Georges de Pimodan

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Georges de Pimodan
Georges de Rarécourt de La Vallée de Pimodan
Born(1822-01-29)January 29, 1822
Échenay, Kingdom of France
DiedSeptember 18, 1860(1860-09-18) (aged 38)
Castelfidardo, Papal States
Allegiance Austrian Empire
 Papal States
Years of service1847-1860
RankGeneral
Colonel
Battles/warsRevolutions of 1848 in the Italian states
Hungarian Revolution of 1848
Expedition of the Thousand

Georges de Rarecourt de La Vallée, Marquis de Pimodan (January 29, 1822, in Échenay – September 18, 1860, in Castelfidardo), was a French legitimist émigré officer, who served Austria and the Papal States.

Biography[edit]

Pimodan was the son of Camille de Pimodan, a cavalry captain and gentleman of the King's Chamber, and his wife, born Claire Fauveau de Frénilly.

He studied at the Jesuit college in Fribourg. Admitted to Saint-Cyr, he refused to take the oath of allegiance to Louis-Philippe, whose reign was too liberal for his taste and continued his military studies in Austria, where in 1847 he became a sub-lieutenant in the lancers of the Habsburg emperor. He was sent to garrison in Verona, then in the Austrian Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia. During the revolutions of 1848 in Lombardy, Veneto and in the duchies of Parma and Modena and Reggio, which were supported by Charles Albert of Piedmont-Sardinia, he served with the Austrian troops sent to suppress the rebellions, during which he demonstrated bravery. He was appointed captain and aide-de-camp to Field Marshal Joseph Radetzky von Radetz, commander-in-chief of the Austrian troops in Italy.

He then left, under the orders of General Josip Jelačić, to suppress the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 led by Lajos Kossuth. During the battle of Moor (Komorn), Pimodan, together with a handful of men, took an enemy battery. Having left on reconnaissance, he was taken prisoner by the revolutionaries in Peterwardein, by whom he was condemned to death. He owed his survival to the defeat of the Hungarian army of Artúr Görgey on August 23, 1849. He was named major and count.

In 1850, he published "Souvenirs et scènes de la guerre d’Italie sous le maréchal Radetzky" (Memories and Scenes of the War in Italy under Marshal Radetzky) in the Revue des deux Mondes, followed, in 1851, by "Souvenirs de la guerre de Hongrie sous le prince Windischgraetz et le ban Jellachich" (Memories of the War in Hungary under Prince Windischgraetz and Ban Jellachich), also in the Revue des deux Mondes: the two works were later published together by Allouard and Kaeppelin under the title Souvenirs des campagnes d’Italie et de Hongrie (Memories of the campaigns of Italy and Hungary).

At thirty-three, he was made a colonel. He resigned, returned to France and married, on March 29, 1855, Emma de Couronnel, a daughter of a gentilhomme of Charles X.

A devout Catholic, he joined the ranks of the Papal Army in April 1860, under the command of Lamoricière, and was subsequently appointed chief of staff. He took part in the battles to defend the borders of the Papal States and was promoted to general on August 3.

In September 1860, the papal troops commanded by Lamoricière moved on Ancona, were they were stopped by the fire of the Piedmontese artillery posted on the heights of Castelfidardo. Pimodan was tasked with attacking the cannons. He died during the attack.

Pius IX conferred the title of duke on his descendants.

Tomb of Georges de Pimodan in the Church of St. Louis of the French in Rome.

Family[edit]

On March 29, 1855, Pimodan married Emma de Couronnel, a granddaughter of the Duke of Montmorency-Laval.

  • His son Gabriel (December 16, 1856 – 1924) was a historian and a poet. Among other things, he published a life of his father, Poésies (1875) and Histoire d'une vieille maison le Château d'Echenay (1882). He was general councilor of Haute-Marne and mayor of Échenay.
  • His other son Claude Emmanuel Henri Marie (1859-1931) was an officer and military attaché at the French legation in Japan. He published Promenades en Extrême-Orient, in which he recounted his travels between 1895 and 1898 (Paris Honoré Champion 1900). Around 1895 he married Georgina de Mercy-Argenteau, the last descendant of the Mercy-Argenteau family, Lord of Ochain in Clavier, Belgium. One of their sons, Georges, married Mathilde Pillet-Will, granddaughter of Frédéric Pillet-Will.

Honours[edit]

Bibliography[edit]