Online Encyclopedia

MASSENA, ANDRE, or ANDREA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 866 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MASSENA, ANDRE, or ANDREA  , duke of Rivoli, prince of Essling (1756-1817), the greatest of
See also:
Napoleon's marshals, son of a small wine merchant, it is said of Jewish origin, was born at
See also:
Nice on the 6th of May 1756 . His parents were very poor, and he began
See also:
life as a
See also:
cabin boy, but he did not care much for the sea, and in 1775 he enlisted in the Royal-Italien regiment . He quickly rose to be under-officer-adjutant; but, finding his birth would prevent his ever getting a commission, he
See also:
left the army in 1789, retired to his native city, and married . At the sound of war, however, and the word republic, his
See also:
desire to see service increased, and he once more left Italy, and joined the 3rd
See also:
battalion of the
See also:
volunteers of the
See also:
Var in 1791 . In those days when men elected their
See also:
officers, and many of the old commissioned officers had emigrated, promotion to a man with a knowledge of his
See also:
drill was rapid, and by
See also:
February 1792 Massena was a
See also:
lieutenant-colonel . His regiment was one of those in the army which occupied Nice, and in the advance to the Apennines which followed, his know-ledge of the country, of the language, and of the
See also:
people was so useful that in December 1793 he was already a general of division . In command of the advanced guard he won the
See also:
battle of Saorgio in August 1794, capturing ninety guns, and after many successes he at last, on the 23rd of November 1795, with the right wing of the army of Italy, had the greatest share in the victory of Loano, won by Scherer over the Austrians and Sardinians . In
See also:
Bonaparte's
See also:
great
See also:
campaign of 1796–97 Massena was his most trusted general of division; in each battle he won fresh laurels, up to the crowning victory of Rivoli, from which he afterwards took his title . It was during this campaign that Bonaparte gave him the title of enfant gdte de la victoire, which he was to justify till he met the
See also:
English in 1810 . In 1798 he commanded the army of Rome for a short time, but was displaced by the intrigues of his subordinate Berthier . Massena's next important service was in command of the army in
See also:
Switzerland, which
See also:
united the army in Germany under Moreau, and that in Italy under Joubert . There he proved himself a great captain, as he had already proved him-self a great lieutenant; the archduke Charles and
See also:
Suvarov had each been successful in Germany and in Italy, and now turned upon Massena in Switzerland .

That general held his ground well against the archduke, and then suddenly, leaving

Soult to face the Austrians, he transported his army to Zurich, where, on the 26th of September 1799, he entirely defeated Korsakov, taking 200 guns and 5000 prisoners . This campaign and battle placed his reputation on a level with that of his compatriot Bonaparte, and he might have made the revolution of
See also:
Brumaire, but he was sincerely attached to the republic, and had no ambition beyond a desire to live well and to have plenty of
See also:
money to spend . Bonaparte, now First Consul, sent him to Genoa to command the debris of the army of Italy, and he nobly defended Genoa from February to
See also:
June to the very last extremity, giving time for Bonaparte to strike his great blow at
See also:
Marengo . He now went to Paris, where he sat in the Corps Legislatif in 1803, and actually defended Moreau without
See also:
drawing upon himself the
See also:
ill-will of Napoleon, who well knew his honesty and lack of ambition . In 1804 he was made one of the first marshals of France of the new regime, and in 1805 was decorated with the
See also:
Grand Eagle of the Legion of Honour . In that
See also:
year Napoleon needed an able general to keep in check the archduke Charles in Italy, while he X\-IT . 28advanced through Germany with the grand army . Massena was chosen; he kept the archduke occupied till he received
See also:
news of the surrender of
See also:
Ulm, and then on the 3oth of
See also:
October defeated him in the battle of Caldiero . After the peace of Pressburg had been signed, Massena was ordered to take possession of the
See also:
kingdom of Naples, and to place Joseph Bonaparte on the
See also:
throne . This task done, Napoleon summoned Massena to Poland, where he as usual distinguished himself, and where he for the time gave up his republican principles . In 1808 he was made duke of Rivoli . In 1808 he was accidentally wounded by his old enemy Berthier when both were in attendance. on the emperor at a
See also:
shooting party, and he lost the sight of one eye .

