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Military history of France

The military history of France encompasses an immense panorama of conflicts and struggles extending for more than 2,000 years across areas including modern France, Europe, and a variety of regions throughout the world.

In July 1453, a French army defeated its English opponents at the Battle of Castillon, the last major engagement of the Hundred Years War. The victory at Castillon showcased the power of artillery against charging masses of infantry and allowed the French to capture Bordeaux a few months later. The English subsequently lost their major remaining possessions on the European continent.

According to historian Niall Ferguson, France is the most successful military power in history. It participated in 50 of the 125 major European wars that have been fought since 1495; more than any other European state. The first major recorded wars in the territory of modern-day France itself revolved around the Gallo-Roman conflict that predominated from 60 BC to 50 BC. The Romans eventually emerged victorious through the campaigns of Julius Caesar. After the decline of the Roman Empire, a Germanic tribe known as the Franks took control of Gaul by defeating competing tribes. The "land of Francia", from which France gets its name, had high points of expansion under kings Clovis I and Charlemagne, who established the nucleus of the future French state. In the Middle Ages, rivalries with England prompted major conflicts such as the Norman Conquest and the Hundred Years' War. With an increasingly centralized monarchy, the first standing army since Roman times, and the use of artillery, France expelled the English from its territory and came out of the Middle Ages as the most powerful nation in Europe, only to lose that status to the Holy Roman Empire and Spain following defeat in the Italian Wars. The Wars of Religion crippled France in the late 16th century, but a major victory over Spain in the Thirty Years' War made France the most powerful nation on the continent once more. In parallel, France developed its first colonial empire in Asia, Africa, and in the Americas. Under Louis XIV France achieved military supremacy over its rivals, but escalating conflicts against increasingly powerful enemy coalitions checked French ambitions and left the kingdom bankrupt at the opening of the 18th century.

Resurgent French armies secured victories in dynastic conflicts against the Spanish, Polish, and Austrian crowns. At the same time, France was fending off attacks on its colonies. As the 18th century advanced, global competition with Great Britain led to the Seven Years' War, where France lost its North American holdings. Consolation came in the form of dominance in Europe and the American Revolutionary War, where extensive French aid in the form of money and arms, and the direct participation of its army and navy led to the independence of the United States.[1] Internal political upheaval eventually led to 23 years of nearly continuous conflict in the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars. France reached the zenith of its power during this period, dominating the European continent in an unprecedented fashion under Napoleon Bonaparte. However, France was ultimately defeated in 1815, and its borders were restored to the same ones it controlled before the Revolution. The rest of the 19th century witnessed the growth of the Second French colonial empire as well as French interventions in Belgium, Spain, and Mexico. Other major wars were fought against Russia in the Crimea, Austria in Italy, and Prussia within France itself.

Following defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, Franco-German rivalry erupted again in the First World War. France and its allies were victorious this time. Social, political, and economic upheaval in the wake of the conflict led to the Second World War, in which France and the Allies were defeated in the Battle of France and almost half of the country was placed under German military occupation for more than four years. The Allies, including the Free French Forces led by a government in exile, eventually emerged victorious over the Axis Powers. As a result, France secured an occupation zone in Germany and a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council. The imperative of avoiding a third Franco-German conflict on the scale of the first two world wars paved the way for European integration starting in the 1950s. France became a nuclear power and, since the late 20th century, has cooperated closely with NATO, the United States and European partners.

Dominant themes edit

 
Animated map of French territory in continental Europe over time. After centuries of warfare and diplomacy, France has the largest territory of any nation in Western Europe.

Historian Niall Ferguson argues that France is the most belligerent military power in history. It participated in 50 of the 125 major European wars fought since 1495; more than any other European state. It is followed by Austria which fought in 47 of them; Spain in 44; and England in 43. Out of the 169 most important world battles fought since 387BC, France has won 109, lost 49 and drawn 10.[2]

In the last few centuries, French strategic thinking has sometimes been driven by the need to attain or preserve the so-called "natural frontiers," which are the Pyrenees to the southwest, the Alps to the southeast, and the Rhine River to the east.[3] Starting with Clovis, 1,500 years of warfare and diplomacy has witnessed the accomplishment of most of these objectives. Warfare with other European powers was not always determined by these considerations, and often rulers of France extended their continental authority far beyond these barriers, most notably under Charlemagne, Louis XIV, and Napoleon.[4] These periods of incessant conflict were characterized by their own standards and conventions, but all required strong central leadership in order to permit the extension of French rule.[5] Important military rivalries in human history have come about as a result of conflict between French peoples and other European powers. Anglo-French rivalry, for prestige in Europe and around the world, continued for centuries, while the more recent Franco-German rivalry required two world wars to stabilize.[6]

 
Animated map showing growth and decline of the French colonial empire

Starting in the early 16th century, much of France's military efforts were dedicated to securing its overseas possessions and putting down dissent among both French colonists and native populations. French troops were spread all across its empire, primarily to deal with the local population. The French colonial empire ultimately disintegrated after the failed attempt to subdue Algerian nationalists in the late 1950s, a failure that led to the collapse of the Fourth Republic.[7] Since World War II, France's efforts have been directed at maintaining its status as a great power and its influence on the UN Security Council. France has also been instrumental in attempting to unite the armed forces of Europe for their own defense in order to both balance the power of Russia and to lessen European military dependence on the United States. For example, France withdrew from NATO in 1966 over complaints that its role in the organization was being subordinated to the demands of the United States.[8] French objectives in this era have undergone major shifts. Unencumbered by continental wars or intricate alliances, France now deploys its military forces as part of international peacekeeping operations, security enforcers in former colonies, or maintains them combat ready and mobilized to respond to threats from rogue states. France is a nuclear power with the largest nuclear arsenal in Europe, and its nuclear capabilities, just like its conventional forces, have been restructured to rapidly deal with emerging threats.[9]

Early period edit

 
Brennus and the sack of Rome as imagined in the 19th century

Around 390 BC, the Gallic chieftain Brennus made his own way through the Alps, defeated the Romans in the Battle of the Allia and sacked Rome for several months. The Gallic invasion left Rome weakened and encouraged several subdued Italian tribes to rebel. One by one, over the course of the next 50 years, these tribes were defeated and brought back under Roman dominion. Meanwhile, the Gauls would continue to harass the region until 345 BC, when they entered into a formal treaty with Rome. But Romans and Gauls would maintain an adversarial relationship for the next several centuries and the Gauls would remain a threat in Italia.

Around 125 BC, the south of France is conquered by the Romans who called this region Provincia Romana ("Roman Province"), which evolved into the name Provence in French.[10] Brennus' sack of Rome was still remembered by Romans, when Julius Caesar conquered the remainder of Gaul. Initially Caesar met with little Gallic resistance: the 60 or so tribes that made up Gaul were unable to unite and defeat the Roman army, something Caesar exploited by pitting one tribe against another. In 58 BC, Caesar defeated the Germanic tribe of the Suebi, which was led by Ariovistus. The following year he conquered the Belgian Gauls after claiming that they were conspiring against Rome. The string of victories continued in a naval triumph against the Veneti in 56 BC. In 53 BC, a united Gallic resistance movement under Vercingetorix emerged for the first time. Caesar laid siege to the fortified city of Avaricum (Bourges) and broke through the defenses after 25 days, with only 800 out of the 40,000 inhabitants managing to escape.[11] He then besieged Gergovia, Vercingetorix's home town, and suffered one of the worst defeats in his career when he had to retreat to suppress a revolt in another part of Gaul. After returning, Caesar surrounded Vercingetorix at Alesia in 52 BC. The townspeople were starved into submission and Caesar's unique defensive earthworks, protruding towards the city and away from it in order to stop a massive Gallic relief force,[12] eventually forced Vercingetorix to surrender. The Gallic Wars were over.

Gallo-Roman culture settled over the region in the next few centuries, but as Roman power weakened in the 4th and 5th centuries AD, a Germanic tribe, the Franks, overran large areas that today form modern France. Under King Clovis I in the late 5th and early 6th centuries, Frankish dominions quadrupled as they managed to defeat successive opponents for control of Gaul. In 486 the Frankish armies under Clovis triumphed over Syagrius, the last Roman official in Northern Gaul, at the Battle of Soissons.[13] In 491 Clovis defeated Thuringians east of his territories. In 496 he overcame the Alamanni at the Battle of Tolbiac. In 507 he scored the most impressive victory in his career, prevailing at the Battle of Vouillé against the Visigoths, who were led by Alaric II, the conqueror of Spain.[14]

 
Frankish expansion from the early Clovis I' kingdom (481) to the divisions of Charlemagne's Empire (843/870)

Following Clovis, territorial divisions in the Frankish domain sparked intense rivalry between the western part of the kingdom, Neustria, and the eastern part, Austrasia. The two were sometimes united under one king, but from the 6th to the 8th centuries they often warred against each other. Early in the 8th century, the Franks were preoccupied with Islamic invasions across the Pyrenees and up the Rhone Valley. Two key battles during this period were the Battle of Toulouse and the Battle of Tours, both won by the Franks, and both instrumental in slowing Islamic incursions.

Under Charlemagne the Franks reached the height of their power. After campaigns against Lombards, Avars, Saxons, and Basques, the resulting Carolingian Empire stretched from the Pyrenees to Central Germany, from the North Sea to the Adriatic. In 800 the Pope made Charlemagne Emperor of the West in return for protection of the Church. The Carolingian Empire was a conscious effort to recreate a central administration modeled on that of the Roman Empire,[15] but the motivations behind military expansion differed. Charlemagne hoped to provide his nobles an incentive to fight by encouraging looting on campaign. Plunder and spoils of war were stronger temptations than imperial expansion, and several regions were invaded over and over in order to bolster the coffers of Frankish nobility.[16] Cavalry dominated the battlefields, and while the high costs associated with equipping horses and horse-riders helped limit their numbers, Carolingian armies maintained an average size of 20,000 during peacetime by recruiting infantry from imperial territories near theaters of operation, swelling to more with the levies called upon when at war.[17] The Empire lasted from 800 to 843, when, following Frankish tradition, it was split between the sons of Louis the Pious by the Treaty of Verdun.

Middle Ages edit

 
A section of the Bayeux Tapestry chronicling the Norman victory at Hastings

Military history during this period paralleled the rise and eventual fall of the armored knight. Following Charlemagne and the breakdown of the Frankish Empire due to civil war and ceaseless Viking incursions, the larger and more logistically difficult to maintain infantry-based armies were abandoned in favor of cavalry supplemented by an improvement in armor: leather and steel, steel helmets, coats of mail, and even full armor added to the defensive capabilities of mounted forces.[18] A smaller and more mobile elite cavalry force quickly grew to be the most important component of armies within French territories and most of the rest of Europe,[19] with the shock charge they provided becoming the standard tactic on the battlefield when it was invented in the 11th century.[20] At the same time, the development of agricultural techniques allowed the nations of Western Europe to radically increase food production, facilitating the growth of a particularly large aristocracy under Capetian France. The rise of castles, which began in France during the 10th century, was partly caused by the inability of centralized authorities to control these emerging dukes and aristocrats.[21] While all vassals and knights were in theory bound to fight for their sovereign when called upon, this period was marked by many feudal local and regional lords using the knights and levied conscripts below them to fight amongst each other, often in defiance or even outright rebellion towards their sovereign. After campaigns designed for plundering, attacking and defending, castles became the dominant feature of medieval warfare.[22]

 
Castles were the most important defensive structures during the Middle Ages, making them a valuable target for any invading army.

During the Crusades, there were in fact too many armored knights in France for the land to support. Some scholars believe that one of the driving forces behind the Crusades was an attempt by such landless knights to find land overseas, without causing the type of internecine warfare that would largely damage France's increasing military strength.[23] However, such historiographical work on the Crusades is being challenged and rejected by a large part of the historical community. The ultimate motivation or motivations for any one individual are difficult to know, but regardless, nobles and knights from France generally formed very sizeable contingents of crusading expeditions.[24] Crusaders were so predominantly French that the word "crusader" in the Arabic language is simply known as Al-Franj or "The Franks"[25] and Old French became the lingua franca of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.[26]

 
The advent of artillery, like these bombards at the Mont-Saint-Michel, greatly changed the techniques of warfare in the late Middle Ages.

In the 11th century, French knights wore knee-length mail and carried long lances and swords. The Norman knights fielded at the Battle of Hastings were more than a match for English forces, and their victory simply cemented their power and influence. Between 1202 and 1343, France reduced England's holdings on the continent to a few small provinces through a series of conflicts including the Bouvines Campaign (1202-1214), the Saintonge War (1242) and the War of Saint-Sardos (1324).

Improvements in armor over the centuries led to the establishment of plate armor by the 14th century, which was further developed more rigorously in the 15th century.[27] However, by the late 14th century and the early 15th century, socioeconomic calamities such as the Black Death, and political crises such as the Jacquerie peasant revolt, and especially the Armagnac-Burgundian Civil War combined with numerous English invasions, all led to French military power declining during the first two phases of the Hundred Years' War. New weapons, including artillery, and tactics seemingly made the knight more of a sitting target than an effective battle force, but the often-praised longbowmen had little to do with the English success.[28] Poor coordination or rough and soft, muddy terrain led to a number of bungled French assaults.[29] The slaughter of knights at the Battle of Agincourt best exemplified this carnage. The French were able to field a much larger army of men-at-arms than their English counterparts, who had many longbowmen. Despite this, the French suffered about 6,000 casualties[30] compared to a few hundred for the English because the narrow terrain prevented the tactical envelopments envisioned in recently discovered French plans for the battle.[31] The French suffered a similar defeat at the Battle of the Golden Spurs against Flemish militia in 1302. When knights were allowed to effectively deploy and attack their opponents in the open field, however, they could be more useful, as at Cassel in 1328 or, even more decisively, at Bouvines in 1214, and Patay in 1429.

Popular conceptions of the third and final phase of the Hundred Years War are often dominated by the exploits of Joan of Arc, but French resurgence was rooted in multiple factors. A major step was taken by King Charles VII, who created the Compagnies d'ordonnance—cavalry units with 20 companies of 600 men each[32]—and launched the first standing army for a dynastic state in the Western world.[33] The Compagnies gave the French a considerable edge in professionalism and discipline, being composed of paid full-time professional soldiers, at a time when the allegiances of the aristocratic knights would often shift to the opposing side. Strong French counterattacks turned the tide of the war. The important victories of Orléans, Patay, Formigny and Castillon allowed the French to win back all English continental territories, except Calais, which was later captured by the French.

