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  1. Raoul François Charles Le Mouton de Boisdeffre, (Alençon, 1839 - París, 1919) fue un militar francés. Hijo de Adolphe Le Mouton de Boisdeffre y de Elisa Bauny de Récy, Raoul de Boisdeffre se desempeñaría desde muy joven en la carrera militar y se alistó en la Escuela Superior Militar en 1858.

    • Francesa
    • 24 de agosto de 1919 (80 años), París (Francia)
  2. Raoul Le Mouton de Boisdeffre, ou plus communément Raoul de Boisdeffre, est un général français né le 6 février 1839 à Alençon et mort le 24 août 1919 à Paris. Il a été chef d'état-major général de l'armée de 1893 à 1898, notamment lors du déclenchement de l' affaire Dreyfus . Carrière militaire.

    • Raoul François Charles Le Mouton de Boisdeffre
  3. Raoul François Charles Le Mouton de Boisdeffre, or more commonly Raoul de Boisdeffre (6 February 1839, Alençon – 24 August 1919, Paris) was a French Army general. Biography. He studied at the College of Saint Cyr and at the Staff-College. During the Franco-Prussian War he was a major of cavalry and aide-de-camp of General Antoine ...

  4. Raoul François Charles Le Mouton de Boisdeffre, fue un militar francés. For faster navigation, this Iframe is preloading the Wikiwand page for Raoul Le Mouton de Boisdeffre . Home

    • Colonel Picquart
    • The "Petit Bleu"
    • Major Esterhazy
    • Picquart's Investigations
    • The Secret Dossier
    • General Billot
    • The Castelin Interpellation
    • Henry's Confirmatory Letter
    • Machinations Against Picquart
    • References

    Not long after the condemnation of Alfred Dreyfus, the military counter-intelligence section at the French War Ministry had a change of leadership. Lt Col Jean Conrad Sandherr, incapacitated by illness, resigned from the post simultaneously with his assistant, Cordier on 1 July 1895. Georges Picquart, who had been in charge of reporting the proceed...

    The chief of the staff, Raoul Le Mouton de Boisdeffre, told Picquart that in his opinion the Dreyfus affair was not definitively settled. They believed that they must be on the lookout for a counter-attack from the Jews. In 1894, they had not been able to discover a motive for the treason; there was therefore every reason for continuing the search ...

    Picquart began by getting information about the personality of Major Esterhazy, to whom the "petit bleu" was addressed. He spoke to his friend Major Curé, one of Esterhazy's fellow soldiers. He discovered that Esterhazy had been under suspicion of malversation in Tunis and of espionage; he learned that Major Esterhazy was constantly absent from his...

    At first Picquart did not establish any connection in his own mind between the "petit bleu" and the bordereau; he simply thought he was on the track of a fresh traitor, and hoped to catch him in the act. However, Esterhazy had been warned, and not only was it impossible to surprise him in any compromising visit, but he showed himself openly at the ...

    Picquart told General de Boisdeffre about his discovery, and upon the order of the general and of the minister of war, Jean-Baptiste Billot, he was directed to continue his inquiry as quietly as possible. Boisdeffre did not seem to be interested in pursuing the case. If Esterhazy were really a traitor, he would be dismissed from the army quietly; a...

    Most of the officers involved in the case were afraid that they would lose their positions in the military if they publicly confessed the part they had taken in the mistaken conviction of Dreyfus in 1894 and the subsequent cover-up. General Billot, to whom Picquart, following Boisdeffre's orders, made a complete report of the case, appeared deeply ...

    In September 1896, the false rumor of Dreyfus's escape brought the case abruptly back to public notice. The anti-Jewish press inveighed against the accomplices, the protectors of the traitor; a member of the Chamber, André Castelin, announced that at the opening of the next session he would formally question the ministry on the subject. The Dreyfus...

    Meanwhile, Henry told General Gonse that it would be advisable to put the secret dossier of the Dreyfus case out of the way. Gonse removed the dossier on 30 October. A few days later Henry brought him a letter written in blue pencil from the Italian military attachéAlessandro Panizzardi which, he said, he had just found among some scraps in Madame ...

    Meanwhile, Picquart was sent from Nancy to Marseille, and later on to Tunis, where he was attached to the Fourth Regiment of sharpshooters in garrison at Sousse. General Gonse wrote to him upon the question of money, as if to suggest purchasing his silence. Picquart recorded the history of his discovery in a codicil to his will, which he intended f...

    This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Joseph Jacobs (1901–1906). "Dreyfus Case (L'Affaire Dreyfus)". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia...

  5. Raoul Le Mouton de Boisdeffre (6 February 1839-24 August 1919) was a French Army general who was involved in the Dreyfus affair of the 1890s. Raoul Le Mouton de Boisdeffre was born in Alencon, France in January 1839, and he graduated from Saint-Cyr and the Staff College before serving as a...

  6. Raoul François Charles Le Mouton de Boisdeffre, o más comúnmente Raoul de Boisdeffre (6 de febrero de 1839, Alençon - 24 de agosto de 1919, París) fue un general del ejército francés . Estudió en el Colegio de Saint Cyr y en el Staff-College.