Honorific Prefix: | Lieutenant-General |
John Sontag | |
Nickname: | General Ney |
Birth Date: | 27 October 1747 |
Birth Place: | The Hague, Netherlands |
Death Date: | 4 May 1816 |
Death Place: | Earl's Court, United Kingdom |
Allegiance: | United Kingdom |
Branch: | British Army |
Serviceyears: | 1780–1792 1793–1816 |
Rank: | Lieutenant-General |
Unit: | 12th Light Dragoons The Guides |
Battles: |
|
Lieutenant-General John Salomon Balthasar Sontag was a British Army officer who briefly served as General Officer Commanding the 7th Division during the Peninsular War.
Sontag was born the son of Johan Wilhelm Philip Sontag and his wife, Anna Hoek, in The Hague.[1]
He joined the British Army in 1779[2] and was naturalised as a British citizen in February 1780.[3] He became aide-de-camp to General Ralph Abercromby in 1795 and accompanied Abercromby during his expedition to the West Indies in 1796 and during the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland in 1799.[2] He also saw action during the Walcheren Campaign and became Military Governor of Middelburg in August 1809; General George Don then appointed him Head of the Provisional Government of Walcheren in November 1809. He left when the British Forces withdrew from Walcheren in December 1809.[2]
He served as temporary General Officer Commanding the 7th Division in Spain during the Peninsular War from 1 August 1811 until relinquishing his position, due to ill health, in October 1811.[4]