Equipment of medieval French sergeants was based on their property:[34]

Property worth Military equipment
L60+ Hauberk, helmet, sword, knife, spear, and shield
L30+ Gambeson, sword, knife, spear, and shield
L10+ Helmet, sword, knife, spear, and shield
L10< Bow, arrows, and knife

Ancien Régime edit

 
Francis I at the Battle of Marignan (1515)

The French Renaissance and the beginning of the Ancien Régime, normally marked by the reign of Francis I, saw the nation become far more unified under the monarch. The power of the nobles was diminished as a national army was created. With England expelled from the continent and being consumed by the Wars of the Roses, France's main rival was the Holy Roman Empire. This threat to France became alarming in 1516 when Charles V became the king of Spain, and grew worse when Charles was also elected Holy Roman Emperor in 1519. France was all but surrounded as Germany, Spain, and the Low Countries were controlled by the Habsburgs. The lengthy Italian Wars that took place during this period eventually resulted in defeat for France and established Catholic Spain, which formed a branch of the Habsburg holdings, as the most powerful nation in Europe, with their dreaded tercios dominating the European battlefield well into the Thirty Years War. Later in the 16th century, France was weakened internally by the Wars of Religion. As nobles managed to raise their own private armies, these conflicts between Huguenots and Catholics all but demolished centralization and monarchical authority, precluding France from remaining a powerful force in European affairs.[35] On the battlefield, the religious conflicts highlighted the influence of the gendarmes, heavy cavalry units that comprised the majority of cavalrymen attached to the main field armies.[36] The pride of the royal cavalry, gendarme companies were often attached to the main royal army in hopes of inflicting a decisive defeat on Huguenot forces, although secondary detachments were also used for scouting and intercepting enemy troops.[37]

 
The Battle of Rocroi in (1643)

After the Wars of Religion, France could do little to challenge the dominance of the Holy Roman Empire, although the empire itself faced several problems. From the east it was facing intense warfare against Ottoman Empire, with which France formed an alliance.[38] The vast Habsburg empire also proved impossible to manage effectively, and the crown was soon divided between the Spanish and Austrian holdings. In 1568, the Dutch declared independence, launching a war that would last for decades and would illustrate the weaknesses of Habsburg power. In the 17th century, the religious violence that had beset France a century earlier began to tear the empire apart. At first France sat on the sidelines, but under Cardinal Richelieu it saw an opportunity to advance its own interests at the expense of the Habsburgs. Despite France's staunch Catholicism, it intervened on the side of the Protestants. The Thirty Years' War was long and extremely bloody, but France and its allies came out victorious, under the leadership of the legendary commanders Condé and Turenne, beginning a long line of unparalleled French marshals who would help usher in a new era of military strategy. After their victory, France emerged as the sole dominant European power under the reign of Louis XIV. In parallel, French explorers, such as Jacques Cartier or Samuel de Champlain, claimed lands in the Americas for France, paving the way for the expansion of the French colonial empire.

 
The Battle of Fontenoy (1745), during the War of the Austrian Succession

The long reign of Louis XIV saw a series of conflicts: the War of Devolution, the Franco-Dutch War, the War of the Reunions, the Nine Years War, and the War of the Spanish Succession. Few of these wars were either clear victories or definite defeats, but French borders expanded steadily anyway. The west bank of the Rhine, much of the Spanish Netherlands, and a good deal of Luxembourg were annexed while the War of the Spanish Succession saw the grandson of Louis placed on the throne of Spain. The French strategic situation, however, changed decisively with the Glorious Revolution in England, which replaced a pro-French king with an enemy of Louis, the Dutch William of Orange. After a period of two centuries seeing only rare hostilities with France, England now became a consistent enemy again, and remained so until the 19th century. To stop French advances, England formed coalitions with several other European powers, most notably the Habsburgs. While these armies had difficulties against the French on land, the British Royal Navy dominated the seas, and France lost many of its colonial holdings. The British economy also became Europe's most powerful, and British money funded the campaigns of their continental allies.

 
Surrender of Lord Cornwallis to French troops (left) and American troops (right), at Yorktown (1781)

Wars in this era consisted mostly of sieges and movements that were rarely decisive, prompting the French military engineer Vauban to design an intricate network of fortifications for the defense of France.[39] The armies of Louis XIV were some of the most impressive in French history, their quality reflecting militaristic as well political developments. In the mid-17th century, royal power reasserted itself and the army became a tool through which the King could wield authority, replacing older systems of mercenary units and the private forces of recalcitrant nobles.[40] Military administration also made gigantic progress as food supply, clothing, equipment, and armaments were provided in a regularity never before equaled.[41] In fact, the French embedded this standardization by becoming the first army to give their soldiers national uniforms in the 1680s and 1690s.[42]

The 18th century saw France remain the dominant power in Europe, but begin to falter largely because of internal problems. The country engaged in a long series of wars, such as the War of the Quadruple Alliance, the War of the Polish Succession, and the War of the Austrian Succession, but these conflicts gained France little. Meanwhile, Britain's power steadily increased, and a new force, Prussia, became a major threat. This change in the balance of power led to the Diplomatic Revolution of 1756, when France and the Habsburgs forged an alliance after centuries of animosity.[43] This alliance proved less than effective in the Seven Years' War, but in the American Revolutionary War, the French helped inflict a major defeat on the British.

Revolutionary France edit

 
The armies of the Revolution at Jemappes in 1792. With chaos internally and enemies on the borders, the French were in a jittery state in 1792. By 1797, however, they had exported their ideology (and the army that followed it) to the Low Countries and Northern Italy.

The French Revolution, true to its name, revolutionized nearly all aspects of French and European life. The powerful sociopolitical forces unleashed by a people seeking liberté, égalité, and fraternité made certain that even warfare was not spared this upheaval. 18th-century armies—with their rigid protocols, static operational strategy, unenthusiastic soldiers, and aristocratic officer classes—underwent massive remodeling as the French monarchy and nobility gave way to liberal assemblies obsessed with external threats. The fundamental shifts in warfare that occurred during the period have prompted scholars to identify the era as the beginning of "modern war".[44]

In 1791 the Legislative Assembly passed the "Drill-Book" legislation, implementing a series of infantry doctrines created by French theorists because of their defeat by the Prussians in the Seven Years' War.[45] The new developments hoped to exploit the intrinsic bravery of the French soldier, made even more powerful by the explosive nationalist forces of the Revolution. The changes also placed a faith on the ordinary soldier that would be completely unacceptable in earlier times; French troops were expected to harass the enemy and remain loyal enough to not desert, a benefit other Ancien Régime armies did not have. Following the declaration of war in 1792, an imposing array of enemies converging on French borders prompted the government in Paris to adopt radical measures. August 23, 1793, would become a historic day in military history; on that date the National Convention called a levée en masse, or mass conscription, for the first time in human history.[46] By summer of the following year, conscription made some 500,000 men available for service and the French began to deal blows to their European enemies.[47]

 
An episode (Battle of Entrames) of the civil war between republicans and royalists during the French Revolutionary Wars

Armies during the Revolution became noticeably larger than their Holy Roman counterparts, and combined with the new enthusiasm of the troops, the tactical and strategic opportunities became profound. By 1797 the French had defeated the First Coalition, occupied the Low Countries, the west bank of the Rhine, and Northern Italy, objectives which had defied the Valois and Bourbon dynasties for centuries. Unsatisfied with the results, many European powers formed a Second Coalition, but by 1801 this too had been decisively beaten. Another key aspect of French success was the changes wrought in the officer classes. Traditionally, European armies left major command positions to those who could be trusted, namely, the aristocracy. The hectic nature of the French Revolution, however, tore apart France's old army, meaning new men were required to become officers and commanders.[48]

Besides opening a flood of tactical and strategic opportunities, the Revolutionary Wars also laid the foundation for modern military theory. Later authors that wrote about "nations in arms" drew inspiration from the French Revolution, in which dire circumstances seemingly mobilized the entire French nation for war and incorporated nationalism into the fabric of military history.[49] Although the reality of war in the France of 1795 would be different from that in the France of 1915, conceptions and mentalities of war evolved significantly. Clausewitz correctly analyzed the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras to give posterity a thorough and complete theory of war that emphasized struggles between nations occurring everywhere, from the battlefield to the legislative assemblies, and to the very way that people think.[50] War now emerged as a vast panorama of physical and psychological forces heading for victory or defeat.

Napoleonic France edit

 
Napoleon and the Grande Armée receive the surrender of Austrian General Mack after the Battle of Ulm in October 1805. The decisive finale of the Ulm Campaign raised the tally of captured Austrian soldiers to 60,000. With the Austrian army destroyed, Vienna would fall to the French in November.

The Napoleonic Era saw French power and influence reach immense heights, even though the period of domination was relatively brief. In the century and a half preceding the Revolutionary Era, France had transformed demographic leverage to military and political weight; the French population was 19 million in 1700,[51] but this had grown to over 29 million in 1800, much higher than that of most other European powers.[52] These numbers permitted France to raise armies at a rapid pace should the need arise. Furthermore, military innovations carried out during the Revolution and the Consulate, evidenced by improvements in artillery and cavalry capabilities on top of better army and staff organization, gave the French army a decisive advantage in the initial stages of the Napoleonic Wars. Another ingredient of success was Napoleon Bonaparte himself—intelligent, charismatic, and a military genius, Napoleon absorbed the latest military theories of the day and applied them in the battlefield with deadly effect.

 
Napoleon I at the battle of Iena (1806) which led to the occupation of Prussia

Napoleon inherited an army that was based on conscription and used huge masses of poorly trained troops, which could usually be readily replaced.[53] By 1805 the French Army was a truly lethal force, with many in its ranks veterans of the French Revolutionary Wars. Two years of constant drilling for an invasion of England helped to build a well-trained, well-led army. The Imperial Guard served as an example for the rest of the army and consisted of Napoleon's best handpicked soldiers. Napoleon's huge losses suffered during the disastrous Russian campaign would have destroyed any professional commander of the day, but those losses were quickly replaced with new draftees. After Napoleon, nations planned for huge armies with professional leadership and a constant supply of new soldiers, which had huge human costs when improved weapons like the rifled musket replaced the inaccurate muskets of Napoleon's day during the American Civil War.

 
French Empire, 1811. The French Empire is in dark green while the "Grand Empire" includes satellite states and areas under French military control (light green).

This large size came at a cost, as the logistics of feeding a huge army made them especially dependent on supplies. Most armies of the day relied on the supply-convoy system established during the Thirty Years' War by Gustavus Adolphus. This limited mobility, since the soldiers had to wait for the convoys, but it did keep possibly mutinous troops from deserting, and thus helped preserve an army's composure. However, Napoleon's armies were so large that feeding them using the old method proved ineffective, and consequently, French troops were allowed to live off the land. Infused with new concepts of nation and service. Napoleon often attempted to wage decisive, quick campaigns so that he could allow his men to live off the land. The French army did use a convoy system, but it was stocked with very few days worth of food; Napoleon's troops were expected to march quickly, effect a decision on the battlefield, then disperse to feed. For the Russian campaign, the French did store 24 days' worth of food before beginning active operations, but this campaign was the exception, not the rule.[54]

Napoleon's biggest influence in the military sphere was in the conduct of warfare. Weapons and technology remained largely static through the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras, but 18th-century operational strategy underwent massive restructuring. Sieges became infrequent to the point of near-irrelevance, a new emphasis arose towards the destruction of enemy armies as well as their outmaneuvering, and invasions of enemy territory occurred over broader fronts, thus introducing a plethora of strategic opportunities that made wars costlier and, just as importantly, more decisive.[55] Defeat for a European power now meant much more than losing isolated enclaves. Near-Carthaginian treaties intertwined whole national efforts—social, political, economic, and militaristic—into gargantuan collisions that severely upset international conventions as understood at the time. Napoleon's initial success sowed the seeds for his downfall. Not used to such catastrophic defeats in the rigid power system of 18th-century Europe, many nations found existence under the French yoke difficult, sparking revolts, wars, and general instability that plagued the continent until 1815, when the forces of reaction finally triumphed at the Battle of Waterloo.[56]

French colonial empire edit

 
Map of the first (green) and second (blue) French colonial empires

The history of French colonial imperialism can be divided in two major eras: the first from the early 17th century to the middle of the 18th century, and the second from the early 19th century to the middle of the 20th century. In the first phase of expansion, France concentrated its efforts mainly in North America, the Caribbean and India, setting up commercial ventures that were backed by military force. Following defeat in the Seven Years' War, France lost its possessions in North America and India, but it did manage to keep the wealthy Caribbean islands of Saint-Domingue, Guadeloupe, and Martinique.

The second stage began with the conquest of Algeria in 1830, then with the establishment of French Indochina (covering modern Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia) and a string of military victories in the Scramble for Africa, where it established control over regions covering much of West Africa, Central Africa and Maghreb. In 1914 France had an empire stretching over 13,000,000 km2 (5,000,000 sq mi) (6,000,000 mile²) of land and about 110 million people.[57] Following victory in World War I, Togo and most of Cameroon were also added to the French possessions, and Syria and Lebanon became French mandates. For most of the period from 1870 to 1945, France was territorially the third largest nation on Earth, after Britain and Russia (later the Soviet Union), and had the most overseas possessions following Britain. Following the Second World War, France struggled to preserve French territories but wound up losing the First Indochina War (the precursor to the Vietnam War) and granting independence to Algeria after a long war. Today, France still maintains a number of overseas territories, but their collective size is barely a shadow of the old French colonial empire.

