- Jean Baptiste Eblé
Jean Baptiste Eble (
december 21 1758 -december 31 1812 ), was a FrenchGeneral , Engineer andArtillery man during theNapoleonic Wars . He is credited with saving Napoleon's Grand Army from complete destruction in 1812.Biography
Eble was born in
Saint-Jean-Rohrbach , Lorraine. He, like his father, started out in the artillery when he joined the army in 1793. He was commissioned as an officer two years later. Rising rapidly through the ranks, he served in northernGermany , and commanded an artillerybrigade at Austerlitz in 1805 before becoming governor ofMagdeburg in 1806 and Minister of War forWestphalia in 1808.The following year, he was assigned to
Spain serving in the army of Marshal Masséna where he commanded the French artillery atCiudad Rodrigo andAlmeida .In 1811, Eblé was put in command of the Dutch
Pontoon bridge builders ("pontonniers") for the Grande Armée which Napoleon was assembling for his invasion of Russia. Eblé discovered he had inherited a rag-tag collection of boatmen, yet in less than a year he had turned them into a disciplined, highly trained and skilled force who would soon prove indispensable. Besides training, Eblé also issued his pontonniers specialized tools and equipment. Most notable of which were the mobile wagon-mounted forges, that could quickly make any needed but unavailable metal parts or items.During the disastrous retreat from
Moscow in 1812, Napoleon ordered Eblé to destroy the pontonniers' mobile forges, so these valuable pieces of engineering technology would not fall into enemy hands. Eblé argued with his Emperor, that without the forges his men could not perform their duty and the greater danger to the Armée was to be caught between an uncrossable river and a vengeful, pursuing enemy. Napoleon insisted they be destroyed, but Eblé went against his orders and kept the vital equipment intact.When the Armée arrived at the
Berezina River it found itself trapped, with the Russians fast bearing down and no way to cross. Eblé's men worked feverishly in dangerously frigid water to complete the bridges in time for the Armée to escape. With the way across the Berezina opened, most of the surviving remnants successfully crossed. But the campaign had taken a heavy toll on General Eblé's men and his health. He died inKonigsberg shortly after returning from Russia.References and links
* [http://www.wtj.com/articles/berezina/ THE BRIDGES THAT ÉBLÉ BUILT: THE 1812 CROSSING OF THE BEREZINA]
*Caulaincourt, Armand-Augustin-Louis de, Duc de Vicence, "With Napoleon in Russia". Grosset & Dunlap, 1959
*Chandler, David, "Dictionary of the Napoleonic Wars". London 1979
*Haythornthwaite, Phillip, "Who Was Who in the Napoleonic Wars", London, 1998.
*"1812: Napoleon's Fatal March on Moscow",Adam Zamoyski , ISBN 0-00-712375-2ISBN 2-90930
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