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  1. Jean Lannes ( tiếng Việt: Giăng Lan) (sinh ngày 10 tháng 4 năm 1769, mất ngày 31 tháng 5 năm 1809 sau khi bị thương nặng trong Trận Aspern-Essling ), Công tước Montebello ( Duc de Montebello) là một thống chế của Napoléon I. Lannes nổi tiếng là một vị chỉ huy dũng cảm và tài năng, ông ...

  2. Jean Lannes was born on April 10, 1769 in Lectoure Marshal Lannes'house of birth in Lectoure, a quiet, but small town in Lomagne located between Agen and Auch on the river Gers where his father was a farmer and an estate agent. When the Revolution began, Lannes was a dye worker and enlisted in 1792 in the 2nd Battalion of Volunteers of Gers.

  3. Marshal Jean Lannes. (1769-1809) note: Lannes was one of Napoleon’s Marshals. On the 14th of May 1808, Lannes received the title Duc de Montebello. ( Lannes, Lannes) François Nicolas Fririon. (1766-1821) note: Fririon was the Secretary General of the War Department and the document is dated the 8th of September 1808.

  4. How history is written In 1818, a book called Voyage en Autriche, en Moravie et en Bavière fait à la suite de l'armée française pendant la campagne de 1809, par le chevalier C.L. Cadet de Gassicourt, pharmacien, docteur de la faculté des Sciences, membre de la Légion d'honneur… [what follows are two lines of academic titles]” appeared …

  5. Saalfeld. In December of 1805, Lannes was back in France. He spent the next months with his family and visited his old friends back in Lectoure. He cleared his mind of all things military, but knew that soon he would be called for yet another campaign. The Prussians had remained neutral during the last campaign, but politics tend to ruin uneasy ...

  6. Maréchal Jean Lannes. Jean Lannes, 1 er duc de Montebello, né le 10 avril 1769 à Lectoure (Occitanie) et mort le 31 mai 1809 sur l'île de Lobau, en Autriche, à la suite des blessures reçues à la bataille d'Essling, est un général français de la Révolution et de l'Empire, élevé à la dignité de maréchal d'Empire en 1804 et inhumé au Panthéon en 1810.

  7. On the eve of the battle of Austerlitz, Lannes was ordered to hold the Brunn-Olmutz road, and make a stand against Bagration’s 17,000 troops. On the 2nd of December, the battle of Austerlitz began. During the morning hours, Lannes would hold his ground against the Russians, and by afternoon he went on the offensive.