From 1815 edit

 
French Zouaves during the Franco-Austrian War (1859)

After the exile of Napoleon, the freshly restored Bourbon monarchy helped the absolute Bourbon king of Spain to recover his throne during the French intervention in Spain in 1823. To restore the prestige of the French monarchy, disputed by the Revolution and the First Empire, Charles X engaged in the military conquest of Algeria in 1830. This marked the beginning of a new expansion of the French colonial empire throughout the 19th century. In that century, France remained a major force in continental affairs. After the 1830 July Revolution, the liberal king Louis Philippe I victoriously supported the Spanish and Belgian liberals in 1831. The French later inflicted a defeat on the Habsburgs in the Franco-Austrian War of 1859, a victory which led to the unification of Italy in 1861, after having triumphed over Russia with other allies in the Crimean War 1854–56. Detrimentally, however, the French army emerged from these victories in an overconfident and complacent state.[58] France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War led to the loss of Alsace-Lorraine and the creation of a united German Empire, both results representing major failures in long-term French foreign policy and sparking a vengeful, nationalist revanchism meant to earn back former territories.[59] The Dreyfus Affair, however, mitigated these nationalist tendencies by prompting public skepticism about the competence of the military.[60]

First World War edit

 
French soldiers in a trench, during the Battle of Verdun (1916)

In World War I, the French, with their allies, managed to hold the Western front and to counterattack on the Eastern front and in the colonies until the final defeat of the Central Powers and their allies. After major conflicts such as the Battle of the Frontiers, the First Battle of the Marne, the Battle of Verdun, and the Second Battle of the Aisne—the last resulting in tremendous loss of life and mutiny within the army—the French proved to be enough of a cohesive fighting force to counterattack and defeat the Germans at the Second Battle of the Marne, the first in what would become a string of Allied victories that ended the war.[61] The Treaty of Versailles eventually returned Alsace-Lorraine to France. The French military, civilian and material losses during the First World War were huge. With more than 1.3 million military fatalities and more than 4.6 million wounded, France suffered the second highest Allied losses, after Russia. As a result, France was adamant on the payment of reparations by Germany. The organised failure of the Weimar Republic to pay reparations led to the Occupation of the Ruhr by French and Belgian forces.

Second World War edit

 
Free French Foreign Legionnaires at the Battle of Bir Hakeim (1942)

A variety of factors—ranging from smaller industrial base to low population growth and obsolete military doctrines—crippled the French effort at the outset of World War II. The Germans won the Battle of France in 1940 despite the French often having better planes and tanks than their opponents whereas they were lacking modern weaponry for the infantry, the main problem although was the unexistant doctrine to synchronize the tanks alongside the plane, as tanks were not used as a primary force but rather as support for infantry, without planning an anti-air protection for them. their use as primary force were made in very rare occasion, when commanded by Charles de Gaulle for example, only a tank crew division commander by the time of 1940. Prior to the Battle of France, there were sentiments among many Allied soldiers, French and British, of pointless repetition; they viewed the war with dread since they had already beaten the Germans once, and images of that first major conflict were still poignant in military circles.[62] The costs of World War I along with the now stale doctrine employed by the French Army (while the Germans were developing a doctrine which stressed initiative from junior commanders and combining different arms, the French sought to minimize casualties through a rigorously controlled type of battle and a top down command structure) forced the French to look for more defensive measures. The Maginot Line was the result of these deliberations: the French originally allocated three billion francs for the project, but by 1935 seven billion had been spent.[63] The Maginot Line succeeded in holding off the German attack.[64] However, while the French thought that the main weight of the German attack would arrive through central Belgium, and accordingly deployed their forces here, the assault actually came further south in the Ardennes forest.[65] The Third Republic collapsed in the ensuing conflict.

 
French forces advance in Colmar Pocket, 1945

After the defeat, Vichy France cooperated with the Axis powers until 1944. Charles de Gaulle exhorted the French people to join the allied armies, while the French Vichy forces participated in direct action against Allied forces, inflicting casualties in some cases.

The Normandy landings in that year were the first step towards the eventual liberation of France. The Free French Forces, under de Gaulle, had participated widely throughout previous campaigns, and their large size made them notable at the end of the war. As early as the winter of 1943, the Free French already had nearly 260,000 soldiers,[66] and these numbers only grew as the war progressed. The French Resistance had also a significant contribution, participating also actively in the liberation of France. At the end of the war, France was given one of four occupation zones in Germany, in Berlin and Austria.

Post-1945 warfare edit

 
An ERC 90 Sagaie of the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment in Côte d'Ivoire in 2003

Following the 1939–45 war, decolonization spread through the former European empires.

Following the First Indochina War, they withdrew from Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. The military also tried to keep control of Algeria during the Algerian War, when French forces attempted to defeat the Algerian rebels. Despite its military victory, France granted independence to Algerians. French Algeria was home to over a million of settlers (known as Pieds-Noirs), de Gaulle's decision to grant independence to Algeria, almost led to a civil war, supported by various Pied-Noir, Harki and nationalist factions, including the FAF and the OAS. Related to and during the Algerian war France participated in the Suez Crisis with Israel and the UK.

By 1960 France had lost its direct military influence over all of its former colonies in Africa and Indochina. Nonetheless, several colonies in the Pacific, Caribbean, Indian Oceans and South America remain French territory to this day and France kept a form of indirect political influence in Africa colloquially known as the Françafrique.

As President of the French Republic, Charles de Gaulle oversaw the development of French atomic weapons and promoted a foreign policy independent of U.S. influence. He also withdrew France from the NATO military command in 1966—although remaining a member of the western alliance. The effect of withdrawal was reduced by continued cooperation between the French military and NATO, though France did not formally rejoin the NATO military command until 2009.[67]

France intervened in various post-colonial conflicts, supporting former colonies (Western Sahara War, Shaba II, Chadian–Libyan conflict, Djiboutian Civil War), NATO peacekeeping missions in war-torn countries (UNPROFOR, KFOR, UNAMIR) and many humanitarian missions.

As a nuclear power and having some of the best trained and best equipped forces in the world, the French military has now met some of its primary objectives which are the defense of national territory, the protection of French interests abroad, and the maintenance of global stability. Conflicts indicative of these objectives are the Gulf War in 1991—when France sent 18,000 troops, 60 combat aircraft, 120 helicopters, and 40 tanks[68]—and Mission Héraclès in the War in Afghanistan, along with recent interventions in Africa.

African interventions during the early 21st century include peacekeeping actions in Côte d'Ivoire, which involved brief direct fighting between the French and Ivorian armies in 2004; French forces returned to Côte d'Ivoire in 2011 to remove the Ivorian president. In the same year, France played a pivotal role in the 2011 military intervention in Libya against Muammar Gaddafi. The year after, France intervened in Mali during that country's civil war, as Islamist militants appeared to threaten the south after seizing control of the arid north. Changes in the government of France, including Socialist François Hollande becoming president in 2012 after years of center-right governance, have done little to alter Paris' foreign policy in Africa.

Hollande also proposed French military involvement in the Syrian civil war in the wake of chemical attacks French intelligence reports linked to the forces of President Bashar al-Assad in mid-2013.[69]

France has encouraged military cooperation at an EU level, starting with the formation of the Franco-German Brigade in 1987 and Eurocorps in 1992, based in Strasbourg. In 2009 a battalion of German light infantry was moved to Alsace, the first time German troops had been stationed in France since the Nazi occupation of World War II. This process has not been immune to budget cuts—in October 2013 France announced the closure of her last infantry regiment in Germany, thus marking the end of a major presence across the Rhine although both countries will maintain around 500 troops on each other's territory.[70] As fellow members of the UN Security Council with many interests and problems in common, the UK and France have a long history of bilateral collaboration. This has occurred both at government level and in industrial programmes like the SEPECAT Jaguar whilst corporate mergers have seen Thales and MBDA emerge as major defence companies spanning both countries. The financial crisis of 2007–08 led to renewed pressure on military budgets and the "austerity alliance" enshrined in the Lancaster House Treaties of 2010. These promised close integration in both procurement and at an operational level, reaching into the most sensitive areas such as nuclear warheads.

Topical subjects edit

French Air and Space Force edit

 
The Tricolore cockade of the French Air and Space Force was the first roundel used on combat aircraft.[71]

The Armée de l'Air became one of the first professional air forces in the world when it was founded in 1909. The French took active interest in developing their air force and had the first fighter pilots of World War I. During the interwar years, however, particularly in the 1930s, the technical quality fell when compared with the Luftwaffe, which crushed both the French and British air forces during the Battle of France. In the post–World War II era, the French made a concerted and successful effort to develop a homegrown aircraft industry. Dassault Aviation led the way forward with their unique and effective delta-wing designs, which formed the basis for the famous Mirage series of jet fighters. The Mirage repeatedly demonstrated its deadly abilities in the Six-Day War and the Gulf War, becoming one of the most popular and well-sold aircraft in the history of military aviation along the way.[72] Currently, the French are awaiting the A400M military transport aircraft, which is still in developmental stages, and the integration of the new Rafale multi-role jet fighter, whose first squadron of 20 aircraft became operational in 2006 at Saint-Dizier.[73] In 2020 it was renamed the Armée de l'Air et de l'Espace, or French Air and Space Force.

French Navy edit

 
The French ships engage the British navy (right) in the Battle of Chesapeake.

Medieval fleets, in France as elsewhere, were almost entirely composed of merchant ships enlisted into naval service in time of war, but the early beginnings of the French naval history goes back to that era. The first battle of the French Navy was the battle of Arnemuiden (23 September 1338), where it defeated the English Navy.[74] The battle of Arnemuiden was also the first naval battle using artillery.[75] It was later defeated by an Anglo-Flemish fleet at the Battle of Sluys and, with Castilian help, managed to beat the English at La Rochelle—both battles playing a crucial role in the development of the Hundred Years War. However, the navy did not become a consistent instrument of national power until the 17th century with Louis XIV. Under the tutelage of the "Sun King," the French Navy was well financed and equipped, managing to resoundingly defeat a combined Spanish-Dutch fleet at the Battle of Palermo in 1676 during the Franco-Dutch War, although, along with the English navy, it suffered several strategic reversals against the Dutch, who were led by the brilliant Michiel de Ruyter. It scored several early victories in the Nine Years War against the Royal Navy and the Dutch Navy. Financial difficulties, however, allowed the English and the Dutch to regain the initiative at sea.

 
The Charles de Gaulle, the first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in Europe

A perennial problem for the French Navy was the strategic priorities of France, which were first and foremost tied to its European ambitions. This reality meant that the army was often treated better than the navy, and as a result, the latter suffered in training and operational performance.[76] The 18th century saw the beginning of the Royal Navy's domination, which managed to inflict a number of significant defeats on the French. However, in a very impressive effort, a French fleet under de Grasse managed to defeat a British fleet at the Battle of the Chesapeake in 1781, ensuring that the Franco-American ground forces would win the ongoing Siege of Yorktown. Beyond that, and Suffren's impressive campaigns against the British in India, there was not much more good news. The French Revolution all but crippled the French Navy, and efforts to make it into a powerful force under Napoleon were dashed at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, where the British all but annihilated a combined Franco-Spanish fleet. The disaster guaranteed British naval domination until the end of the Napoleonic wars.

Later in the 19th century, the navy recovered and became the second finest in the world after the Royal Navy. It conducted a successful blockade of Mexico in the Pastry War of 1838 and obliterated the Chinese navy at the Battle of Foochow in 1884. It also served as an effective link between the growing parts of the French empire. The navy performed well during World War I, in which it mainly protected the naval lanes in the Mediterranean Sea. At the onset of the war, the French had a large fleet in the Mediterranean whive no less than seven battleship & six heavy cruiser .[77] French defeats in the early stages of World War II, however, forced the British to attack the French fleet moored at Mers-el-Kebir in order to prevent the threat she fall to the Germans, the remaining of French fleet scuttled herself at Toulon for prevent the 7th Panzer Division to capture the fleet, two years later .

Currently, French naval doctrine calls for two aircraft carriers, but the French currently only have one, the Charles de Gaulle, due to restructuring. The navy is in the midst of some technological and procurement changes; newer submarines are under construction and Rafale aircraft (the naval version) are currently replacing older aircraft.

Foreign Legion edit

The Foreign Legion was created in 1831 by French king Louis-Philippe to allow the incorporation of foreign nationals into the French Army. Over the past century and a half, it has gone on to become one of the most recognizable and lauded military units in the world. The Legion had a very difficult start; there were few non-commissioned officers, many of the soldiers could not speak French, and pay was often irregular.[78] The Legion was soon transferred to fight in Algeria, performing moderately successfully given its condition. On August 17, 1835, the commander of the Legion, Colonel Joseph Bernelle, decided to amalgamate all the battalions so that no nationality was exclusively confined to a particular battalion; this helped ensure that the Legion did not fragment into factions.[79]

Following participation in Africa and in the Carlist Wars in Spain, the Legion fought in the Crimean War and the Franco-Austrian War, where they performed heroically at the Battle of Magenta, before earning even more glory during the French intervention in Mexico. On April 30, 1863, a company of 65 legionnaires was ambushed by 2,000 Mexican troops at the Hacienda Camarón; in the resulting Battle of Camarón, the legionnaires resisted bravely for several hours and inflicted 300–500 casualties on the Mexicans while 62 of them died and three were captured.[80] One of the Mexican commanders, impressed by the memorable intransigence he had just witnessed, characterized the Legion in a way they've been known ever since, "These are not men, but devils!"[81]

