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Jean Lannes
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Jean Lannes, 1st Duke of Montebello, Prince of Siewierz (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ lan]; 10 April 1769 – 31 May 1809), was a French military commander and a Marshal of the Empire who served during both the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.
Key Information
He was one of Napoleon's most daring and talented generals, and is regarded by many as one of history's greatest military commanders. Napoleon once commented on Lannes: "I found him a pygmy and left him a giant".[2] A personal friend of the emperor,[3] he was allowed to address him with the familiar tu, as opposed to the formal vous.
Early life
[edit]
Lannes was born in the small town of Lectoure,[2][4] in the province of Gascony in Southern France. He was the son of a small landowner and merchant, Jeannet Lannes (1733–1812), son of Jean Lannes (d. 1746), a farmer, and his wife, Jeanne Pomiès (d. 1770), and paternal grandson of Pierre Lane and wife Bernarde Escossio (both died in 1721), and wife Cécile Fouraignan (1741–1799), daughter of Bernard Fouraignan and wife Jeanne Marguerite Laconstère. He was apprenticed in his teens to a dyer.[2][4] Lannes received little education, but his great strength and proficiency in many sports caused him in 1792 to be elected sergeant-major of the battalion of volunteers of Gers, which he had joined upon the outbreak of war between France and Spain. He served under General Jean-Antoine Marbot during the campaigns in the Pyrenees in 1793 and 1794, and rose by distinguished conduct to the rank of chef de brigade. During his time in the Pyrenees, Lannes was given some important tasks by General Jacques François Dugommier and recommended for promotion by future Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout.[5]
Campaigns of Italy and Egypt
[edit]

Lannes served under General Barthélemy Louis Joseph Schérer, taking part in the Battle of Loano.[5] However, in 1795, as a result of the reforms of the army introduced by the Thermidorians, he was dismissed from his rank.[6] He re-enlisted as a simple volunteer in the French Armée d'Italie.[citation needed] He served in the Italian campaign of 1796, and climbed his way up to high rank once again,[citation needed] being given command of a brigade in General Charles-Pierre Augereau's division[7] and later of 3 battalions of the permanent advance guard at different times.[8] Lannes was distinguished in every battle and played an important role in the victory at Dego.[8] At the Battle of Bassano, he captured two enemy flags with his own hands[8] and received multiple wounds at the Battle of Arcole but kept leading his column in person.[9]
Lannes led troops under Claude Victor-Perrin in the invasion of the Papal States.[9] When he and a small reconnaissance party ran into 300 Papal cavalry, he averted danger by astutely ordering the cavalry to return to base, convincing them not to attack.[7][9]
He was chosen by Bonaparte to accompany him to Egypt as commander in one of General Jean-Baptiste Kléber's brigades,[10] in which capacity he greatly distinguished himself, especially during the retreat from Syria. Lannes was wounded at the Battle of Abukir, before he returned to France with Bonaparte, and assisted him in the Coup of 18 Brumaire.[7] After Bonaparte's takeover and appointment as Consul of France, Lannes was promoted to the ranks of general of division and commandant of the Consular Guard.
Back with the Armée d'Italie, Lannes commanded the advanced guard in the crossing of the Alps in 1800, was instrumental in winning the Battle of Montebello,[11] from which he afterwards took his title, and played a large part in the Battle of Marengo.[6][12]
Napoleonic Wars
[edit]

General Joachim Murat and Chef de brigade Jean-Baptiste Bessières schemed to have Lannes removed over a budget deficit,[13] but Augereau bailed him out.[13] As a result, Lannes was not totally disgraced,[13] but was instead sent as ambassador to Portugal in 1801.[7][13] Opinions differ as to his merits in this capacity; Napoleon never made such use of him again. Lannes purchased the seventeenth-century Château de Maisons, near Paris, in 1804 and had one of its state apartments redecorated for a visit from Napoleon.
Upon the establishment of the First French Empire, he was made one of the original eighteen Marshals of the Empire.[14] In 1805, he fully regained Napoleon's favour,[14] which he lost during the consulate.[15] At Austerlitz, he commanded the left wing of the Grande Armée. During the War of the Fourth Coalition, Lannes was at his best, commanding his corps with the greatest credit in the march through the Thuringian Forest, the Battle of Saalfeld (which is studied as a model today at the French Staff College), and the Battle of Jena. His leadership of the advance guard at Friedland was even more prominent.[6]
In 1807, Napoleon recreated the Duchy of Siewierz (Sievers), granting it to Lannes after Prussia was forced to cede all her acquisitions from the second and third partitions of Poland.
