- Édouard Adolphe Casimir Joseph Mortier
-
Édouard Mortier, 1st Duc de Trévise 15th Prime Minister of France In office
18 November 1834 – 12 March 1835Preceded by Hugues-Bernard Maret, duc de Bassano Succeeded by Victor, 3rd duc de Broglie Personal details Born 13 February 1768
Le Cateau-CambrésisDied 28 July 1835 (aged 67)Political party None Édouard Adolphe Casimir Joseph Mortier, 1st Duc de Trévise (13 February 1768 – 28 July 1835) was a French general and Marshal of France under Napoleon I.
Biography
Mortier was born at Le Cateau-Cambrésis on 13 February 1768, son of Charles Mortier (1730 – 1808) and wife Marie Anne Joseph Bonnaire (b. 1735), and entered the army as a sub-lieutenant in 1791.
He served in the French Revolutionary Wars in the campaigns of 1792 and 1793 on the north-eastern frontier and in the Netherlands, and subsequently on the Meuse and the Rhine. In the war against the Second Coalition in 1799, he was promoted successively general of brigade and général de division. During the Second Battle of Zurich, he led a force of 8,000 in the attack from Dieticon on Zurich.[1] His conduct of the French occupation of Hanover, bringing about the Convention of Artlenburg, led Napoleon to include Mortier in the first list of marshals created in 1804.[2]
He commanded a corps of the Grande Armée in the Ulm campaign in which he distinguished himself. In the campaign of the middle Danube, which culminated in the Battle of Austerlitz, Napoleon placed him in command of a newly-formed VIII. Corps, composed of divisions from the other Corps. Mortier over-extended his line of march on the north shore of the Danube and failed to heed Napoleon's advice to protect his north flank. A combined force of Russians and Austrians, under over-all command of Mikhail Kutuzov enticed Mortier to send Théodore Maxime Gazan's 2nd Division into a trap and French troops were caught in a valley between two Russian columns. They were rescued by the timely arrival of a second division, under command of Pierre Dupont de l'Étang's 1st Division, which covered a day's march in a half day. The Battle of Dürrenstein (11 November 1805) extended well into the night. Both sides claimed victory, the French lost more than a third of the participants, and Gazan's division experienced over 40 percent losses. The Austrians and Russians also had heavy losses—close to 16 percent. After Austerlitz, Napoleon dispersed the Corps and Gazan received the Legion of Honor, but Mortier was simply reassigned.[3]
In 1806 Mortier was again in Hanover and north-western Germany. In 1807 he served with the Grande Armée in the Friedland campaign, in the siege of Stralsund,[4] and in the siege of Kolberg.[4]
In 1808, Napoleon created him duke of Treviso (Trévise in French) a duché grand-fief (a rare, but nominal, hereditary honor, extinguished in 1912) in his own Kingdom of Italy, and shortly after he commanded an army corps in Napoleon's campaign for the recapture of Madrid.
Mortier remained in Spain for two campaigns, winning the victory of Ocaña in November 1809. In 1812 and 1813 he commanded the Imperial Guard, and in the defensive campaign of 1814 he rendered brilliant services in command of rearguards and covering detachments. In 1815, after the flight of Bourbon king Louis XVIII of France, he rejoined Napoleon during the Cent Jours and was given a high command, but at the opening of the Battle of Waterloo he was unable to continue, complaining of severe sciatica.
After the second Bourbon Restoration he was for a time in disgrace, but in 1819 he was readmitted to the Chamber of Peers and in 1825 received the Order of the Holy Spirit, the kingdom's highest. In 1830–1831 he was Ambassador of France to Russia at St Petersburg, and in 1834–1835 minister of war and president of the council of ministers.
In 1835, while accompanying Louis-Philippe to a review, Marshal Mortier and eleven others were killed by the 'infernal machine' – an apparatus of 25 musket barrels[5] firing simultaneously aimed at the king by Giuseppe Marco Fieschi, a disgruntled vagabond and outcast. Louis Philippe bitterly mourned him, and wept openly at the marshal's funeral.
He married Eve Anne Hymmès (Coblence, 19 August 1779 – Paris, 13 February 1855), by whom he had issue:
- Caroline (1800–1842)
- Malvina (1803–1883)
- Napoleon (1804–1869)
- Edouard (1806–1815)
- Louise (1811–1831)
- Eve (1814–1831)
- Edouard
Sources
- ^ Aldolphe Thiers. The history of the French revolution, New York: Appleton, 1854, v. 4., p. 401.
- ^ Thiers, fn, p. 401.