In World War I, the Legion demonstrated that it was a highly capable unit in modern warfare. It suffered 11,000 casualties in the Western Front while conducting brilliant defenses and spirited counter-attacks.[82] Following the debacle in the Battle of France in 1940, the Legion was split between those who supported the Vichy government and those who joined the Free French under de Gaulle. At the Battle of Bir Hakeim in 1942, the Free French 13th Legion Demi-Brigade doggedly defended its positions against a combined Italian-German offensive and seriously delayed Rommel's attacks towards Tobruk. The Legion eventually returned to Europe and fought until the end of the Second World War in 1945. It later fought in the First Indochina War against the Viet Minh. At the climactic Battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954, French forces, many of them legionnaires, were completely surrounded by a large Vietnamese army and were defeated after two months of tenacious fighting. French withdrawal from Algeria led to the collapse of the French colonial empire. The legionnaires were mostly used in colonial interventions, so the destruction of the empire prompted questions about their status. Ultimately, the Legion was allowed to exist and participated as a rapid reaction force in many places throughout Africa and around the world.[83]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 101. "Washington's success in keeping the army together deprived the British of victory, but French intervention won the war."
  2. ^ Ferguson, Niall (2001). "The Cash Nexus: Money and Power in the Modern World, 1700-2000; p.25-27". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2020-07-05.
  3. ^ William Roosen, The age of Louis XIV: the rise of modern diplomacy. p. 55
  4. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. pp. 46–7, 84–5, 108–9.
  5. ^ Brooks pp. 46–7, 84–5, 108–9.
  6. ^ William Thompson, Great power rivalries. p. 104
  7. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 234
  8. ^ Kay, Sean. NATO and the future of European security. p. 43
  9. ^ Jolyon Howorth and Patricia Chilton, Defence and dissent in contemporary France. p. 153
  10. ^ Inc, Time (13 July 1953). "LIFE". Time Inc. Retrieved 6 May 2018 – via Google Books. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  11. ^ Alfred Bradford and Pamela Bradford, With arrow, sword, and spear: a history of warfare in the ancient world. p. 213
  12. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 31. In De Bello Gallico, Caesar claims a Gallic relief force of 250,000 men, but the logistical requirements for such a huge army were beyond anything the Gauls could procure. It is likely that Caesar inflated the figures to make his victory seem more impressive.
  13. ^ Jim Bradbury, The Routledge companion to medieval warfare. p. 109
  14. ^ Jim Bradbury, The Routledge companion to medieval warfare. p. 110
  15. ^ J. M. Roberts, History of the World. p. 384
  16. ^ Brooks, Richard (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 46
  17. ^ Brooks p. 47
  18. ^ French Medieval Armies and Navies, Xenophon Group. Accessed March 20, 2006
  19. ^ French Medieval Armies and Navies, Xenophon Group. Accessed March 20, 2006
  20. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 53
  21. ^ Brooks p. 50
  22. ^ Brooks p. 50
  23. ^ Andrew Jotischky, Crusading and the Crusader States. p. 37. The theory that argues for sociological and economic rather than spiritual motivation provides regional examples where noble fathers would give their lands to the oldest surviving son, meaning younger sons would be left landless and looking for somewhere to go (the Crusades, in this case). Problems with the theory include, but are not limited to, the fact that there is no proof that younger sons formed the majority of the crusaders, the response to the crusading movement was just as strong in areas with equitable inheritance systems, and, since they were in many ways bound to the wishes and the decisions of their nobles, knights often had little individual choice in whether they would participate in a crusade.
  24. ^ Jotischky p. 37
  25. ^ "Discover Islamic Art Virtual Exhibitions - Al-Franj: the Crusaders in the Levant - Introduction". www.discoverislamicart.org. from the original on 6 May 2018. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  26. ^ . www.welcometohosanna.com. Archived from the original on 29 October 2016. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  27. ^ David Eltis, The military revolution in sixteenth-century Europe. p. 12
  28. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 59. "Much has been made of the success of the English longbow. However, it was not a war-winning weapon. Reliance on this defensive weapon on the battlefield gave the initiative to the French.."
  29. ^ Brooks p. 59. (continuing from last comment) "...its victories also depended on the French bungling their attack. The English were fortunate that their opponent failed to get it right three times in a 70-year period."
  30. ^ Trevor Dupuy, Harper Encyclopedia of Military History. p. 450
  31. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 59. "The major defeats of the French by the English boosted French military thought. A recently discovered document of the French battle plan for the Agincourt campaign shows how carefully the French thought about ways of defeating the English. In the event, the plan could not be fully executed because the battlefield at Agincourt was too narrow for the French forces to fully deploy."
  32. ^ French Medieval Armies and Navies, Xenophon Group. Accessed March 20, 2006
  33. ^ Jeremy Black, Cambridge illustrated atlas, warfare: Renaissance to revolution, 1492-1792. p. 49
  34. ^ Heath, Ian (2016). Armies of Feudal Europe 1066-1300. Lulu.com. p. 24. ISBN 9781326256524.
  35. ^ John A. Lynn, The Wars of Louis XIV. p. 8
  36. ^ James Wood, The King's Army. p. 131
  37. ^ Wood p. 132
  38. ^ Kemal Karpat, The Ottoman state and its place in world history. p. 52
  39. ^ Jamel Ostwald, Vauban under siege. p. 7
  40. ^ John A. Lynn, Giant of the Grand Siècle: The French Army, 1610–1715. p. 16 (preface)
  41. ^ Lynn p. 16 (preface)
  42. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 84
  43. ^ Jackson Spielvogel, Western Civilization: Since 1500. p. 551
  44. ^ Lester Kurtz and Jennifer Turpin, Encyclopedia of violence, peace and conflict, Volume 2. p. 425
  45. ^ David G. Chandler, The Campaigns of Napoleon. p. 136
  46. ^ John R. Elting, Swords Around a Throne: Napoleon's Grande Armée. p. 35. The opening words are mundane, but they helped pave the way for a new era in human history, one where militarism became entrenched in national culture: "From this moment until our enemies shall have been driven from the territory of the Republic, all Frenchmen are permanently requisitioned for the service of the armies."
  47. ^ T. C. W. Blanning, The French Revolutionary Wars. p. 109
  48. ^ John R. Elting, Swords Around a Throne: Napoleon's Grande Armée. p. 28–29. Aristocratic officers deserted gradually, not suddenly. Furthermore, desertion rates depended upon the service: cavalry officers were more likely to leave the army than their artillery counterparts.
  49. ^ Parker, Geoffrey. The Cambridge history of warfare. p. 189
  50. ^ Peter Paret, Clausewitz and the State. p. 332
  51. ^ John A. Lynn, The Wars of Louis XIV. p. 28
  52. ^ Martyn Lyons, Napoleon Bonaparte and the Legacy of the French Revolution. p. 43. Lyons writes, France had a large population by European standards, numbering over 29 million in 1800. This was more than the population of the Habsburg Empire (20 million), more than double the population of England (about 12 million), and more than four times the population of Prussia (6 million).
  53. ^ Lester Kurtz and Jennifer Turpin, Encyclopedia of violence, peace and conflict, Volume 2. p. 425
  54. ^ David G. Chandler, The Campaigns of Napoleon. p. 758
  55. ^ Chandler p. 162
  56. ^ Todd Fisher & Gregory Fremont-Barnes, The Napoleonic Wars: The Rise and Fall of an Empire. p. 186. "Up to 1792,...conflicts were, of course, those of kings, and followed the pattern of eighteenth-century warfare: sovereigns sought limited objectives and entertained no desire to overthrow their adversaries' ruling (and indeed usually ancient) dynasty. The outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 altered this pattern forever and international relations underwent some radical changes as a result."
  57. ^ Conrad Phillip Kottak, Cultural Anthropology. p. 331
  58. ^ Richard Brooks (editor), Atlas of World Military History. p. 129
  59. ^ Paul Marie de la Gorce, The French Army: A Military-Political History p. 48. Following the Franco-Prussian War and the loss of Alsace-Lorraine, revanchism in French politics made certain that the army was carefully nurtured and well-treated because it was viewed as the only instrument through which France could overcome the humiliations of 1870.
  60. ^ de la Gorce p. 48
  61. ^ Hew Strachan, The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War. p. 280
  62. ^ John Keegan, The Second World War. p. 64
  63. ^ Keegan p. 61
  64. ^ Boyce, French Foreign and Defence Policy. p. 185
  65. ^ Boyce p. 185
  66. ^ F. Roy Willis, France, Germany, and the New Europe, 1945-1967. p. 9
  67. ^ Cody, Edward (12 March 2009). "After 43 Years, France to Rejoin NATO as Full Member". from the original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved 6 May 2018 – via www.washingtonpost.com.
  68. ^ Charles Hauss, Politics in France. p. 194
  69. ^ "France emerges as key U.S. ally against Syria". USA Today. 2 September 2013. from the original on 2 September 2013. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
  70. ^ Agence France-Presse (31 October 2013). "France Dissolves Symbolic Regiment Based In Germany". Defense News. Archived from the original on November 8, 2013.
  71. ^ Royal Air Force Museum 2009-06-02 at the Wayback Machine
  72. ^ Shlomo Aloni, Israeli Mirage and Nesher Aces. p. 6
  73. ^ Agence-France Presse. Accessed November 7, 2006
  74. ^ Jean-Claude Castex, Dictionnaire des batailles navales franco-anglaises, Presses de l'Université Laval, 2004, p. 21
  75. ^ Jean-Claude Castex, Dictionnaire des batailles navales franco-anglaises, Presses de l'Université Laval, 2004, p.21
  76. ^ Russell Weigley, The age of battles: the quest for decisive warfare from Breitenfeld to Waterloo. pp. 158–9
  77. ^ Barbara Tuchman, The Guns of August. p. 166
  78. ^ David Jordan, The History of the French Foreign Legion. p. 10
  79. ^ Jordan p. 14
  80. ^ Byron Farwell, The encyclopedia of nineteenth-century land warfare. p. 155
  81. ^ David Jordan, The History of the French Foreign Legion. p. 34
  82. ^ Jordan p. 67
  83. ^ Jordan p. 94

Works cited edit

  • Aloni, Shlomo. Israeli Mirage and Nesher Aces. Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1-84176-653-4
  • Black, Jeremy. Cambridge illustrated atlas of warfare: Renaissance to revolution, 1492–1792. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-521-47033-1
  • Blanning, T.C.W. The French Revolutionary Wars. London: Hodder Headline Group, 1996. ISBN 0-340-56911-5
  • Boyce, Robert. French Foreign and Defence Policy, 1918–1940. Oxford: CRC Press, 1998. ISBN 0-203-97922-2
  • Bradbury, Jim. The Routledge companion to medieval warfare. New York: Routledge, 2004. ISBN 0-415-22126-9
  • Bradford, Alfred and Pamela. With arrow, sword, and spear: a history of warfare in the ancient world. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001. ISBN 0-275-95259-2
  • Brooks, Richard (editor). Atlas of World Military History. London: HarperCollins, 2000. ISBN 0-7607-2025-8
  • Chandler, David G. The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995. ISBN 0-02-523660-1
  • Chilton, Patricia and Howorth, Jolyon Howorth. Defence and dissent in contemporary France Oxford: Taylor & Francis, 1984. ISBN 0-7099-1280-3
  • Dupuy, Trevor N., Harper Encyclopedia of Military History. New York: HarperCollins, 1993. ISBN 0-06-270056-1
  • Elting, John R. Swords Around a Throne: Napoleon's Grande Armée. New York: Da Capo Press Inc., 1988. ISBN 0-306-80757-2
  • Eltis, David. The military revolution in sixteenth-century Europe. New York: I. B. Tauris, 1998. ISBN 1-86064-352-3
  • Farwell, Byron. The encyclopedia of nineteenth-century land warfare. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2001. ISBN 0-393-04770-9
  • Fisher, Todd & Fremont-Barnes, Gregory. The Napoleonic Wars: The Rise and Fall of an Empire. Oxford: Osprey Publishing Ltd., 2004. ISBN 1-84176-831-6
  • de la Gorce, Paul Marie. The French Army: A Military-Political History. New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1963.
  • Hauss, Charles. Politics in France. Washington, DC: CQ Press, 2007. ISBN 1-56802-670-6
  • Jordan, David. The History of the French Foreign Legion. Spellmount Limited, 2005. ISBN 1-86227-295-6
  • Jotischky, Andrew. Crusading and the Crusader States. Pearson Education Limited, 2004. ISBN 0-582-41851-8
  • Karpat, Kemal. The Ottoman state and its place in world history. Leiden: Brill, 1974. ISBN 90-04-03945-7
  • Kay, Sean. NATO and the future of European security. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 1998. ISBN 0-8476-9001-6
  • Keegan, John. The Second World War. New York: Penguin Group, 1989. ISBN 0-670-82359-7
  • Kottak, Conrad. Cultural Anthropology. Columbus: McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2005. ISBN 0-07-295250-4
  • Kurtz, Lester and Turpin, Jennifer. Encyclopedia of violence, peace and conflict, Volume 2. New York: Academic Press, 1999. ISBN 0-12-227010-X
  • Lyons, Martyn. Napoleon Bonaparte and the Legacy of the French Revolution. New York: St. Martin's Press, Inc., 1994. ISBN 0-312-12123-7
  • Lynn, John A. Giant of the Grand Siècle: The French Army, 1610–1715. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-521-57273-8
  • Lynn, John A. The Wars of Louis XIV. London: Longman, 1999. ISBN 0-582-05629-2
  • Ostwald, Jamel. Vauban under siege. Leiden: Brill, 2007. ISBN 90-04-15489-2
  • Paret, Peter. Clausewitz and the State. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-691-13130-9
  • Parker, Geoffrey. The Cambridge history of warfare. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-521-85359-1
  • Roberts, J.M. History of the World. New York: Penguin Group, 1992. ISBN 0-19-521043-3
  • Roosen, William. The age of Louis XIV: the rise of modern diplomacy. Edison: Transaction Publishers, 1976. ISBN 0-87073-581-0
  • Spielvogel, Jackson. Western Civilization: Since 1500. Florence: Cengage Learning, 2008. ISBN 0-495-50287-1
  • Strachan, Hew. The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-19-289325-4
  • Thompson, William. Great power rivalries. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1999. ISBN 1-57003-279-3
  • Tuchman W., Barbara. The Guns of August. New York: Random House, 1962. ISBN 0-345-38623-X
  • Weigley, Russell. The age of battles: the quest for decisive warfare from Breitenfeld to Waterloo. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-253-21707-5
  • Willis, F. Roy. France, Germany, and the New Europe, 1945–1967. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, 1968. ISBN 0-8047-0241-1
  • Wood, James. The King's Army. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-521-52513-6

Further reading edit

  • Blaufarb, Rafe. The French army 1750–1820: Careers, talent, merit (Manchester University Press, 2021).
  • Clayton, Anthony. Paths of glory: the French Army 1914–18. London: Cassell, 2003.
  • Cowley, Robert (editor). What If? Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been. New York: Penguin Group, 1999. ISBN 0-399-15238-5
  • Doughty, Robert A. Pyrrhic Victory: French Strategy and Operations in the Great War (2008), 592pp; excerpt and text search
  • Forrest, Alan. Conscripts and Deserters: The Army and French Society During the Revolution and Empire (1989)
  • Forrest, Alan. Napoleon's Men: The Soldiers of the Revolution and Empire (2002)
  • Greenhalgh, Elizabeth. The French Army and the First World War (2014), 486 pages; comprehensive scholarly history.
  • Holroyd, Richard. "The Bourbon Army, 1815–1830." Historical Journal 14, no. 3 (1971): 529–52. online.
  • Kinard, Jeff. Artillery: an illustrated history of its impact. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2007. ISBN 1-85109-556-X
  • Nolan, Cathal. Wars of the Age of Louis XIV, 1650–1715: An Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization (2008)
  • Nolan, Cathal. The Age of Wars of Religion, 1000–1650 (2 vol. 2006)
  • Pichichero, Christy. The Military Enlightenment: War and Culture in the French Empire from Louis XIV to Napoleon (2018) online review
  • Porch, Douglas. "The French Army Law of 1832." Historical Journal 14, no. 4 (1971): 751–69. online.
  • Porch, Douglas. The March to the Marne: The French Army 1871–1914 Cambridge University Press (2003) ISBN 978-0521545921
  • Scott, Samuel F. From Yorktown to Valmy: the transformation of the French Army in an age of revolution (University Press of Colorado, 1998)
  • Thoral, Marie-Cécile. From Valmy to Waterloo: France at War, 1792–1815 (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011)

Historiography and memory edit

  • Forrest, Alan. The Legacy of the French Revolutionary Wars: The Nation-in-Arms in French Republican Memory (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
  • Messenger, Charles, ed. Reader's Guide to Military History (2001) 948pp; Evaluation of thousands of books on military history, many of them involving France.