After this, Lannes was to be tested as a commander-in-chief, for Napoleon sent him to Spain in 1808 and gave him a detached wing of the army to command, with which he won a crushing victory over General Francisco Castaños at Tudela on 22 November. In January 1809, he was sent to capture Zaragoza, and by 21 February, after one of the most stubborn defences in history, Lannes was in possession of the place. He later said, "this damned Bonaparte is going to get us all killed" after his last campaign in Spain.[citation needed] In 1808, Napoleon made him Duke of Montebello, and in 1809, for the last time, gave him command of the advance guard. He took part in the engagements around Eckmühl and the advance on Vienna. With his corps, he led the French Army across the Danube River and bore the brunt, with Marshal André Masséna, at the Battle of Aspern-Essling.[6]
Death
[edit]
On 22 May 1809, during a lull in the second day of the Battle of Aspern-Essling, Lannes went and sat down at the edge of a ditch, his hand over his eyes and his legs crossed.
As he sat there, plunged in gloomy meditation on having seen his friend, General Pierre Charles Pouzet, decapitated mid-conversation by a cannonball, a second cannonball fired from a gun at Enzersdorf ricocheted and struck him just where his legs crossed. The knee-pan of one was smashed, and the back sinews of the other torn. The marshal said "I am wounded; it's nothing much; give me your hand to help me up." He tried to rise, but could not.
He was carried to the tête de pont, where the chief surgeons proceeded to dress his wound. Lannes' left leg was amputated within two minutes by Dominique Jean Larrey. He bore the painful operation with courage; it was hardly over when Napoleon came up and, kneeling beside the stretcher, wept as he embraced the marshal.[17] On 23 May, he was transported by boat to the finest house in Kaiserebersdorf, now a part of Simmering district of Vienna. Eight days later, on 31 May, Lannes died from his painful wounds at daybreak. Napoleon commented on Lannes' death by saying "I have lost the most distinguished general in my army, my companion in arms for sixteen years, and my best friend."
He was initially buried in Les Invalides, Paris, but in 1810, he was exhumed and reinterred in the Panthéon national after a grandiose ceremony.
Family
[edit]Lannes married twice, in Perpignan on 19 March 1795 to Paulette Méric, whom he divorced because of infidelity in 1800, after she had given birth to an illegitimate son while he was serving in Egypt:
- Jean-Claude Lannes de Montebello (Montauban, 12 February 1799 – 1817), who died unmarried and without issue,
His second marriage was at Dornes on 16 September 1800 to Louise Antoinette, Comtesse de Guéhéneuc (Paris, 26 February 1782 – Paris, 3 July 1856), by whom he had five children:
- Louis Napoléon (30 July 1801 – 19 July 1874)
- Alfred-Jean (11 July 1802 – 20 June 1861)
- Jean-Ernest (20 July 1803 – 24 November 1882)
- Gustave-Olivier (4 December 1804 – 25 August 1875)
- Josephine-Louise (4 March 1806 – 8 November 1889)
One succeeded in his titles and three others used the courtesy title of baron. One of his direct descendants, Philippe Lannes de Montebello, was the director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art until 2008.
Assessment
[edit]
Lannes ranks with Louis-Nicolas Davout, Louis-Gabriel Suchet, and André Masséna as the ablest of all of Napoleon's marshals. He was continually employed in tasks requiring the utmost resolution and daring, and more especially when the emperor's combinations depended upon the vigour and self-sacrifice of a detachment or fraction of the army. It was thus with Lannes at Friedland and at Aspern as it was with Davout at Austerlitz and Auerstedt, and Napoleon's estimate of his subordinates' capacities can almost exactly be judged by the frequency with which he used them to prepare the way for his own shattering blow. Dependable generals with the usual military virtue, or careful and exact troop leaders like Jean-de-Dieu Soult and Étienne Macdonald, were kept under Napoleon's own hand for the final assault which he himself launched; the long hours of preparatory fighting against odds of two to one, which alone made the final blow possible, he entrusted only to men of extraordinary courage and high capacity for command. Lannes' place in his affections was never filled.[6]
Miscellaneous
[edit]A chocolate cake, the "Gâteau au chocolat de la Maréchale de Lannes",[18][19] is named after his wife, and in turn, him as well.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Paris, Louis (1869). Dictionnaire des anoblissements (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Bachelin-Deflorenne.
