In the year VIII Ramel de Nogaret married Ange-Pauline-Charlotte Panckoucke, grand-niece of
Charles-Joseph Panckoucke, the encyclopedist and founder of
Le Moniteur. He remained out of politics during the
French Consulate (1799–1804) and most of the
First French Empire. By inheritance and his business activities Ramel had accumulated a large fortune, which gave him 20,000 francs of income in 1811. He bought a beautiful modern country house in Montolieu, the "little Versailles", surrounded by fertile parkland. In 1812 Ramel de Nogaret accepted a position in the local government of Aude. During the
Hundred Days of 1815 when
Napoleon returned from exile he accepted the position of prefect in
Normandy. After the second
Bourbon Restoration, in January 1816 he was exiled as a regicide, and settled in Belgium, where he returned to his family's business of textile manufacture and trade. Dominique-Vincent Ramel died on 31 March 1829 in
Brussels, Belgium. Ramel de Nogaret had two daughters by his 1799 marriage with Pauline Panckoucke, Pauline and Mélanie. In 1820 the celebrated painter Jacques-Louis David (30 August 1748 – 29 December 1825) made portraits of Ramel and his wife, Ange-Pauline-Charlotte. The pictures remained in the family until 1913. ==Selected publications==