Pascal Vaugrenet: Difference between revisions

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== Execution and death==
== Execution and death==
==Legacy and memorials==
* A [[Statue of Pascal Vaugrenet, Noorderstein|40-meter-tall statue]] of Vaugranet was built in [[Noorderstein, The Furbish Islands|Noorderstein]], [[The Furbish Islands]], on the 80th anniversary of his coronation in 1882.


{{Gagium topics}}
{{Gagium topics}}

Latest revision as of 04:30, 6 February 2023

Pascal Vaugrenet
Pascalvaugrenet.png
Emperor Vaugrenet, by Tristan Demange, 1807
Emperor of Gagium
Reign7 April 1802 – 19 September 1809
Coronation24 July 1802
TBD
SuccessorTBD (as King of Gagium)
Count of Marsan
Reign26 January 1793 – 7 April 1802
SuccessorDamien Comvillier
Born(1771-07-13)13 July 1771
Marsan, Celleroy, Gagium
Died7 April 1811(1811-04-07) (aged 39)
Fort-Anfree, Rachelia, Gagium
Burial29 December 1814
Spouse
Ludivine of TBD
(m. 1797; div. 1908)
Regnal name
Vaugrenet I
FatherFelix Vaugrenet
MotherInès Vaugrenet

Pascal Vaugrenet (13 July 1771 – 7 April 1811), later known by his regnal name Vaugrenet I, was a Gagian military commander and political leader who rose to prominence during the Triumphant Revolution and subsequent internal instability. For two years, Vaugrenet served as Grand Magistrate of the Gagian Magistry, then as the Emperor of the Gagians of his self-declared First Gagian Empire from 1802 to 1809. In 1811, Vaugrenet was executed in Fort-Anfree, the then-capital of Gagium. Pascal Vaugrenet is considered a highly controversial figure, and his cultural and political legacy endures in modern times. Vaugrenet initiated and led many reforms in Gagian society, many of them modelled after practices of the Mavonan Empire. Furthermore, Vaugrenet is considered one of the greatest military commanders in history, and his campaigns across Stratea are studied across the globe.

Early life

Early career

Triumphant Revolution

Ruler of Gagium

Execution and death

Legacy and memorials