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Jean Louis Debilly
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Jean Louis Debilly : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean Louis Debilly

Jean Louis Debilly, General of Brigade in the Grande Armée, was born 30 July 1763 in Dreux, Eure-et-Loire, France, and died 14 October 1806, in the French victory over the Kingdom of Prussia at the Battle of Jena-Auerstadt. On 14 June 1804, he was awarded the Commanders Cross of the Legion of Honor.
==Military service==

When the French Revolution began in 1789, Jean Louis Debilly was a professor of mathematics in Paris. He joined the Parisian National Guard artillery in 1792, and served for six weeks as provisional commander of the artillery defending the coast at Brest. In June he entered the army, and was promoted to adjutant general. Debilly declined a proffered promotion to remain as General Kléber's chief of staff. He served for a brief time with Army of England, until the Directory abandoned the project. He was transferred to Jean-Baptiste Jourdan's Army of the Danube, where he filled several roles: as commander of cavalry, he supported Dominique Vandamme's detached flank maneuver on Stuttgart, and he was a commander of the left column of the III. Division of the Army at the first Battle of Stockach. He was badly wounded at the French defeat at the First Battle of Zurich〔Charles-Louis Chassin. ''La Vendée patriote, 1793–1800''. Paris: P. Dupont, 1893–95, p. 327〕 in early June 1799, and was unable to ride a horse for several months. Massena promoted him to brigadier general, and assigned him to a staff position as chief artillery and engineers of the III. Division.〔Howard Brown. ''War, revolution, and the bureaucratic state: 1791–1799.'' Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995, ISBN 978-0-19-820542-5, p. 314.〕
In 1806, Debilly was still a brigade commander, but in the I. Division of the I. Corps of Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout. The 10,000-man I. Division on the French left flank at Auerstadt. Jean Louis Debilly commanded the leading brigade of French infantry marching on Hassenhausen in late morning of 14 October. Facing a cavalry charge, Debilly ordered the infantry to form defensive squares. The infantry absorbed the brunt of a triple Prussian cavalry charge; when the Prussian cavalry recoiled under heavy musketry-fire, the brigade reformed its line and marched against the supporting Prussian infantry, pushing them back to Lissbach. In the course of this advance, Debilly was killed.〔David Chandler. ''Jena 1806: Napoleon destroys Prussia.'' London: Osprey, 1993, pp. 36, 76; F. Loraine Petre. ''Napoleon's Conquest of Prussia 1806. London: Lane, 1903, p. 160.〕

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