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Footnotes
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*1 Paul Déroulède (1847–1914). Writer and politician. Extreme nationalist, supporter of General Boulanger and founder of the League of Patriots.
*2 Entrayes derives from entrailles, entrails (‘blood and guts’).
*3 Byzantine general (500–565) who, according to legend, was blinded by order of Emperor Justinian. Numerous paintings show him as a beggar, holding out his reversed helmet for alms.
*4 Popular cabaret singer early in the century.
*5 President of the French Republic.
*6 Ebert was the President of the German Weimar Republic and Noske his Minister of Defence. Balmashov conflates them into one person.
*7 Marshal Henri Philippe Pétain (1856–1951) became a national hero for his defence of Verdun in 1916. When France collapsed in June 1940, he negotiated the armistice with Germany and became Chief of State, establishing his government at Vichy. After the liberation in 1944, he was tried and convicted of treason.
*8 A town north of Tours where Marshal Pétain met Hitler on 24 October 1940.
*9 Charles Pierre Péguy (1873–1914), a poet who had died in the First World War; Pierre Corneille (1606–1684), popular dramatist.
*10 Armia Krajowa (Home Army), the main branch of the Polish resistance directed by the government in London.
War Stories Page 41