our situation at tlie present moment . '
Tbe 'National publishes the following letter from M . Mazzini , refusing to attend a conference which tbat journal declares was _proposed to him , non-offieially , by a person of some standing in General Oudinot ' s camp : — ' Home , June 13 . —Sir : It is impossible for me to go to the advance d posts to see you . Our conversation , besides , unfortunately for us , could have no issue favourable to yourviews and ours . I have the conviction that we have exhausted all possible means of conciliation , and tbat it only remains to us to fight . We will do so—we will do so , you may be assured , from wall to wall , from street to street , from barricade to barricade . We may be conquered ,
but not put down . We had flattered ourselves with the hope that France would at length feel how much there is noble , sacred , and worthy- of herself in our attitude , and what there is—permit mc to be frank—contradictory and tyrannical in the part tbat she plays here with us . We have pro . claimed towards France , not a state of war , but a state of defence ; we have sent back your _prisoners we have rejected air the occasions which presented themselves to us to combat your troops wilh advantage ; we offered healthy cantonments to those who could not be accommodated at- Civita Vecchia , and we declared that we were ready to concede all , one thing excepted—the occupation of Rome . And yet
that is what is required . France , having fouglu against us , blockaded us , disarmed us , deprived us of all our resources , condemned us to see , with arms in our hands , our territory invaded by Austria , _UOW says to us— 'I will have Rome . 1 will have it without conditions , without a programme , or I will endeavour to crush it , to bombard its monuments , which are venerated by all Europe , and to massacre its brave population . ' To that you must perceive , sir , that there is only one reply to make , and wc shall make it .. I know not whether we shail fall , but I know that there are falls which confer honour . 1 have the honour , & c . _Joshf-h Mazzini .
The ' Presse' publishes a long letter from M . _Pescantijii , envoy of the Roman republic at Florence , to M . Ledru Rollin , written some time bask , and commenting upon the president's message , in the part relating to Rome . It affirms that the French government had had , every opportunity ol obtaining correct information about the real opinion of tlie people of Rome , and tbat the allegation of treachery on thc part of the Romans towards the French is utterly unfounded .
Alerter from Toulon of the 22 d inst . slates , thai in consequence of a demand for reinforcements maOe by General Oudinot , four batteries of artillery and two regiments of the line were to be embarked immediately for Civita Vecchia . The steam-boat Caton , which returned to Toulon from PortVendres on the 21 st inst . ; received orders to sail forthwith for Italy with despatches from the government for General Oudinot and M . de CorccIIes . She sailed again from Toulon on the 21 st .
( From the'Daily News . ' ) June 16 . —A tremendous assault took place on the night of the 14 th , and the French strove hard to effect an entry at the partial breach , ' . They were , however , repulsed by the well-sustained musketry of the besieged , and received four discharges of grape as they retreated , whicli made great havoc in their close ranks . Simultaneous attacks' were made at ' , the Porta and . _Cavallegiero , and ihe walls of the Vatican , with a like result , andthe roar of artillery was utiremittingfrommidn _' gbt until late in the ' morning of tha 15 th . Thc losses of the besiegers must be great . The conduct ofthe French is no longer so exemplary as in the commencement of their invasion .
