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Dominique Martin Dupuy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dominique Martin Dupuy
Bust of General Dupuy Capitole de Toulouse)
Born1767
Toulouse, France
Died21 October 1798 (aged 31)
Cairo, Ottoman Egypt
Allegiance
Kingdom of France
Kingdom of the French
France French First Republic
Years of service1789–98
RankBrigadier General
Battles/warsFrench Revolutionary Wars

Dominique Martin Dupuy (1767 – 21 October 1798) was a French revolutionary brigadier general.

The son of a baker from Toulouse, he engaged in the Régiment d'Artois before the French Revolution. In 1791, he was volunteer in the 1st battalion of the Haute-Garonne regiment, where he was soon elected junior lieutenant-colonel. He took part in the repression of royalist insurrections in Ardèche, then joined the Army of Italy, distinguishing himself at the battle of Lonato, where he commanded the 32nd Line Infantry Demi-brigade. Military governor of Milan in 1797, he accompanied Napoleon Bonaparte in the expedition to Egypt, where he wrote, shortly after Pope Pius VI's death : "We are fooling Egyptians with our pretended interest for their religion; neither Bonaparte nor we believe in this religion more than we did in Pius the Defunct's one".[note 1] He was murdered during the Revolt of Cairo (1798). He had never ceased to correspond with the Jacobins from Toulouse.

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Transcription

Notes and references

  1. ^ Jacques Bainville, Napoleon I, p.94
  1. ^ “Nous trompons les Égyptiens par notre simili attachement à leur religion, à laquelle Bonaparte et nous ne croyons pas plus qu'à celle de Pie le défunt.”[1]


This page was last edited on 14 July 2023, at 09:45
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