More than
200 years after he died of his battlefield wounds in Russia, archaeologists
believe they have found the remains of one of Napoleon Bonaparte's favorite
generals buried in a park beneath the foundations of a dance floor.
General
Charles Etienne Gudin, whose name is inscribed on the Arc de Triomphe in Paris,
died aged 44 on August 22, 1812, after being hit by a cannon ball during
Napoleon's unsuccessful invasion of Russia.
Gudin was
personally known to and respected by Napoleon, and after his death his heart
was cut out and carried to Paris to be placed in a chapel in the French
capital's Pere Lachaise cemetery.
A bust of
his likeness resides in the Palace of Versailles, and a Paris street bears his
name.
A team of
French and Russian archaeologists say they discovered what they believe to be
Gudin's missing remains on July 6 during a dig in the Russian city of Smolensk,
400 km (250 miles) west of Moscow.
Records
from the period indicate that Gudin's battlefield injuries meant he had to have
his left leg amputated and also suffered damage to his right leg.
Archaeologists
say the remains which they found in a coffin are consistent with those injuries
and believe "with a high degree of probability" that they have found
the aristocrat and veteran of both the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic
wars.
French
historian and archaeologist Pierre Malinovsky, who played a central role in the
discovery, has hailed the find as the culmination of a long search.
"It's
a historic moment not only for me but for I think for our two countries,"
Malinovsky told Smolensk newspaper Rabochy Put (Worker's Journey), saying
Napoleon had personally known Gudin since his childhood.
"Napoleon
was one of the last people to see him alive which is very important, and he's
the first general from the Napoleonic period that we have found."
The
Russian military-historical society, which was also involved in the dig, said
the find, if confirmed, would be a sensation. "It's possible that we'll
have to identify the remains with the aid of a DNA test which could take from
several months to a year," it said.
"The
general's descendants are following the news."
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