Every possible aunoyance is now inflicted upon the inhabitants ofthe city : the couriers are stopped , letters opened , money stolen , aqueducts broken , provisions intercepted , country folks pillaged , and property destroyed to a frightful amount ; the African regiments considering themselves entitled , no doubt , to make up for the hardships of the campaign by renewing the razzias to which they we ' re accustomed in Algeria ; I was an eye-witness of some of their wholesale' barbarities yesterday afternoon . ' The Romans had despatched a force consisting of the 1 st regiment of the line , ; the carabineersy the Bologna battalion , and a company of Poles , to lake up a positiontowards Ponte -Molle , —a movement which was
effected successfully , the French retreating to the other side of the Tiber , and tho : Komans occupying Parioli Hill ( which ' overlooks the river ) , and fortify _^ ing it with two pieces of artillery . About half-past four . p . m ,, ' the French received considerable reinforcements , and succeeded in i'eci'bssing the bridge . They immediately . set . about firing . all the casini , villas , farmhouses , hayricks _^ and even the haycocks which the country folks had just been employed upon ; between tbe bridge and the foot of the Parioli Hills , and an universal conflagration marked their destructive progress , whilst a dense smoke served at the same
time to hide them from the lire ofthe Romans . Their activity in" this mischievous operation was incredible , aad what with the tremendous heat of the day ,. the scorchin g influence of their incendiary work , and the weight of their arms and long capotes , they must nave certainly performed a good apprenticeship in Mnc & to . u ' e able to ran so swiftly iii such a tern-P _^ rature . Perhaps the Roman musketry and grapeshot , which plied , incessantly , in spite of the smoke maybave somewhat quickened their motions . ' Rome is calm , united , and undaunted , and a hundred acts of heroism might be quoted . "'¦ ' - _"*** - " - ;
( Fromthe'Morning . Chronicle . ' ) It is believed in Rome that about half the French rough * oa by _latigue and _exposure to a sun 5
Italy. The Siege Of Rome.—Glorious De
_Atof _& _fhent- _^ Two private soldiers were taken on TSdV By _Garitoldi _' 8 me n _. _^ avmg _voluntoj placed themselves in a position to be made . _prisoners . They gave a frightful account of thesuffenngs of the _tosieglrs , who , < hey said , were _ataoj _> . starving . 1 observe that the'Semaphore de Marseilles , just received here , has the modesty to _^ . the _PrenA lc _^ in the action of the 3 d : current ( full details of which I sentyou ) at two killed and a " . dozen wounded . Now , what will yon say of the veracity : _^ _*« _'iJ _«™ _J papers , when I inform . you that : it is ; an _^ undoubted fact that , fifty dead bodies of French soldiers were found by the Romans in the Torre Quatn Venti o In tip - * ' * -. '" - * Capitulation of Ancona . —The ' Wiener Zeitung' of June 21 is headed with a telegraphic dispatch , officially announcing the cap itulation , of Ancona on the 18 th ¦ . '¦ ' _- . ; _i „ ,.. „ U ! . _rt : « BW > tftken OU
. .. ; . . , The following telegraphic despatch , was sent by Gen . Standiesky , from Trieste , at 6 _' 38 a ,, m ., and reached the ministry of war at Vienna at . _fi' 33 p . m _, ., on the 20 th — , " '" After a severe bombardment , Ancona capitulated on the evening of the 18 th . * -The city , and forts were occupied by our troops on the 19 th . ' The ' Milan Gazette' describes the capitulation of Ancona , which we had already announced . It took place on the 18 th after a well-sustained bombardment . The conditions of the capitulation ; according to the same journal , are a political amnesty for the inhabitants , the dissolution of the corps formin- * tbe present garrison ,, and the occupation of the fortress and of the port of . Ancona by , jhe Imperial
troops . • _:..,- " . ., GLORIOUS DEFENCE OF VENICE — RUMOURED HUNGARIAN INTERVENTION , The'Genoa Gazette' has the : folio wing from Venice , 14 th instant :-. ' After several attacks made by tbe enemy on the side of Brondolo and Chioggia , and a fierce cannonade on the bridge of the Lagoon , for the purpose of demolishing our works of defence , the Austrians have this morning . disappeared , and are to be seen neither at Chioggia nor at Brondolo . A few troops were seen marching towards Compalto ,
