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BENJAMIN DE ROHAN See also: leader, younger See also: brother of See also: Henri de Rohan, inherited his title through his See also: mother See also: Catherine de See also: Parthenay
.
He served his apprenticeship as a soldier under See also: Prince See also: Maurice of Orange-See also: Nassau in the Low Countries
.
In the religious See also: wars from 1621 onwards his elder brother chiefly commanded on See also: land and in the See also: south, See also: Soubise in the west and along the See also: sea-See also: coast
.
His exploits in the conflict have been sympathetically related by his brother, who, if he was not quite an impartial witness, was one of the best military critics of the See also: time
.
Soubise's chief exploit was a singularly bold and well-conducted attack (in 1625) on the Royalist See also: fleet in the See also: river Blavet (which included the cutting of a See also: boom in the face of See also: superior numbers) and the occupation of See also: Oleron
.
He commanded at Rochelle during the famous siege, and (if we may believe his brother) the failure of the defence and of the See also: English attack on Rhe was mainly due to the alternate obstinacy of the townsfolk and the English commanders in refusing tolisten to Soubise's advice
.
When surrender became inevitable he fled to See also: England, which he had previously visited in quest of succour
.
He died in 1642 in See also: London
.
The Soubise title after-wards served as the chief second designation (not for heirs apparent, but for the chief collateral branch for the time being) of the See also: house of Rohan-See also: Chabot
.
The name Soubise appears again in the military See also: history of See also: France in the See also: person of See also: CHARLES DE ROHAN, PRINCE DE SOUBISE (1715—1787), peer and marshal of France, the
See also: grandson of the princesse de Soubise, who is known to history as one of t'ie distresses of See also: Louis XIV
.
He accompanied Louis XV. in the
See also: campaign of 1744—48 and attained high military See also: rank, which he owed more to his courtiership than to his generalship
.
Soon after the beginning of the Seven Years' War, through the influence of Mme de Pompadour, he was put in command of a corps of 24,000 men, and inSee also: November 1757 he sustained the crushing defeat of See also: Rossbach
.
He was more fortunate, however, in his later military career, and continued in the service until the general See also: peace of 1763, after which he lived the See also: life of an ordinary courtier and See also: man of fashion in See also: Paris, dying on the 4th of See also: July 1787
.
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