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  1. The "bravest of the brave", Michel Ney was the son of a cooper who would one day rise to being one of Napoleon's most famous marshals. After enlisting in a hussar regiment in February of 1787, Ney quickly gained prominence within his unit for being an excellent rider and fencer. His skill with a sword was so good that when his unit's fencing ...

  2. « Michel Ney » , dans Robert et Cougny, Dictionnaire des parlementaires français, 1889 [részlet] (francia nyelven) Évariste Dumoulin, Histoire complète du procès du maréchal Ney (deux volumes, Paris, 1815) (francia nyelven) Henri Welschinger, Le maréchal Ney, 1815, (deuxième édition, Paris, 1893) (francia nyelven)

  3. Microsoft Word - michel_ney.doc. Aus: Rainer Hudemann unter Mitarbeit von Marcus Hahn, Gerhild Krebs und Johannes Großmann (Hg.), Stätten grenzüberschreitender Erinnerung – Spuren der Vernetzung des Saar-Lor-Lux-Raumes im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert.

  4. When Ney was awakened in his cell to listen to his sentence, he interrupted the long enumeration of his titles. "Enough! Just say Michel Ney, soon a handful of dust." On December 7, instead of executing him on the Grenelle Plain, as was the custom, he was taken to the avenue de l'Observatoire, to avoid the crowds. Ney, refusing to be ...

  5. www.napoleon.org › biographies › ney-michelNEY, Michel - napoleon.org

    Ney led the Grande Armée's VI Corps against the Third Coalition in 1805. After the débâcle of Albeck in October, which triggered a lifelong feud with Murat, he redeemed himself with a brilliant performance at Elchingen a few days later, but missed the triumph at Austerlitz after leading his corps into the Tyrol to block Archduke John's Austrian army. He played a full part in victory in the ...

  6. 14. Juni 2020 · Michel Ney was one of the Marshals of the Empire – a prestigious sign of supreme military attainment – under Napoleon. Called the “bravest of the brave”, he was one of Napoleon’s most popular officers, the very picture of a dashing cavalry commander. After Napoleon’s final exile, he was executed by the French court.

  7. Michel Ney, duke d’Elchingen, (born Jan. 10, 1769, Sarrelouis, France—died Dec. 7, 1815, Paris), French army officer, the best-known of Napoleon’s marshals. He distinguished himself in the French Revolutionary Wars and rose to general in 1799. A supporter of Napoleon, he was created marshal of France in 1804 and duke d’Elchingen in 1808 after victories in the