From Austerlitz to Eylau along with the mounted chasseurs during the Battle of Austerlitz. Painting by Felician Myrbach, 1906. At the
Battle of Austerlitz, the Mamelukes were in the reserve, under Rapp, with the rest of the
Imperial Guard cavalry, when the Russian cavalry charged onto the Pratzen Heights and dispersed two French regiments of the
Vandamme division. After an unsuccessful counterattack by two squadrons of mounted chasseurs supported by three squadrons of
mounted grenadiers, Napoleon ordered Rapp to charge at the head of the last two squadrons of chasseurs and the Mamelukes in order to restore the situation. The Mamelukes threw themselves into the mêlée, but the impact of their charge was mitigated by the mass of men and horses. Lieutenant Renno rushed at a Russian square and opened a breach, which was quickly exploited by the Mamelukes, who broke through the formation and took 120 prisoners. Encouraged by this success, Rapp's cavalrymen seized a battery before contributing to the rout of the
Russian Imperial Guard cavalry. Following this victorious engagement, two Mamelukes each came to throw an enemy standard at Napoleon's feet. The company's losses amounted to one dead and five wounded. The Mamelukes did not take part in the
Battle of Jena–Auerstedt, but
entered Berlin on 27 October 1806. They charged the Russian cavalry at
Pułtusk, losing 20 men wounded. At the
Battle of Eylau, they took part under Captain Renno in the charge of the Guard cavalry led by Marshal
Bessières, following the grenadiers and the mounted chasseurs. This engagement cost them four officers and five Mamelukes wounded. Following the departure of ''
chef d'escadron'' Delaitre, appointed major of the
Polish light cavalry of the Guard in April 1807, Captain Renno assumed interim command.
In the Iberian Peninsula by Francisco de Goya, also titled La carga de los mamelucos'' ("The Charge of the Mamelukes"). The company suffered only minor losses, contrarily to what the painting suggests. In 1808, Napoleon ordered Marshal
Murat to enter Spain and occupy
Madrid. The Mamelukes took part in this expedition. Staunchly Catholic, the Spanish people remembered the period of
Muslim rule in the Iberian Peninsula by the
Moors, and was offended by the presence of the Muslims who entered the capital on 24 March 1808. The
abdication of King
Charles IV and then of his son
Ferdinand in favor of
Joseph Bonaparte, the Emperor's brother, exacerbated tensions between the Spanish and the French. In April, the company of Mamelukes numbered 86 men. Seeking to expand this force, ''chef d'escadron''
Daumesnil, commanding the detachment of chasseurs of the Guard in Spain, asked permission to enlist foreigners, former Mamelukes but also Greeks or Spaniards, which Napoleon refused: "I created this corps to reward those men who served me in Egypt, and not to make a collection of adventurers." On 2 May, the people of Madrid revolted and attacked isolated soldiers. Murat then ordered the cavalry to enter the city to suppress the riot. The mounted chasseurs of the Guard led by Daumesnil advanced first, followed by the Mamelukes and the rest of the Guard cavalry. Passing through
Alcalá Street, where they had rocks thrown at them, the French cavalrymen reached the
Puerta del Sol where many Spaniards had gathered. The Mamelukes's arrival marked the beginning of merciless fighting. The Madrid rebels assaulted the horsemen with knives, jumped onto their mounts behind them and tried to dismount them. For their part, the Mamelukes responded with
scimitar strikes and skillfully cut off heads, a hundred "in an instant" according to
Marbot. In the mêlée, Lieutenant Chahin saved ''chef d'escadron'' Daumesnil, who had fallen to the ground after having his horse killed from under him, before being struck in turn; the residents of a house on San Geronimo Street were also massacred by the Mamelukes in retaliation for the killing of two of their comrades. At the end of the fighting, the company had its five officers injured as well as three horsemen killed or mortally wounded, losses that Ronald Pawly considered as "relatively limited" compared to the painter
Goya's depictions. Edward Ryan instead mentions only two killed. In July, the Mamelukes and chasseurs of Daumesnil served as escorts for King Joseph during his first brief stay in Madrid. A few months later, in November 1808, Napoleon entered Spain at the head of the Grande Armée in order to expel the British from the peninsula. The Mamelukes, who had in the meantime taken part in the
Battle of Medina de Rioseco, took part in the pursuit of the retreating British troops towards
La Coruña. On 29 December, they arrived at
Benavente where the enemy rearguard cavalry under
Henry Paget was positioned. The three squadrons of mounted chasseurs of the Guard and the detachment of Mamelukes, under the command of General
Lefebvre-Desnouettes, crossed the river
Esla and charged towards the city, but Paget striked at the French from the flank and managed to
push them back. This setback cost the Mamelukes two killed - including Lieutenant Azaria -, two wounded and one prisoner.
Second Austrian campaign and return to Spain In 1809, after returning to their garrison at Melun, the company of Mamelukes joined the Grande Armée to take part in the Austrian campaign of the
War of the Fifth Coalition. They missed the
Battle of Essling but took part in that of
Wagram, where the Mameluke Baraka was wounded. Once the campaign was over, the Mamelukes received the order to return to Spain. Without being directly engaged in the front line of battles, they actively fought against the
guerrillas, which caused them several losses. They also distinguished themselves at
Prádanos on 24 May 1809, where a charge by the company led by Captain Renno resulted in the capture of around a hundred Spanish soldiers. On 1 March 1812, the company, now numbering no more than 55 men, left the peninsula definitively to join the army stationed in
Poland, in preparation for the
Russian campaign.
