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  1. The Count of Monte Cristo

    The Count of Monte Cristo

    PG-132002 · Adventure · 2h 11m

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  1. The Count of Monte Cristo, Romantic novel by French author Alexandre Dumas père (possibly in collaboration with Auguste Maquet), published serially in 1844–46 and in book form in 1844–45. The work, which is set during the time of the Bourbon Restoration in France, tells the story of an unjustly incarcerated man who escapes to find revenge.

  2. The Count of Monte Cristo begins right before Napoleon's first exile to Elba, and throughout the novel, we hear about Napoleon's armies, his escape to Paris, and about the royalist parties. Villefort, for example, is a royalist, but his father (Noirtier) fights for Napoleon.

  3. Overview. The Count of Monte Cristo by French author Alexandre Dumas, completed in 1844, is a classic work of literature that weaves a tale of betrayal, revenge, and redemption. The narrative unfolds in the complex political landscape of post-Napoleonic France, where Edmond Dantès, a young sailor, is falsely accused and imprisoned.

  4. The Count of Monte Cristo Summary. Next. Chapter 1. Edmond Dantes is a nineteen year-old with a bright future. He is first mate on the ship Pharaon, which docks in Marseille in 1814. M. Morrel, who owns and operates the ship (and who is therefore Dantes’ boss and mentor) promotes Dantes to captain, which upsets the ship’s cargo manager ...

  5. Jan 1, 1998 · Le comte de Monte-Cristo. English Title: The Count of Monte Cristo Credits: Anonymous Project Gutenberg Volunteers, Dan Muller and David Widger Language: English: LoC Class: PQ: Language and Literatures: Romance literatures: French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese: Subject: Historical fiction Subject: Revenge -- Fiction Subject: Adventure stories ...

  6. The Count of Monte Cristo is a classic example of the mid-nineteenth-century European serial adventure novel. These novels had large casts of characters, complex plots with numerous intertwined subplots, and central dramas involving love, revenge, and shifts in class or identity.

  7. The Count of Monte Cristo is an example of the appropriation process Dumas frequently employed. His inspiration for the novel was an anecdote he read in Mémoires historiques tirés des archives de la police de Paris, a collection of intriguing criminal cases recorded by Jacques Peuchet, a former police archivist.

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