Junot, Gen Andoche, Duc d'Abrantes (1771-1813). Junot enlisted into a volunteer battalion in 1791 and, as a sergeant, was Bonaparte's secretary at the siege of Toulon in 1793. His star rose with Napoleon's: he was a major on his staff at the start of the 1796 Italian campaign, a colonel at its finish, and a general two years later. He was disappointed not to be appointed marshal in 1804, but was sent on an independent mission to Portugal in 1807 and took Lisbon, covering the last 300 miles (483 km) in fourteen days and only narrowly missing capturing the Portuguese royal court. This achievement brought him his dukedom, but he was soon beaten by Wellington at Vimiero, captured, and repatriated. A corps commander in 1812, he was censured by Napoleon for letting the Russians escape from Smolensk in August. His baton lost for ever, he became deeply depressed and committed suicide by jumping from a window.
— Richard Holmes




