When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Jean Victor Marie Moreau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Victor_Marie_Moreau

    Jean Victor Marie Moreau (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ viktɔʁ maʁi mɔʁo], 14 February 1763 – 2 September 1813) was a French general who helped Napoleon Bonaparte rise to power, but later became his chief military and political rival and was banished to the United States. [1] He is among the foremost French generals in military history ...

  3. Battle of Hohenlinden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Hohenlinden

    A French army under Jean Victor Marie Moreau won a decisive victory over an Austrian and Bavarian force led by 18-year-old Archduke John of Austria. The allies were forced into a disastrous retreat that compelled them to request an armistice, effectively ending the War of the Second Coalition. Hohenlinden is 33 km east of Munich in modern Germany.

  4. First Battle of Marengo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Battle_of_Marengo

    On 16 May, Moreau sent Victor on a strong reconnaissance east toward Tortona. [15] Jean Victor Moreau. The French crossed the Bormida at a point called The Cedars. At 8:00 am they split into two columns with General of Brigade Louis Léonard (Luigi Leonardo) Colli-Ricci on the left and General of Brigade Gaspard Amédée Gardanne on the right ...

  5. Rhine campaign of 1796 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhine_Campaign_of_1796

    Moreau lost 2,400 out of 36,000 men while Charles had 2,600 hors de combat out of 32,000 troops. Anxious about the security of his supply lines, though, Charles began a measured and careful retreat to the east. [35] [39] Jean Victor Moreau commanded the Army of the Rhine and Moselle. French successes continued.

  6. Battle of Hohenlinden order of battle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Hohenlinden...

    In the Battle of Hohenlinden on 3 December 1800, a French army commanded by Jean Victor Marie Moreau decisively defeated the army of Habsburg monarchy led by Archduke John. The first action of the campaign was the Battle of Ampfing, two days earlier.

  7. Battle of Dresden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Dresden

    The Tsar and General Jean Victor Moreau, formerly a General of France and by 1813 an adviser to the Coalition, wanted to attack at once; Karl Philipp Fürst zu Schwarzenberg wanted to wait until additional forces arrived. [4] The following day, 26 August, Schwarzenberg sent the Coalition force of over 200,000 men to attack Saint-Cyr.

  8. Battle of Höchstädt (1800) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Höchstädt_(1800)

    Jean Victor Moreau commanded the French Army of the Rhine. Sources are unclear which forces were present. Certainly, it was approximately 40,000 troops, and possibly 60,000, well above the 10,000–30,000 total Austrian and Württemberg numbers.

  9. Battle of Messkirch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Messkirch

    The Battle of Messkirch (5 May 1800) saw a Republican French army led by Jean Victor Marie Moreau attack a Habsburg Austrian army commanded by Paul Kray.At the start of the 1800 campaign in Germany, Moreau's 108,000-strong field army faced Kray's 120,000-man army on opposite sides of the Rhine River.