- ^ a b c "Jean Lannes, duc de Montebello, French general". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
- ^ Rothenberg, Gunther E. (2004). The emperor's last victory: Napoleon and the Battle of Wagram. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0297846728. OCLC 56653068.
- ^ a b Dunn-Pattison, p. 117.
- ^ a b Dunn-Pattison, p. 119.
- ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911.
- ^ a b c d Macdonell, A. G. (Archibald Gordon) (2012). Napoleon and his marshals. Stroud: Fonthill Media. ISBN 9781781550366. OCLC 796280659.
- ^ a b c Dunn-Pattison, p. 120.
- ^ a b c Dunn-Pattison, p. 121.
- ^ Dunn-Pattison, p. 122.
- ^ Dunn-Pattison, p. 123.
- ^ Dunn-Pattison, p. 124.
- ^ a b c d Dunn-Pattison, p. 125.
- ^ a b Dunn-Pattison, p. 126.
- ^ Dunn-Pattison. 124-125
- ^ Chrisawn, Margaret (2001). The Emperor's Friend: Marshal Jean Lannes. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9780313073809.
- ^ Chrisawn, Margaret (2001). The Emperor's Friend: Marshal Jean Lannes. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9780313073809.
- ^ Beauvau-Craon; Vidal-Quadras (1977). Les Petits plats et les Grands (in French). Paris: Denoël.
- ^ Olney, Richard; Cutler, Carol; Worthington, Jolene (1981). Cakes. Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books. ISBN 0-8094-2916-0. OCLC 7653532.
References
[edit]- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lannes, Jean". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 182–183.
- Clausewitz, Carl von (2018). Napoleon's 1796 Italian Campaign. Trans and ed. Nicholas Murray and Christopher Pringle. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-2676-2
- Dunn-Pattison, R. P. (1909), Napoleon's Marshals, Little, Brown & co., ISBN 9781428629264
{{citation}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
External links
[edit]
Media related to Jean Lannes at Wikimedia Commons
Jean Lannes
View on GrokipediaJean Lannes (10 April 1769 – 31 May 1809) was a French military commander who rose from humble origins to become one of Napoleon Bonaparte's most trusted marshals, distinguished by his fearless leadership in combat and unyielding loyalty.[1][2] Born in Lectoure to a modest family, Lannes enlisted in the National Guard in 1792 and rapidly advanced through the ranks during the French Revolutionary Wars, earning promotions for his valor in the Italian campaign, including battles at Lodi and Arcole.[1][2] Appointed a Marshal of the Empire in 1804, he played pivotal roles in major Napoleonic victories such as Austerlitz, Jena, and Friedland, often commanding the vanguard and halting enemy advances with elite grenadier units.[1] Known as the "Roland of the Army" for his chivalric courage, Lannes shared a rare informal camaraderie with Napoleon, addressing him directly and offering frank counsel.[1] His career culminated tragically at the Battle of Aspern-Essling in 1809, where he sustained mortal wounds while exposing himself to enemy fire, becoming the first of Napoleon's marshals to die in battle; Napoleon reportedly mourned him deeply, declaring no replacement could fill the void.[1][2] Elevated to Duke of Montebello, Lannes exemplified the meritocratic ascent enabled by revolutionary upheaval, commanding respect for his tactical acumen and inspirational presence among troops.[1][2]
Early Life
Birth and Upbringing
Jean Lannes was born on April 10, 1769, in Lectoure, a small town in the province of Gascony in southwestern France.[1][3][4] He came from a family of humble means; his father worked as a livery stable keeper or small farmer, and Lannes was one of several children in the household. Lannes received only a rudimentary education, limited by his family's modest circumstances, but he demonstrated exceptional physical strength and agility from a young age, excelling in boyish exercises and outdoor activities typical of rural Gascon youth.[5] As a teenager, he was apprenticed to a local dyer, though his restless energy and aversion to sedentary work led him to seek more adventurous pursuits beyond the confines of Lectoure's traditional trades.[5]Entry into Military Service
