Roustam Raza

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Roustam Raza
Roustam - Vernet.jpg
Portrait of Roustam Raza, the mamluck of Napoleon by Horace Vernet, 1810
Born
Rostam

1783
Tiflis, Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti (present-day Tbilisi, Georgia)
DiedDecember 7, 1845 (aged 61–62)
NationalityArmenian
CitizenshipFrance
Spouse(s)Alexandrine Douville
ChildrenAchille

Roustam Raza (1783 – 7 December 1845), also known as Roustan or Rustam, was Napoleon's mamluk bodyguard and secondary valet.[1]

Early life[]

Roustam was born in Tiflis, Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti (present-day Tbilisi, Georgia), to Armenian parents. At thirteen he was kidnapped and sold into slavery in Cairo. The Turks gave him the name Idzhahia. The Sheikh of Cairo presented him to General Napoleon Bonaparte in 1798, during the French campaign in Egypt.

In the service of Napoleon[]

Painting of the Battle of Abensberg by Jean-Baptiste Debret, 1810. Roustam Raza (recognizable by his turban) is depicted in the background at the far right

Roustam served Napoleon for fifteen years, travelling with the First Consul and subsequent Emperor on all of his campaigns. The mamluk's role was that of a personal attendant, taking care of Napoleon's weapons and clothing, and supervising the serving of his meals. Acting as a bodyguard he slept near to the emperor. On ceremonial occasions, such as the coronation of 1804, Roustom would be in attendance dressed in full "oriental" costume.

Later life[]

In 1814 Roustan married Mademoiselle Douville in Dourdan and refused to follow the Emperor in his exile to Elba after the first Bourbon Restoration.[2][3] He offered his service to Napoleon during the Hundred Days, but the recently re-crowned emperor refused to even receive him and spoke bitterly of Raza's "betrayal" in his recollections written at St. Helena. Raza later claimed that he feared Napoleon would commit suicide and that he would be blamed for his death. He cited this as the reason he left Napoleon during the marshals' revolt, just prior to the emperor's abdication.[4]

Raza's position as second valet was filled during the Hundred Days restoration by his former assistant and the Imperial Librarian, Louis Étienne Saint-Denis; whom Napoleon took to calling Ali. Like Raza, Saint-Denis also wrote an auto-biography about his time in Napoleon's Service.

On 7 December 1845, Roustam died in Dourdan.[5] His memoirs of his service to Napoleon were first published in 1888.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "NAPOLEON AS HIS MAMELUKE SERVANT SAW HIM; Memoirs of Roustam Come to Light---Intimate Anecdotes of the Emperor by His Personal Attendant, Whom Bonaparte Brought Back with Him from Egypt and Who Served Him for 17 Years". The New York Times. 7 May 1911.
  2. ^ Roustam, mameluck de Napoléon. D'après des mémoires et de nombreux documents inédits tirés des Archives Nationales et des Archives du ministère de la Guerre. [Ed.Hector Fleischmann]. — Paris: Albert Méricant, 1910. — 384 pp. (in French)
  3. ^ Alexander Mikaberidze (September 9, 2001). "The Georgian Mameluks in Egypt". www.napoleon-series.org.
  4. ^ "Louis Étienne Saint-Denis: Napoleon's French Mameluke - Shannon Selin". Shannon Selin. 2013-12-27. Retrieved 2017-10-02.
  5. ^ Registre d'état civil de Dourdan (1845), Archives départementales de l'Essonne

External links[]


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