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CLAUSEL (more correctly CLAUZEL), BERTRAND, COUNT (1772–1842) , marshal ofSee also: France, was See also: born at Mirepoix (See also: Ariege) on the 12th of See also: December 1772, and served in the first See also: campaign of the French Revolutionary See also: Wars as one of the See also: volunteers of 1791
.
In See also: June 1795, having distinguished himself repeatedly in the war on the See also: northern frontier (1792–1793) and the fighting in the eastern Pyrenees (1793–1794), Clausel was made a general of brigade
.
In this See also: rank he served in See also: Italy in 1798 and 1799, and in the disastrous campaign of the latter See also: year he won See also: great distinction at the battles of the Trebbia and of Novi
.
In 18o2 he served in the expedition to S
.
Domingo
.
He became a general of division in December 1802, and after his return to France he was in almost continuous military employment there until in 18o6 he was sent to the army of Naples
.
Soon after this See also: Napoleon made him a See also: grand officer of the See also: Legion of Honour
.
In 1808–1809 he was with Marmont in Dalmatia, and at the close of 1809 he was appointed to a command in the army of See also: Portugal under See also: Massena
.
Clausel took See also: part in the See also: Peninsular See also: campaigns of 18 to and 1811, including the Torres Vedras campaign, and under Marmont he did excellent service in re-establishing the discipline, efficiency and mobility of the army, which had suffered severely in the retreat from Torres Vedras
.
In the Salamanca campaign (1812) the result of Clausel's See also: work was shown in the marching See also: powers
of the French, and at the See also: battle of Salamanca, Clausel, who had succeeded to the command on Marmont being wounded, and had himself received a severe wound, See also: drew off his army with the greatest skill, the retreat on See also: Burgos being conducted by him in such a way that the pursuers failed to make the slightest impression, and had themselves in the end to retire from the siege of Burgos (1812)
.
Early in 1813 Clausel was made See also: commander of the Army of the See also: North in See also: Spain, but he was unable to avert the great disaster of See also: Vittoria
.
Under the supreme command of See also: Soult he served through the rest of the Peninsular War with unvarying distinction
.
On the first restoration in 1814 he submitted unwillingly to the Bourbons, and when Napoleon returned to France, he hastened to join him . During the See also: Hundred Days he was in command of an army defending the Pyrenean frontier
.
Even after See also: Waterloo he long refused to recognize the restored See also: government, and he escaped to See also: America, being condemned to See also: death in See also: absence
.
He took the first opportunity of returning to aid the Liberals in France (1820), sat in the chamber of deputies from 1827 to 1830, and after the revolution of 183o was at once given a military command
.
At the See also: head of the army of Algiers, Clausel made a successful campaign, but he was soon recalled by the home government, which desired to avoid complications in See also: Algeria
.
At the same See also: time he was made a marshal of France (See also: February 1831)
.
For some four years thereafter he urged his Algerian policy upon the chamber of deputies, and finally in 1835 was reappointed commander-inchief
.
But after several victories, including the taking of See also: Mascara in 1835, the marshal met with a severe repulse at See also: Constantine in 1836
.
A change of government in France was primarily responsible for the failure, but public opinion attributed it to Clausel, who was recalled in February 1837
.
He thereupon retired from active service, and, after vigorously defending his conduct before the deputies, he ceased to take part in public affairs
.
He lived in See also: complete retirement up to his death at Secourrieu (See also: Garonne) on the 21st of See also: April 1842
.
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