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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MAR-MEC |
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MASSENA, ANDRE, or ANDREA , duke of Rivoli, prince of Essling (1756-1817), the greatest of Napoleon
birth
drill
Consul
without drawing upon himself the ill-will of Napoleon
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 Grand Eagle of the Legion of Honour. In that 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 news of the surrender of Ulm, and then on the 3oth of October defeated him in the battle of Caldiero. After the peace of Pressburg had been signed, Massena was ordered to take possession of the kingdom of Naples, and to place Joseph Bonaparte on the 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 shooting
glory
opinion attributed this disobedience to the presence with the army of Massena's 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 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 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 Marseilles. This command he still held at the restoration, when Louis XVIII. 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 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 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 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 imagination prevented him being as great in 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 contactof 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 doge funebre, and Koch's Memoires de Massena (4 vols., 1849), a valuable work, carefully compiled. In more modern times E. Gachot has produced several important works dealing with Massena's campaigns. End of Article: MASSENA, ANDRE, or ANDREA If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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