Auguste Julien Bigarré
Auguste Julien Bigarré
Auguste Julien Bigarré
French General who was aide-de-camp to King Joseph and Colonel of the 1st Line
Auguste-Julien Bigarré’s service in the Kingdom of Naples was short yet very
profitable for the Army. Born in Le Palais on Belle-Île on 1st January 1775,
Bigarré was the son of the local magistrate and enlisted in the Navy at age 16 as
a volunteer. He served on Saint-Domingue before transferring as a Sous-
Lieutenant in the 9e de Ligne in 1793. Appointed as a staff officer to the Army
of the West in 1795, he was wounded in the left shoulder in the Quiberon
landings before transferring to the 1st Legion des Francs as captain in October
1797. He participated in General Hoche’s expedition to Ireland on board the Les
Droits de l’Homme, where he distinguished himself in saving the vessel from
burning once it was shipwrecked; he was hence recommended by Admiral
Lacrosse and served in Germany (where he was captured at Neuwied) and
Switzerland, distinguishing himself at Soleure, Lucerne and later Hohenlinden.
Serving briefly as captain in the Chasseurs à pied of the Consular Guard, he
transferred as Major of the 4e de Ligne where he met
Joseph Bonaparte, Colonel of the same regiment.
On 15th August 1806 Bigarré was given approval to transfer into the service of
the Kingdom of Naples and was promised a regiment in the Royal Guard; this
never came, as the commands had already been given to other officers. Hence,
he was first appointed aide-de-camp to Joseph (30th November) and then
Colonel of the 1st Line Regiment on 3rd February 1807, stationed in Capua. He
took over the regiment alongside Major Pégot, and assisted greatly in
uniforming it adequately before teaching it French discipline and manoeuvres.
Bigarré commented on the regiment’s initial state as “pitiful, so devoid of
everything”, but then asserted that on March 19th he presented to Joseph the
regiment at the strength of 1,800 “well-dressed, well-armed and well-equipped”
men. Bigarré’s success in making the 1st Line combat-worthy would manifest
itself well in the coming Spanish campaign, where the regiment’s performance
far outshined that of other Italian contingents in Duhesme’s corps.