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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lazare_HocheLazare Hoche - Wikipedia

    Louis Lazare Hoche ([lwi la.zaʁ ɔʃ]; 24 June 1768 – 19 September 1797) was a French military leader of the French Revolutionary Wars. He won a victory over Royalist forces in Brittany. His surname is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe, on Column 3.

  2. Louis Lazare Hoche, né le 24 juin 1768 à Versailles ( France) et mort le 19 septembre 1797 à Wetzlar ( ville libre d'Empire ), est un général français de la Révolution . Biographie. Famille. Son père est palefrenier à la vénerie du roi et sa mère s'appelle Anne Merliere.

  3. Lazare Hoche (born June 24, 1768, Versailles, Fr.—died Sept. 18, 1797, Wetzlar, Nassau [Germany]) was a general of the French Revolutionary Wars who drove the Austro-Prussian armies from Alsace in 1793 and suppressed the counterrevolutionary uprising in the Vendée (1794–96).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. General Louis Lazare Hoche. By Nathan D. Jensen. Born: June 24, 1768. Place of Birth: Versailles, Yvelines, France. Died: September 19, 1797. Place of Death: Wetzlar, Germany. Arc de Triomphe: HOCHE on the north pillar. Pronunciation: The son of a stableman to the equerries of the king, Louis Lazare Hoche followed in his father's footsteps and ...

  5. officier général. Histoire : Lazare Hoche (1762-1797) s’engage en 1784 comme soldat au régiment des gardes-françaises. Caporal le 16 juin 1789, il passe le grade de sergent le 1er septembre dans la garde nationale soldée de Paris.

  6. FRANCE, histoire, de 1789 à 1815. Biographie de LAZARE HOCHE (1768-1797). Né à Versailles, fils d'un palefrenier du roi. Fusilier puis caporal aux gardes françaises, Lazare Hoche, pendant ses...

  7. Overview. Gen Louis Lazare Hoche. (1768—1797) Quick Reference. (1768–97). Son of a groom, Hoche was an assistant groom in the royal stables before joining the Gardes Françaises. A corporal in 1789, he rose rapidly in the French Revolutionary ... From: Hoche, Gen Louis Lazare in The Oxford Companion to Military History »