- ^ (German) Egger, Rainer. Das Gefecht bei Dürnstein-Loiben 1805. Wien: Bundesverlag, 1986, pp. 14–22; Goetz, Robert. 1805: Austerlitz, the Destruction of the Third Coalition. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 2005, ISBN 1-85367-644-6, pp. 75–81; and Digby Smith, Napoleonic Wars Databook: 1805, London: Greenhill Publishing Co., 1998, ISBN 1-85367-276-9, p. 213.
- ^ a b Jaques, Tony (2006). Dictionary of Battles And Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity Through the Twenty-first Century. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 973. ISBN 0-313-33536-2.
- ^ Harsin, Jill (2002). Barricades:The War of the Streets in Revolutionary Paris, 1830–1848. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 148. ISBN 0-312-29479-4.
Political offices Preceded by
Hugues Maret, Duc de BassanoPrime Minister of France
1834–1835Succeeded by
Victor, duc de BrogliePreceded by
Simon BernardFrench minister of War
18 November 1834 – 12 March 1835Succeeded by
Henri Gauthier, comte de RignySources and references
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Heraldica.org – Napoleonic heraldry
- Gray, Randal. Napoleon's Marshals. New York: Macmillan, 1987. 310
- ^ Aldolphe Thiers. The history of the French revolution, New York: Appleton, 1854, v. 4., p. 401.
- ^ Thiers, fn, p. 401.
- ^ (German) Egger, Rainer. Das Gefecht bei Dürnstein-Loiben 1805. Wien: Bundesverlag, 1986, pp. 14–22; Goetz, Robert. 1805: Austerlitz, the Destruction of the Third Coalition. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 2005, ISBN 1-85367-644-6, pp. 75–81; and Digby Smith, Napoleonic Wars Databook: 1805, London: Greenhill Publishing Co., 1998, ISBN 1-85367-276-9, p. 213.
- ^ a b Jaques, Tony (2006). Dictionary of Battles And Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity Through the Twenty-first Century. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 973. ISBN 0-313-33536-2.
- ^ Harsin, Jill (2002). Barricades:The War of the Streets in Revolutionary Paris, 1830–1848. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 148. ISBN 0-312-29479-4.
Marshals of the First French Empire French Revolution Significant civil and political events by year 1788 1789 Reveillon riot (28 Apr 1789) Convocation of the Estates-General (5 May 1789) · National Assembly (17 Jun to 9 Jul 1790) · Tennis Court Oath (20 Jun 1789) · Storming of the Bastille (14 Jul 1789) · Great Fear (20 Jul to 5 Aug 1789) · Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (27 Aug 1789) · Women's March on Versailles (5 Oct 1789)1790 Abolition of the Parlements (3 Feb 1790) · Abolition of the Nobility (19 Jun 1790) · Civil Constitution of the Clergy (12 Jul 1790) · Abolition of the Parlements (12 Jul 1790)1791 Flight to Varennes (20 and 21 Jun 1791) · Champ de Mars Massacre (17 Jul 1791) · Declaration of Pillnitz (27 Aug 1791) · The Constitution of 1791 (3 Sep 1791) · Legislative Assembly (1 Oct 1791 to Sep 1792) · Self-denying ordinance (30 Sep 1791)1792 Brunswick Manifesto (25 Jul 1792) · Paris Commune becomes insurrectionary (Jun 1792) · 10th of August (10 Aug 1792) · September Massacres (Sep 1792) · National Convention (20 Sep 1792 to 26 Oct 1795) · First republic declared (22 Sep 1792)1793 Louis Capet is guillotined (21 Jan 1793) · Revolutionary Tribunals (9 Mar 1793 to 31 May 1795) · Reign of Terror (27 Jun 1793 to 27 July 1794) · (Committee of Public Safety · Committee of General Security) · Fall of the Girondists (2 Jun 1793) · Assassination of Marat (13 Jul 1793) · Levée en masse (23 Aug 1793) · Law of Suspects (17 Sep 1793) · Marie Antoinette is guillotined (16 Oct 1793) · Anti-clerical laws (throughout the year)1794 Danton & Desmoulins guillotined (5 Apr 1794) · Law of 22 Prairial (10 Jun 1794) · Thermidorian Reaction (27 Jul 1794) · White Terror (Fall 1794) · Closing of the Jacobin Club (11 Nov 1794)1795 1797 1799 Coup of 30 Prairial Year VII (18 Jun 1799) · The coup of 18 Brumaire (9 Nov 1799) · Constitution of the Year VIII (24 