Charles Mangin

Charles Mangin
Charles Mangin
Charles Mangin 02.jpg
General Mangin wearing the Legion of Honour
Nickname "The Butcher"
Born 6 July 1866 (1866-07-06)
Sarrebourg, Moselle
Died 12 May 1925 (1925-05-13)
Paris
Allegiance Flag of France.svg France
Years of service 1889–1925
Rank General
Commands held Third Army,
Sixth Army,
Tenth Army
Battles/wars World War I
*Battle of Verdun
*Battle of the Aisne
*Second Battle of the Marne

Charles Emmanuel Marie Mangin (6 July 1866, Sarrebourg, Moselle – 12 May 1925, Paris) was a French general during World War I.

Contents

Early career

Charles was born on the 6th July 1866 in Sarrebourg. After initially failing to gain entrance to Saint-Cyr, he joined the 77th Infantry Regiment in 1885. He reapplied and was accepted in Saint-Cyr in 1886 attaining the rank of Sub-Lieutenant in 1888. He joined the 1st Marine Infantry Regiment based in Cherbourg. Mangin was sent Sudan serving under Jean-Baptiste Marchand and gained further experience in Mali, French North Africa. During this period he learnt Bambara, the lingua-franca of Mali. he was wounded three times and returned to France in 1892. In 1893 he was made a Knight of the Legion d'honneur. In 1898 he joined Jean-Baptiste Marchand on his expedition to Fashoda. In 1900 he attained the rank of Officer of the Legion d'honneur and was given the command of a battalion in Tonkin from 1901-1904. Then he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1905 and served in French occupation of Senegal from 1906 to 1908 under General Audéoud. In 1910 he published La force noire,where he called for the use of French Colonial Forces in the event of a European war.[1]

First World War

During the war he rose from divisional command to that of the 10th Army for the Second Battle of the Marne commanding both French and American troops. Nicknamed "the Butcher" for his espousal of la guerre à outrance and his faith in the suitability of North African troops for the attack, there was no doubt in the French Army that Mangin was personally fearless.

During that war, he had notable victories at Charleroi and then at Verdun, but his reputation suffered following the disastrous Nivelle Offensive, (16 April–9 May 1917). This was due partly to the fact that Mangin was one of the few high-ranking French officials who supported Nivelle's strategy.

Mangin's Sixth Army bore the brunt of the main attack during the Second Battle of the Aisne, the main component of Robert Nivelle's costly assault. After the failed operation was abandoned, both Mangin and Nivelle were removed from effective command. However, following Ferdinand Foch's promotion to Allied Supreme Commander (over Philippe Pétain), Mangin was recalled upon the orders of Prime Minister Clemenceau and given command initially of a corps and then of the French Tenth Army on the Western Front.

Statue of Charles Mangin in Paris, France

Although he was despised by some of his troops (who gave him the nickname "The Butcher"), Mangin's 10th Army was responsible for the crucial Allied counter-attack at the Second Battle of the Marne. It was this that largely promoted his military reputation. Mangin also became known for the observation: "Quoi qu'on fasse, on perd beaucoup de monde." ("Whatever you do," (i.e. attack or defend) "you lose a lot of men."). In the closing months of the war, he served as part of General Castelnau's Army Group East, advancing towards Metz.

Occupation of the Rhineland

After the Allied victory, Mangin's 10th Army was sent to occupy the Rhineland. There, Mangin became the focus of controversy due to his attempts to foster the establishment of a pro-French Rhenish Republic with the aim of separating it from Germany and thus denying Germany the West bank of the Rhine. Mangin became a member of the Supreme War Council and inspector general of French colonial troops. He fell seriously ill at his Paris home on the 9 March 1925, suffering from incredible pain. He became incoherent and partly paralysed. On the 10th he was diagnosed as suffering from appendicitis and as having suffered a stroke, though the rumour had it he may have been poisoned. He died at 9am two days later, 12 March.[2] His remains were interred in Les Invalides in 1932, and a statue erected in his honour in 1928.[3]

The statue of Mangin was destroyed in 1940 after the armistice. During his tour of Paris, Adolf Hitler visited Napoleon's tomb and the statue, being a reminder of Mangin's machinations in the Rhineland, was one of two he ordered dynamited. (The other was of Edith Cavell.) In 1957 a new statue was erected on the avenue de Breteuil.[4]

