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  1. Louis-Alexandre Berthier (20 November 1753 – 1 June 1815), Prince of Neuchâtel and Valangin, Prince of Wagram, was a French military commander who served during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars. He was twice Minister of War of France and was made a Marshal of the Empire in 1804.

  2. Louis-Alexandre Berthier. Louis Alexandre Berthier (* 20. November 1753 in Versailles; † 1. Juni 1815 in Bamberg ), durch Napoleon zum prince souverain de Neuchâtel et de Valangin und prince de Wagram erhoben, war ein französischer Offizier in der Zeit der Revolutionskriege sowie Maréchal dEmpire .

  3. Louis Alexandre Berthier, Príncipe de Neuchâtel (20 de febrero de 1753-1 de junio de 1815), Mariscal de Francia, vice-Condestable de Francia desde 1808 y Jefe de Estado Mayor del Ejército de Francia, nació en Versalles y fue amigo personal de Napoleón. Infancia y juventud. Louis Alexandre Berthier en 1792.

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  4. LouiséAlexandre Berthier (1753-1815) senior of the Marshals, was the first of the great chiefs of staff in military history. Born at Versailles of a soldier father, he was carefully brought up and trained for a career as a soldier. His father being in the select Topographical Engineers, Berthier too entered that corps in 1766, and was selected ...

  5. On 1 June 1815 one of Napoleon Bonaparte's most faithful servants, Marshal Berthier, chief-of-staff of the army, died after falling from a window in unclear circumstances. Until now little was known of his private life and his psychological profile: Franck Favier has filled this gap, with his recent biography of Berthier, “the shadow of the ...

  6. Born: November 20, 1753. Place of Birth: Versailles, Yvelines, France. Died: June 1, 1815. Place of Death: Bamberg, Germany. Arc de Triomphe: BERTHIER on the south pillar. Pronunciation: The most indispensable of Napoleon's marshals, Louis Alexandre Berthier was born the son of a senior officer in the Topographical Engineers.

  7. 26 de ene. de 2015 · En el nuevo régimen de Luis XVIII, Berthier acepta una de las capitanías de las nuevas compañías de guardias reales y unido al hecho de que, como Mariscal más mayor, acompaña al resto de mariscales para conocer al Rey en Compiègne, provoca que sea visto como un traidor por Napoleón y los Imperialistas.