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Louis Gabriel Suchet

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Allegiance
  
France

Other work
  
author

Service/branch
  
army

Name
  
Louis-Gabriel Suchet


Years of service
  
1792–1815

Awards
  
Marshal of France

Rank
  
General de division

Children
  
Napoleon Suchet

Louis-Gabriel Suchet LouisGabriel Suchet Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Born
  
2 March 1770 Lyon, France (
1770-03-02
)

Battles/wars
  
French Revolutionary Wars Siege of Toulon Napoleonic Wars Battle of Austerlitz Battle of Saalfeld Battle of Jena Battle of Pultusk Siege of Saragossa Battle of Alcaniz Battle of Maria Siege of Lleida (1810) Siege of Mequinenza Siege of Tortosa (1810) Siege of Tarragona (1811) Battle of Montserrat Battle of Saguntum Siege of Valencia (1812) Battle of Castalla Battle of Ordal War of the Seventh Coalition

Died
  
January 3, 1826, Marseille, France

Books
  
Memoirs of the War in Spain, from 1808 To 1814

Battles and wars
  
French Revolutionary Wars, Siege of Toulon

Similar People
  
Jean‑de‑Dieu Soult, Jean Lannes, Joaquin Blake, Louis‑Nicolas Davout, Jean‑Baptiste Bessieres

Louis gabriel suchet


Louis-Gabriel Suchet (2 March 1770 – 3 January 1826), Duke of Albufera (French: Duc d'Albuféra), was a Marshal of France and one of Napoleon's most brilliant generals.

Contents

Louis-Gabriel Suchet FileLouis Gabriel Suchet Vicent Lpez Portaa Museu de

Life

Louis-Gabriel Suchet wwwnndbcompeople252000097958suchet1sizedjpg

Suchet was born to a silk manufacturer in Lyon. He originally intended to follow his father's business but, serving as a volunteer in the cavalry of the National Guard at Lyon, he displayed abilities which secured rapid military promotions.

Louis-Gabriel Suchet FileAlbrier Louis Gabriel Suchet duc d39Albufra chef

In 1793, he was serving as a battalion chief (chef de bataillon) when he captured the British general Charles O'Hara at Toulon. During the 1796 Italian campaign, he was severely wounded at Cerea on 11 October. In October 1797, he was promoted to command of a half-brigade (demi-brigade). His services in the Tyrol under Joubert that year and in Switzerland under Brune over the next were recognized by his promotion to the rank of brigadier general (général de brigade). He took no part in the Egyptian campaign but was made Brune's chief of staff in August and restored the efficiency and discipline of the army in Italy. In July 1799, he was promoted to division general (général de division) and made Joubert's chief of staff in Italy. In 1800, he was named second-in-command to Masséna. His dexterous resistance to the superior forces of the Austrians with the left wing of Masséna's army, when the right and centre were shut up in Genoa, not only prevented the invasion of France from this direction but contributed to the success of Napoleon's crossing the Alps, which culminated in the battle of Marengo on 14 June. He took a prominent part in the rest of the Italian campaign up to the armistice of Treviso.

In the campaigns of 1805 and 1806, he greatly enhanced his reputation at the Battles of Austerlitz, Saalfeld, Jena, Pułtusk, and Ostrolenka, in the last of which he commanded an infantry division. He obtained the title of count on 19 March 1808. Ordered to Spain, he took part in the Siege of Saragossa, after which he was named commander of the army of Aragon and governor of that region. Within two years, he brought the area into complete submission by wise and adroit administration no less than by his brilliant valor. Beaten by the Spanish at Alcañiz, he sprung back and soundly defeated the army of Blake y Joyes at María on 14 June 1809. On 22 April 1810, he defeated O'Donnell at Lleida. After the siege of Tarragona, he was named marshal of France on 8 July 1811. In 1812, he captured Valencia, for which he was rewarded with the dukedom of Albufera nearby, on 24 January. When the tide turned against France, Suchet defended his conquests one by one until compelled to withdraw from Spain, after which he took part in Soult's defensive campaign of 1814.

The restored Bourbon king Louis XVIII made him a peer of France on 4 June with a seat in the upper house, but this was forfeited (effective 24 July 1815) by his support of Napoleon's return during the Hundred Days. During Napoleon's brief restoration, Suchet was given command of an army on the Alpine frontier.

Louis-Gabriel Suchet Louis Gabriel Suchet Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

He died in the Castle of Saint-Joseph near Marseille on 3 January 1826.

Legacy

Louis-Gabriel Suchet LouisGabriel Suchet Wikiwand

He wrote his memoirs (Mémoires sur Ses Campagnes en Espayne) in two volumes from 1829 to '34.

Louis-Gabriel Suchet Marshal LouisGabriel Suchet

The chicken dish poularde à la d'Albuféra is named after him.

Family

Louis-Gabriel Suchet Louis Gabriel Suchet Histoire de lEurope

He married Honorine Anthoine de Saint-Joseph (Marseille, 26 February 1790 – Paris, 13 April 1884), a niece of Julie Clary, the wife of Joseph Bonaparte, on 16 November 1808. They had three children:

  • Louise-Honorine (1811 – 1885)
  • Louis-Napoleon (1813 – 1877)
  • Anne-Marie (1820 – 1835)
  • References

    Louis-Gabriel Suchet Wikipedia