General Marie-Victor-Nicolas de Fay Latour-Maubourg


Latour-Maubourg

Born: May 22, 1768

Place of Birth: La-Motte-de-Galaure, Drôme, France

Branch: Cavalry

Legion of Honor: Grand Eagle

Imperial Nobility: Count

Died: November 11, 1850

Cause of Death: Natural causes

Place of Death: Dammarie, France

Arc de Triomphe: South



Latour-Maubourg was a noble who emigrated from France, but was promptly imprisoned by the Austrians. Finally able to return to France in 1799, he quickly showed talent. His older brother Marie-Charles-César-Florimond was also a general.

Shortly after Latour-Maubourg's leg was carried off by a cannonball at Leipzig, he noticed his valet weeping at the horrific nature of his wound. Latour-Maubourg told his valet, "What are you crying about, idiot? You have one less boot to polish!"

With this wound, his active service came to an end, and he did not rejoin Napoleon for the Hundred Days. Latour-Maubourg voted for the death of Marshal Ney.

Sources:

Elting, John R. Swords Around a Throne: Napoleon's Grande Armee. USA: Da Capo Press, 1997.

Senior, Terry J. The Top Twenty French Cavalry Commanders. 2005. <http://www.napoleon-series.org/research/commanders/c_twenty.html>

Six, Georges. Dictionnaire Biographique des Generaux & Amiraux Francais de la Revolution et de l'Empire (1792-1814). Paris: Gaston Saffroy, 2003.

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