In French edit

  • Bertaud, Jean-Paul, and William Serman. Nouvelle histoire militaire de la France, 1789–1919 (Paris, Fayard: 1998); 855pp

External links edit

  • French Military Terms Adopted by the English Language
  • French military participation from 1800 to 1999
  • The French Army: Royal, Revolutionary and Imperial
  • An excellent guide to French Medieval warfare
  • France in the American Revolution
  • French Army from Revolution to the First Empire, Illustrations by Hippolyte Bellangé from the book P.-M. Laurent de L`Ardeche «Histoire de Napoleon», 1843
  • (2008) – Council on Foreign Relations

military, history, france, military, history, france, encompasses, immense, panorama, conflicts, struggles, extending, more, than, years, across, areas, including, modern, france, europe, variety, regions, throughout, world, july, 1453, french, army, defeated,. The military history of France encompasses an immense panorama of conflicts and struggles extending for more than 2 000 years across areas including modern France Europe and a variety of regions throughout the world In July 1453 a French army defeated its English opponents at the Battle of Castillon the last major engagement of the Hundred Years War The victory at Castillon showcased the power of artillery against charging masses of infantry and allowed the French to capture Bordeaux a few months later The English subsequently lost their major remaining possessions on the European continent According to historian Niall Ferguson France is the most successful military power in history It participated in 50 of the 125 major European wars that have been fought since 1495 more than any other European state The first major recorded wars in the territory of modern day France itself revolved around the Gallo Roman conflict that predominated from 60 BC to 50 BC The Romans eventually emerged victorious through the campaigns of Julius Caesar After the decline of the Roman Empire a Germanic tribe known as the Franks took control of Gaul by defeating competing tribes The land of Francia from which France gets its name had high points of expansion under kings Clovis I and Charlemagne who established the nucleus of the future French state In the Middle Ages rivalries with England prompted major conflicts such as the Norman Conquest and the Hundred Years War With an increasingly centralized monarchy the first standing army since Roman times and the use of artillery France expelled the English from its territory and came out of the Middle Ages as the most powerful nation in Europe only to lose that status to the Holy Roman Empire and Spain following defeat in the Italian Wars The Wars of Religion crippled France in the late 16th century but a major victory over Spain in the Thirty Years War made France the most powerful nation on the continent once more In parallel France developed its first colonial empire in Asia Africa and in the Americas Under Louis XIV France achieved military supremacy over its rivals but escalating conflicts against increasingly powerful enemy coalitions checked French ambitions and left the kingdom bankrupt at the opening of the 18th century Resurgent French armies secured victories in dynastic conflicts against the Spanish Polish and Austrian crowns At the same time France was fending off attacks on its colonies As the 18th century advanced global competition with Great Britain led to the Seven Years War where France lost its North American holdings Consolation came in the form of dominance in Europe and the American Revolutionary War where extensive French aid in the form of money and arms and the direct participation of its army and navy led to the independence of the United States 1 Internal political upheaval eventually led to 23 years of nearly continuous conflict in the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars France reached the zenith of its power during this period dominating the European continent in an unprecedented fashion under Napoleon Bonaparte However France was ultimately defeated in 1815 and its borders were restored to the same ones it controlled before the Revolution The rest of the 19th century witnessed the growth of the Second French colonial empire as well as French interventions in Belgium Spain and Mexico Other major wars were fought against Russia in the Crimea Austria in Italy and Prussia within France itself Following defeat in the Franco Prussian War Franco German rivalry erupted again in the First World War France and its allies were victorious this time Social political and economic upheaval in the wake of the conflict led to the Second World War in which France and the Allies were defeated in the Battle of France and almost half of the country was placed under German military occupation for more than four years The Allies including the Free French Forces led by a government in exile eventually emerged victorious over the Axis Powers As a result France secured an occupation zone in Germany and a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council The imperative of avoiding a third Franco German conflict on the scale of the first two world wars paved the way for European integration starting in the 1950s France became a nuclear power and since the late 20th century has cooperated closely with NATO the United States and European partners Contents 1 Dominant themes 2 Early period 3 Middle Ages 4 Ancien Regime 5 Revolutionary France 6 Napoleonic France 7 French colonial empire 8 From 1815 8 1 First World War 8 2 Second World War 8 3 Post 1945 warfare 9 Topical subjects 9 1 French Air and Space Force 9 2 French Navy 9 3 Foreign Legion 10 See also 11 Notes 12 Works cited 13 Further reading 13 1 Historiography and memory 13 2 In French 14 External linksDominant themes edit nbsp Animated map of French territory in continental Europe over time After centuries of warfare and diplomacy France has the largest territory of any nation in Western Europe Historian Niall Ferguson argues that France is the most belligerent military power in history It participated in 50 of the 125 major European wars fought since 1495 more than any other European state It is followed by Austria which fought in 47 of them Spain in 44 and England in 43 Out of the 169 most important world battles fought since 387BC France has won 109 lost 49 and drawn 10 2 In the last few centuries French strategic thinking has sometimes been driven by the need to attain or preserve the so called natural frontiers which are the Pyrenees to the southwest the Alps to the southeast and the Rhine River to the east 3 Starting with Clovis 1 500 years of warfare and diplomacy has witnessed the accomplishment of most of these objectives Warfare with other European powers was not always determined by these considerations and often rulers of France extended their continental authority far beyond these barriers most notably under Charlemagne Louis XIV and Napoleon 4 These periods of incessant conflict were characterized by their own standards and conventions but all required strong central leadership in order to permit the extension of French rule 5 Important military rivalries in human history have come about as a result of conflict between French peoples and other European powers Anglo French rivalry for prestige in Europe and around the world continued for centuries while the more recent Franco German rivalry required two world wars to stabilize 6 nbsp Animated map showing growth and decline of the French colonial empireStarting in the early 16th century much of France s military efforts were dedicated to securing its overseas possessions and putting down dissent among both French colonists and native populations French troops were spread all across its empire primarily to deal with the local population The French colonial empire ultimately disintegrated after the failed attempt to subdue Algerian nationalists in the late 1950s a failure that led to the collapse of the Fourth Republic 7 Since World War II France s efforts have been directed at maintaining its status as a great power and its influence on the UN Security Council France has also been instrumental in attempting to unite the armed forces of Europe for their own defense in order to both balance the power of Russia and to lessen European military dependence on the United States For example France withdrew from NATO in 1966 over complaints that its role in the organization was being subordinated to the demands of the United States 8 French objectives in this era have undergone major shifts Unencumbered by continental wars or intricate alliances France now deploys its military forces as part of international peacekeeping operations security enforcers in former colonies or maintains them combat ready and mobilized to respond to threats from rogue states France is a nuclear power with the largest nuclear arsenal in Europe and its nuclear capabilities just like its conventional forces have been restructured to rapidly deal with emerging threats 9 Early period editSee also List of wars involving France nbsp Brennus and the sack of Rome as imagined in the 19th centuryAround 390 BC the Gallic chieftain Brennus made his own way through the Alps defeated the Romans in the Battle of the Allia and sacked Rome for several months The Gallic invasion left Rome weakened and encouraged several subdued Italian tribes to rebel One by one over the course of the next 50 years these tribes were defeated and brought back under Roman dominion Meanwhile the Gauls would continue to harass the region until 345 BC when they entered into a formal treaty with Rome But Romans and Gauls would maintain an adversarial relationship for the next several centuries and the Gauls would remain a threat in Italia Around 125 BC the south of France is conquered by the Romans who called this region Provincia Romana Roman Province which evolved into the name Provence in French 10 Brennus sack of Rome was still remembered by Romans when Julius Caesar conquered the remainder of Gaul Initially Caesar met with little Gallic resistance the 60 or so tribes that made up Gaul were unable to unite and defeat the Roman army something Caesar exploited by pitting one tribe against another In 58 BC Caesar defeated the Germanic tribe of the Suebi which was led by Ariovistus The following year he conquered the Belgian Gauls after claiming that they were conspiring against Rome The string of victories continued in a naval triumph against the Veneti in 56 BC In 53 BC a united Gallic resistance movement under Vercingetorix emerged for the first time Caesar laid siege to the fortified city of Avaricum Bourges and broke through the defenses after 25 days with only 800 out of the 40 000 inhabitants managing to escape 11 He then besieged Gergovia Vercingetorix s home town and suffered one of the worst defeats in his career when he had to retreat to suppress a revolt in another part of Gaul After returning Caesar surrounded Vercingetorix at Alesia in 52 BC The townspeople were starved into submission and Caesar s unique defensive earthworks protruding towards the city and away from it in order to stop a massive Gallic relief force 12 eventually forced Vercingetorix to surrender The Gallic Wars were over Gallo Roman culture settled over the region in the next few centuries but as Roman power weakened in the 4th and 5th centuries AD a Germanic tribe the Franks overran large areas that today form modern France Under King Clovis I in the late 5th and early 6th centuries Frankish dominions quadrupled as they managed to defeat successive opponents for control of Gaul In 486 the Frankish armies under Clovis triumphed over Syagrius the last Roman official in Northern Gaul at the Battle of Soissons 13 In 491 Clovis defeated Thuringians east of his territories In 496 he overcame the Alamanni at the Battle of Tolbiac In 507 he scored the most impressive victory in his career prevailing at the Battle of Vouille against the Visigoths who were led by Alaric II the conqueror of Spain 14 nbsp Frankish expansion from the early Clovis I kingdom 481 to the divisions of Charlemagne s Empire 843 870 Following Clovis territorial divisions in the Frankish domain sparked intense rivalry between the western part of the kingdom Neustria and the eastern part Austrasia The two were sometimes united under one king but from the 6th to the 8th centuries they often warred against each other Early in the 8th century the Franks were preoccupied with Islamic invasions across the Pyrenees and up the Rhone Valley Two key battles during this period were the Battle of Toulouse and the Battle of Tours both won by the Franks and both instrumental in slowing Islamic incursions Under Charlemagne the Franks reached the height of their power After campaigns against Lombards Avars Saxons and Basques the resulting Carolingian Empire stretched from the Pyrenees to Central Germany from the North Sea to the Adriatic In 800 the Pope made Charlemagne Emperor of the West in return for protection of the Church The Carolingian Empire was a conscious effort to recreate a central administration modeled on that of the Roman Empire 15 but the motivations behind military expansion differed Charlemagne hoped to provide his nobles an incentive to fight by encouraging looting on campaign Plunder and spoils of war were stronger temptations than imperial expansion and several regions were invaded over and over in order to bolster the coffers of Frankish nobility 16 Cavalry dominated the battlefields and while the high costs associated with equipping horses and horse riders helped limit their numbers Carolingian armies maintained an average size of 20 000 during peacetime by recruiting infantry from imperial territories near theaters of operation swelling to more with the levies called upon when at war 17 The Empire lasted from 800 to 843 when following Frankish tradition it was split between the sons of Louis the Pious by the Treaty of Verdun Middle Ages editSee also List of wars involving France nbsp A section of the Bayeux Tapestry chronicling the Norman victory at HastingsMilitary history during this period paralleled the rise and eventual fall of the armored knight Following Charlemagne and the breakdown of the Frankish Empire due to civil war and ceaseless Viking incursions the larger and more logistically difficult to maintain infantry based armies were abandoned in favor of cavalry supplemented by an improvement in armor leather and steel steel helmets coats of mail and even full armor added to the defensive capabilities of mounted forces 18 A smaller and more mobile elite cavalry force quickly grew to be the most important component of armies within French territories and most of the rest of Europe 19 with the shock charge they provided becoming the standard tactic on the battlefield when it was invented in the 11th century 20 At the same time the development of agricultural techniques allowed the nations of Western Europe to radically increase food production facilitating the growth of a particularly large aristocracy under Capetian France The rise of castles which began in France during the 10th century was partly caused by the inability of centralized authorities to control these emerging dukes and aristocrats 21 While all vassals and knights were in theory bound to fight for their sovereign when called upon this period was marked by many feudal local and regional lords using the knights and levied conscripts below them to fight amongst each other often in defiance or even outright rebellion towards their sovereign After campaigns designed for plundering attacking and defending castles became the dominant feature of medieval warfare 22 nbsp Castles were the most important defensive structures during the Middle Ages making them a valuable target for any invading army During the Crusades there were in fact too many armored knights in France for the land to support Some scholars believe that one of the driving forces behind the Crusades was an attempt by such landless knights to find land overseas without causing the type of internecine warfare that would largely damage France s increasing military strength 23 However such historiographical work on the Crusades is being challenged and rejected by a large part of the historical community The ultimate motivation or motivations for any one individual are difficult to know but regardless nobles and knights from France generally formed very sizeable contingents of crusading expeditions 24 Crusaders were so predominantly French that the word crusader in the Arabic language is simply known as Al Franj or The Franks 25 and Old French became the lingua franca of the Kingdom of Jerusalem 26 nbsp The advent of artillery like these bombards at the Mont Saint Michel greatly changed the techniques of warfare in the late Middle Ages In the 11th century French knights wore knee length mail and carried long lances and swords The Norman knights fielded at the Battle of Hastings were more than a match for English forces and their victory simply cemented their power and influence Between 1202 and 1343 France reduced England s holdings on the continent to a few small provinces through a series of conflicts including the Bouvines Campaign 1202 1214 the Saintonge War 1242 and the War of Saint Sardos 1324 Improvements in armor over the centuries led to the establishment of plate armor by the 14th century which was further developed more rigorously in the 15th century 27 However by the late 14th century and the early 15th century socioeconomic calamities such as the Black Death and political crises such as the Jacquerie peasant revolt and especially the Armagnac Burgundian Civil War combined with numerous English invasions all led to French military power declining during the first two phases of the Hundred Years War New weapons including artillery and tactics seemingly made the knight more of a sitting target than an effective battle force but the often praised longbowmen had