Noël Édouard, Vicomte de Curières de Castelnau
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Noël Édouard, vicomte de Curières de Castelnau (24 December 1851 – 19 March 1944) was a
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army general, army group commander and
Chief of Staff The title chief of staff (or head of staff) identifies the leader of a complex organization such as the armed forces, institution, or body of persons and it also may identify a principal staff officer (PSO), who is the coordinator of the supporti ...
of the Armed Forces during the First World War. Elected deputy in 1919 and president of the Army Commission in the legislature, he then took the head of a confessional political movement, the ''
Fédération Nationale Catholique The Fédération Nationale Catholique (FNC) ( en, National Catholic Federation) was a French movement that was active in the 1920s and 1930s, with the purpose of defending the Catholic Church against secular trends in the governments of the time. T ...
''. During the Second World War, he opposed
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and the Vichy regime and supported the French Resistance. For a long time controversial because of a Catholicism that was considered outrageous by his opponents, historians have moderated that portrait by emphasising his great loyalty to republican institutions and disputed in particular that he could have been
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or
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.


Early life

The son of Michel de Castelnau, mayor of Saint-Affrique, Noël Édouard Marie Joseph de Curières de Castelnau was born in Saint-Affrique, into an aristocratic family of the Rouergue. He is the third of five children. His elder brother, Léonce, was a politician of national importance, the president of the parliamentary group of the ''
Action libérale The Popular Liberal Action (french: Action libérale populaire, ALP), simply called Liberal Action (), was a political party that represented Catholic supporters of the French Third Republic. It operated in the center-right, primarily to oppose ...
'' in the National Assembly. His other brother, Clément, was director of the '' École des mines de Saint-Étienne''. Ruined by the French Revolution, his family had to share a house in Saint-Affrique with his mother's three uncles, the Abbés Barthe. They would have liked him to be a notary, but he wanted to be a naval officer. For reasons of age, he had to reorient himself towards the Army and became part of the 54th promotion of Saint-Cyr, ''Promotion du Rhin'' (1869-1871), from which he graduated as second lieutenant on 14 August 1870. He was appointed to the 31st Infantry Regiment and took part in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 in the Loire Army. After the war, he served as a lieutenant and then captain in various regiments before joining the ''
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'' in 1879. Assigned to the Army Staff in Paris in 1893, he headed the ''1er bureau'' in 1897. His career was delayed for the first time when the polemicist
Urbain Gohier Urbain Gohier (born Urbain Degoulet, December 17, 1862 in Versailles – June 29, 1951) was a French lawyer and journalist best known for his publication of the anti-Semitic forgery ''The Protocols of the Elders of Zion'' in France. His pe ...
, in an article in ''
L'Aurore ''L’Aurore'' (; ) was a literary, liberal, and socialist newspaper published in Paris, France, from 1897 to 1914. Its most famous headline was Émile Zola's '' J'Accuse...!'' leading into his article on the Dreyfus Affair. The newspaper was ...
'', revealed that he was the descendant of an emigrant, who had fought in the army of the
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during the Revolution. In 1900, he was the target of the new Minister of War, General André, who wanted to dismiss him from the army because of his aristocratic origins and his Catholicism. According to André, Castelnau did not have the republican profile that he wanted to impose on the army. The Chief of Staff, General Delanne, opposed this decision and appointed Castelnau to command the 37th Infantry Regiment in Nancy and then resigned. That led to the government being questioned in the
french Chamber of Deputies Chamber of Deputies (french: Chambre des députés) was a parliamentary body in France in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: * 1814–1848 during the Bourbon Restoration and the July Monarchy, the Chamber of Deputies was the lower house o ...
and the French Senate. The minister took his revenge by keeping Castelnau in that post for five years, twice the usual length of time in that type of command. He also ensured that Castelnau was not promoted to general despite his record of service, but the affair of the files would revive his career. General André was forced to resign and a few months later, on 25 March 1906, at the request of
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, Castelnau was promoted to Brigadier. He successively commanded a Brigade at Sedan, then at Soissons. On 21 December 1909, he became a major general, which put him under the command of General Joseph Joffre for the first time. Joffre commanded the army corps on which the 13th Division of
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depended, which Castelnau inherited. Both men got to know each other, and when Joffre was appointed head of the French Army o 2 July 1911, he insisted on having Castelnau at his side. Castelnau took the title of First Deputy Chief of Staff. His main task was to devise a new plan for mobilising and concentrating the French armies in the event of war,
Plan XVII Plan XVII () was the name of a "scheme of mobilization and concentration" that was adopted by the French (the peacetime title of the French ) from 1912 to 1914, to be put into effect by the French Army in the event of war between France and Ger ...
. In 1912, he was confirmed in his position as
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and replaced General Dubail. By the decree of 30 October 1913, he was then appointed to the ''
Conseil supérieur de la guerre The Conseil supérieur de la guerre (CSG, Superior War Council) was the highest military body in France under the Third Republic. It was under the presidency of the Minister of War, although vice presidents presided in his absence and took care of ...
'' and do he would take command of 2nd French Army in the event of conflict. In 1913, Castelnau found himself largely exposed to the violent debate that accompanied the Three Years' Law. Indeed, when Plan XVII was drawn up, it quickly became clear that military manpower had to be increased in peacetime. The only way to achieve that was to extend military service by an additional year, but almost two thirds of the radical and socialist deputies were fiercely opposed to the prospect of a three-year service. Led by Jean Jaurès, opposition to the bill quickly took a passionate turn. Castelnau, who was considered to have inspired the text, became the bête noire of the opponents, especially as the text was finally voted on 19 July 1913. Resentment towards Castelnau on the part of the radical-Socialist Party continued until the end of his life. Georges Clemenceau, although in favour of the law, immortalised tat antagonism by giving Castelnau nicknames like the "Fighting Friar", which have become legendary.


