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  1. Maxime Weygand (French pronunciation:; 21 January 1867 – 28 January 1965) was a French military commander in World War I and World War II, as well as a high ranking member of the Vichy regime. Born in Belgium, Weygand was raised in France and educated at the Saint-Cyr military academy in Paris.

  2. According to biographer Barnett Singer in his fine work Maxime Weygand: A Biography of the French General in Two World Wars, he suddenly found himself “hurled to the top” of the French Army in May 1940 after but 10 days of Gamelin’s field command proved to be an utter failure.

  3. Jan 24, 2011 · Singer is right when he says Weygand drew much of his force from his ‘foreign’ origins, but this hypothesis leads to a questionable comparison with Napoleon, as Weygand never commanded any army in the front and never had the same merit.

    • Fadi El Hage
    • 2011
  4. military minds between Army and Nation, furnishes one of the keys to the complex process of the politicization of French military life in recent times. Using the experience of General Maxime Weygand, peacetime commander of the French Army from 1931 to 1935 and Generalissimo in June, 1940, this article proposes to trace the development of the Army-

  5. Apr 19, 2016 · This disregards General Weygand’s own writings, where he himself observed that ‘political’ promotions were a marginal phenomenon while he was in office from 1931 to 1935. It also ignores nineteenth-century French history and the role played by the army in events such as the coup d’état of 2 December, the Boulangist period and the ...

    • Simon Catros
    • 2016
  6. Jun 10, 2022 · Several of the top Entente generals stand at a ceremony for the promotion of Phillipe Petain to the rank of Marshal of France (Weygand is standing behind Joffre and Foch, visible between British General Douglas Haig and US General John Pershing)

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  8. Maxime Weygand. (1867—1965) Quick Reference. (1867–1965) French general. He was Foch's chief of staff in World War I, and in 1920 was sent by the French government to aid the Poles in their ultimately successful defence against the advancing Soviet Red Army.

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