little to do with the English success 28 Poor coordination or rough and soft muddy terrain led to a number of bungled French assaults 29 The slaughter of knights at the Battle of Agincourt best exemplified this carnage The French were able to field a much larger army of men at arms than their English counterparts who had many longbowmen Despite this the French suffered about 6 000 casualties 30 compared to a few hundred for the English because the narrow terrain prevented the tactical envelopments envisioned in recently discovered French plans for the battle 31 The French suffered a similar defeat at the Battle of the Golden Spurs against Flemish militia in 1302 When knights were allowed to effectively deploy and attack their opponents in the open field however they could be more useful as at Cassel in 1328 or even more decisively at Bouvines in 1214 and Patay in 1429 Popular conceptions of the third and final phase of the Hundred Years War are often dominated by the exploits of Joan of Arc but French resurgence was rooted in multiple factors A major step was taken by King Charles VII who created the Compagnies d ordonnance cavalry units with 20 companies of 600 men each 32 and launched the first standing army for a dynastic state in the Western world 33 The Compagnies gave the French a considerable edge in professionalism and discipline being composed of paid full time professional soldiers at a time when the allegiances of the aristocratic knights would often shift to the opposing side Strong French counterattacks turned the tide of the war The important victories of Orleans Patay Formigny and Castillon allowed the French to win back all English continental territories except Calais which was later captured by the French Equipment of medieval French sergeants was based on their property 34 Property worth Military equipmentL60 Hauberk helmet sword knife spear and shieldL30 Gambeson sword knife spear and shieldL10 Helmet sword knife spear and shieldL10 lt Bow arrows and knifeAncien Regime editSee also List of wars involving France nbsp Francis I at the Battle of Marignan 1515 The French Renaissance and the beginning of the Ancien Regime normally marked by the reign of Francis I saw the nation become far more unified under the monarch The power of the nobles was diminished as a national army was created With England expelled from the continent and being consumed by the Wars of the Roses France s main rival was the Holy Roman Empire This threat to France became alarming in 1516 when Charles V became the king of Spain and grew worse when Charles was also elected Holy Roman Emperor in 1519 France was all but surrounded as Germany Spain and the Low Countries were controlled by the Habsburgs The lengthy Italian Wars that took place during this period eventually resulted in defeat for France and established Catholic Spain which formed a branch of the Habsburg holdings as the most powerful nation in Europe with their dreaded tercios dominating the European battlefield well into the Thirty Years War Later in the 16th century France was weakened internally by the Wars of Religion As nobles managed to raise their own private armies these conflicts between Huguenots and Catholics all but demolished centralization and monarchical authority precluding France from remaining a powerful force in European affairs 35 On the battlefield the religious conflicts highlighted the influence of the gendarmes heavy cavalry units that comprised the majority of cavalrymen attached to the main field armies 36 The pride of the royal cavalry gendarme companies were often attached to the main royal army in hopes of inflicting a decisive defeat on Huguenot forces although secondary detachments were also used for scouting and intercepting enemy troops 37 nbsp The Battle of Rocroi in 1643 After the Wars of Religion France could do little to challenge the dominance of the Holy Roman Empire although the empire itself faced several problems From the east it was facing intense warfare against Ottoman Empire with which France formed an alliance 38 The vast Habsburg empire also proved impossible to manage effectively and the crown was soon divided between the Spanish and Austrian holdings In 1568 the Dutch declared independence launching a war that would last for decades and would illustrate the weaknesses of Habsburg power In the 17th century the religious violence that had beset France a century earlier began to tear the empire apart At first France sat on the sidelines but under Cardinal Richelieu it saw an opportunity to advance its own interests at the expense of the Habsburgs Despite France s staunch Catholicism it intervened on the side of the Protestants The Thirty Years War was long and extremely bloody but France and its allies came out victorious under the leadership of the legendary commanders Conde and Turenne beginning a long line of unparalleled French marshals who would help usher in a new era of military strategy After their victory France emerged as the sole dominant European power under the reign of Louis XIV In parallel French explorers such as Jacques Cartier or Samuel de Champlain claimed lands in the Americas for France paving the way for the expansion of the French colonial empire nbsp The Battle of Fontenoy 1745 during the War of the Austrian SuccessionThe long reign of Louis XIV saw a series of conflicts the War of Devolution the Franco Dutch War the War of the Reunions the Nine Years War and the War of the Spanish Succession Few of these wars were either clear victories or definite defeats but French borders expanded steadily anyway The west bank of the Rhine much of the Spanish Netherlands and a good deal of Luxembourg were annexed while the War of the Spanish Succession saw the grandson of Louis placed on the throne of Spain The French strategic situation however changed decisively with the Glorious Revolution in England which replaced a pro French king with an enemy of Louis the Dutch William of Orange After a period of two centuries seeing only rare hostilities with France England now became a consistent enemy again and remained so until the 19th century To stop French advances England formed coalitions with several other European powers most notably the Habsburgs While these armies had difficulties against the French on land the British Royal Navy dominated the seas and France lost many of its colonial holdings The British economy also became Europe s most powerful and British money funded the campaigns of their continental allies nbsp Surrender of Lord Cornwallis to French troops left and American troops right at Yorktown 1781 Wars in this era consisted mostly of sieges and movements that were rarely decisive prompting the French military engineer Vauban to design an intricate network of fortifications for the defense of France 39 The armies of Louis XIV were some of the most impressive in French history their quality reflecting militaristic as well political developments In the mid 17th century royal power reasserted itself and the army became a tool through which the King could wield authority replacing older systems of mercenary units and the private forces of recalcitrant nobles 40 Military administration also made gigantic progress as food supply clothing equipment and armaments were provided in a regularity never before equaled 41 In fact the French embedded this standardization by becoming the first army to give their soldiers national uniforms in the 1680s and 1690s 42 The 18th century saw France remain the dominant power in Europe but begin to falter largely because of internal problems The country engaged in a long series of wars such as the War of the Quadruple Alliance the War of the Polish Succession and the War of the Austrian Succession but these conflicts gained France little Meanwhile Britain s power steadily increased and a new force Prussia became a major threat This change in the balance of power led to the Diplomatic Revolution of 1756 when France and the Habsburgs forged an alliance after centuries of animosity 43 This alliance proved less than effective in the Seven Years War but in the American Revolutionary War the French helped inflict a major defeat on the British Revolutionary France editMain article French Revolutionary Wars See also List of wars involving France and French Revolutionary Army nbsp The armies of the Revolution at Jemappes in 1792 With chaos internally and enemies on the borders the French were in a jittery state in 1792 By 1797 however they had exported their ideology and the army that followed it to the Low Countries and Northern Italy The French Revolution true to its name revolutionized nearly all aspects of French and European life The powerful sociopolitical forces unleashed by a people seeking liberte egalite and fraternite made certain that even warfare was not spared this upheaval 18th century armies with their rigid protocols static operational strategy unenthusiastic soldiers and aristocratic officer classes underwent massive remodeling as the French monarchy and nobility gave way to liberal assemblies obsessed with external threats The fundamental shifts in warfare that occurred during the period have prompted scholars to identify the era as the beginning of modern war 44 In 1791 the Legislative Assembly passed the Drill Book legislation implementing a series of infantry doctrines created by French theorists because of their defeat by the Prussians in the Seven Years War 45 The new developments hoped to exploit the intrinsic bravery of the French soldier made even more powerful by the explosive nationalist forces of the Revolution The changes also placed a faith on the ordinary soldier that would be completely unacceptable in earlier times French troops were expected to harass the enemy and remain loyal enough to not desert a benefit other Ancien Regime armies did not have Following the declaration of war in 1792 an imposing array of enemies converging on French borders prompted the government in Paris to adopt radical measures August 23 1793 would become a historic day in military history on that date the National Convention called a levee en masse or mass conscription for the first time in human history 46 By summer of the following year conscription made some 500 000 men available for service and the French began to deal blows to their European enemies 47 nbsp An episode Battle of Entrames of the civil war between republicans and royalists during the French Revolutionary WarsArmies during the Revolution became noticeably larger than their Holy Roman counterparts and combined with the new enthusiasm of the troops the tactical and strategic opportunities became profound By 1797 the French had defeated the First Coalition occupied the Low Countries the west bank of the Rhine and Northern Italy objectives which had defied the Valois and Bourbon dynasties for centuries Unsatisfied with the results many European powers formed a Second Coalition but by 1801 this too had been decisively beaten Another key aspect of French success was the changes wrought in the officer classes Traditionally European armies left major command positions to those who could be trusted namely the aristocracy The hectic nature of the French Revolution however tore apart France s old army meaning new men were required to become officers and commanders 48 Besides opening a flood of tactical and strategic opportunities the Revolutionary Wars also laid the foundation for modern military theory Later authors that wrote about nations in arms drew inspiration from the French Revolution in which dire circumstances seemingly mobilized the entire French nation for war and incorporated nationalism into the fabric of military history 49 Although the reality of war in the France of 1795 would be different from that in the France of 1915 conceptions and mentalities of war evolved significantly Clausewitz correctly analyzed the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras to give posterity a thorough and complete theory of war that emphasized struggles between nations occurring everywhere from the battlefield to the legislative assemblies and to the very way that people think 50 War now emerged as a vast panorama of physical and psychological forces heading for victory or defeat Napoleonic France editMain article Napoleonic Wars See also List of wars involving France and Grande Armee History nbsp Napoleon and the Grande Armee receive the surrender of Austrian General Mack after the Battle of Ulm in October 1805 The decisive finale of the Ulm Campaign raised the tally of captured Austrian soldiers to 60 000 With the Austrian army destroyed Vienna would fall to the French in November The Napoleonic Era saw French power and influence reach immense heights even though the period of domination was relatively brief In the century and a half preceding the Revolutionary Era France had transformed demographic leverage to military and political weight the French population was 19 million in 1700 51 but this had grown to over 29 million in 1800 much higher than that of most other European powers 52 These numbers permitted France to raise armies at a rapid pace should the need arise Furthermore military innovations carried out during the Revolution and the Consulate evidenced by improvements in artillery and cavalry capabilities on top of better army and staff organization gave the French army a decisive advantage in the initial stages of the Napoleonic Wars Another ingredient of success was Napoleon Bonaparte himself intelligent charismatic and a military genius Napoleon absorbed the latest military theories of the day and applied them in the battlefield with deadly effect nbsp Napoleon I at the battle of Iena 1806 which led to the occupation of PrussiaNapoleon inherited an army that was based on conscription and used huge masses of poorly trained troops which could usually be readily replaced 53 By 1805 the French Army was a truly lethal force with many in its ranks veterans of the French Revolutionary Wars Two years of constant drilling for an invasion of England helped to build a well trained well led army The Imperial Guard served as an example for the rest of the army and consisted of Napoleon s best handpicked soldiers Napoleon s huge losses suffered during the disastrous Russian campaign would have destroyed any professional commander of the day but those losses were quickly replaced with new draftees After Napoleon nations planned for huge armies with professional leadership and a constant supply of new soldiers which had huge human costs when improved weapons like the rifled musket replaced the inaccurate muskets of Napoleon s day during the American Civil War nbsp French Empire 1811 The French Empire is in dark green while the Grand Empire includes satellite states and areas under French military control light green This large size came at a cost as the logistics of feeding a huge army made them especially dependent on supplies Most armies of the day relied on the supply convoy system established during the Thirty Years War by Gustavus Adolphus This limited mobility since the soldiers had to wait for the convoys but it did keep possibly mutinous troops from deserting and thus helped preserve an army s composure However Napoleon s armies were so large that feeding them using the old method proved ineffective and consequently French troops were allowed to live off the land Infused with new concepts of nation and service Napoleon often attempted to wage decisive quick campaigns so that he could allow his men to live off the land The French army did use a convoy system but it was stocked with very few days worth of food Napoleon s troops were expected to march quickly effect a decision on the battlefield then disperse to feed For the Russian campaign the French did store 24 days worth of food before beginning active operations but this campaign was the exception not the rule 54 Napoleon s biggest influence in the military sphere was in the conduct of warfare Weapons and technology remained largely static through the Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras but 18th century operational strategy underwent massive restructuring Sieges became infrequent to the point of near irrelevance a new emphasis arose towards the destruction of enemy armies as well as their outmaneuvering and invasions of enemy territory occurred over broader fronts thus introducing a plethora of strategic opportunities that made wars costlier and just as importantly more decisive 55 Defeat for a European power now meant much more than losing isolated enclaves Near Carthaginian treaties intertwined whole national efforts social political economic and militaristic into gargantuan collisions that severely upset international conventions as understood at the time Napoleon s initial success sowed the seeds for his downfall Not used to such catastrophic defeats in the rigid power system of 18th century Europe many nations found existence under the French yoke difficult sparking revolts wars and general instability that plagued the continent until 1815 when the forces of reaction finally triumphed at the Battle of Waterloo 56 French colonial empire editMain articles French colonial empire and List of French possessions and colonies See also New France French West Indies French India French West Africa French Equatorial Africa List of wars involving France Troupes coloniales and Army of Africa France nbsp Map of the first green and second blue French colonial empiresThe history of French colonial imperialism can be divided in two major eras the first from the early 17th century to the middle of the 18th century and the second from the early 19th century to the middle of the 20th century In the first phase of expansion France concentrated its efforts mainly in North America the Caribbean and India setting up commercial ventures that were backed by military force Following defeat in the Seven Years War France lost its