(Redirected from Marie Victor de Fay, Marquis de Latour-Maubourg)'Marie Victor Nicolas de Fay, marquis de Latour-Maubourg' (Château de
La Motte-de-Galaure, near
Grenoble 22 May 1768 — 1850) followed a military career under the
Ancien Régime of France, during the
First French Empire and a diplomatic one after the
Bourbon Restoration.
In 1789, at the outbreak of the
French Revolution, he was the colonel of the Soissonois at
Uzès[1], who was called to Paris, where he was an under-lieutenant in the Royal Guard, in 1792, when he accompanied the royal family on the return to Paris after their abortive
flight to Varennes (20-21 June 1791). He was appointed Colonel of the 3e Régiment des Chasseurs-a-Cheval
5 February 1792 and during the late summer was arrested and taken prisoner by the Austrians as were a number of prominent French officers, one source of the anger and suspicion of Parisians that led to the
September Massacres. On his release by the Austrians he did not return to France but went to Brussels as an
émigré where he remained for the next five years.
At the end of 1799 he returned to France and was sent to Egypt by the
First Consul, where he served as aide-de-camp to
General Kléber, with whom he received a head wound at Alexandria, 13 March 1801, and after Kléber's assassionation to
General Menou.
He was present at the
battle of Austerlitz, forming part of
Joachim Murat's cavalry reserve, and was shortly promoted to brigadier general, Christmas Eve 1805. He fought at
Jena and in the
Peninsular War in Spain, winning the title of a
Baron de l'Empire. He was recalled to participate in the march on Moscow. Surviving the retreat, at
Wachau he lost a leg above the knee: famously responding to his body-servant's weeping at the sight he remarked to his man, "You have one less boot to polish".
With the
restoration of the Bourbons he pledged loyalty to
Louis XVIII and remained with him during the
Hundred Days, for which he was rewarded with some diplomatic posts, including that of Ambassador to London in 1819. He was briefly Minister of War and sat on the tribunmal that condemned Marshal
Michel Ney to death. At the consistory that elected
Pope Gregory XVI in 1831, the marquis had the honour of informing the assembled cardinals that
Louis-Philippe would waive his right of veto, with the assurance that only a wise and virtuous pontiff could be elected by such a wise and virtuous assembly.
[2]
His older brother, Marie-Charles-César de Fay also became a general.
Notes
1. État Militaire de France pour l’année 1789
2. Valérie Pirie ''The Triple Crown: An Account of the Papal Conclaves''
External links
★
Terry J. senior, "The Top Twenty French Cavalry Commanders: #11 General Marie-Victor-Nicolas de Fay Latour-Maubourg"