Dec 1799) · ConsulateRevolutionary wars 1792 1793 First Coalition · Siege of Toulon (18 Sep to 18 Dec 1793) · War in the Vendée · Battle of Neerwinden) · Battle of Famars (23 May 1793) · Capture of San Pietro and Sant'Antioco (25 May 1793) · Battle of Kaiserslautern · Siege of Mainz · Battle of Wattignies · Battle of Hondshoote · Siege of Bellegarde · Battle of Peyrestortes (Pyrenees) · First Battle of Wissembourg (13 Oct 1793) · Battle of Truillas (Pyrenees) Second Battle of Wissembourg (26 and 27 Dec 1793)1794 Battle of Villers-en-Cauchies (24 Apr 1794) · Battle of Boulou (Pyrenees) (30 Apr and 1 May 1794) · Battle of Tournay (22 May 1794) · Battle of Fleurus (26 Jun 1794) · Chouannerie · Battle of Tourcoing (18 May 1794) · Battle of Aldenhoven (2 Oct 1794)1795 1796 Battle of Lonato (3 and 4 Aug 1796) · Battle of Castiglione (5 Aug 1796) · Battle of Theiningen · Battle of Neresheim (11 Aug 1796) · Battle of Amberg (24 Aug 1796) · Battle of Würzburg (3 Sep 1796) · Battle of Rovereto (4 Sep 1796) · First Battle of Bassano (8 Sep 1796) · Battle of Emmendingen (19 Oct 1796) · Battle of Schliengen (26 Oct 1796) · Second Battle of Bassano (6 Nov 1796) · Battle of Calliano (6 and 7 Nov 1796) · Battle of the Bridge of Arcole (15 to 17 Nov 1796) · The Ireland Expedition (Dec 1796)1797 Naval Engagement off Brittany (13 Jan 1797) · Battle of Rivoli (14 and 15 Jan 1797) · Battle of the Bay of Cádiz (25 Jan 1797) · Treaty of Leoben (17 Apr 1797) · Battle of Neuwied (18 Apr 1797) · Treaty of Campo Formio (17 Oct 1797)1798 French Invasion of Egypt (1798–1801) · Irish Rebellion of 1798 (23 May – 23 Sep 1798) · Quasi-War (1798 to 1800) · Peasants' War (12 Oct to 5 Dec 1798)1799 Second Coalition (1798-1802) · Siege of Acre (20 Mar to 21 May 1799) · Battle of Ostrach (20 and 21 Mar 1799) · Battle of Stockach (25 Mar 1799) · Battle of Magnano (5 Apr 1799) · Battle of Cassano (27 Apr 1799) · First Battle of Zürich (4-7 Jun 1799) · Battle of Trebbia (19 Jun 1799) · Battle of Novi (15 Aug 1799) · Second Battle of Zürich (25 and 26 Sep 1799)1800 Battle of Marengo (14 Jun 1800) · Battle of Hohenlinden (3 Dec 1800) · League of Armed Neutrality (1800-1802)1801 Treaty of Lunéville (9 Feb 1801) · Treaty of Florence (18 Mar 1801) · Battle of Algeciras (8 Jul 1801)1802 Treaty of Amiens (25 Mar 1802)Military leaders French
army officersEustache Charles d'Aoust · Pierre Augereau · Alexandre de Beauharnais · Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte · Louis Alexandre Berthier · Jean-Baptiste Bessières · Guillaume Marie Anne Brune · Jean François Carteaux · Jean Étienne Championnet · Chapuis de Tourville · Adam Philippe, Comte de Custine · Louis-Nicolas Davout · Louis Charles Antoine Desaix · Jacques François Dugommier · Charles François Dumouriez · Pierre Marie Barthélemy Ferino · Louis-Charles de Flers · Paul Grenier · Emmanuel de Grouchy · Jacques Maurice Hatry · Lazare Hoche · Jean-Baptiste Jourdan · François Christophe Kellermann · Jean-Baptiste Kléber · Pierre Choderlos de Laclos · Jean Lannes · Charles Leclerc · Claude Lecourbe · François Joseph Lefebvre · Jacques MacDonald · Jean-Antoine Marbot · Jean Baptiste de Marbot · François-Séverin Marceau · Auguste de Marmont · André Masséna · Bon-Adrien Jeannot de Moncey · Jean Victor Marie Moreau · Édouard Adolphe Casimir Joseph Mortier · Joachim Murat · Michel Ney · fr:Pierre-Jacques Osten · Nicolas Oudinot · Catherine-Dominique de Pérignon · Charles Pichegru · Józef Antoni Poniatowski · Laurent de Gouvion Saint-Cyr · Barthélemy Louis Joseph Schérer · Jean-Mathieu-Philibert Sérurier · Joseph Souham · Nicolas Jean-de-Dieu Soult · Louis Gabriel Suchet · Belgrand de Vaubois · Claude Victor-Perrin, Duc de BellunoFrench
naval officersOpposition