This is said to be owing to the intelligence officially received , that about 30 , 000 Hungarians were marching towards the Isonzo , and were expected at Fiume , Udine , and Trieste . The Austrians are therefore hastening to encamp on the banks of the Isonzo _^ to oppose the Hungarian ' s . Manin published this intelligence to the people from the palace , and read a letter from Kossuib , in which the latter excited the Venetians to resist , and promised tbem prompt relief . Venice is now unblocked by land , and overcome with'joy ,. An illumination , is preparing for this
evening . _,- _...-..- ,:: •;; . - .-.. < _, '•;• : The f Piedmontese Gazette' states , from Venice , tliat complete tranquillity reigned in , that city , that the , _Fete-Dieu had been celebrated with great , solemnity- and even magnificence ; and tbat bis Emi » nepce Cardinal Moncio had blessed the soldiers and he" people . ; : _" ' "
' ' FRANCE ; The ; editors , managers , aiid compositors of the ' Peuple' have addressed a letter to the * Republique , ' contradicting the statement made by General Gourgaud in the tribune of the National Assembly . They deny that violence had to be employed to effect an entrance into their offices on the 13 th , or that the damage done could be considered as accidental ; . or that the printers of the . offices of M . Boule used insulting _lauguage , or tbat 150 persons were arrested in the evening in that house ; they admit , however , that the next day fifty workmen were taken into custody ! "
PaoscRiprioH of the Press . —The government continues its attempts to put down opinions hostile to it by tbe means already noticed . The "Siecle ' and ' La Presse' have for the second time been informed that they must not discuss questions relative to articles five and fifty-four of the constitutbn . The ' Presse' says : — ' We have . 'done as we were asked . What more is wanted ? If this is insufficient , let Louis Napoleon Buonaparte send the editor to the Conciergerie , where he once had as companion M . Failus de Persigny . ' It will be recollected that M . de Girardin was sent to prison during the rule of General Cavaignac , and that he afterwards took part through thick and thin for Louis Napoleon , who now threatens . him with the same punishment . General Donuadieu , formerly a deputy , died o " Monday , at Courbevoie . of cholera .
General de Pont-le-Roy died on Friday , at Paris , from cholera , at the age of eighty years . Madame Marrast , ; wife of the late President © f the National Assembly , died in Paris on Thursday . Lyons . —General Gemau , commanding the troops stationed in the sixth military division has issued three decrees declaring : —1 st . That cafes , wineshops , aud other public . places , distinguished as being tbe points of meeting of disorderly persons , shall be closed . 2 nd . That the hawking about of books , pamphlets , journals , " and other printed papers , is interdicted throughout the whole extent of the division . And , 3 rd . That the clubs and other political meetings are forbidden throughout the extent of the sixth military division- These decrees are dated June 17 .
On tbe 14 th , an Austrian vessel arrived at Marseilles from Trieste , having on board 185 prisoners of war , most of them Poles , ordered to be transported to New York , but she had scarcely got out to sea when the prisoners insisted upon being taken to Marseilles , and the captain , having only eig ht men under his command , found himself forced to obey . But on her coming into port the prefect immediately ordered the ship to be towed by the steamer Eurotas to Toulon , there to wait the orders of the government as to the final destination ef the prisoners .
_Atrociotjs Ukase . —Odillon Barrot has addressed a circular to the _Procureurs . Genei'eaux from which we select the following : — ' 1 have been several times consulted on the question as to whether the cry of ' Vive la Republique Sociale 3 ' and the exhibition of a red flag were to be considered as constituting misdemeanours ; I used to reply , before the late events , that a prosecution ought to be made subordinate to cin-umstancc-s . At present my reply -. - . 111 be much more absolute * , a cry and colours which have become the signal and symbol of civil war cannot henceforward remain unpunished . The law on the clubs and _dangerous reunions will give you means of putting an end to these hotbeds , where