Jean Lannes, a dyer's apprentice from Lectoure in the Gers department, entered military service at the age of 23 during the early phases of the French Revolution. On 4 June 1792, he enlisted as a simple grenadier in the 2e Bataillon de Volontaires du Gers, a volunteer unit formed in response to the escalating threats from European coalitions.[6] His enlistment occurred shortly after France's declaration of war on Austria and Prussia on 20 April 1792, reflecting the widespread mobilization of civilians into national defense efforts.[6] Lannes' physical strength and athletic prowess, honed through local sports and manual labor, quickly distinguished him among his peers. By 20 June 1792, following basic instruction, he was appointed sous-lieutenant in the same battalion, an election-based promotion common in the revolutionary volunteer forces that valued demonstrated capability over formal training.[7] The unit was deployed to the Army of the Pyrénées-Orientales, where it prepared for operations against Spain amid rising tensions that culminated in Spain's declaration of war on 7 March 1793.[3] In the initial campaigns of 1793, Lannes exhibited exceptional courage in engagements along the Pyrenees frontier, contributing to the battalion's defensive efforts. His early valor led to rapid advancement, including election to captain later that year, marking the transition from volunteer infantryman to junior officer amid the chaotic but merit-driven structure of the Revolutionary Army.[2][8]
Revolutionary Wars
Italian Campaign
Jean Lannes joined the French Army of Italy in early 1796 under the command of General Napoleon Bonaparte, participating in the initial operations against Austrian and Sardinian forces.[1] His unit was involved in the Montenotte campaign, where on April 14–15, 1796, at the Battle of Dego, Lannes demonstrated exceptional bravery in close-quarters combat against Austrian reinforcements, earning initial notice from Bonaparte.[3] This action contributed to the French victory, which disrupted enemy lines and forced Sardinian retreats.[9] During the advance toward Milan, Lannes fought at the Battle of Lodi on May 10, 1796, leading an assault across the Adda River against Austrian rear guards; he personally captured two enemy standards amid heavy fire, showcasing the aggressive infantry tactics that characterized French grenadiers.[10] Following the capture of Milan on May 15, 1796, Lannes suppressed local unrest, including setting fire to the village of Binasco on May 25 to enforce compliance and quelling a revolt in Arquata Scrivia on June 1 through decisive action against insurgents.[2] These measures secured French supply lines amid widespread counter-revolutionary resistance in northern Italy.[1] Promoted to général de brigade in August 1796 for his cumulative service, Lannes was attached to General Charles Pierre François Augereau's division during the pursuit of Austrian forces.[3] In September 1796, he engaged at the Battle of Bassano, where French forces routed the Austrians under József Alvinczi, opening paths toward Vienna.[10] Lannes' role emphasized rapid maneuvers and direct assaults, aligning with Bonaparte's strategy of bold exploitation of enemy disarray.[11] In the subsequent phase, Lannes participated in the Battle of Arcole from November 15–17, 1796, leading repeated charges across the marshy terrain and contested bridge against fortified Austrian positions; wounded twice, he commandeered a horse to rejoin the fray, aiding the eventual French breakthrough despite high casualties.[1] [12] This tenacity helped sever Austrian retreat routes. By January 1797, at the Battle of Rivoli on January 14–15, Lannes supported the decisive defeat of Alvinczi's relief army through coordinated assaults on high ground, contributing to the near-total destruction of 28,000 Austrian troops and securing French dominance in northern Italy. Post-Rivoli, Lannes led efforts to pacify Verona and crush lingering rebellions, consolidating territorial gains until the armistice of preliminary peace in April 1797.[1]Egyptian Campaign
Lannes accompanied Napoleon Bonaparte on the expedition to Egypt, departing Toulon on 19 May 1798 as commander of the 2nd Brigade within Jean-Baptiste Kléber's division of the Army of the Orient, which comprised approximately 30,000 troops.[1] En route, the fleet anchored off Malta on 9 June 1798; Lannes, alongside Auguste Marmont, secured the landing beach and led an assault on Fort St. Catherine despite Bonaparte's initial preference for negotiation, resulting in the fort's surrender after a brief skirmish on 12 June.[13] The expedition reached Egypt on 1 July 1798, disembarking near Alexandria, where Lannes participated in the capture of the city on 2 July following street fighting against Ottoman defenders.[1] Advancing inland, French forces under Bonaparte defeated Mamluk cavalry at the Battle of Embabeh (Pyramids) on 21 July, securing Cairo; Lannes, as brigade commander, contributed to the infantry squares that repelled charges, though his unit suffered from the desert conditions and supply shortages.[1] In October 1798, Lannes helped suppress a revolt in Cairo sparked by the 1–3 August destruction of the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile, restoring French control over the city.[1] Bonaparte promoted Lannes to général de division shortly thereafter, entrusting him with independent command of a division amid ongoing operations.