Great War

At the declaration of war, he joined his army being mobilised in Nancy. On 15 August 1914, the five French armies went on the offensive against the Germans, who were in the process of making a large overrun through Belgium. Castelnau faced the army of Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria, which was waiting for him on positions prepared in advance at Morhange. While the Grand Quartier Général (GQG) claimed that the Germans were in retreat and that there were only rearguards in front of him, Castelnau suddenly came up against considerable forces that were strongly supported by heavy artillery. The Second French Army, composed in particular of XV, XVI and XX Corps and 2nd Reserve Division Group the last was commanded by General Léon Durand), suffered heavy losses and had to withdraw to Nancy. Fortunately, Castelnau succeeded in reforming his army, which he later launched into a flanking manoeuvre that inflicted a heavy defeat on the pursuing Germans: the
Battle of the Trouée de Charmes The Battle of the Trouée de Charmes (french: Bataille de la trouée de Charmes) or Battle of the Mortagne was fought at the beginning of World War I, between 24 and 26 August 1914 by the French Second Army (France), Second Army and the German 6th ...
(24-27 August) prevented the French armies retreating towards Paris from being turned to the right and made the First Battle of the Marne. Just as the other armies won the victory of the Marne, Castelnau blocked a new German offensive aimed at Nancy at the Battle of Grand Couronné (4-13 September). That earned him the nickname as the "Saviour of Nancy". On 18 September 1914, Castelnau was promoted to '' Grand Officer de la Legion d'Honneur''. Joffre then withdrew him from the Lorraine front and entrusted him with the mission of extending the left flank of the French armies to the north of the Oise by trying to outflank the German right wing. That was the beginning of the race to the sea, which Castelnau initiated and led to
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. The manoeuvre was then pursued until it reached the North Sea coast by the British Expeditionary Corps, the Belgian Army and several French army corps under the command of
General Foch Ferdinand Foch ( , ; 2 October 1851 – 20 March 1929) was a French general and military theorist who served as the Supreme Allied Commander during the First World War. An aggressive, even reckless commander at the First Marne, Flanders and Art ...
. In
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, Castelnau distinguished himself by resisting a German offensive commanded by General Alexander von Kluck in the Roye region. After the war, that earned him this appreciation from his former adversary: "The French adversary towards whom our sympathies instinctively went, because of his great military talent and his chivalry, is General de Castelnau. And I would like him to know that".' From November 1914 onwards, the fighting in Belgium and France took the form of trench warfare. Implementing new tactical principles, notably by launching his infantry under the protection of a rolling artillery barrage, Castelnau won a victory at Le Quesnoy-en Santerre. From early 1915, he advocated adopting a defensive attitude on the French front until he had enough heavy artillery to break through the German defences and, in the meantime, to launch a major offensive in the Balkans. His idea was supported by President
Raymond Poincaré Raymond Nicolas Landry Poincaré (, ; 20 August 1860 – 15 October 1934) was a French statesman who served as President of France from 1913 to 1920, and three times as Prime Minister of France. Trained in law, Poincaré was elected deputy in 1 ...
and Foreign Minister Aristide Briand but opposed by Joffre and the GQG. In June 1915, he was placed at the head of the Centre Army Group (GAC) and led the Champagne Offensive of 25 September 1915. In a few days, he took 25,000 prisoners and 125 guns, but disrupted by continuous rain, the offensive did not lead to a strategic victory. After that feat of arms, he was made a ''Grand Croix de la Legion d'Honneu''r on 8 October 1915 and, two months later, on 11 December 1915, he was appointed Chief of the General Staff of the French Armies, a position that he held throughout 1916. In that position, he assisted Generalissimo Joffre. He made a decisive contribution to the Battle of Verdun. Contrary to the majority of officers in the GQG, who did not believe in a German offensive there, he feared one and di intervened to reinforce the town's defences and had XX Army Corps in Bar-le-Duc put on alert so that it could be used as reinforcements in the event of a German attack, which began on 21 February 1916. After three days of fighting, the French defences were in the process of giving way, and Castelnau went to Verdun and took the crucial decisions that would allow the resistance to take hold. He appointed General Philippe Pétain and reorganised the local command. Throughout the nine months of the battle, he intervened during the most critical