Elie Frédéric Forey
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Élie-Frédéric Forey (January 10, 1804 - June 20, 1872) was a Marshal of France.
[edit] Biography
Elie Frédéric Forey was born at Paris.
He studied at the French military academy Saint-Cyr and was commissioned a lieutenant in the 2nd Light Infantry Regiment in 1824. He served in the expedition against Algiers in 1830. Promoted to captain in 1835, he was given the command of a battalion of chasseurs a pied (foot soldiers) in 1839. By the time of the Revolution of 1848, Forey had become a colonel (1844) and commanded his own regiment. Forey soon commanded a brigade and in 1852, and was promoted to général de division for having supported Napoléon III in his coup d'etat.
During the Crimean War, Forey commanded a division with which he served in the siege of Sebastopol. During the Austro-Sardinian War of 1859, Forey again commanded a division with which he saw action at the battles of Montebello and Solferino, where he distinguished himself in breaking the last Austrian positions near the village of Favriano.
Having been made a senator after the end of the war, Forey was named commanding general of the French expeditionary corps to Mexico in 1862. Forey - given the fullest civil and military powers - and his troops landed in September 1862 in Veracruz. In May 1863, his forces captured Puebla after a protracted siege and then Mexico City as well. For this, Forey received as his reward the marshal's baton. After having established a triumvirate to govern Mexico for Emperor Maximilian, Forey handed over command of the expeditionary force to Bazaine and returned to France were he was given command of the 2nd Corps, which he commanded until 1867 when after been struck by a blood cloth in the brain, he was put on the non active list.
Forey died in Paris in 1872, having taken no part in the Franco-Prussian War.