[1] In February 1799, Lannes advanced into Syria with Bonaparte's 13,000-man force, overwhelming 1,400 Ottoman and local defenders at Gaza on 26 February before contributing to the assault on Jaffa from 3–7 March, where French troops stormed the walls after bombardment and bayonet charges, capturing the port despite fierce resistance.[1][14] During the subsequent Siege of Acre (19 March–20 May 1799), Lannes led grenadiers in failed storming attempts, including on 28 March, and sustained a severe neck wound but was rescued by a grenadier captain; British naval support and Ottoman reinforcements under Ahmad Pasha ultimately forced a French retreat.[15][16] Returning to Egypt, Lannes commanded at the Battle of Abukir on 25 July 1799 against an Ottoman amphibious force of about 18,000; leading two battalions, he spearheaded the capture of a key Turkish redoubt amid house-to-house fighting but was wounded in the leg and evacuated to Alexandria.[15][17] The French secured a decisive victory, inflicting heavy casualties, after which Lannes departed Egypt with Bonaparte on 22 August aboard a small flotilla, abandoning the stranded Army of the Orient to its fate.[17]Rise Under the Consulate and Empire
Diplomatic Mission to Portugal
In late 1801, following the loss of his military command in the Army of the Rhine, Jean Lannes was appointed minister plenipotentiary to Portugal on November 14, serving as ambassador to the court of Prince Regent Dom João in Lisbon.[18] This posting, while ostensibly a diplomatic role, also addressed Lannes' personal financial debts through potential rewards and aimed to counter British influence in Portugal by securing French commercial and political advantages.[18] Lannes, lacking formal diplomatic training beyond brief instruction from Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, arrived in Lisbon on March 26, 1802, and adopted an aggressive, soldierly approach, often appearing at court in full military uniform with sword, disregarding protocol.[19][1] Lannes' initial efforts focused on demanding the expulsion of French royalist émigré regiments sheltered in Portugal, the dismissal of anti-French ministers like Viscount of Almeida, and concessions for duty-free French trade.[18] He hosted lavish social events to cultivate favor among the Portuguese nobility, leveraging his wife Louise's influence, while pressing Dom João through direct, sometimes confrontational correspondences.[19] Tensions escalated with the British ambassador, leading to personal rivalries, including an incident where Lannes' carriage collided with the British envoy's.[1] A major crisis arose in August 1802 over the arrest of French officer Gérard de Subervie by Portuguese authorities, prompting Lannes to abruptly depart Lisbon on August 10 amid threats of rupture in relations.[18][19] Returning to Lisbon on March 10, 1803, Lannes resumed negotiations, securing the émigré regiments' departure by June 1802 (retroactively enforced) and Almeida's dismissal in August 1803.[18] Despite ongoing British opposition and Portuguese hesitancy, he forged a personal rapport with Dom João, culminating in the Treaty of Neutrality signed on March 19, 1804.[18] This agreement committed Portugal to neutrality in Franco-British conflicts, provided France with a 16 million franc subsidy from Portugal, and granted commercial privileges, including reduced tariffs on French goods.[18][19] In recognition, Lannes received the Grand Cross of the Order of Christ.[1] Lannes departed Portugal definitively on July 18, 1804, recalled to France to command the camp at Boulogne in preparation for the invasion of Britain, with his diplomatic duties transferred to General Horace François Bastien Sébastiani.[18] His tenure, marked by unconventional tactics and intermittent successes, temporarily stabilized Franco-Portuguese relations but foreshadowed Portugal's later alignment with Britain under pressure from French invasions.[18][19]Elevation to Marshal and Early Victories
Jean Lannes was appointed Marshal of the Empire on May 19, 1804, as one of the inaugural 18 marshals created by Napoleon Bonaparte to reward distinguished military service during the Revolutionary Wars.[15] This elevation recognized Lannes' proven valor in battles such as Montebello and Marengo, where his tactical acumen and personal bravery had been instrumental to French successes.[15] In the 1805 Campaign against the Third Coalition, Lannes commanded the V Corps of the Grande Armée, contributing decisively to the Ulm Maneuver that encircled Austrian forces under General Mack. On October 8, 1805, at the Battle of Wertingen, Lannes' corps engaged and routed an Austrian rearguard under Feldmarschall-Leutnant Auffenberg, securing a key bridge through bold maneuvers despite numerical inferiority.