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Marmont and king
Marmont accompanied the king into exile and forfeited his marshalate.

Marmont and Louis
In addition to Bonaparte himself, Louis Alexandre Berthier, Auguste de Marmont, Jean Lannes, Joachim Murat, Louis Desaix, Jean Reynier, Antoine-François Andréossy, Jean-Andoche Junot, Louis-Nicolas Davout and Dumas were all passengers on the cramped Mediterranean crossing.
* Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de Marmont, Duke of Ragusa ( 1774 – 1852 ), Marshal of the Empire in 1809
Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de Marmont, 1st Duke of Ragusa ( 20 July 1774 – 22 March 1852 ) was a French General, nobleman and Marshal of France.
Marmont had married, in 1798, Hortense de Perregaux, the daughter of Jean-Frédéric Perregaux, a Swiss ( and Protestant ) banker, later a founder and regent of the Banque de France, and Adélaïde de Praël de Surville, herself the natural daughter of the banker to the court of Louis XV, Nicolas Beaujon.
de: Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de Marmont
lmo: Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de Marmont
hu: Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de Marmont
pms: Auguste Frédéric Louis Marmont
pl: Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de Marmont
sl: Auguste Frédéric Louis Viesse de Marmont

Marmont and during
The couple moved into the Chateau Marmont Hotel in West Hollywood for a few months until they arranged to lease Patty Duke's home on Summit Ridge Drive in Beverly Hills during the latter part of 1968.
In 1956 a replica castle exterior, complete with drawbridge, was built in the grounds of the estate for filming of ' The Adventures of Sir Lancelot ' series ( it features prominently in title sequence for the colour episodes ), this was used predominantly for castle scenes in series 3 & 4 of Robin Hood, it first appears as Chataeu Marmont in ' The Bandit of Brittany ' during series 2, in place of the standing castle and village set on the backlot at Nettlefold studios used in series 1 & most of series 2.
The acquaintance ripened into intimacy ; Marmont became General Bonaparte's aide-de-camp, remained with him during his disgrace and accompanied him to Italy and Egypt, winning distinction and promotion to general of brigade.
The relationship intensified during July / August 1964, and after Southern's wife and son went back to East Canaan, Southern and Gerber moved in together in a suite at the Chateau Marmont hotel.

Marmont and following
He fought under Marshal Auguste Marmont at the Battle of Leipzig ( 1813 ), but in the following year returned to Poland, unable to continue the fight any further.

Marmont and Marshal
* July 10 – French Marshal Marmont engages in the inconclusive Battle of Znaim against the Austrians.
Marshal Marmont, who had been called in the day before to remedy the situation, took the offensive against the rioters, but some of his men defected to the rioters and by the afternoon he had to retreat to the Tuileries Palace.
On the March 25 the Allies defeated Marshal Marmont and Marshal Mortier at the Battle of Fère-Champenoise, and three days later linked up with Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher at Meaux.
He was replaced by Marshal Auguste Marmont.
On 13 February, reeling from his successive defeats, Blücher looked to disengage from Napoleon and instead manoeuvre with a part of his forces to fall upon the isolated Corps of Marshal Auguste de Marmont, who was defending Napoleon ’ s rear.
While the actual pitched battle was short, the French infantry, under Marshal Marmont, and most of all the cavalry, under General Emmanuel de Grouchy, launched a relentless pursuit that rode down the enemy.
After his consecutive defeats, Field-marshal Blücher decided to disengage from Napoleon and move a significant force against the isolated French Army Corps of Marshal Marmont, at Étoges.
* VI Corps, commanded by Marshal of the Empire Auguste de Marmont:
Marshal Marmont then launched his five squadrons to the rescue and the cavalry promptly forced the Prussians back to the village, with one of their battalions taken prisoner, after taking refuge in an isolated farm.
Following Marmont at a short distance were further reinforcements, two Guard infantry divisions ( Friant and Curial ) under the command of Marshal Ney and with them was Napoleon himself.
After defeats at the battles of Sabugal and Fuentes de Oñoro, he was replaced by Marshal Auguste Marmont and did not serve again, being made a local commander at Marseilles.
He defeated Marshal MacDonald at the Katzbach, and by his victory over Marshal Marmont at Möckern led the way to the decisive defeat of Napoleon at Leipzig.
* Marshal Marmont, duc de Raguse – 1808 ( extinct 1852 ) – present-day Dubrovnik, on the Croatian coast ; conquered as part of Napoleon's own Italian kingdom, soon part of France's imperial enclave the Illyrian province
The French Army of Portugal, now reconstituted under Marshal Auguste Marmont, had joined up with Soult's Army of the South, and Wellington was forced to pull his 44, 000 men back across the border to Elvas.
* Napoleon monument, erected in the honour of the French Marshal Marmont in 1808.
* Auguste Marmont, duke of Ragusa ( 1774 – 1852 ), Marshal of France
The most notable action in which Beresford held independent command occurred in 1811 when a combined Anglo-Portuguese and Spanish army under his command, intercepted a French army commanded by Marshal Soult who had been ordered by Marshal Auguste Marmont to move to protect the important Spanish fortress-city of Badajoz.
On 22 July 1812, the important Battle of Salamanca was fought, giving the Anglo-Portuguese forces a decisive victory over the French under Marshal Marmont.

Marmont and Ney
The French were separated in two massive rings at this point: the forces of Ney, Lannes and Murat to the west were containing Mack, while those of Soult, Davout, Bernadotte and Marmont to the east were charged with guarding against any possible Russian and Austrian incursions.
Marmont massed at Graz with the II Corps while Ney reached Klagenfurt with his VI Corps.

Marmont and .
* 1883 – Percy Marmont, British actor ( d. 1977 )
However, upon hearing of the surrender of his last army under Auguste Marmont he realizes that all is lost and accepts the abdication pleas of his marshallate.
* March 3 – Percy Marmont, stage & screen actor ( b. 1883 )
** Percy Marmont, British stage & screen actor ( d. 1977 )
* July 20 – Auguste Marmont, French marshal ( d. 1852 )
* July 22 – Auguste Marmont, French marshal ( b. 1774 )
Matters came to a head when the French commander in the Republic, Auguste de Marmont, ordered in November, 1804, that French coast guards and customs officials were to take over the responsibility for the surveillance of cargoes in Dutch ports, with powers of confiscation without reference to Dutch authorities.
The members of the Chamber of Deputies sent a five-man delegation to Marmont, urging him to advise the King to revoke the ordinances and thus assuage the anger of the protesters.
By chance, both Marmont and his deputy commander General Bonet were wounded by shrapnel in the first few minutes of firing.
Wellington withdrew, as the odds turned against him, with the armies often marching close together and Marmont repeatedly threatening Wellington's supply line.
Suddenly, he observed that Marmont had made the tactical error of separating his left flank from his main body.
( Wellington's reaction has been differently reported, with little emphasis that both he and Marmont had been looking for an opening for weeks.
Spotting a dust cloud in the distance, Marmont surmised that most of the British army was in retreat and that he faced only a rearguard.
Marmont was mistaken.
Wellington had planned to retreat if outflanked, but he was watching warily to see if Marmont would make a blunder.
Marmont planned to move along an L-shaped ridge, with its angle near a steep height known as the Greater Arapile.
That morning, the French occupied only the short, north-pointing part of the L. For his flanking move, Marmont sent his divisions marching west along the long side of the L. The Anglo-Allied army lay behind another L-shaped ridge, inside and parallel to the French L, and separated from it by a valley.
As Marmont reached to the west, the French became strung out along the long side of the L. Thomières's division led the way, supported by Curto's cavalry.

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