- Louis Henri Loison
Loison, General Louis Henri (
May 16 ,1771 -December 30 ,1816 ) commanded a division in the armies of Napoleon in the Marengo, Ulm, Peninsular and Russian campaigns during the Napoleonic Wars.Revolution
Loison, born in
Damvillers ,France , entered the army in 1787 and was commissioned an officer in 1791. His father had served as a Deputy in theConstituent Assembly . He served with the Army of the North and received promotion to general of brigade in 1795. When royalist sympathizers tried to overthrow theDirectory onOctober 5 ("13 Vendémiaire"), 1795 andNapoleon Bonaparte dispersed them with his cannon, Loison supported his colleague. [Chandler, p 253]He was unemployed for a few years then re-entered military service in January 1799. Serving under Generals
André Masséna andClaude Lecourbe , Loison commanded a brigade in a series of small actions inSwitzerland from March through May and from August to September. He was promoted to general of division that October. [Chandler, p 253]In 1800, Loison was posted to the Army of the Reserve to command a 5,300-man division and crossed the
Great St Bernard Pass with Napoleon. He missed theBattle of Marengo because his men served in General Philibert Duhesme's corps in the capture ofMilan and other cities. [Arnold, p 128]Empire
During the Ulm campaign in 1805, Loison served in the VI Corps under Marshal
Michel Ney at theBattle of Elchingen . [Smith, p 204 and other pages. Loison's name shows up in many orders of battle.] He commanded a division in GeneralJean Andoche Junot 's first invasion ofPortugal in 1808, where his troops brutally put down a revolt. He fought at theBattle of Vimeiro . Loison commanded a detached force during MarshalNicolas Soult 's second invasion of Portugal. In 1810, he rejoined Ney's VI Corps at the sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida. During Marshal Masséna's third invasion of Portugal, his division led Ney's unsuccessful attack at theBattle of Bussaco . Loison commanded the VI Corps at theBattle of Fuentes de Onoro in May 1811.In 1812, Loison was sent with a division of 10,000 newly drafted German and Italian boys to help extricate the remnants of the Grand Army in its retreat from
Russia . He was stupidly ordered by the governor of Vilna to defend a position outside the city. Camping on the ground when the night-time temperature dropped to minus 35 degrees Celsius proved catastrophic for his untried soldiers. Within a few days, his division was wiped out of existence without a battle. [Zamoyski, p 504-505]Loison was assigned to guard the fortress of
Wesel in 1813. But Napoleon arrested him for failing to accompany his division to the front. After this severe reprimand, his military career was virtually over. [Chandler, p 253] He died in Chikel, nearLiège on 30 December 1816. Loison is recognized on the 35th column of theArc de Triomphe inParis .References
* Arnold, James R., "Marengo & Hohenlinden", Pen & Sword, 2005. ISBN 1-84415-279-0
* Chandler, David, "Dictionary of the Napoleonic Wars", Macmillan, 1979. ISBN 0-02-523670-9
* Smith, Digby, "The Napoleonic Wars Data Book", Greenhill, 1998. ISBN 1-85367-276-9
* Zamoyski, Adam, "", Harper, 2004. ISBN 0-06-108686-X
* [http://pagesperso-orange.fr/arnauld.divry/arc_de_triomphe.htm The Names of 660 persons inscribed in the Arc de triomphe]Footnotes
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