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  1. General Maxime Weygand, 1867-1965: Fortune and Misfortune on JSTOR. ANTHONY CLAYTON. Copyright Date: 2015. Published by: Indiana University Press. Pages: 176. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt16gzg78. Select all. (For EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley) (For BibTex) Front Matter. (pp. i-vi) Front Matter. (pp. i-vi)

  2. General Maxime Weygand and his successor, General Maurice Game-lin, quite sensibly concentrated their gaze eastward across the Rhine. On occasion they looked further afield toward Italy and France's East-ern European allies, always with a view to the construction of a more effective cordon sanitaire against the burgeoning Reich. Both generals

  3. 8 de abr. de 2021 · General Maxime Weygand’s refusal to contemplate the capitulation of the French army in 1940 in a direct line from Foch’s actions in 1919, as part of a tradition of ‘conditional obedience’. Bankwitz goes so far as to claim that in 1919 many believed that ‘Clemenceau’s fall was imminent’ and that Foch was ‘possibly [preparing] a coup

  4. Musialik, Zdzislaw, "General Maxime Weygand and the Battle of the Vistula, 1920." Ph.D. dissertation, St. John's University, 1973. Porebski, Barbara, "Polish American Participation in the Armed Struggle for the Independence of Poland in World War I and in the Russian-Polish War." M.A. thesis, State University of New York College at Buffalo, 1977.

  5. role of other Polish soldiers or of the Frenchman, General Maxime Weygand.' From the midst of this historiographical controversy, we may discern the dim outlines of a simultaneous, yet obscured episode: the aborted political comeback of Ignacy Jan Paderewski. It is the purpose of this essay to reconstruct the latter against the background of ...