Édouard Michel du Faing d'Aigremont
Édouard Michel du Faing d'Aigremont | |
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Born | 14 May 1855 Charleroi, Belgium |
Died | 15 June 1931(1931-06-15) (aged 76) Fays-Famenne, Belgium |
Buried | Ixelles, Belgium |
Allegiance | ![]() |
Years of service | 1871-1920 |
Rank | Lieutenant-general |
Battles/wars | World War I
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Baron Augustin Édouard Michel du Faing d'Aigremont, born Augustin Édouard Michel (14 May 1855 – 15 June 1931) was a Belgian army officer and general who served during World War I.
Career
Son of a mining engineer, he studied at the Athénée de Charleroi, and in 1871 at the Royal Military Academy in Brussels. He qualified in 1873 as an artillery officer, and rose through the ranks to become Inspector General of the Artillery in 1906.
In 1912, he was promoted to Lieutenant-General and received the command of the 4th Army Division based on in the Fortified Position of Namur. In August 1914, he commanded the division during the Siege of Namur, retreating towards Antwerp. He took part in the Battle of the Yser, where the 4th Division occupied the front between Kaaskerke and Tervate along the Nieuwpoort-Diksmuide railway line until its relief on 26 October 1914. From December 1914 to January 1917, the 4th Division remained in Wulpen. It participated on the general allied offensive in 1918 and crossed the Scheldt river on 8 November 1918, reaching the city of Ghent. After the war, Michel commanded the Belgian forces during the Occupation of the Rhineland. He retired in 1920 in order to work with the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History in Brussels.
In 1921, he was made Baron du Faing d'Aigremont. The barracks of the 17th Regiment of the Line in Mechelen was named after him, and numerous streets in different towns across the country are named in his honour.
Honours
Belgium: 1919 : Grand Cordon in the Order of Leopold.[1]
References
- ^ "Op de Balkan stijgt de temperatuur".
External links
- Michel du Faing d'Aigremont memorial in Namur at Traces of World War I
- v
- t
- e
- G. Baix (1st Division of the Army)
- Émile Dossin (2nd Division of the Army)
- Gérard Leman (3rd Division of the Army)
- Édouard Michel (4th Division of the Army)
- Ruwet (5th Division of the Army)
- Albert Lantonnois van Rode (6th Division of the Army)
- Léon de Witte (Cavalry Division)