passions went to obtain . aliment and excitement _. But it must not be allowed that this violence driven from the clubs , shall find perhaps more dangerous organs in daily publications or even in the small pamphlets hawked about in our towns and country districts . I cannot too much call your attention to this system of hawking , and the emissaries of secret societies , who , af ler disseminating hatred and preparing civil war , disappear , and leave after them ruin and despair . ' The present law already arras you with all the means lequired to prevent the-danger of this propagation or" evil . = Perhaps it may shortly receive some modifications , which in rendering the action of justice more rapid , will render it more efficient , I have on several occasions informed you how important it is for the utility of repression that it should be immediate , and how much the habit . of
protracting and uselessly complicating . criminal proceedings isinjurioHS to the action of justice . More than ever you will perceive the necessity of ' observing my . i recommendations on this subject . I will not speak to you of the stateof siege , which an , imperious neces . sity aud public safety : have imposed on the govern _, ment ; it applies only to some departments for which special instructions will be given , and it will besides have only a limited duration . * Iu < fine , Monsieur le ProcureurGeneral , great and difficult _Situations elevate men who know how to comprehend them _^ and who feel sufficient , courage te rmeet the difficulty . That suffices to inform you , that I have , full " confidence in your co-operation . Society puts trust in the French mag i stracy , which has been protected even against revolutions by the universal respect which it has known how-to secure—society will not be deceived in its confidence ;—I have the honour to
be , & c , ' : . ' _-Qdiii . on Barrot . Lehru . Roi . lin . —Citizen Ledru Rollin is at Geneva ; He _Crossed the frontier yesterday , ' after passing through Bellegarde _; The carriage . in which he travelled -had in it three ladies , while he was on theseat ; behind , _astheir-, servant , in an . old blouse with a straw hat on his head .. The passport with which he was furnished- gave an accurate" description of his person , but was in a false name . On passing by Fort _l'JEcluse , where all passengers leaving France are examined , this passport was registered with all its details , and . corresponds with '* the- information
sent to the gendarmes , but which did net arrive till this morning . It appears that he * quitted the carnage between Forfc l'Ecluae , and got out of France by _crossmgthe Rhone in the ferryboat from Chancy . Two hours after his arrival at Geneva , the sub-prefeet of Gex was informed of it ; and was enabled to _SLh _- ? . J heday _fcefaeyesterday , a person believed to be citizen _Considerant , ? passed through tbis place . m a private , carriage driven by a person of our _arrondissement , well known for his exaggerated opinions . He stopped at Vaucby , " entering an inn , where hecarefully avoided all obaervation _. andthence took a guide who _wudugted him to Eloise ( _Swoy )
Italy. The Siege Of Rome.—Glorious De
_nassinK the Rhone by the bridge at Grezin . He had SS a passport in the name of M . _Ordinwre , editor of a journal at Macon , . Acommeiceraent of _inspection _^ had actually taken _nlace at Hurie _' j Kun the department of the sounded in three districts adjoining Montlucon ; and the . next morning 800 peasants , armed __ with guRs swords , scythes , and pitchforks , a ssembled _^ the reading-room , as indicated by M . Fargm _Fayolle , of the leThe r _~^ h 7 l thuii ( i _bnbr _hridr Grezin . _DaSSWK _. Hie Knone uy " »• _= B n . M _„ . ira
the brother of the representative peop . peasants had been induced to rise by a _promiseihat the forty-five centimes would be reimbursed to them . They were preparing to march to Huriel to burn the register * * - of the tax-collectors , when an emissary ar rived from Montlucon with the news of the suppression of the movement in Paris . The * expedition was according ly countermanded ; All the peaceable inhabitants had fled to the woods . On the 17 th the authorities of _Monclucon were waiting for troops to proceed to arrest M . Fargm Fayolle . —Times .
_^ Three officers of the 9 th Regiment of Hussars , stationed at Verdun , have taken to fli g ht in consequence of being mixed up in the affair of the 13 th , The -Courrier' says : — ' Vanquished anarchy is now taking-vengeance by assassination .. On the 18 th a soldier of the 6 th Regiment was shot in the head near the cemetery bf Fontaines-sur-Saone . On the same evening the keeper of a house of _ill-fame rushed on a soldier of the 22 d Regiment , and attempted to Stab him , but the man took to flight .