possessions in North America and India but it did manage to keep the wealthy Caribbean islands of Saint Domingue Guadeloupe and Martinique The second stage began with the conquest of Algeria in 1830 then with the establishment of French Indochina covering modern Vietnam Laos and Cambodia and a string of military victories in the Scramble for Africa where it established control over regions covering much of West Africa Central Africa and Maghreb In 1914 France had an empire stretching over 13 000 000 km2 5 000 000 sq mi 6 000 000 mile of land and about 110 million people 57 Following victory in World War I Togo and most of Cameroon were also added to the French possessions and Syria and Lebanon became French mandates For most of the period from 1870 to 1945 France was territorially the third largest nation on Earth after Britain and Russia later the Soviet Union and had the most overseas possessions following Britain Following the Second World War France struggled to preserve French territories but wound up losing the First Indochina War the precursor to the Vietnam War and granting independence to Algeria after a long war Today France still maintains a number of overseas territories but their collective size is barely a shadow of the old French colonial empire From 1815 edit nbsp French Zouaves during the Franco Austrian War 1859 After the exile of Napoleon the freshly restored Bourbon monarchy helped the absolute Bourbon king of Spain to recover his throne during the French intervention in Spain in 1823 To restore the prestige of the French monarchy disputed by the Revolution and the First Empire Charles X engaged in the military conquest of Algeria in 1830 This marked the beginning of a new expansion of the French colonial empire throughout the 19th century In that century France remained a major force in continental affairs After the 1830 July Revolution the liberal king Louis Philippe I victoriously supported the Spanish and Belgian liberals in 1831 The French later inflicted a defeat on the Habsburgs in the Franco Austrian War of 1859 a victory which led to the unification of Italy in 1861 after having triumphed over Russia with other allies in the Crimean War 1854 56 Detrimentally however the French army emerged from these victories in an overconfident and complacent state 58 France s defeat in the Franco Prussian War led to the loss of Alsace Lorraine and the creation of a united German Empire both results representing major failures in long term French foreign policy and sparking a vengeful nationalist revanchism meant to earn back former territories 59 The Dreyfus Affair however mitigated these nationalist tendencies by prompting public skepticism about the competence of the military 60 First World War edit See also French Army in World War I nbsp French soldiers in a trench during the Battle of Verdun 1916 In World War I the French with their allies managed to hold the Western front and to counterattack on the Eastern front and in the colonies until the final defeat of the Central Powers and their allies After major conflicts such as the Battle of the Frontiers the First Battle of the Marne the Battle of Verdun and the Second Battle of the Aisne the last resulting in tremendous loss of life and mutiny within the army the French proved to be enough of a cohesive fighting force to counterattack and defeat the Germans at the Second Battle of the Marne the first in what would become a string of Allied victories that ended the war 61 The Treaty of Versailles eventually returned Alsace Lorraine to France The French military civilian and material losses during the First World War were huge With more than 1 3 million military fatalities and more than 4 6 million wounded France suffered the second highest Allied losses after Russia As a result France was adamant on the payment of reparations by Germany The organised failure of the Weimar Republic to pay reparations led to the Occupation of the Ruhr by French and Belgian forces Second World War edit See also Military history of France during World War II nbsp Free French Foreign Legionnaires at the Battle of Bir Hakeim 1942 A variety of factors ranging from smaller industrial base to low population growth and obsolete military doctrines crippled the French effort at the outset of World War II The Germans won the Battle of France in 1940 despite the French often having better planes and tanks than their opponents whereas they were lacking modern weaponry for the infantry the main problem although was the unexistant doctrine to synchronize the tanks alongside the plane as tanks were not used as a primary force but rather as support for infantry without planning an anti air protection for them their use as primary force were made in very rare occasion when commanded by Charles de Gaulle for example only a tank crew division commander by the time of 1940 Prior to the Battle of France there were sentiments among many Allied soldiers French and British of pointless repetition they viewed the war with dread since they had already beaten the Germans once and images of that first major conflict were still poignant in military circles 62 The costs of World War I along with the now stale doctrine employed by the French Army while the Germans were developing a doctrine which stressed initiative from junior commanders and combining different arms the French sought to minimize casualties through a rigorously controlled type of battle and a top down command structure forced the French to look for more defensive measures The Maginot Line was the result of these deliberations the French originally allocated three billion francs for the project but by 1935 seven billion had been spent 63 The Maginot Line succeeded in holding off the German attack 64 However while the French thought that the main weight of the German attack would arrive through central Belgium and accordingly deployed their forces here the assault actually came further south in the Ardennes forest 65 The Third Republic collapsed in the ensuing conflict nbsp French forces advance in Colmar Pocket 1945After the defeat Vichy France cooperated with the Axis powers until 1944 Charles de Gaulle exhorted the French people to join the allied armies while the French Vichy forces participated in direct action against Allied forces inflicting casualties in some cases The Normandy landings in that year were the first step towards the eventual liberation of France The Free French Forces under de Gaulle had participated widely throughout previous campaigns and their large size made them notable at the end of the war As early as the winter of 1943 the Free French already had nearly 260 000 soldiers 66 and these numbers only grew as the war progressed The French Resistance had also a significant contribution participating also actively in the liberation of France At the end of the war France was given one of four occupation zones in Germany in Berlin and Austria Post 1945 warfare edit Main article List of French wars and battles Modern period See also Overseas military bases of France and List of equipment of the French Army nbsp An ERC 90 Sagaie of the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment in Cote d Ivoire in 2003Following the 1939 45 war decolonization spread through the former European empires Following the First Indochina War they withdrew from Vietnam Laos and Cambodia The military also tried to keep control of Algeria during the Algerian War when French forces attempted to defeat the Algerian rebels Despite its military victory France granted independence to Algerians French Algeria was home to over a million of settlers known as Pieds Noirs de Gaulle s decision to grant independence to Algeria almost led to a civil war supported by various Pied Noir Harki and nationalist factions including the FAF and the OAS Related to and during the Algerian war France participated in the Suez Crisis with Israel and the UK By 1960 France had lost its direct military influence over all of its former colonies in Africa and Indochina Nonetheless several colonies in the Pacific Caribbean Indian Oceans and South America remain French territory to this day and France kept a form of indirect political influence in Africa colloquially known as the Francafrique As President of the French Republic Charles de Gaulle oversaw the development of French atomic weapons and promoted a foreign policy independent of U S influence He also withdrew France from the NATO military command in 1966 although remaining a member of the western alliance The effect of withdrawal was reduced by continued cooperation between the French military and NATO though France did not formally rejoin the NATO military command until 2009 67 France intervened in various post colonial conflicts supporting former colonies Western Sahara War Shaba II Chadian Libyan conflict Djiboutian Civil War NATO peacekeeping missions in war torn countries UNPROFOR KFOR UNAMIR and many humanitarian missions As a nuclear power and having some of the best trained and best equipped forces in the world the French military has now met some of its primary objectives which are the defense of national territory the protection of French interests abroad and the maintenance of global stability Conflicts indicative of these objectives are the Gulf War in 1991 when France sent 18 000 troops 60 combat aircraft 120 helicopters and 40 tanks 68 and Mission Heracles in the War in Afghanistan along with recent interventions in Africa African interventions during the early 21st century include peacekeeping actions in Cote d Ivoire which involved brief direct fighting between the French and Ivorian armies in 2004 French forces returned to Cote d Ivoire in 2011 to remove the Ivorian president In the same year France played a pivotal role in the 2011 military intervention in Libya against Muammar Gaddafi The year after France intervened in Mali during that country s civil war as Islamist militants appeared to threaten the south after seizing control of the arid north Changes in the government of France including Socialist Francois Hollande becoming president in 2012 after years of center right governance have done little to alter Paris foreign policy in Africa Hollande also proposed French military involvement in the Syrian civil war in the wake of chemical attacks French intelligence reports linked to the forces of President Bashar al Assad in mid 2013 69 France has encouraged military cooperation at an EU level starting with the formation of the Franco German Brigade in 1987 and Eurocorps in 1992 based in Strasbourg In 2009 a battalion of German light infantry was moved to Alsace the first time German troops had been stationed in France since the Nazi occupation of World War II This process has not been immune to budget cuts in October 2013 France announced the closure of her last infantry regiment in Germany thus marking the end of a major presence across the Rhine although both countries will maintain around 500 troops on each other s territory 70 As fellow members of the UN Security Council with many interests and problems in common the UK and France have a long history of bilateral collaboration This has occurred both at government level and in industrial programmes like the SEPECAT Jaguar whilst corporate mergers have seen Thales and MBDA emerge as major defence companies spanning both countries The financial crisis of 2007 08 led to renewed pressure on military budgets and the austerity alliance enshrined in the Lancaster House Treaties of 2010 These promised close integration in both procurement and at an operational level reaching into the most sensitive areas such as nuclear warheads Topical subjects editFrench Air and Space Force edit Main articles History of the Armee de l Air 1909 1942 Free French Air Force Vichy French Air Force and History of the Armee de l Air in the colonies 1939 62 nbsp The Tricolore cockade of the French Air and Space Force was the first roundel used on combat aircraft 71 The Armee de l Air became one of the first professional air forces in the world when it was founded in 1909 The French took active interest in developing their air force and had the first fighter pilots of World War I During the interwar years however particularly in the 1930s the technical quality fell when compared with the Luftwaffe which crushed both the French and British air forces during the Battle of France In the post World War II era the French made a concerted and successful effort to develop a homegrown aircraft industry Dassault Aviation led the way forward with their unique and effective delta wing designs which formed the basis for the famous Mirage series of jet fighters The Mirage repeatedly demonstrated its deadly abilities in the Six Day War and the Gulf War becoming one of the most popular and well sold aircraft in the history of military aviation along the way 72 Currently the French are awaiting the A400M military transport aircraft which is still in developmental stages and the integration of the new Rafale multi role jet fighter whose first squadron of 20 aircraft became operational in 2006 at Saint Dizier 73 In 2020 it was renamed the Armee de l Air et de l Espace or French Air and Space Force French Navy edit nbsp The French ships engage the British navy right in the Battle of Chesapeake Main article History of the French Navy Medieval fleets in France as elsewhere were almost entirely composed of merchant ships enlisted into naval service in time of war but the early beginnings of the French naval history goes back to that era The first battle of the French Navy was the battle of Arnemuiden 23 September 1338 where it defeated the English Navy 74 The battle of Arnemuiden was also the first naval battle using artillery 75 It was later defeated by an Anglo Flemish fleet at the Battle of Sluys and with Castilian help managed to beat the English at La Rochelle both battles playing a crucial role in the development of the Hundred Years War However the navy did not become a consistent instrument of national power until the 17th century with Louis XIV Under the tutelage of the Sun King the French Navy was well financed and equipped managing to resoundingly defeat a combined Spanish Dutch fleet at the Battle of Palermo in 1676 during the Franco Dutch War although along with the English navy it suffered several strategic reversals against the Dutch who were led by the brilliant Michiel de Ruyter It scored several early victories in the Nine Years War against the Royal Navy and the Dutch Navy Financial difficulties however allowed the English and the Dutch to regain the initiative at sea nbsp The Charles de Gaulle the first nuclear powered aircraft carrier in EuropeA perennial problem for the French Navy was the strategic priorities of France which were first and foremost tied to its European ambitions This reality meant that the army was often treated better than the navy and as a result the latter suffered in training and operational performance 76 The 18th century saw the beginning of the Royal Navy s domination which managed to inflict a number of significant defeats on the French However in a very impressive effort a French fleet under de Grasse managed to defeat a British fleet at the Battle of the Chesapeake in 1781 ensuring that the Franco American ground forces would win the ongoing Siege of Yorktown Beyond that and Suffren s impressive campaigns against the British in India there was not much more good news The French Revolution all but crippled the French Navy and efforts to make it into a powerful force under Napoleon were dashed at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 where the British all but annihilated a combined Franco Spanish fleet The disaster guaranteed British naval domination until the end of the Napoleonic wars Later in the 19th century the navy recovered and became the second finest in the world after the Royal Navy It conducted a successful blockade of Mexico in the Pastry War of 1838 and obliterated the Chinese navy at the Battle of Foochow in 1884 It also served as an effective link between the growing parts of the French empire The navy performed well during World War I in which it mainly protected the naval lanes in the Mediterranean Sea At the onset of the war the French had a large fleet in the Mediterranean whive no less than seven battleship amp six heavy cruiser 77 French defeats in the early stages of World War II however forced the British to attack the French fleet moored at Mers el Kebir in order to prevent the threat she fall to the Germans the remaining of French fleet scuttled herself at Toulon for prevent the 7th Panzer Division to capture the fleet two years later Currently French naval doctrine calls for two aircraft carriers but the French currently only have one the Charles de Gaulle due to restructuring The navy is in the midst of some technological and procurement changes newer submarines are under construction and Rafale aircraft the naval version are currently replacing older aircraft Foreign Legion edit Main articles French Foreign Legion and List of French paratrooper units The Foreign Legion was created in 1831 by French king Louis Philippe to allow the incorporation of foreign nationals into the French Army Over the past century and a half it has gone on to become one of the most recognizable and lauded military units in the world The Legion had a very difficult start there were few non commissioned officers many of the soldiers could not speak French and pay was often irregular 78 The Legion was soon transferred to fight in Algeria performing moderately successfully given its condition On August 17 1835 the commander of the Legion Colonel Joseph Bernelle decided to amalgamate all the battalions so that no nationality was exclusively confined to a particular battalion this helped ensure that the Legion did not fragment into factions 79 Following participation in Africa and in the Carlist Wars in Spain