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LAZARE See also: born of poor parents near See also: Versailles on the 24th of See also: June 1768
.
At sixteen years of age he enlisted as a private soldier in the Gardes fran4aises
.
He spent his entire leisure in earning extra pay by See also: civil See also: work, his See also: object being to provide himself with books, and this love of study, which was combined with a strong sense of duty and See also: personal courage, soon led to his promotion
.
When the Gardes frangaises were broken up in 1789 he was a See also: corporal, and thereafter he served in various See also: line regiments up to the See also: time of his receiving a commission in 1792
.
In the defence of Thionville in that See also: year See also: Hoche earned further promotion, and he served with See also: credit in the operations of 1792–1793 on the See also: northern frontier of See also: France
.
At the See also: battle of See also: Neerwinden he was aide-de-See also: camp to General le Veneur, and when Dumouriez deserted to the Austrians, Hoche, along with le Veneur and others, See also: fell under suspicion of treason; but after being kept under arrest and unemployed for some months he took See also: part in the defence of See also: Dunkirk, and in the same year (1793) he was promoted successively chef de brigade, general of brigade, and general of division
.
In See also: October 1793 he was provisionally appointed to command the Army of the Moselle, and within a few See also: weeks he was in the See also: field at the
See also: head of his army in See also: Lorraine
.
His first battle was that of See also: Kaiserslautern (28th–3oth of See also: November) against Prussians
.
The French were defeated, but even in the midst of the Terror the Committee of Public Safety continued Hoche in his command
.
Pertinacity and fiery energy in their eyes outweighed everything else, and Hoche soon showed that he possessed these qualities
.
On the 22nd of See also: December he stormed the lines of Frdschweiler, and the representatives of the See also: Convention with his army at once added the Army of the Rhine to his sphere of command
.
On the 26th of December the French
carried by assault the famous lines of See also: Weissenburg, and Hoche pursued his success, sweeping the enemy before him to the See also: middle Rhine in four days
.
He then put his troops into winter quarters . Before the followingSee also: campaign opened, he married See also: Anne Adelaide Dechaux at Thionville (See also: March rrth, 1994)
.
But ten days later he was suddenly arrested, charges of treason having been preferred by
See also: Pichegru, the displaced See also: commander of the Army of the Rhine, and by his See also: friends
.
Hoche escaped execution, however, though imprisoned in See also: Paris until the fall of Robespierre
.
Shortly after his See also: release he was appointed to command against the Vendeans (21st of See also: August 1794)
.
He completed the work of his predecessors in a few months by the See also: peace of Jaunaye (15th of See also: February 1795), but soon afterwards the war was renewed by the Royalists
.
See also: Roche showed himself equal to the crisis and inflicted a crushing See also: blow on the Royalist cause by defeating and capturing de Sombreuil's expedition at See also: Quiberon and Penthievre (16th—21st of See also: July 1795)
.
Thereafter, by means of See also: mobile columns (which he kept under See also: good discipline) he succeeded before the summer of 1796 in pacifying the whole of the west, which had for more than three years been the scene of a pitiless civil war
.
After this he was appointed to organize and command the troops destined for the invasion of See also: Ireland, and he started on this enterprise in December 1796
.
A See also: tempest, however, separated Hoche from the expedition, and after various adventures the whole See also: fleet returned to See also: Brest without having effected its purpose
.
Hoche was at once transferred to the Rhine frontier, where he defeated the Austrians at Neuwied (See also: April), though operations were soon afterwards brought to an end by the Preliminaries of See also: Leoben
.
Later in 1797 he was See also: minister of war for a See also: short See also: period, but in this position he was surrounded by obscure See also: political intrigues, and, finding himself the dupe of Barras and technically guilty of violating the constitution, he quickly laid down his office, returning to his command on the Rhine frontier
.
But his See also: health See also: grew rapidly worse, and he died at See also: Wetzlar on the 19th of See also: September 1797 of See also: consumption
.
The belief was widely spread that he had been poisoned, but the suspicion seems to have been without foundation
.
He was buried by the See also: side of his friend Marceau in a fort on the Rhine, amidst the mourning not only of his army but of all France
.
See Privat, Notions historiques sur la See also: vie morale, politique et militaire du general Hoche (Strassburg, 1798) ; Daunou, See also: doge du general Hoche (1798), delivered on behalf of the Institut at Hoche's funeral; Rousselin, Vie de Lazare Hoche, general See also: des armees de la republique francaise (Paris, 1798; this work was printed at the public expense and distributed to the See also: schools) ; Dubroca, Eloge funebre du general Hoche (Paris, 1800) ; Vie et pensees du general Hoche (See also: Bern) ; Champrobert, See also: Notice historique sur Lazare Hoche, le pacifcateur de la See also: Vendee (Paris, 184o); Dourille, Histoire de Lazare Hoche (Paris, 1844); Desprez, Lazare Hoche d'apres sa correspondance (Paris, 1858; new ed., 1880); Bergounioux, Essai sur la vie de Lazare Hoche (1852); E. de Bonnechose, Lazare Hoche (1867); H
.
See also: Martin, Hoche et
See also: Bonaparte (1875); Dutemple, Vie politique et militaire du general Hoche (1879); Escaude, Hoche en Irlande (1888); Curler) d'Ornano, Hoche (1892); A
.
Chuquet, Hoche et la lulte pour l'See also: Alsace (a See also: volume of this author's series on the See also: campaigns of the Revolution, 1893); E
.
Charavaray, Le General Hoche (1893); A
.
See also: Duruy, Hoche et Marceau (1885)
.
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