The next morning two soldiers , one of the 19 tn Regiment , the other of the _Escadron des Guides ; were found assassinated near the fort of Loyasse . In the evening of Tuesday two shots were fired on the soldiers of the post at the Barriere des Bemardines , at a moment at which a group was assembled near the spot . The soldiers returned the fire , and a child had its leg broken by a ball . Tbey then arrested some persons , and among them a suspiciouslooking man , who , after advancing some steps with themattempted to escape , but was shot dead . '
, The President of . the Club of _Batignolles and several artillerymen of the National Guard were arrested on Friday night . It is said tbat some important documents connected with the attempted insurrection on the 13 « h were found in their
possession . ; , X letter from Atbois , in the . department of the Jura dated the 21 st . inst .. states that during three davs , while the result , of tbe attempted insurrection in Paris was uncertain , the reign of , terror had prevailed in that neighbourhood . A letter from a representative , announcing the triumph of the Mon . _tagnards , was read on the steps of the Hotel de Ville to above 1 , 200 _peisohs collected in the square The most hidebus yells were then raised , and the most atrocious intentions manifested . The extermination
of tbe most respectable , inhabitants and the confiscation of their property was threatened . It was resolved that one thousand ' ¦ Socialists should march to tbe assistance of the insurgents ' of Paris , and that a tax should be levied- * "bn the rich to defray the . expenses of the expedition . The telegraphic despatch , however , received from Paris announcing the failure of the insurrection , dispelled their illusions , and those _whohad terrified the peaceable inhabitants with cries of' Vive la guillotine 1 * 'A bas les richesl' « A genoux aux ouvriers ! ' were no longer to be seen . —Times .
,. Infamous . —The government has determined that the 183 Poles who arrived at Marseilles a few days ago , on board an Austrian vessel , shall be sent to Algeria . The Forthcoming EiECTio _> s , —The Montagnardsin the Legislative Assembly have published the following electoral manifesto to the electors of the Seine .- — 'On the eve of the elections the state of siege presses on the democracy , the . clubs are closed , the right of meeting is suspended , the journals are
suppressed . Under these circumstances , the discussion of the merits of the candidates can neither be free nor sincere . The representatives of the Mountain , appreciating the gravity of the situation of affairs , believe it tp be their duty to constitute themselves into an electoral , committee . " They trust that the people will accept their undertaking in the name of theinterests of the democratic party . A list shall be proposed to them as soon as all the information on the subject shall be collectcd ' and _mvilurely appreciated . '
The Democratic and Socialist Committee bas published the following address to the electors of the Seine _: — 'Citizen Electors , —The Democratic Socialist Committee , in virtue of the mission you confided to them to direct the elections for the Legislative Assembly , resumed last night the electoral operations which were suspended on the 18 th ol May last .. In this sitting it has re-ppened . its committee— it discussed all the questions relative to its competency and its attributes , and taken the necessary measures for the prompt union of the whole force of tbe democracy . In spite of the obstacles created by the state of siege , your delegates , strong in your support , hope to obtain on tbe 8 th ol July a victory still more brilliant than that gained on the 13 th of May last .
The ' Moniteur publishes a decree , signed by the President of the . Republic , dissolving the National Guard of Salons and of Perigueux . Letters from Givors and Rives de Gier , in the department of the Loire , state that these towns were occupied by a strong _^ ailitary force at an early hour . on the morning of the 22 nd instant _. Martial law was enforced , and Bever & l persons were arrested . - MORE TERRORISM—NEW LAW TO . COMPLETE THE DESTRUCTION OF THE FREEDOM OF THE PRESS .
