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COMTE DE JACQUES ANTOINE HIPPOLYTE GU...

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 684 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COMTE DE JACQUES ANTOINE HIPPOLYTE GUIBERT (1743–1790)  , French general and military writer, was born at Montauban, and at the age of thirteen accompanied his
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father, Charles Benoit, comte de Guibert (1715-1786), chief of staff to Marshal de
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Broglie, throughout the war in Germany, and won the
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cross of St Louis and the rank of colonel in the expedition to Corsica (1767) . In 1770 he published his Essai general de tactique in
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London, and this celebrated
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work appeared in numerous subsequent
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editions and in
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English, German and even Persian
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translations (extracts also in Liskenne and Sauvan, Bibl. historique et militaire, Paris, 1845) . Of this work (for a detailed critique of which see Max Jahns, Gesch. d . Kriegswissenschaften, vol. iii. pp . 2058-2070 and references therein) it may be said that it was the best essay on war produced by a soldier during a period in which tactics were discussed even in the
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salon and military literature was more abundant than at any time up to 1871 . Apart from technical questions, in which Guibert's enlightened conservatism stands in marked contrast to the doctrinaire progressiveness of Menil Durand, Folard and others, the
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book is chiefly valued for its broad outlook on the state of
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Europe, especially of military Europe in the period 1763-1792 . One
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quotation may be given as being a most remarkable prophecy of the impending revolution in the
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art of war, a revolution which the " advanced " tacticians themselves scarcely foresaw . " The
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standing armies, while a burden on the
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people, are inadequate for the achievement of
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great and decisive results in war, and meanwhile the mass of the people, untrained in arms, de-generates . . . . The hegemony over Europe will fall to that nation which . . . becomes possessed of manly virtues and creates a
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national army "—a prediction fulfilled almost to the letter within twenty years of Guibert's
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death . In 1773 he visited Germany and was
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present at the Prussian regimental drills and army manoeuvres; Frederick the Great, recognizing Guibert's ability, showed great favour to the young colonel and freely discussed military questions with him .

Guibert's

Journal d'un voyage en Allemagne was published, with a memoir, by Toulongeon (Paris, 1803) . His Defense du systeme de guerre moderne, a reply to his many critics (Neuchatel, 1779) is a reasoned and scientific defence of the Prussian method of tactics, which formed the basis of his work when in 1775 he began to co-operate with the count de St Germain in a series of much-needed and successful reforms in the French army . In 1777, however, St Germain fell into disgrace, and his fall involved that of Guibert who was promoted to the rank of marechal de camp and relegated to a provincial staff appointment . In his semi-retirement he vigorously defended his old chief St Germain against his detractors . On the
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eve of the Revolution he was recalled to the War Office, but in his turn he became the
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object of attack and he died, practically of disappointment, on the 6th of May 1790 . Other
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works of Guibert, besides those mentioned, are: Observations sur la constitution politique et militaire
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des armies de S . M . Prussienne (Amsterdam, 1778), Eloges of Marshal Catinat (1775), of Michel de 1'Hopital (1778), and of Frederick the Great (1787) . Guibert was a member of the Academy from 1786, and he also wrote a tragedy, Le Connetable de Bourbon (x775) and a journal of travels in France and Switzer-
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land . See Toulongeon, Eloge veridique de Guiberl (Paris, 1790) ; Madame de Stael,
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doge de Guiberl ; Bardin,
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Notice historique du general Guibert (Paris, 1836) ; Flavian d'Aldeguier, Discours sur to
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vie et
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les ecrits du comte de Guibert (Toulouse, r855); Count Forestie, Biographie du comte de Guibert (Montauban, 1855); Count zur
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Lippe, " Friedr. der Grosse and Oberst Guibert" (Militdr-Wochenblati, 1873, 9 and to) .

End of Article: COMTE DE JACQUES ANTOINE HIPPOLYTE GUIBERT (1743–1790)
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