Louis Klein

Louis Klein
Klein has light curly hair and a round face; he wears heavy epaulets on the shoulders of an ornately embroidered jacket, decorated with military medals.
Born29 January 1761 (1761-01-29)
Blâmont Meurthe-et-Moselle
Died2 November 1845 (1845-11-03) (aged 84)
Paris
Allegiance
Service / branchCavalry
Years of service1777–1787; 1790–1814
RankGeneral of Division
Battles / warsFrench Revolutionary Wars
Napoleonic Wars
AwardsOfficer's Grand Cross, Légion d'honneur
Count of the Empire, 1808
Grand Cordon, Order of the Lion of Bavaria
Order of Saint Louis
Peer of France, 1831.[1]
Other workSenator.

Dominique Louis Antoine Klein (19 January 1761 – 2 November 1845) served in the French military during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars as a general of cavalry.

Initially part of the house guard at the royal residences for Louis XVI, Klein left the military in 1787. During the French Revolution, he enlisted and rose rapidly from a lieutenant to a brigadier general; he participated in the French invasion of southwestern Germany in 1796, and was part of the Army of the Danube in 1799. His cavalry played critical roles in the battles of Austerlitz and Jena and Auerstadt. Following the Prussian campaign, he retired from active service, entered politics, and performed administrative duties in Paris.

Klein served in the French Senate, and voted for Napoleon Bonaparte's abdication in 1814; he did not participate in the Hundred Days and Louis XVIII of France raised him to the French peerage upon the second restoration.

  1. ^ (in French) Henri Gourdon de Genouillac. Dictionnaire des anoblis, 1270-1868, suivi du Dictionnaire des familles. Paris, Bachelin-Deflorenne, 1875, p. 157.