military figuresSir Ralph Abercromby (British) · József Alvinczi (Austrian) · Archduke Charles of Austria · Duke of Brunswick (Prussian) · Count of Clerfayt (Walloon fighting for Austria) · Luis Firmin de Carvajal (Spanish) · Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg (Russian) · Prince of Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen (Prussian) · Friedrich Freiherr von Hotze (Swiss in Austrian service) Count of Kalckreuth (Austrian) · Alexander Korsakov (Russian) · Pál Kray (Hungarian serving Austria) · Prince of Lambesc (French in the service of Austria) · Maximilian Baillet de Latour (Walloon in the service of Austria) · Karl Mack von Leiberich (Austrian) · Rudolf Ritter von Otto (Saxon fighting for Austria) · Antonio Ricardos (Spanish) · Sir James Saumarez (British admiral) · Prince Josias of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (Austrian) · William V, Prince of Orange (Dutch) · Sir Edward Pellew (British admiral) · Peter Vitus von Quosdanovich (Austrian) · Prince Heinrich XV Reuss of Plauen (Austrian) · Alexander Suvorov (Russian) · Johann Mészáros von Szoboszló (Hungarian in Austrian service) · Karl Philipp Sebottendorf (Austrian) · Dagobert von Wurmser (Austrian) · Duke of York (British)Other important figures and factions Royals and
RoyalistsCharles X of France · Louis XVI · Louis XVII · Louis XVIII · Louis Antoine, Duke of Enghien · Louis Henri, Prince of Condé · Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé · Louis Philippe of France · Marie Antoinette · Madame de Lamballe · Madame du Barry · Louis de Breteuil · Loménie de Brienne · Charles Alexandre de Calonne · Chateaubriand · Jean Chouan · Grace Elliott · Arnaud de Laporte · Jean-Sifrein Maury · Mirabeau · Jacques NeckerFeuillants Girondists Montagnards Paul Nicolas, vicomte de Barras · Georges Couthon · Georges Danton · Jacques Louis David · Camille Desmoulins · Roger Ducos · Jean Marie Collot d'Herbois · Jean-Paul Marat · Prieur de la Côte-d'Or · Prieur de la Marne · Maximilien Robespierre · Gilbert Romme · Jean Bon Saint-André · Louis de Saint-Just · Jean-Lambert Tallien · Bertrand Barère de VieuzacHébertists Bonapartists Napoléon Bonaparte · de Cambacérès · Jacques-Louis David · Jean Debry · Joseph Fesch · Charles François Lebrun · Philippe-Antoine Merlin de DouaiOthers: Jean-Pierre-André Amar · François-Noël Babeuf · Jean Sylvain Bailly · François-Marie, marquis de Barthélemy · Jacques Nicolas Billaud-Varenne · Lazare Nicolas Marguerite Carnot · André Chénier · Jean-Jacques Duval d'Eprémesnil · Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville · Olympe de Gouges · Father Henri Grégoire · Philippe-François-Joseph Le Bas · Jacques-Donatien Le Ray · Jean-Baptiste Robert Lindet · Guillaume-Chrétien de Malesherbes · Antoine Christophe Merlin de Thionville · Jean Joseph Mounier · Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours · François de Neufchâteau · Louis Michel le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau · Pierre Louis Prieur · Jean-François Rewbell · Louis Marie de La Révellière-Lépeaux · Marquis de Sade · Antoine Christophe Saliceti · Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès · Madame de Staël · Talleyrand · Thérésa Tallien · Gui-Jean-Baptiste Target · Catherine Théot · Marc-Guillaume Alexis Vadier · Jean-Henri Voulland · EnragésInfluential thinkers The Bonapartes Cultural impact La Marseillaise · Fabre d'Églantine · French Tricolour · Liberté, égalité, fraternité · Bastille Day · Panthéon · French Republican Calendar · Cult of the Supreme Being · Cult of Reason · Sans-culottes · Metric system
Quatrevingt-treize · A Tale of Two Cities · The Scarlet Pimpernel · Scaramouche · La Révolution française · Orphans of the Storm · DantonCategories:- 1768 births
- 1835 deaths
- People from Le Cateau-Cambrésis
- Prime Ministers of France
- Marshals of France
- French commanders of the Napoleonic Wars
- Commanders in the French Imperial Guard
- French diplomats
- Assassinated French politicians
- Dukes of Treviso
- Politicians of the July Monarchy
- People murdered in France
- Ambassadors of France to Russia
- Recipients of the Order of the Holy Spirit
- Grand Chanceliers of the Légion d'honneur
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