Gazan$95541$ - Übersetzung nach deutsch
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Gazan$95541$ - Übersetzung nach deutsch

FRENCH GENERAL (1765-1845)
Gazan de la Peyriere; Gazan de la Peyriére; General Gazan; Gazan de la Peyrière; Honore Theodore Maxime Gazan de la Peyriere; Honoré Théodore Maxime Gazan; Théodore Maxime Gazan
  • General Gazan at the battle of Dürenstein, 11 November 1805, by [[Charles Nègre]].
  • 22px

Gazan      
n. von Gaza, Einwohner von Gaza

Wikipedia

Honoré Théodore Maxime Gazan de la Peyrière

Honoré Théodore Maxime Gazan de la Peyrière (French pronunciation: ​[ɔnɔʁe teɔdɔʁ maksim ɡazɑ̃ də la peʁjɛʁ]; October 29, 1765 – April 9, 1845) was a French general who fought in the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.

Gazan started his military career as a cannonier in the French Coast Guard. He was later appointed to the Royal Life Guards and, upon the beginning of the French Revolution in 1789, he joined the French National Guard. After service in the Upper Rhine valley and the Netherlands, he joined André Masséna in Switzerland in 1799, and fought at the battles of Winterthur and First Zurich. In August 1805, Gazan commanded of a division of the Army that encircled the Austrians in Ulm. On November 11, under Joseph Mortier, his division provided the advance guard in the advance on Vienna. Mortier over-extended his line of march and Gazan's division was surrounded by Kutuzov's Coalition army; Gazan lost 40 percent of his force in the Battle of Dürenstein. Following the Prussian defeat at the Battle of Jena-Auerstadt, he transferred with Jean Lannes to the Iberian peninsula. There he participated in the French capture of Zaragoza and in several important actions of the long Peninsular War, including the Battle of Albuera and the Battle of Vitoria.

During the Hundred Days, Gazan eventually joined Napoleon's cause, although he did not have a field command. In 1815, he judged Michel Ney's trial for treason but refused to reach a verdict. He dabbled briefly, and unsuccessfully, in politics in the 1820s. In 1830, he was raised to the French peerage and held a divisional command in Marseilles, but by then was an old man, and he retired in 1832. He died in 1845.