- Auguste Jean Ameil
General Auguste Jean Joseph Gilbert Ameil (
January 6 ,1776 –September 16 ,1822 ), was a French soldier who fought during theFrench Revolution and theFirst French Empire , attaining the rank ofBrigade General in 1812.Born in
Paris , the son of a parliamentary lawyer, Ameil entered the army as a simpleinfantryman on July 14, 1789. He would subsequently rise through every rank in the army. In 1805 he was made squadron commander of a cavalry company inMarshal Bernadotte's army. He then participated in the German, Polish, andRussia n campaigns. On July 12, 1809, we was named colonel of the 24th Chasseurs de Cheval [Light Cavalry] Regiment [Broughton, Tony "French Chasseur-a-Cheval Regiments and the Colonels Who Led Them 1791-1815:21e - 31e Regiments " [http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:3YlNs4AoajUJ:www.napoleon-series.org/military/organization/c_chasseurs3.html+Auguste+Jean+Ameil&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=4&gl=us ] Accessed September 1, 2007. ] , and on November 21, 1812 he was made a Brigade General.After the abdication of
Napoleon in 1814, Ameil accepted the restored Bourbon regime and was granted theOrder of Saint Louis . He then accompanied theCount of Artois (Charles X ) toLyon , with orders to stop Napoleon's advance. However, the army deserted "en masse" to Napoleon's side, and when the Count retreated for Paris, Ameil pledged himself to Napoleon. He was sent toAuxerre , but was intercepted by royalist forces and sent as a prisoner to Paris the same day that Napoleon victoriously enteredTuileries Palace .Upon regaining his liberty, Ameil took part in the formation of Napoleon's army. Hedging somewhat, he sent a letter to
Louis XVIII on the day of theBattle of Waterloo for the purpose of justifying his conduct. The letter was not persuasive: court martial proceedings against him were soon begun. To escape, Ameil travelled toEngland , later travelling toHannover with the intention of reachingSwitzerland and the protection of Bernadotte.However, he was arrested in
Lüneburg and transferred toHildesheim as a prisoner of the state. Accused ofhigh treason , on November 15, 1816 he was condemned to death by court martial. However, the sentence was not carried out, and on July 25, 1821 he was pardoned by a royal decree and his titles, rights, honors, and rank were restored.On October 24, 1821, he retired. The following year, he died in Paris, on the same day that he was named a Commander of the
Legion of Honor by Louis XVIII. By this time he was also a knight of theOrder of Saint Hubert of Bavaria of theRoyal Swedish Order of the Sword .References
*Mullié, Charles. "Auguste Jean Ameil". "Biographie des célébrités militaires des armées de terre et de mer de 1789 à 1850". Poignavant et Compagnie: 1852. [http://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Biographie_des_c%C3%A9l%C3%A9brit%C3%A9s_militaires_des_arm%C3%A9es_de_terre_et_de_mer_de_1789_%C3%A0_1850_%28Mulli%C3%A9%29 Wikisource]
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