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See also: prince of See also: Eckmuhl (1770-1823), marshal of See also: France, was See also: born at Annoux (See also: Yonne) on the loth of May 1770
.
His name is also, less correctly, spelt See also: Davout and Davoust
.
He entered the French army as a sub-See also: lieutenant in 1788, and on the outbreak of the Revolution he embraced its principles
.
He was chef de bataillon in a volunteer corps in the See also: campaign of 1792, and distinguished himself at See also: Neerwinden in the following spring
.
He had just been promoted general of brigade when he was removed from the active See also: list as being of See also: noble See also: birth
.
He served, however, in the See also: campaigns of 1794–1797 on the Rhine, and accompanied Desaix in the See also: Egyptian expedition of See also: Bonaparte
.
On his return he took See also: part in the campaign of See also: Marengo under See also: Napoleon, who placed the greatest confidence in his abilities, made him a general of division soon after Marengo, and in 18o1 gave him a command in the consular guard
.
At the accession of Napoleon as emperor, Davout was one of the generals who were created marshals of France
.
As See also: commander of the III. corps of the Grande Armee Davout rendered the greatest services
.
At See also: Austerlitz, after a forced See also: march of
See also: forty-eight See also: hours, the III. corps See also: bore the brunt of the See also: allies' attack
.
In the See also: Jena campaign Davout with a single corps fought and won the brilliant victory of Auerstadt against the See also: main Prussian army
.
(See NAPOLEONSC CAMPAIGNS.) He took part, and added to his renown, in the campaign of See also: Eylau and See also: Friedland
.
Napoleon See also: left him as governor-general in the See also: grand-duchy of Warsaw when the treaty of See also: Tilsit put an end to the war (1807), and in 1808 created him duke of Auerstadt
.
In the war of 18o9 Davout took a brilliant part in the actions which culminated in the victory of Eckmuhl, and had an important share in the See also: battle of See also: Wagram (q.v.)
.
He was created prince of Eckmuhl about this See also: time
.
It was Davout who was entrusted by Napoleon with the task of organizing the " corps of observation of the Elbe," which was in reality the gigantic army with which the emperor invaded See also: Russia in 1812
.
In this Davout commanded the I. corps, over 70,000 strong, and defeated the Russians at Mohilev before he joined the main army, with which he continued through-out the campaign and the retreat from Moscow
.
In 1813 he commanded the See also: Hamburg military See also: district, and defended Hamburg, a city See also: ill fortified and provisioned, and full of disaffection, through a long siege, only surrendering the place on the See also: direct See also: order of See also: Louis XVIII. after the fall of Napoleon in 1814
.
Davout's military character was on this, as on many other occasions, interpreted as cruel and rapacious, and he had to defend himself against many attacks upon his conduct at Hamburg
.
He was a stern disciplinarian, almost the only one of the marshals who exacted rigid and precise obedience from his troops, and consequently his corps was more trustworthy and exact in the performance of its duty than any other
.
Thus, in the earlier days of the Grande Armee, it was always the III. corps which was entrusted with the most difficult part of the
See also: work in See also: hand
.
The same criterion is to be applied to his conduct of See also: civil affairs
.
His rapacity was in reality Napoleon's, for he gave the same undeviating obedience to See also: superior orders which he enforced in his own subordinates
.
As for his military talents, he was admitted by his contemporaries and by later See also: judgment to be one of the ablest, perhaps the ablest, of all Napoleon's marshals
.
On the first restoration he retired into private See also: life, openly displaying his hostility to the Bourbons, and when See also: Nap'ol`e'on return'e'd frdni See also: Elba, Davout of one'e jd rietl him
.
Appointed See also: minister of war, he reorganized the French army as far as the limited time available permitted, and he was so far indispensable to the war department that Napoleon kept him at See also: Paris during the See also: Waterloo campaign
.
To what degree his skill and bravery would have altered the fortunes of the campaign of 1815 can only be surmised, but it has been made a ground of See also: criticism against Napoleon that he did not avail himself in the See also: field of the services of the best general he then possessed
.
Davout directed the gallant, but hopeless, defence of Paris after Waterloo, and was deprived of his marshalate and his titles at the second restoration
.
When some of his subordinate generals were
See also: pro-scribed, he demanded to be held responsible for their acts, as executed under his orders, and he endeavoured to prevent the condemnation of See also: Ney
.
After a time the hostility of the Bourbons towards Davout died away, and he was reconciled to the See also: monarchy
.
In 1817 his See also: rank and titles were restored, and in 1819 he became a member of the chamber of peers
.
He died at Paris on the 1st of See also: June 1823
.
See the marquise de Blocqueville, Le Marechal Davout raconte See also: par See also: les siens et lui-mee"me (Paris, 187o–188o, 1887) ; See also: Chenier, Davout, duc d'Auerstfidt (Paris, 1866)
.
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