the Legion fought in the Crimean War and the Franco Austrian War where they performed heroically at the Battle of Magenta before earning even more glory during the French intervention in Mexico On April 30 1863 a company of 65 legionnaires was ambushed by 2 000 Mexican troops at the Hacienda Camaron in the resulting Battle of Camaron the legionnaires resisted bravely for several hours and inflicted 300 500 casualties on the Mexicans while 62 of them died and three were captured 80 One of the Mexican commanders impressed by the memorable intransigence he had just witnessed characterized the Legion in a way they ve been known ever since These are not men but devils 81 In World War I the Legion demonstrated that it was a highly capable unit in modern warfare It suffered 11 000 casualties in the Western Front while conducting brilliant defenses and spirited counter attacks 82 Following the debacle in the Battle of France in 1940 the Legion was split between those who supported the Vichy government and those who joined the Free French under de Gaulle At the Battle of Bir Hakeim in 1942 the Free French 13th Legion Demi Brigade doggedly defended its positions against a combined Italian German offensive and seriously delayed Rommel s attacks towards Tobruk The Legion eventually returned to Europe and fought until the end of the Second World War in 1945 It later fought in the First Indochina War against the Viet Minh At the climactic Battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954 French forces many of them legionnaires were completely surrounded by a large Vietnamese army and were defeated after two months of tenacious fighting French withdrawal from Algeria led to the collapse of the French colonial empire The legionnaires were mostly used in colonial interventions so the destruction of the empire prompted questions about their status Ultimately the Legion was allowed to exist and participated as a rapid reaction force in many places throughout Africa and around the world 83 See also edit nbsp France portalHistory of French foreign relations Military of France Military history of France during World War II Norman Conquest of England Marshals of France List of notable French military leaders List of French wars and battles Deployments of the French military List of battles involving France disambiguation Social background of officers and other ranks in the French Army 1750 1815 French and Indian WarsNotes edit Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 101 Washington s success in keeping the army together deprived the British of victory but French intervention won the war Ferguson Niall 2001 The Cash Nexus Money and Power in the Modern World 1700 2000 p 25 27 www goodreads com Retrieved 2020 07 05 William Roosen The age of Louis XIV the rise of modern diplomacy p 55 Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History pp 46 7 84 5 108 9 Brooks pp 46 7 84 5 108 9 William Thompson Great power rivalries p 104 Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 234 Kay Sean NATO and the future of European security p 43 Jolyon Howorth and Patricia Chilton Defence and dissent in contemporary France p 153 Inc Time 13 July 1953 LIFE Time Inc Retrieved 6 May 2018 via Google Books a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Alfred Bradford and Pamela Bradford With arrow sword and spear a history of warfare in the ancient world p 213 Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 31 In De Bello Gallico Caesar claims a Gallic relief force of 250 000 men but the logistical requirements for such a huge army were beyond anything the Gauls could procure It is likely that Caesar inflated the figures to make his victory seem more impressive Jim Bradbury The Routledge companion to medieval warfare p 109 Jim Bradbury The Routledge companion to medieval warfare p 110 J M Roberts History of the World p 384 Brooks Richard editor Atlas of World Military History p 46 Brooks p 47 French Medieval Armies and Navies Xenophon Group Accessed March 20 2006 French Medieval Armies and Navies Xenophon Group Accessed March 20 2006 Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 53 Brooks p 50 Brooks p 50 Andrew Jotischky Crusading and the Crusader States p 37 The theory that argues for sociological and economic rather than spiritual motivation provides regional examples where noble fathers would give their lands to the oldest surviving son meaning younger sons would be left landless and looking for somewhere to go the Crusades in this case Problems with the theory include but are not limited to the fact that there is no proof that younger sons formed the majority of the crusaders the response to the crusading movement was just as strong in areas with equitable inheritance systems and since they were in many ways bound to the wishes and the decisions of their nobles knights often had little individual choice in whether they would participate in a crusade Jotischky p 37 Discover Islamic Art Virtual Exhibitions Al Franj the Crusaders in the Levant Introduction www discoverislamicart org Archived from the original on 6 May 2018 Retrieved 6 May 2018 Hosanna Lutheran Church www welcometohosanna com Archived from the original on 29 October 2016 Retrieved 6 May 2018 David Eltis The military revolution in sixteenth century Europe p 12 Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 59 Much has been made of the success of the English longbow However it was not a war winning weapon Reliance on this defensive weapon on the battlefield gave the initiative to the French Brooks p 59 continuing from last comment its victories also depended on the French bungling their attack The English were fortunate that their opponent failed to get it right three times in a 70 year period Trevor Dupuy Harper Encyclopedia of Military History p 450 Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 59 The major defeats of the French by the English boosted French military thought A recently discovered document of the French battle plan for the Agincourt campaign shows how carefully the French thought about ways of defeating the English In the event the plan could not be fully executed because the battlefield at Agincourt was too narrow for the French forces to fully deploy French Medieval Armies and Navies Xenophon Group Accessed March 20 2006 Jeremy Black Cambridge illustrated atlas warfare Renaissance to revolution 1492 1792 p 49 Heath Ian 2016 Armies of Feudal Europe 1066 1300 Lulu com p 24 ISBN 9781326256524 John A Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV p 8 James Wood The King s Army p 131 Wood p 132 Kemal Karpat The Ottoman state and its place in world history p 52 Jamel Ostwald Vauban under siege p 7 John A Lynn Giant of the Grand Siecle The French Army 1610 1715 p 16 preface Lynn p 16 preface Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 84 Jackson Spielvogel Western Civilization Since 1500 p 551 Lester Kurtz and Jennifer Turpin Encyclopedia of violence peace and conflict Volume 2 p 425 David G Chandler The Campaigns of Napoleon p 136 John R Elting Swords Around a Throne Napoleon s Grande Armee p 35 The opening words are mundane but they helped pave the way for a new era in human history one where militarism became entrenched in national culture From this moment until our enemies shall have been driven from the territory of the Republic all Frenchmen are permanently requisitioned for the service of the armies T C W Blanning The French Revolutionary Wars p 109 John R Elting Swords Around a Throne Napoleon s Grande Armee p 28 29 Aristocratic officers deserted gradually not suddenly Furthermore desertion rates depended upon the service cavalry officers were more likely to leave the army than their artillery counterparts Parker Geoffrey The Cambridge history of warfare p 189 Peter Paret Clausewitz and the State p 332 John A Lynn The Wars of Louis XIV p 28 Martyn Lyons Napoleon Bonaparte and the Legacy of the French Revolution p 43 Lyons writes France had a large population by European standards numbering over 29 million in 1800 This was more than the population of the Habsburg Empire 20 million more than double the population of England about 12 million and more than four times the population of Prussia 6 million Lester Kurtz and Jennifer Turpin Encyclopedia of violence peace and conflict Volume 2 p 425 David G Chandler The Campaigns of Napoleon p 758 Chandler p 162 Todd Fisher amp Gregory Fremont Barnes The Napoleonic Wars The Rise and Fall of an Empire p 186 Up to 1792 conflicts were of course those of kings and followed the pattern of eighteenth century warfare sovereigns sought limited objectives and entertained no desire to overthrow their adversaries ruling and indeed usually ancient dynasty The outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 altered this pattern forever and international relations underwent some radical changes as a result Conrad Phillip Kottak Cultural Anthropology p 331 Richard Brooks editor Atlas of World Military History p 129 Paul Marie de la Gorce The French Army A Military Political History p 48 Following the Franco Prussian War and the loss of Alsace Lorraine revanchism in French politics made certain that the army was carefully nurtured and well treated because it was viewed as the only instrument through which France could overcome the humiliations of 1870 de la Gorce p 48 Hew Strachan The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War p 280 John Keegan The Second World War p 64 Keegan p 61 Boyce French Foreign and Defence Policy p 185 Boyce p 185 F Roy Willis France Germany and the New Europe 1945 1967 p 9 Cody Edward 12 March 2009 After 43 Years France to Rejoin NATO as Full Member Archived from the original on 26 October 2017 Retrieved 6 May 2018 via www washingtonpost com Charles Hauss Politics in France p 194 France emerges as key U S ally against Syria USA Today 2 September 2013 Archived from the original on 2 September 2013 Retrieved 2 September 2013 Agence France Presse 31 October 2013 France Dissolves Symbolic Regiment Based In Germany Defense News Archived from the original on November 8 2013 Royal Air Force Museum Archived 2009 06 02 at the Wayback Machine Shlomo Aloni Israeli Mirage and Nesher Aces p 6 French airforce adds home grown fighter plane to its arsenal Agence France Presse Accessed November 7 2006 Jean Claude Castex Dictionnaire des batailles navales franco anglaises Presses de l Universite Laval 2004 p 21 Jean Claude Castex Dictionnaire des batailles navales franco anglaises Presses de l Universite Laval 2004 p 21 Russell Weigley The age of battles the quest for decisive warfare from Breitenfeld to Waterloo pp 158 9 Barbara Tuchman The Guns of August p 166 David Jordan The History of the French Foreign Legion p 10 Jordan p 14 Byron Farwell The encyclopedia of nineteenth century land warfare p 155 David Jordan The History of the French Foreign Legion p 34 Jordan p 67 Jordan p 94Works cited editAloni Shlomo Israeli Mirage and Nesher Aces Oxford Osprey Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 84176 653 4 Black Jeremy Cambridge illustrated atlas of warfare Renaissance to revolution 1492 1792 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 ISBN 0 521 47033 1 Blanning T C W The French Revolutionary Wars London Hodder Headline Group 1996 ISBN 0 340 56911 5 Boyce Robert French Foreign and Defence Policy 1918 1940 Oxford CRC Press 1998 ISBN 0 203 97922 2 Bradbury Jim The Routledge companion to medieval warfare New York Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 415 22126 9 Bradford Alfred and Pamela With arrow sword and spear a history of warfare in the ancient world Westport Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 ISBN 0 275 95259 2 Brooks Richard editor Atlas of World Military History London HarperCollins 2000 ISBN 0 7607 2025 8 Chandler David G The Campaigns of Napoleon New York Simon amp Schuster 1995 ISBN 0 02 523660 1 Chilton Patricia and Howorth Jolyon Howorth Defence and dissent in contemporary France Oxford Taylor amp Francis 1984 ISBN 0 7099 1280 3 Dupuy Trevor N Harper Encyclopedia of Military History New York HarperCollins 1993 ISBN 0 06 270056 1 Elting John R Swords Around a Throne Napoleon s Grande Armee New York Da Capo Press Inc 1988 ISBN 0 306 80757 2 Eltis David The military revolution in sixteenth century Europe New York I B Tauris 1998 ISBN 1 86064 352 3 Farwell Byron The encyclopedia of nineteenth century land warfare New York W W Norton amp Company 2001 ISBN 0 393 04770 9 Fisher Todd amp Fremont Barnes Gregory The Napoleonic Wars The Rise and Fall of an Empire Oxford Osprey Publishing Ltd 2004 ISBN 1 84176 831 6 de la Gorce Paul Marie The French Army A Military Political History New York George Braziller Inc 1963 Hauss Charles Politics in France Washington DC CQ Press 2007 ISBN 1 56802 670 6 Jordan David The History of the French Foreign Legion Spellmount Limited 2005 ISBN 1 86227 295 6 Jotischky Andrew Crusading and the Crusader States Pearson Education Limited 2004 ISBN 0 582 41851 8 Karpat Kemal The Ottoman state and its place in world history Leiden Brill 1974 ISBN 90 04 03945 7 Kay Sean NATO and the future of European security Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield 1998 ISBN 0 8476 9001 6 Keegan John The Second World War New York Penguin Group 1989 ISBN 0 670 82359 7 Kottak Conrad Cultural Anthropology Columbus McGraw Hill Higher Education 2005 ISBN 0 07 295250 4 Kurtz Lester and Turpin Jennifer Encyclopedia of violence peace and conflict Volume 2 New York Academic Press 1999 ISBN 0 12 227010 X Lyons Martyn Napoleon Bonaparte and the Legacy of the French Revolution New York St Martin s Press Inc 1994 ISBN 0 312 12123 7 Lynn John A Giant of the Grand Siecle The French Army 1610 1715 New York Cambridge University Press 1997 ISBN 0 521 57273 8 Lynn John A The Wars of Louis XIV London Longman 1999 ISBN 0 582 05629 2 Ostwald Jamel Vauban under siege Leiden Brill 2007 ISBN 90 04 15489 2 Paret Peter Clausewitz and the State Princeton Princeton University Press 2007 ISBN 0 691 13130 9 Parker Geoffrey The Cambridge history of warfare Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2005 ISBN 0 521 85359 1 Roberts J M History of the World New York Penguin Group 1992 ISBN 0 19 521043 3 Roosen William The age of Louis XIV the rise of modern diplomacy Edison Transaction Publishers 1976 ISBN 0 87073 581 0 Spielvogel Jackson Western Civilization Since 1500 Florence Cengage Learning 2008 ISBN 0 495 50287 1 Strachan Hew The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War Oxford Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 0 19 289325 4 Thompson William Great power rivalries Columbia University of South Carolina Press 1999 ISBN 1 57003 279 3 Tuchman W Barbara The Guns of August New York Random House 1962 ISBN 0 345 38623 X Weigley Russell The age of battles the quest for decisive warfare from Breitenfeld to Waterloo Bloomington Indiana University Press 2004 ISBN 0 253 21707 5 Willis F Roy France Germany and the New Europe 1945 1967 Palo Alto Stanford University Press 1968 ISBN 0 8047 0241 1 Wood James The King s Army Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 52513 6Further reading editBlaufarb Rafe The French army 1750 1820 Careers talent merit Manchester University Press 2021 Clayton Anthony Paths of glory the French Army 1914 18 London Cassell 2003 Cowley Robert editor What If Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been New York Penguin Group 1999 ISBN 0 399 15238 5 Doughty Robert A Pyrrhic Victory French Strategy and Operations in the Great War 2008 592pp excerpt and text search Forrest Alan Conscripts and Deserters The Army and French Society During the Revolution and Empire 1989 Forrest Alan Napoleon s Men The Soldiers of the Revolution and Empire 2002 Greenhalgh Elizabeth The French Army and the First World War 2014 486 pages comprehensive scholarly history Holroyd Richard The Bourbon Army 1815 1830 Historical Journal 14 no 3 1971 529 52 online Kinard Jeff Artillery an illustrated history of its impact Santa Barbara ABC CLIO 2007 ISBN 1 85109 556 X Nolan Cathal Wars of the Age of Louis XIV 1650 1715 An Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization 2008 Nolan Cathal The Age of Wars of Religion 1000 1650 2 vol 2006 Pichichero Christy The Military Enlightenment War and Culture in the French Empire from Louis XIV to Napoleon 2018 online review Porch Douglas The French Army Law of 1832 Historical Journal 14 no 4 1971 751 69 online Porch Douglas The March to the Marne The French Army 1871 1914 Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0521545921 Scott Samuel F From Yorktown to Valmy the transformation of the French Army in an age of revolution University Press of Colorado 1998 Thoral Marie Cecile From Valmy to Waterloo France at War 1792 1815 Palgrave Macmillan UK 2011 Historiography and memory edit Forrest Alan The Legacy of the French Revolutionary Wars The Nation in Arms in French Republican Memory Cambridge University Press 2009 Messenger Charles ed Reader s Guide to Military History 2001 948pp Evaluation of thousands of books on military history many of them involving France In French edit Bertaud Jean Paul and William Serman Nouvelle histoire militaire de la France 1789 1919 Paris Fayard 1998 855ppExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Military history of France French Military Terms Adopted by the English Language French military participation from 1800 to 1999 The French Army Royal Revolutionary and Imperial An excellent guide to French Medieval warfare France in the American Revolution French Army from Revolution to the First Empire Illustrations by Hippolyte Bellange from the book P M Laurent de L Ardeche Histoire de Napoleon 1843 The French Military in Africa 2008 Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military history of France amp oldid 1206974312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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