Decorations

His Publications

  • La force noire, Hachette, Paris, 1910 (in this book Mangin predicted the quick and massive use of colonial troops, his so-called "Black Force", in the event of a war in Europe)
  • La Mission des troupes noires. Compte-rendu fait devant le comité de l'Afrique française, Comité de l'Afrique française, 1911, 44 p.
  • Comment finit la guerre, Plon-Nourrit, Paris, 1920, 330 p.
  • Des Hommes et des faits. I. Hoche. Marceau. Napoléon. Gallieni. La Marne. Laon. La Victoire. Le Chef. La Discipline. Le Problème des races. Paul Adam : A la jeunesse. Réponse à M. P. Painlevé, Plon-Nourrit, 1923, 275 p.
  • Autour du continent latin avec le "Jules-Michelet", J. Dumoulin, Paris, 1923, 381 p.
  • Regards sur la France d'Afrique, Plon-Nourrit, Paris, 1924, 315 p.
  • Lettres du Soudan, Les Éditions des portiques, Paris, 1930, 253 p.
  • Un Régiment lorrain. Le 7-9. Verdun. La Somme, Floch, Mayenne ; Payot, Paris, 1935, 254 p.
  • Souvenirs d'Afrique : Lettres et carnets de route, Denoël et Steele, Paris, 1936, 267 p.
  • Les Chasseurs dans la bataille de France. 47e division (juillet-novembre 1918), Floch, Mayenne ; Payot, Paris, 1935, 212 p.
  • Histoire de la nation française (publ. sous la direction de Gabriel Hanotaux), 8, Histoire militaire et navale, 2e partie, De la Constituante au Directoire, Plon, Paris, 1937
  • Lettres de guerre : [à sa femme] 1914-1918, Fayard, 1950, 323 p.

Notes

  1. ^ La force noire
  2. ^ Mangin, Louis-Eugène. Le Général Mangin, Privately Published, 1990, p. 398
  3. ^ Mangin, Louis-Eugène. Le Général Mangin, Privately Published, 1990, p. 400
  4. ^ Mangin, Louis-Eugène. Le Général Mangin, Privately Published, 1990, p. 408

References

  • Portions of this article were translated from the French Wikipedia article fr:Charles Mangin.
  • Mangin, Louis-Eugène. Le Général Mangin. 1990.
  • Evans, M. M. Battles of World War I. Select Editions. 2004. ISBN 1-84193-226-4.
  • Heywood, Chester D. "Negro combat troops in the world war". 1928.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Charles Mangin — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Mangin. Charles Mangin Naissance 6 juillet …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Charles Mangin — General Charles Mangin Charles Marie Emmanuel Mangin (* 6. Juli 1866 in Sarrebourg, Frankreich; † 12. Mai 1925 in Paris) war ein französischer General im Ersten Weltkrieg. Inhaltsverzeich …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Charles Mangin — General Charles Mangin. Charles Marie Emmanuel Mangin (Sarrebourg, 6 de julio de 1866 – París, 12 de mayo de 1925) fue un general francés durante la Iª Guerra Mundial. El 24 de septiembre de 1916, en la Batalla de …   Wikipedia Español

  • Mangin — ist ein französischer Familienname. Bekannte Namensträger sind: Léon Ignace Mangin, französischer Missionar in China (1857 1900) Charles Mangin, französischer General im Ersten Weltkrieg Serge Mangin, in Deutschland lebender Bildhauer und Autor.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mangin — may refer to: Charles Mangin, a French general Patrice Mangin, a forensic pathologist Jean Pierre Mangin, a French philatelist Mangin mirror, in optics, a type of back surface concave mirror This disambiguation page lists articles associated with …   Wikipedia

  • Mangin — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Personnalités Plusieurs personnalités portent le nom de famille Mangin Alexis Louis Mangin (1856 1920), prêtre canadien en cause de canonisation Anatole… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Charles Louis Lanrezac — Général Charles Lanrezac Charles Louis Marie Lanrezac (* 31. Juli 1852 in Pointe a Pitre, Guadeloupe; † 18. Januar 1925 in Neuilly sur Seine) war ein französischer General im Ersten Weltkrieg. Er gilt als eines der größten Führungstalente des… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mangin, Charles — (general) (1866 1925)    military figure    Born in sarrebourg, charles Mangin, after graduating from saint cyr, served for a number of years in Africa (1890 94, 1895 98, 1907 11), in Tonkin (1901 04), and with General louis lyautey in Morocco… …   France. A reference guide from Renaissance to the Present

  • Charles Cochon De Lapparent — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Lapparent. Charles Cochon de Lapparent, né à Champdeniers (Deux Sèvres), le 24&# …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Charles cochon de lapparent — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Lapparent. Charles Cochon de Lapparent, né à Champdeniers (Deux Sèvres), le 24&# …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”