[1] Three days later, on October 11, Lannes fought at Haslach-Jungingen, where his forces repelled a larger Austrian counterattack, though he sustained a wound to the leg; this action further isolated the Austrian army, hastening the capitulation at Ulm on October 20.[15] Lannes' early marshalate culminated at the Battle of Austerlitz on December 2, 1805, where he directed the left wing against relentless assaults by Russian and Austrian troops. His corps, positioned on the Pratzen Heights' flank, absorbed heavy attacks for several hours, preventing a breakthrough and enabling Napoleon's central reserve to exploit weaknesses elsewhere, resulting in a comprehensive French victory that shattered the Coalition.[15][1] These engagements underscored Lannes' role as a reliable executor of Napoleon's operational plans, leveraging aggressive infantry tactics and rapid maneuvers.[1]
Napoleonic Campaigns
Ulm, Austerlitz, and Pursuit (1805)
In the Ulm Campaign of 1805, Lannes commanded the French V Corps as part of the Grande Armée's vanguard under Napoleon, advancing rapidly across the Rhine and into Bavaria to envelop the Austrian army led by General Mack von Leiberich.[2] On October 6, Lannes crossed the Danube and reinforced Marshal Murat's cavalry at Wertingen against an Austrian detachment of approximately 6,000 men under General Auffenberg, contributing to the rout and capture of the enemy division, including its colors, artillery, and baggage.[20] By October 12, Lannes reached the outskirts of Ulm, conducted reconnaissance of Mack's entrenched positions, and received reinforcements from divisions under Generals St. Hilaire and Suchet.[20] On October 14, Lannes occupied key heights overlooking the plain near Pfuhl village, from which his sharpshooters seized Austrian field works and supported Marshal Ney's decisive crossing at Elchingen, while his corps engaged and dispersed smaller Austrian detachments in the following days.[20] These maneuvers, combined with envelopments by other French corps, forced Mack's surrender on October 20, yielding over 27,000 Austrian prisoners, though exact V Corps casualties remain sparsely documented in primary accounts.[2] Following Ulm, Lannes pursued the retreating Russian forces under General Kutuzov; on November 13, he and Murat bluffed Austrian guards into yielding the undefended Danube bridge at Vienna, enabling the French entry into the Austrian capital without resistance.[2] At the Battle of Hollabrunn (also known as Schöngrabern) on November 15–16, Lannes assaulted the Russian rear guard commanded by Prince Bagration and General Lisanevich to delay Kutuzov's junction with reinforcements, launching attacks on the enemy flanks after an artillery preparation and achieving breakthroughs that inflicted significant Russian losses while sustaining minimal French casualties.[21][22] This action bought Napoleon time to concentrate his forces. At the Battle of Austerlitz on December 2, Lannes held the French left wing along the Brünn-Olmütz road, repelling initial assaults by Bagration's 17,000-strong Russian advance guard on December 1 and, after morning resistance on the 2nd, transitioning to a counteroffensive in echelon formation supported by divisions under Suchet and Caffarelli and Murat's cavalry, forcing the Russians to withdraw and preventing a northern envelopment that could have threatened Napoleon's central maneuver.[22] Lannes' steadfast defense was pivotal to the French victory, which shattered the Third Coalition, though he later expressed dissatisfaction with his recognition in Napoleon's official bulletin.[22] In the pursuit after Austerlitz, Lannes advanced to Braunau but faced delays from destroyed bridges and inclement weather; ordered to continue harrying the Russian retreat, he instead departed the army five days post-battle for personal reasons, transferring command of V Corps to Marshal Lefebvre.[2][22] This phase saw limited further engagements for his forces, as the coalition's collapse shifted focus to armistice negotiations.Jena, Pultusk, and Friedland (1806–1807)
