NAPOLÉON I. Letter signed "Nap" Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout - Lot 244

Lot 244
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NAPOLÉON I. Letter signed "Nap" Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout - Lot 244
NAPOLÉON I. Letter signed "Nap" Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout. Paris, May 24, 1815. 1/4 p. in-4. Framed under glass. "Mon cousin, donner ordre que le général Loverdo soit jugé comme ayant de sa propre main tué un maire du Dauphiné...". Letter with a distorted echo of the violence in which General de Loverdo was involved at the time of Napoleon I's return to France. At the time of the "Flight of the Eagle", General de Loverdo was in command of the Basses-Alpes (now Alpes-de-Haute-Provence) department. He left Digne for Sisteron, but withdrew from the city on March 4 before the emperor arrived. He moved up to the Dauphiné region, then soon back down to Provence, and concordant reports (albeit from Bonapartists) seem to indicate that he and his troops behaved questionably: at Saint-Julien-en-Beauchêne, in the Drôme region, he molested and allowed his men to molest the mayor who refused to hand over documents received by mail. In Aspremont, Hautes-Alpes, a local man was killed following a brawl with one of the general's soldiers. The mayor, M. Veyne, tried to restore calm, but General de Loverdo hit him hard and was even prevented from stabbing him. In short, a man was killed, but not a mayor, and not by General de Loverdo himself, but by troops, and not in the Hautes-Alpes. The charges against him would be dropped. A native of Corfu, Nicolas de Loverdo (1773-1837) joined the French army in 1792, serving under Murat (1804), then Masséna in Italy (1805), Poland (1807), Portugal (1810) - he served at Essling and was wounded at Wagram (1809). Made a general in 1813, he rallied to the monarchy in 1815, and served in the Duc d'Angoulême's army at the start of the Hundred Days. Dismissed by Napoleon on April 18, 1815, he asked to be allowed to return to Corfu, but was accused of having corresponded with the royalist insurgents in Manosque, and was imprisoned for a time in Grenoble. Appointed lieutenant-general by the Duc d'Angoulême in July 1815, he served in the Spanish Expedition of 1823 and the Algiers Expedition of 1830. Napoléon Ier, Correspondance générale, Paris, Fayard, vol. XV, 2018, n° 39792.
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