Joseph Barbanègre

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Joseph Barbanègre
Joseph Barbanègre statue

Joseph Barbanègre (22 August 1772 7 November 1830) was a French General and a Baron of the First French Empire. He was entrenched in Huningue during the third siege of the city by the Habsburgs in 1815.

Barbanègre was born in Pontacq (Béarn). He was initially a sailor, then a captain in the 5th Battalion of the Lower Pyrenees, and Battalion Chief in the consular guard, He was then promoted to colonel of the 48th Infantry Regiment of the line on August 29, 1805, with whom he fought like a hero at Austerlitz, Iéna, and Eylau.[1] He participated in all the Napoleonic campaigns, becoming Brigadier General after the Peace of Tilsit, 21 March 1809. He powerfully contributed to win battles at Eckmühl, Regensburg, and Wagram.[1] He attained the rank of Commander of the Legion of Honor on December 25, 1805. On August 20, 1809, he became Baron of the Empire. He defended Stettin in 1813. But it was defending Huningue against some 25,000 Austrians in 1815 which made him most famous,[2] holding out with only several hundred men. On 26 August 1815 they surrendered after the abdication of Napoleon and he received the highest medals of esteem for his contribution to the war. He died in Paris, aged 58, and is buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery in the area reserved for marshals and generals of the Empire. In his home village of Pontacq there is a street bearing his name and a statue erected in his honor on the town hall square.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Latruffe, Franck (1863). Huningue et Bâle devant les traités de 1815. Dupont. p. 344. Retrieved 26 October 2011. 
  2. de), Gaston Louis Emmanuel Du Fresne Beaucourt, marquis; Allard, Paul; Guiraud, Jean (1925). Revue des questions historiques. V. Palmé. p. 35. Retrieved 26 October 2011. 

Bibliography

  • Abbé Casteig: La défense d'Huningue et le Général Barbanègre en 1815, In: Études historiques et religieuses du Diocèse de Bayonne, 1897, p. 1–13; 51–60; 115-128; 16-168; 220-230; 269-277; 306-314; 349-358; 395-406; 471-478; 502-512; 551-561 online on Gallica (french)
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