In the Assembly on Monday , June 25 th , M . Odillon Barrot , President of the Council ,. ascended the tribune , and presented a project of law relative to the press . The new law prohibits representatives of the people frorii being responsible agents of journals , and interdicts the opening of subscriptions to pay' the fines incurred by editors . In future a journal may be suspended for provocation to civil war ,, and its editor sentenced to fine and imprisonment from one month to t « ro years for attempting to seduce the troops from their
allegiance , and to fine and imprisonment from one month to one year for circulating false intelligence with a view to disturb public peace . The cautionnemmt , or security in money , is maintained . Severe penalties are also pronounced against the writers of seditious pamphlets and publications . The bill contains nineteen articles , but M . Odillon Barrot . read it in so low a voice that he was almost inaudible in the gallery . . The Minister having demanded urgency , the Assembly decided that the bill should be immediatel y printed , and referred to the bureaux on AVednesday . -
lhe responsible editor of the Defenseur du Peuple ' . announces * that' the publication of that journal has been suspended for the present , in consequence of a domiciliary visit having been made at its offices , and its subscri ption-list , books , & c , seized . ) * _i _... _* - - - " . " ¦ ;¦; \ . _- - ; ... _;— , , _- - ¦• ' _' . \ ' , Wednesday .- * - The debate on foreign affairs hasbeen brought to a conclusion , and , as might have been expected in the present temper of the Assembly , has led to nothing . . Several orders of the _S- , _* were proposed , but the Assembly adopted the order of the day pure and simple by a majority of-191 , * the numbers being 353 to 162
. More arrests have been made at Lyons . Among hem-are those of Af . Met . ra , late colonel of the first m ? ., ° \ the national guard of Lyons and a member ol tbo late executive committee of the Hdtel-de-Villc , and that of M . ' Saunnier , member of the municipal council for the aection of the Jardin des Plantes . * ¦ _'
* ,. ;; . ;• GERMANYi ; : . ¦' _.-. . _^ ISPERSION OF THE GERMAN PAIUUMEW . 1 ; _^ _tuttga-rt , Juke 21 _.- ~ The . National Assembly was prevented yesterday by violence from sitting at _btuttgart . - At one o ' clock the court of the National Assembly was invaded by the troops , and soon everything was demolished by the axes of the pioneers . From one to _> three soldiers ; artillery , - infantry , and cavalry , arrived from all sides . ¦ _-, AU the streets leading to the parliament : meeting place were blockaded
by the roops . -About , three o _? _cloct the members of the . parhament _: assembled on the square-before _^ he _^ . pajace _. _^^ enV from * _thererin procession ; he President at their head , escorted ; by the noble first , row of hayonets , the ,-President , M , Loewe _. of Qalwe , summoned tbe soldiers to let him pass . Then _acommissibner in plain clothes came forth , and in ! formed the President he had received orders from _pLir _. _i _Pontine public meeting of the It MS 5 " Sayii _S | he _^* ediately B _rettreS _behmdjhe soldiers . M . Loewe cried out to him ' In i _» " .. - " *" " - ¦ " _*<*« ouc to mm In the
, „ * name of the nation stop and hear mv answer ; ' _but-the military _commandedo _^ the iiS _SSS _^ _flS l _^ _« M _^ ier £ a loud _^ _oice , « Y ou commit a crime of WRh treason _kSn ft c t _'^ ward . cavalry , ' and _^ ! y _afJer * . hemfantr y . _vvhich closed a street at the left , serried its ranks to allow the lancers and the hussars te _^ _s . There was a crvof indigna-
Italy. The Siege Of Rome.—Glorious De
tion from tbe people which had followed the Par . liament . The officers gave the word to advance , and to cut down those who did not immediately withdraw . But the members ot the Parliament would not retire till after brute force should have been employed . Sixtimes the orBcers- commanded tbe attack ; but the soldiers did not seem as if they dared go further . At last . the . officers advanced , the men followed , one man at the side of _Uhland was wounded , several members of the Parliament retion from tbe people which had followed Par . li . _mont . The nffinera me the word to advanee .
