Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Tweet. Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout, duc d'Auerstädt, prince d'Eckmühl (1770-1823) was one of the most capable of Napoleon's marshals, and earned the nickname of the 'Iron Marshal' because of the strict discipline he imposed on his men. Davout was born at Annoux on 10 May 1770.

  2. There, he met the other commanders — Marshal JeanBaptiste Bernadotte commanding the 1st Corps; Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout commanding the 3rd; Marshal Jean Lannes, the 4th; Joachim Murat, the Cavalry; Marshal Jean-Baptiste Bessieres, The Guard; and Marshal Berthiér, the Chief of Staff. At this morning meeting, Napoleon made some adjustments to the plan he had worked out the previous night ...

  3. Louis Nicolas Davout (lwē nēkôlä´ dävōō´), 1770–1823, marshal of France. One of Napoleon's ablest generals, Davout defeated a Prussian army at Auerstedt (1806) and played a brilliant part in the victory at Wagram (1809).

  4. Louis Nicolas Davout d' auerstaedt prince d' eckmuhl. retrieved. 9 October 2017. stated in. SNAC. SNAC ARK ID. w6xp7jnw. subject named as. Louis-Nicolas Davout ...

  5. DAVOUT, LOUIS NICOLAS, duke of Auerstädt and prince of Eckmühl (1770–1823), marshal of France, was born at Annoux (Yonne) on the 10th of May 1770. His name is also, less correctly, spelt Davoût and Davoust. He entered the French army as a sub-lieutenant in 1788, and on the outbreak of the Revolution he embraced its principles.

  6. The Battle of Krasnoi (at Krasny or Krasnoe) unfolded from 15 to 18 November 1812 marking a critical episode in Napoleon 's arduous retreat from Moscow. [12] Over the course of six skirmishes the Russian forces under field marshal Kutuzov inflicted significant blows upon the remnants of the Grande Armée, already severely weakened by attrition ...

  7. Marshal Louis Davout. Louis-Nicolas Davout came to fame in 1804 as Napoleonic France's youngest Marshal, and from that time on he remained one of the most successful and feared military commanders of his time. He remains one of only a handful of officers in history to successfully execute a large-scale tactical double envelopment of an enemy ...