In October 1806, during the opening phase of the War of the Fourth Coalition, Marshal Jean Lannes commanded the V Corps of Napoleon's Grande Armée, tasked with screening the French left flank as the main force advanced into Saxony against Prussia.[23] On 14 October, at the Battle of Jena, Lannes positioned his corps in the center of the French line amid heavy morning fog, launching an early attack with divisions under Generals Louis-Gabriel Suchet and Pierre-Augustin Hulin (later reinforced by Claude Juste François Victor Raynaud de Puygibus Gazan). Suchet's division seized the village of Closwitz, while Gazan's forces engaged Prussian troops at Clospeda, contributing to the rout of the main Prussian army under Prince Friedrich Ludwig Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen and the mortally wounded Duke of Brunswick; Lannes' corps suffered heavy casualties in the process but helped secure the French victory.[24] Following Jena, Lannes' V Corps joined the pursuit of the disintegrating Prussian forces, capturing prisoners and supplies while advancing toward the Elbe River crossings.[23] As the campaign shifted northeast into Polish territory against Russian reinforcements under General Levin August von Bennigsen, Lannes' exhausted corps, numbering around 20,000 men in the divisions of Gazan and Suchet, encountered the Russians at the Battle of Pultusk on 26 December 1806.[25] Outnumbered by approximately 35,000 Russian troops with superior artillery, Lannes improvised a defense of the town, repelling repeated assaults on his left flank and center despite harsh winter conditions and limited ammunition; his forces inflicted about 5,000 Russian casualties while suffering around 2,000, including a slight wound to Lannes himself from grapeshot.[23] The engagement ended in a tactical French success, stalling Russian momentum and allowing Napoleon time to consolidate, though Lannes soon collapsed from fever and wound complications, sidelining him until spring 1807.[5] By June 1807, recovered and commanding a reserve corps of roughly 16,000 infantry supported by cavalry under Generals François Étienne de Kellermann and Louis-Pierre Montbrun, Lannes advanced as the French vanguard toward the Russian concentrations in East Prussia.[26] At the Battle of Friedland on 14 June, Lannes' outnumbered force confronted Bennigsen's 60,000-man army crossing the Alle River, holding key positions like Sortlack and Heinrichsdorf through a prolonged morning defense against Russian assaults that cost the French about 2,500 casualties but delayed the enemy advance for nearly eight hours.[27] This stand enabled Napoleon to arrive with reinforcements by midday, enveloping the Russians and forcing their disordered retreat across the Alle, with Lannes' corps capturing artillery and prisoners; the victory compelled the Treaty of Tilsit on 7–9 July 1807, ending major hostilities in the coalition.[23]Zaragoza and Peninsular Engagements (1808–1809)
In October 1808, following the Spanish uprising against French occupation, Napoleon dispatched Marshal Jean Lannes to Spain with the V Corps to reinforce operations in the Peninsular War, tasking him with securing the Ebro River line against Spanish forces.[15] On November 23, 1808, Lannes commanded approximately 31,000 French troops at the Battle of Tudela, where they decisively defeated a Spanish army of about 45,000 under General Francisco Javier Castaños, inflicting heavy casualties and disrupting Spanish plans to relieve Zaragoza.[28][29] This victory, achieved through coordinated infantry assaults and exploitation of Spanish command disarray, opened the path toward Madrid and demonstrated Lannes' tactical acumen in maneuver warfare against numerically superior foes.[1] Subsequently, Lannes relieved Marshal Jean-Andoche Junot in commanding the second siege of Zaragoza (Saragossa), a fortified city that had repelled an earlier French attempt from June to August 1808.[4] Beginning December 20, 1808, Lannes directed a methodical investment with around 38,000 French and allied troops, including Polish auxiliaries, employing sustained artillery bombardment to weaken the city's walls, convents, and urban strongpoints while coordinating infantry advances into breaches.[30] By late January 1809, multiple breaches allowed major assaults; on January 27, Lannes orchestrated simultaneous attacks across three gaps, securing incremental gains amid fierce street fighting and high attrition from disease and attrition, which affected both besiegers and the 30,000 Spanish defenders led by regional juntas.[30] The city capitulated on February 21, 1809, after Lannes rejected unconditional surrender terms and pressed final assaults, resulting in French control but at the cost of over 10,000 casualties, underscoring the grueling nature of urban siege warfare against determined irregular resistance.[4] In recognition of these successes, particularly the Zaragoza operation, Lannes was elevated to the title Duke of Montebello on February 23, 1809.[15] These engagements marked Lannes' brief but effective independent command in the Peninsula before his recall to the Danube front in April 1809.[1]Death and Immediate Aftermath
Wounds at Aspern-Essling
