- François Séverin Marceau-Desgraviers
François Séverin Marceau-Desgraviers (
March 1 ,1769 –September 21 ,1796 ) was a French general of the Revolutionary Wars.Biography
Early life
Desgraviers was born at
Chartres . His father served as a legal officer, and Marceau received an education for a legal career, but at the age of sixteen he enlisted in the regiment of Savoy-Carignan. Whilst onfurlough inParis , Marceau joined in thestorming of the Bastille onJuly 14 1789 - after that event he took his discharge from the regular army and returned to Chartres, but the opposition of his family soon compelled him to seek new military employment. He became adrill instructor and later aCaptain in theEure-et-Loir départemental regiment of the National Guard.In March 1792, Marceau was elected
Lieutenant Colonel of one of theFrench Revolutionary Army battalion s of the Eure-et-Loir. He took part in the defence of Verdun in SHIT 1792, and it was his troop that was ordered to bear the proposals of capitulation to thePrussia n camp. The defenders' lack ofmorale provoked the anger of the revolutionary authorities, and Marceau was fortunate to find re-employment as a Captain in the regular service. However, early in 1793, he along with other officers under suspicion were arrested and spent some time in prison.HI DIED HAVING SEX WITH HIS MUMVendée
On his release, Marceau hurried to take part in the defence of
Saumur against the Vendéean Royalists, distinguishing himself at Saumur on 10 June 1793 by rescuing the representativePierre Bourbotte from the hands of the insurgents. TheNational Convention voted him the thanks of the country and he received rapid promotion. His conduct atChantonnay (September 5 , 1793) won him the provisional rank ofBrigadier General . OnOctober 17 , he bore a great part in the victory ofCholet , and on began his friendship withJean Baptiste Kléber while on the field of battle.Kléber was made a "général de division", and Marceau confirmed as a Brigadier General. Marceau in turn became a "général de division" on November 10; then succeeded to the
commander-in-chief "ad interim ", and, with Kléber, won important victories nearLe Mans (December 12-13) andSavenay (23 December 1793).Love affairs
In the wake of Le Mans, Marceau had rescued and protected a young Royalist lady,
Angélique des Mesliers , with whom it has been supposed Marceau fell in love - however, even his help could not save her from theguillotine .He and Kléber were only saved themselves from arrest and execution by the intervention of Bourbotte. Around this time Marceau became engaged to Agathe Leprêtre de Châteaugiron, but his constant military employment, his broken health and the opposition of both
Auguste-Félicité Le Prestre de Châteaugiron and Marceau's devoted half-sister Emira, wife of the Republican politicianAntoine Joseph Sergent , prevented the marriage.Battles of 1795-1796
After spending the winter of 1793-1794 in Paris, Marceau accepted a command in the army under
Jean Baptiste Jourdan alongside Kléber and took part in the various battles nearCharleroi . During the battle of Fleurus on 26 June 1794 he had a horse shot from under him. He distinguished himself atJülich , at Aldenhoven and atKoblenz , where he stormed the enemy lines on 23 October.He took part in the - with the armies of the
Sambre and Meuse, fighting on theRhine and theLahn and distinguishing himself alongside Kléber nearNeuwied and Sulzbach.Death
In 1796, Jourdan and
Jean Victor Moreau 's invasion of Germany ended in disaster and Marceau's men covered Jourdan's retreat over the Rhine. Marceau fought in the desperate actions on the Lahn (16-18 September 1796) until atAltenkirchen on September 19, he received a mortal wound. He died two days later, aged only twenty-seven.The Austrians competed with Marceau's own countrymen to honour to the dead general. His body was burned and the ashes placed under a pyramid in Koblenz designed by Kléber. They were transferred to the Panthéon in 1889.
Marceau was immortalized in Byron's "
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage "::LVI
:By Coblentz, on a rise of gentle ground,:There is a small and simple pyramid,:Crowning the summit of the verdant mound;:Beneath its base are heroes' ashes hid,:Our enemy's — but let not that forbid:Honour to Marceau! o'er whose early tomb:Tears, big tears, gush'd from the rough soldier's lid,:Lamenting and yet envying such a doom,:Falling for France, whose rights he battled to resume.
:LVII
:Brief, brave, and glorious was his young career, —:His mourners were two hosts, his friends and foes;:And fitly may the stranger lingering here:Pray for his gallant spirit's bright repose;:For he was Freedom's champion, one of those,:The few in number, who had not o'erstept:The charter to chastise which she bestows:On such as wield her weapons; he had kept:The whiteness of his soul, and thus men o'er him wept.
References
1911 The 1911 "Britannica", in turn, gives the following references:
* Maze, "Le Général Marceau" (1889)
* Parfait, "Le Général Marceau" (1892)
* T. C. Johnson, "Marceau" (London, 1896)
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