General Count Jean Rapp (27 April 1771 – 8 November 1821) was a French Army officer during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.
Rapp was born the son of the janitor of the town-hall of Colmar, then located in the Old Customs House.
He began theological studies to become a clergyman, but with his build and heated character, he was better suited to the military, which he joined in March 1788.
As a lieutenant, his reputation grew through his impetuousness as well as the wounds he received in battle.
He was made aide-de-camp of Louis Desaix, who named him captain and took him to Egypt, where Rapp distinguished himself at Sediman, capturing an enemy battery.
For that he was given a squadron and later a brigade by Napoleon.
After the Egyptian campaign, Rapp remained under the command of Desaix until the latter's death at Marengo on 14 June 1800.
He then became aide-de-camp of Napoleon, then the First Consul, a post he held until 1814.
In 1803 he was promoted to brigadier general and in December 1805, he led a memorable attack at Austerlitz, when he charged at the head of two squadrons each of the Mounted Chasseurs and the Mounted Grenadiers of the Guard and the Guard Mameluks and decimated the Chevalier Guards of the Russian Imperial Guard.
He saved Napoleon's life a second time by repelling an attack of Cossacks at the Gorodnia and was again wounded at the passage of the Berezina, fighting alongside Ney in the rear guard.
It was used to observe the border near Strasbourg, and to defend the Vosges.
Ten days after the battle of Waterloo (in which his corps took no part), he met some Coalition forces near Strasbourg and defeated them at the Battle of La Suffel.
After the Waterloo Campaign, he offered his resignation several times, but was reinstated.
Later, Rapp became a deputy of the department of Haut-Rhin and was appointed as treasurer of Louis XVIII in 1819.
He died in Rheinweiler in Baden.