During the second day of the Battle of Aspern-Essling on May 22, 1809, Marshal Jean Lannes commanded the French II Corps tasked with defending the villages of Aspern and Essling against repeated Austrian assaults led by Archduke Charles.[4] Positioned near the Granary at Essling, Lannes actively rallied his troops amid intense artillery fire following a temporary lull in the fighting.[31] In quick succession, a cannonball killed his aide-de-camp, Captain Pouzet, decapitating him and covering Lannes in blood and brains, which left the marshal dazed and momentarily withdrawn to the edge of a nearby ditch.[32] While seated in this exposed position, Lannes was struck by grapeshot or a cannonball fragment that passed between his legs, shattering the kneecap of his left leg and severely lacerating the tendons of his right leg.[5] Chief surgeon Dominique Jean Larrey immediately attended to him on the battlefield, performing an above-the-knee amputation of the left leg under primitive conditions to prevent further blood loss.[1] Despite the procedure, gangrene rapidly set in due to infection, compounded by Lannes's exhaustion from over 48 hours of continuous combat without rest.[31] Lannes was evacuated to a field hospital and later to Kaiserebersdorf, where Emperor Napoleon visited him repeatedly, witnessing his friend's stoic endurance of agony without sedatives, as Lannes refused opium to maintain clarity in his final conversations.[4] The wounds proved fatal, marking Lannes as the first of Napoleon's marshals to die from battle injuries, with his prior 13 wounds from earlier campaigns underscoring his repeated exposure to danger but not diminishing the severity of this terminal trauma.[1]Final Days and Burial
Following the severe injuries sustained on May 22, 1809, during the Battle of Aspern-Essling, where a cannonball shattered both of Lannes' legs below the knee, he was evacuated to a nearby manor house in Kaiser-Ebersdorf, Austria.[1] Surgeons, including Dominique Jean Larrey, attempted to treat the wounds by amputating the left leg, but gangrene rapidly set in despite efforts to combat infection.[5] Over the subsequent nine days, Lannes endured intense pain and fever, with his condition deteriorating as sepsis spread.[33] Napoleon Bonaparte visited Lannes multiple times during his final days, remaining at his bedside for extended periods and expressing profound personal grief over the loss of his closest marshal and friend from early campaigns.[33] Lannes reportedly urged Napoleon to continue the fight against the Austrians, with accounts attributing to him words emphasizing resilience, though the exact phrasing of any final exchange remains subject to historical embellishment in contemporary bulletins.[33] He succumbed to his wounds and resulting fever at dawn on May 31, 1809, aged 40.[1] Lannes' body was embalmed and transported back to France amid official mourning.[5] A state funeral was held in Paris, with Napoleon presiding, and his remains were initially interred at Les Invalides before transfer to the Panthéon in July 1810, where they rest under a monument honoring his service.[34] His heart was separately preserved and also placed in the Panthéon, symbolizing the regime's veneration of his loyalty and valor.[35]Personal Life
Marriages and Offspring
Jean Lannes entered into two marriages. The first occurred on 19 March 1795 in Perpignan with Jeanne Jacqueline Barbe Méric, known as Paulette; the couple divorced on 25 July 1799 amid charges of her infidelity.[36] Méric bore a son, Jean-Claude, on 12 February 1799 (died 1817), but Lannes' extended military absence exceeding ten months during the Egyptian campaign makes his biological paternity unlikely.[36] His second marriage took place on 15 September 1800 in Dornes to Louise Antoinette Scholastique Guéhéneuc (born 26 February 1782 in Paris; died 3 July 1856 in Paris), daughter of a noble family with ties to the ancien régime.[36] This union yielded five legitimate children, four sons and one daughter, several of whom received noble titles under the Napoleonic system. Louis Napoléon, the eldest son, succeeded to the ducal title of Montebello upon the creation of majorat estates by imperial decree.[36] The offspring from the second marriage were:| Name | Birth Date and Place | Death Date and Place | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Louis Napoléon Lannes de Montebello | 30 July 1801, Paris | 19 July 1874 | 2nd Duke of Montebello; inherited titles and estates.[36] |
| Alfred Lannes de Montebello | 11 July 1802, Lisbon | 20 June 1861, Paris | Comte de Montebello.[36] |
| Jean Ernest Lannes | 10 August 1803, Lisbon | 24 November 1882, Pau | Comte de Montebello.[36] |
| Gustave Olivier Lannes de Montebello | 4 December 1804, Paris | 29 August 1875, Blosseville | Baron de Montebello.[36] |
| Joséphine Lannes | 4 March 1806 | 8 November 1889 | Daughter; married into nobility.[36][37] |