In the campaign in 1809 he covered himself with

glory at
See also:
Landshut and at Eckmuhl, and finally at the battle of Aspern-Essling his magnificent leadership made what would without him have been an appalling disaster into a mere
See also:
reverse of which the enemy could make no use . On the field of Wagram Massena, though too ill to ride, directed from his
See also:
carriage the movements of the right wing . For his great services he was created prince of Essling, and given the princely castle of
See also:
Thouars . He was then ordered to Spain to " drive the English into the sea." (For the
See also:
campaigns of 1810 and 1811, the advance to and the retreat from Torres Vedras see
See also:
PENINSULAR WAR.) Massena himself, with some justice, ascribed his failure to the frequent disobedience of his subordinates
See also:
Ney, Reynier and Junot, and public opinion attributed this disobedience to the presence with the army of Massena's
See also:
mistress, and to the resentment thereat felt by the wives of the three generals . Still, unsuccessful as he was, Massena displayed the determination of the defence of Genoa and the fertility in expedients of the campaign of Zurich, and kept his army for five weary months close up to Wellington's impregnable position before retiring . His retreat through a devastated country was terrible, but his force of character kept his men together, and Ney having shown the worst side of his character now showed the best in the frequent and brilliant
See also:
rear-guard actions, until a new act of insubordination at last made the old marshal dismiss Ney from his command . Soon Massena was once again ready to try his fortune, and he nearly defeated Wellington at Fuentes d'Onoro, though much hampered by Bessieres . But his recall soon followed this and he returned home to find his
See also:
prestige gone . The old marshal felt he had a right to complain of Ney and of Napoleon himself, and, it is said, opened communications with Fouche and the remnant of the republican party . Whether this be true or not, Napoleon gave his greatest marshal no more employment in the field, but made him merely a territorial commandant at
See also:
Marseilles . This command he still held at the restoration, when Louis XVIII.
See also:
con-firmed him in it, and with true Bourbon stupidity gave him letters of naturalization, as if the great leader of the French armies had not ceased to be an
See also:
Italian . When Napoleon returned from Elba, Massena, probably by the advice of Fouche, kept Marseilles quiet to await events, the greatest service he could do the royalists, but afterwards imputed to him as a fault .

After the second restoration Massena was summoned to sit on the

court-martial which tried Marshal Ney, but, though he had been on
See also:
bad terms with that general, and attributed his own disgrace to him, the old soldier would not be his comrade's judge . This refusal was used by the royalists to attack the marshal, against whom they raked up every offence they could think of . This annoyance shortened his life, and on the 4th of
See also:
April 1817 the old hero died . He was buried in Pere-la-Chaise, with only the word " Massena " upon his tombstone . In private life indolent, greedy, rapacious, ill-educated and morose, in war Massena was, like Napoleon, the incarnation of battle . Only his indolence and his consequent lack of far-ranging
See also:
imagination prevented him being as great in
See also:
strategy as in tactics . His genius needed the presence of the enemy to stimulate it, but once it sprang to life Massena became an ideal leader, absolutely brave, resourceful, unrelenting and indefatigable . He was as great a master of the strategy of forces in immediate contact—of gathering up as it were the threads of the fugue into a " stretto." For the planning of a whole perfect campaign he 1r T had neither knowledge nor inclination, and he falls short there-fore of the highest rank amongst great generals; but his place amongst the greatest of soldiers is beyond challenge . See Thiebault's
See also:
doge funebre, and Koch's Memoires de Massena (4 vols., 1849), a valuable
See also:
work, carefully compiled . In more
See also:
modern times E . Gachot has produced several important
See also:
works dealing with Massena's campaigns .

End of Article: MASSENA, ANDRE, or ANDREA
[back]
MASSAWA, or MASSOWAII
[next]
CHRISTIAN KARL AUGUST LUDWIG VON MASSENBACH (1958-1...

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.