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  1. Comme Maurice de Saxe, Michel-Joseph Maunoury vécut la fin de sa vie dans un village proche de Blois, où il mourut en 1923, avant d'être élevé à la dignité de Maréchal de France peu de temps après. Officier d'artillerie polytechnicien, il effectua une belle carrière qui se termina en 1912 par son placement dans la section de réserve ...

  2. Michel-Joseph Maunoury.jpg 324 × 418; 79 KB Médiathèque de l'architecture et du patrimoine - APZ0002434.jpg 436 × 600; 46 KB Obsèques du Général Maunoury ; les maréchaux Joffre, Foch et le général Berdoulat.jpg 6,633 × 4,719; 3.13 MB

  3. Michel-Joseph Maunoury (17 December 1847-28 March 1923) was a Marshal of France who commanded the French 6th Army during World War I. Michel-Joseph Maunoury was born in Maintenon, France on 17 December 1847, and he was wounded while serving in the Franco-Prussian War as a French Army lieutenant. In 1905, he was given his first corps command, and he served as Military Governor of Paris before ...

  4. Michel Joseph Maunoury (født 17. desember 1847 i Maintenon i departementet Eure-et-Loir, død 28. mars 1923 nær Artenay i departementet Loiret) var en fransk offiser. Liv og virke. Maunoury ble offiser veid artilleriet i 1870, og deltok i den fransk-prøyssiske krig 1870-71.

  5. Michel Joseph Maunoury, född den 17 december 1847 i Maintenon (departementet Eure-et-Loir), död den 28 mars 1923 nära Artenay (departementet Loiret), var en fransk militär. Maunoury blev officer vid artilleriet 1870, deltog i 1870-71 års krig , befordrades inom vapenslaget till överste 1897 och regementschef 1901.

  6. On the night of 3–4 September Joffre sent a handwritten note to Gallieni, wanting Maunoury to push east along the north bank of the Marne, although not specifying a date. This was in line with his modification of Instruction General No 4 (2 September), envisaging a giant pocket from Paris to Verdun, of which he enclosed copies to Gallieni. [38]

  7. Michel-Joseph Maunoury was a commander of French forces in the early days of World War I who was posthumously elevated to the dignity of Marshal of France.