ceived sabre wounds , others forced along by the horses , and the street wae at length cleared . Then the young men cried out ' To arras , but the Parliame nt did hot desire bloodshed ; one word from it , and blood would have flowed everywhere , for evea the soldiers obeyed with evident reluctance . The majoritv of the Parliament , however , was persuaded that aU fighting in Stuttgart would only , increase the number of victims for the good cause ; there was enough of them already in Baden and the
Palatmate . Having thus yielded to violence the members of tbe Parliament assembled to record this act , to authorise tbe President te meet elsewhere , and to order him to prosecute before tbe tribunals all those who took part _ in this . act of violence committed against the Parliament . The law which the Parliament passed some months ago for the safety and protection oi its members , and which punishes the acts of yesterdav as high treason , is valid in Wurtemberg and
the law of the land , for it was officially published as such . Behold us , then , at the end of this first German Parliament . I think Germany , and especially those who remained faithful to their Parliament , _oucht to thank M . Roemer for havim _? given to it such i beautiful death . *"* The revolution is conquered for the moment throughout Germany , excepting Baden : if they had suffered the Parliament to linger on another fortnight , it would _haveldied a natural death without pity and covered with ridicule . Now it has died with some honour , or rather , it is
not dead , but sleepeth for a season . Tbe regency will probably go to Carlsrbue , but I don ' t think the Parliament will follow it ; for the majority does not regard the Baden movement as sufficiently purely German , and then it does not anticipate success . A part , of the members of the Parliament will go to Baden to serve as volunteers , but the rest will : return home , if that be still permitted them . - . r . -.. .- .- * .. : _- All go with the full conviction that the ' reaction' has gained a battle , but that it will lose the campaign in the end ; that the legal revolution , which : the ; German nation believes itself called upon to make , has reached its end , but that the Violent revolution will commence where the other terminates _.
Previously to leaving Stuttgart the regency issued a proclamation for a general insurrection in aid oi the Baden and Bavarian _combatants . The formation or free , corps is demanded , and "the German j aie urged to begin - the holy battle of freedom against shameful oppression . * * The Baden Republicans have taken posesssion of Bructsal , and the entire line of the Necka Karlruhe is full of Republican troops ! and Civic Guardsmen . Mieroslawski , as Commander-in-Chief , continues to display the greatest activity . Citizen Werner has been appointed Minister of War in place of Mayerhofer .
A telegraphic despatch announces this afternoon that the Prussians under General ; _Hirschfeid , upoa hearing ef the entrance of the Bavarians into the Palatinate , crossed the Rhine , at Germersheim , and routed the Baden troops-at Phiiipsburg , a Baden village . Berlin , Juke 24 th . —Thc examination ofthe * wit nesses and the defence of the prisoners did not terminate till nine on the previous ovening _, when the Court retired to consider its decision . It _re-as
sembled between two and three o clock on the above morning ( Sunday ) as day was breakins , and pronounced tho following sentence - . — "Ayear ' s imprisonment against M . Gevcke , for violating a decree issued for the maintenance ofthe public safety ; three months' imprisonment against the members of the Democratic Committee , Schonemann , Cubitz , Herzfcld , Dr . Waldeck , _Berendsjj Weiss , Koch , and Pfeiffer ; Steide , Petersen , and Schildknecht were acquitted .
THE WAR ON THE RHINE . ( From the Kolner Zeitung . ' } The attack of the Palatinate by the Prussians commenced on the 13 th of June , on the whole line of operations on the left bank of the Rhine . Their right wing advanced from the west upon _Hombutg _, and their centre , proceeding from the north , advanced on the high road from Lauterbach to Kaisers . faurern , while their left wing , divided into two corps , marched from Alzei and Worms in a southerly direction . . L
rhe first corps reached Homburg on the morning ofthe 13 th of June . The Prussians were commanded by General Webem ; the" name of t he insurgent leader was Shimrhelpfennig . lie did not offer anv resistance to the advance of the Prussians , but he retreated tothe south into the highlands of the Palatinate . The Prussians entered Homburg , but . instead of following the insurgents to Zweibrutkeii , they turned to the north and marched upon Landstuhl , whence they prepared to follow the second division ot their corps to Kaiserslautern . ¦
