, commander of the 7th Hussar Regiment. During the first reign of
Napoleon the regiment would earn much fame and recognition. It was part of General
Antoine Lasalle’s Hellish Brigade alongside the 5th Hussar Regiment, earning much respect for bravery and performance in battle, eventually winning over 5 battle honors, but their rise to prominence was slowed when Lasalle was killed at Wagram in 1809. In 1814 it was renamed the ''Régiment de hussards d'Orléans
and on the Bourbon Restoration it took the name Colonel-général des hussards'', briefly reverting to 7th Hussar Regiment during the
Hundred Days before being disbanded in November 1815. The 7th Hussars had several notable commanders including
Édouard de Colbert-Chabanais,
Marcellin Marbot (during the Hundred Days) and
Hercule Corbineau. Future cavalry generals Louis Bro (1781–1844) and Antoine Fortuné Brack (1807–1813) also served with the regiment. ==The 19th Century==