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Joseph Édouard de la Motte-Rouge

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Joseph Édouard de la Motte-Rouge
Born(1804-02-03)3 February 1804
Pléneuf-Val-André, Côtes-d'Armor, French Empire
Died29 January 1883(1883-01-29) (aged 78)
Hénansal, Côtes-d'Armor, French Republic
Allegiance Bourbon Restoration
 July Monarchy
 French Second Republic
 Second French Empire
 French Third Republic
BranchFrench Army
Years of service1821 — 1870
CommandsLight Infantry[1]
Battles / warsHundred Thousand Sons of Saint Louis
Belgian Revolution
Crimean War
Second Italian War of Independence
Franco-Prussian War
Other workDeputy of Côtes-du-Nord
Senator of the Second Empire

Joseph Édouard de La Motte-Rouge' was a French general and politician.

Biography

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Motte-Rouge was trained at the Saint-Cyr military school from 1819 to 1821, he was assigned to the Spanish expedition as a second lieutenant in the 22nd line infantry battalion. He witnessed the battles of Corunna and San Sebastián, and was part of the occupying forces in the division of Madrid until 1825.

In 1830, during the Belgian Revolution, he was assigned to the Army of the North of Marshal Gerard and takes part in the fighting against the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, which end with the taking of Antwerp (December 1832): he was promoted to captain.

Capture of Buffalora during the Battle of Magenta, one of the deeds of General de la Motte-Rouge.

On 15 July 1848, he was appointed colonel of the 19th Light Infantry regiment. After various assignments in the North of France, he was appointed brigadier general after the coup d'état of 1851 . Assigned to Varna during the Crimean War (1853), he took part in the Battle of Alma, he even distinguished himself at the Battle of Inkerman. Promoted to Division General in June 1855. He received the command of the 2nd Division of the Army of the East, was twice wounded in a general assault that ends the Battle of the Chernaya.

After being commander of the 15th Military Division in Nantes, he would later be commanding the 1st Division 2nd Army Corps of Patrice de MacMahon at the beginning of the Second Italian War of Independence. Its division fought in the battles of Turbigo and Magenta, and played a decisive role in the Battle of Solferino. Retired in 1869, he was elected the same year as the official candidate of Napoleon III in the legislative body in the st district of the North Coast.

However, after the debacle at Sedan, the Government of National Defense reinstatement in the army cadres and soon given command of the 15th parked Corps at Nantes, the first nucleus of the Army of the Loire. The government ordered him to march on Orleans, which he reached onOctober 6, 1870, but his troops are beaten at Artenay by the corps of the Bavarian general von der Thann. La Motte-Rouge had to evacuate Orléans on October 11 but he was immediately dismissed and replaced by General Louis d'Aurelle de Paladines.

Family

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The La Motte de La Motte-Rouge family comes from Hénansal, in what is now Côtes-d'Armor.

Joseph-Édouard is the son of Joseph-Marie de La Motte de La Motte-Rouge (1770-1848), battalion commander in the Guard of kings Louis XVIII and Charles X, knight of the Legion of Honor, and Agathe -Julie de La Motte de La Guyomarais, (1771-1833).

He married Clémentine Pocquet de Livonnière (1812-1900) on 18 October 1840 and he remained without a descendant. But his nephews are at the origin of many posterity.

Awards

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Foreign Awards

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References

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Works cited

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  • "Cote LH//1462/33". Base Léonore. Ministère de la Culture.
  • "Joseph de La Motte de La Motte Rouge". roglo.eu. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  • "Historique de la 2e promotion de l'École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr (1819-1821)" (PDF). www.saint-cyr.org. La Saint-Cyrienne. Association des anciens élèves de l'École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr - La Saint-Cyrienne. Retrieved 18 April 2011..

Bibliography

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  • "Joseph Édouard de la Motte-Rouge", in Adolphe Robert and Gaston Cougny, Dictionnaire des parlementaires français (1789-1891), Bourloton, Paris, 1889 Edition details Wikisource;
  • Henri de La Messelière, Filiations bretonnes, Saint-Brieuc, éditions Prudhomme, 1922, Tome IV; pages 125-132.