Ihe Prussian centre crossed the frontier on June 13 th , at Lauterekeii . Their road lav through the Lauter valley to Kaiserslautern , the seat of the Provisional Government . The valley of the Lauter is narrow and abounding in defiles ; resistance was expected , but none was offered . The Provisional lioyernment withdrew from Kaiserslautern to _Keustadt-on-the-Hardt . On the 16 th , the Prussians marched from Kaiserslautern to the east , and occupied _Durkheim . _'' ¦ ¦ - ' ¦ One of the divisions of their left wing proceeded on the 14 th from Alzei to Kirchheim Bolanden where a contest took pluce , in consequence of which the
insurgents removed their bead-quarters to Mannheim , 1 he second division of the left Prussian win " advanced on the 14 t h from Worms , on the left bank ofthe Rhine , to i rankcnthal , which was taken after some skirmishing . Oyger ? heim was next occupied , and on the loth of June the Prussians stormed the Mamfheim ' _^ HtS ° Lud < vj _gsljafen * Opposite tO pJSlS _^ _-W 9111 _*^ thus adv _« nced in the _PdUunate without _TOmwg _-jjith any effectual resistance , the operation against Baden commenced likewise on the 15 th of . June on the right bank of the _Rlune , lhe army of the Empire under General
mcuner advanced from Fui'tbin two columns aoains : Weinheim , whiclrwas taken , though not wfthoui great loss on both . sides , 'lhe B . idish insurgent : were commanded by Mieroslawski , who led them to a battle with the army of the empire . It lasted two days , and ended with the return of both the combatant armies lo then- former positions , 'ibis state of things bas not hitherto been changed by any eventthat have come to our knowledge . . Reported _Defeat of the Bade _* Force _* _-.-Thc French
Government has received _n-ws that the Baden army concentrated on the banks ofthe _^ eckar has been attacked along its whole line aud entirely routed by the armies under the orders of the Prince of Prussia aud General Peuchner . Mann * heim'and Heidelberg are taken . Mieroslawski-iml the remnant of his army are in flight towards the in Sr _^ $ _^ bord _^ of tlm _GranScb 0 Baden Ihe Free Corps have dispersed in the conntry . —Junes , luesday .
_the-raT _° anS ol ' -3 ac Jen _Vve distributed among the French troops on the fron tier numerous' copies oi a proclamation running ihus : — " . - p THE PEOPLE OFTHB PAtATINATE . TO THE _NA . _TIOXAI ' GUAKD AKD _ARMT OF FRANCE . . ' The Croats an _^ Cossacks are attacking the _Pols-S _tol ? _foS r _^ _^^^ _om _^ _Sc bea to tho foot of the _Alpsa formidable arrnv ii marching against the French Republic . ' I V 0 UTd te an eternal shame t p the people * and army ofFrance if they . should any longer suffer political ' _liftcidetV most perfidious that has cverbeeH' _seenllthe D 01 Cy of thei _^ real Utench people-soon : drive out these . wretched cowards ;/ - and ; , may the army , whose onlVLnK
nonour , place itself forward to cause the constitution to be respected . ; _Tou-Boichot , Rattier and _Commissaire-worthy _representativea _^ _^ of tlie French a ? mf m the _LegislativeAssembly , do you not hear tlm S HbertvV _ri aidaga , nst the eternal enemies of S i . _^ , erous , _"P _^ scntatives , protest _reso-KimLfV- , / _we s ° _Wiers , protest _* against a government which tears from Europe its liberty' To & rm l' _«^ ens , the Cossacks are at your doors !' ; Aho _ ' Cologne Gazette ' savs :- "Thfi _c . * v
snd-, aenly left the camp of Dukka at the urgent _solicitation pf . Prince Paskewitsch , who had great difficulty in keeping under an insurrection _amon" tin ) troops . _*' ¦ ' * _° -From the south there is now certain _intelligent that the Ban has been obliged to retire from Naus at _* in consequence of ihe _contmvied . bombardment # that place from , Peterw . _irden . Jellachich _^ drawn off towardsj th _' e north , ahd' established k & headquarters at _Kisker . * perczel retreated north ' _X _„ _J ards Theres i _» P 0 l and Szegedin . Bern _W _*? £ ? _£ ' ° mov _?& m _CaransebosthrouKh _Mohi-S ° _^? > and occupied the latter place « _# ;• &* _w- S 10 n ' _X -3 _to- _& maintained the fries * hest relations with . the Magyars , supplying _thf _oSrd _^ A * _ffV f 0 , r wnLch _i-e _^ on tliey are greatly complained of . liy the Sckvonian papers . ( Continued ( o (/(? Se _vintfipage , !
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 30, 1849, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_30061849/page/2/
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