Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Maurice-Paul-Emmanuel Sarrail (6 de abril de 1856 – 23 de março de 1929) foi um general francês que participou da Primeira Guerra Mundial. Seus interesses políticos pelo socialismo tornaram-no uma raridade entre os católicos , conservadores e monarquistas .

  2. Maurice Paul Emmanuel Sarrail (6 April 1856 – 23 March 1929) was a French general of the First World War. Sarrail's openly socialist political connections made him a rarity amongst the Catholics, conservatives and monarchists who dominated the French Army officer corps under the Third Republic before the war, and were the main ...

  3. Maurice Sarrail, né à Carcassonne le 6 avril 1856 et mort à Paris le 23 mars 1929, est un général français, grand-croix de la Légion d'honneur et médaillé militaire. Il est commandant en chef de l' armée française d’Orient (AFO) d'octobre 1915 à août 1916 puis des armées alliées en Orient (CAA) d'août 1916 à ...

  4. In late 1915 General Sarrail became commander-in-chief of the Allied Armies of the Orient. In difficult conditions, he organised the defence of Salonica and ordered the offensive that led to the taking of Monastir in November 1916.

  5. Maurice-Paul-Emmanuel Sarrail (6 April 1856 – 23 March 1929) was a French general of the First World War. Sarrail endeared himself to the political elite of the Third Republic through his openly socialist views, all the more conspicuous in contrast to the Catholics, conservatives and monarchists...

  6. Commander of the French Third Army at the Battle of the Marne, commander of the Allied Eastern Army in 1916-17, and high commissioner to Syria and Lebanon in 1924-25, Sarrail was one of the most controversial figures of the Third French Republic because of his deep involvement with domestic politics. Unlike the majority of twentieth-century military officers, however, he was an ardent ...

  7. A prominent republican with socialist views, General Maurice Sarrail was dismissed by Joffre, and sent to the Salonica Front in Greece where French and British troops, many from Gallipoli, had established a front.