Final campaigns: Russia, Germany and France On 1 July 1812, shortly after the entry of the French army into Russia, the company's strength was increased to 109 horsemen. The Mamelukes, as with the rest of the Imperial Guard, were not actively engaged in the first phase of the campaign. Napoleon
occupied Moscow in mid-September but had to leave the following month with the arrival of winter. During the retreat from Russia, the Mamelukes had their first serious engagement at the on 25 October, during which they helped to protect the Emperor from a
Cossack attack. ''Chef d'escadron'' Kirmann was wounded on this occasion. Their losses increased from this point forward: by 16 December 1812, 34 men had been declared dead, captured or missing. The losses suffered in the Russian campaign required a reorganization of the Guard cavalry. On 18 January 1813, the Mameluke company became the 10th Squadron of the mounted chasseurs of the Guard. This squadron was composed of the 1st Company, attached to the
Old Guard, and the 2nd Company, integrated into the Young Guard and essentially made up of conscripts. Until June 1813, the Mamelukes remained in the background of the battles and ensured the Emperor's protection. They distinguished themselves however on 22 May at the
Battle of Reichenbach when, sent to support the Polish lancers at the head of the mounted chasseurs, the squadron deployed against a brigade of Russian cuirassiers and executed a short-range carbine salvo, causing their enemies to flee. In October, the Mamelukes were present at the
Battle of Leipzig where one of them was taken prisoner. Napoleon, defeated at Leipzig, ordered a retreat towards France. On 30 October, the Bavarians tried to stop the French army at the
Battle of Hanau. During the Guard cavalry's successive charges against the enemy cavalry and artillery, the Mamelukes lost ''chef d'escadron'' , to injury. In total, 59 of the squadron's cavalrymen died during the
German campaign of 1813. Despite these losses, the Mamelukes distinguished themselves again in 1814 during the
French campaign. They were present at the
First Battle of Saint-Dizier on 27 January. Arriving on 10 February near
Montmirail with Napoleon, they charged
the next day following
Letort's
Dragoons of the Imperial Guard; the latter broke through several Russian infantry squares, whose survivors were cut to pieces by the Mamelukes and the mounted grenadiers. They were present at the
Battle of Château-Thierry on 12 February and at that of
Arcis-sur-Aube on 20 and 21 March, where the Mameluke Riva was wounded eight times. Three days later, the Allies decided to push towards Paris and defeated the troops of Marshals
Mortier and
Marmont at
Fère-Champenoise on 25 March. General
Wintzingerode's Russian contingent, charged with creating a diversion, was routed by Napoleon at
Saint-Dizier on 26 March, where a platoon of Mamelukes, charging with the Guard cavalry, seized a battery of 18 cannons. Nevertheless, on 30 March, the Coalition armies attacked the capital. General Dautancourt took command of the cavalry of the Guard present in Paris, which brought together mounted grenadiers, chasseurs, dragoons, Mamelukes, lancers and Polish
scouts. During the
Battle of Paris, this disparate force took part in the defense of
Clichy and then of the
Montmartre hill, before retreating under enemy artillery fire.
Elba and the Hundred Days . Following Napoleon's abdication and the
restoration of the Bourbons, the company of Mamelukes of the Old Guard was integrated into the Royal Corps of Chasseurs de France (
Corps royal des chasseurs de France), essentially composed of former mounted chasseurs of the Guard. On that date, of the 41 horsemen still in the unit, only 18 were genuine Mamelukes from the Egyptian campaign. The Young Guard company was transferred to the 7th mounted chasseurs Regiment; in addition, an officer and seven Mamelukes accompanied the Emperor to the island of
Elba as part of the squadron of Polish lancers of the Guard. During the
Hundred Days, the refugees from the Marseille depot enthusiastically welcomed Napoleon's return. A decree of 24 April 1815 reorganized the Mameluke squadron into two companies: the Mamelukes serving in the Royal Corps of Chasseurs de France were reintegrated, as well as 94 other Mamelukes who had returned to service. In total, the unit counted approximately 120 men. Its commander was ''chef d'escadron'' Kirmann. In June 1815, alongside the mounted chasseurs of the guard, the Mamelukes took part in the
Belgian campaign, where they were present at the battles of
Ligny and
Waterloo. They suffered no losses during this campaign. Under the
Second Bourbon Restoration, the true Mamelukes returned to their families who had settled in Marseille. During the
Second White Terror, royalists in Marseille attacked the refugee community and many Mamelukes were murdered by the mob; the population of the depot fell by two thirds. Part of it then left for Egypt before returning to France shortly afterwards for fear of reprisals from the Turks, while others were sent to
Île Sainte-Marguerite by order of the authorities. After these events, most of the former Mamelukes were reduced to living in great poverty. Four of them, former officers of the corps, took part in the
conquest of Algeria in 1830 as interpreters. In total, 577 men served in the Mamelukes of the Guard, according to the nominal list drawn up by Jean Savant. One of the last survivors of the unit, photographed around 1858, was François Ducel, a Frenchman born in 1789 in
Saône-et-Loire who enlisted in the Mamelukes in March 1813. ==Commanders==