episodes. After six weeks of fighting, he decided to appoint General Robert Nivelle, with Pétain taking command of the Centre Army Group (GAC). In November 1916, against the advice of the officers around Joffre, he ordered the last offensive and turning the long battle into a French victory. Due to his position as Chief of Staff Castelnau played a leading role in the design of the Battle of the Somme. He supervised the plans prepared by the French GHQ for this battle and he took part in the preparatory meetings held with Joffre, Haig and Robertson. In theory, he should have been involved as well in the decisions to be made on a tactical level itself as he did at Verdun. However, Joffre had in fact excluded him from the conduct of this battle. As the British ambassador to France, Lord Bertie, noted, Joffre feared that the government would replace him with Castelnau as Generalissimo. He therefore avoided as far as possible offering him the opportunity to showcase his skills, as had been the case at Verdun. This sidelining was to have the most serious consequences. At the inception of the battle, while on the right bank of the Somme, the British were facing important difficulties, the French were very successful on the left bank. Over an area measuring more than 10 kilometres, they had captured all the German lines of defence. German troops had disappeared, leaving behind dozens of guns, including all their heavy ones. Immediately, Castelnau indicated that it was necessary to exploit this breakthrough and to attack toward the south. Few weeks ago, he had forecasted this scenario and prepared the corresponding instructions. But it would take Joffre almost one week to have them executed. His hesitations, which are still not explained today, gave the Germans an unexpected delay which they took advantage of to bring in reinforcements and dig trenches. When Joffre finally confirmed the attack orders prepared by Castelnau, it was a failure. This mistake deprived the Allies of a great victory that could have allowed them to shorten this war. Joffre and the French generals were careful not to mention it in their memoirs and blamed it on the British military leaders. In December 1916, Joffre was replaced as commander-in-chief of the armies. Nivelle was chosen to succeed him, with Joffre being elevated to the dignity of Marshal of France. The post of Chief of Staff of the Armies was abolished, and Castelnau was appointed to command the Eastern Army Group. However, that sector of the front, where his units operated, was the least active. On 25 June 1917, he received the military medal. In the spring of 1918, taking advantage of the Russian withdrawal from the conflict after the Bolshevik Revolution, the Germans brought all their forces back to France and Belgium and then launched a series of major offensives that were on the way to making them victorious. The armies under Castelnau's command did not play a leading role during that period. On the other hand, as the Franco-British troops, reinforced by the American contingent, regained the initiative during the summer, he was appointed to prepare a decisive manoeuvre in Lorraine. In that sector, the weakness of the German position suggested a major success that could hasten the end of the war. Castelnau did not experience a new victory until two days later. The Armistice of 11 November 1918 suspended his attack, which would probably have taken him deep into Germany. Despite the additional losses that would have caused ("I know only too well the bitterness of the tears shed on the graves", he wrote to his family and thought of his three sons, Gerald, Xavier and Hugues, who had been killed in the war), Castelnau believed that the Allies should not have signed the armistice prematurely.


After Great War

He made a solemn entry into
Colmar Colmar (, ; Alsatian: ' ; German during 1871–1918 and 1940–1945: ') is a city and commune in the Haut-Rhin department and Grand Est region of north-eastern France. The third-largest commune in Alsace (after Strasbourg and Mulhouse), it is ...
on 22 November 1918 during the celebrations for the town's liberation. On that occasion, the press around the world announced his elevation to the dignity of a marshal, but the government refused. However, public opinion demanded it, as was shown by the ovation that he received on 14 July 1919 when he marched on the Champs Élysées. As he passed, the crowd began to chant, "Maréchal! Maréchal!" It demanded for him to be elevated to the marshalate as Joffre, Foch and Pétain had been. Like the other great military leaders of the Great War, he was the object of many honours. In the city of Lyon, Mayor Édouard Herriot, although very anticlerical, welcomed him with a speech of rare emphasis and stated, "Your victory, your unique victory at the Grand Couronne will become classic like that of Thermopylae in the past. I compare you to that great leader, Turenne, whose figure shines in our History as one of the noblest, simplest and purest of our race and our time".' Castelnau entered Parliament in 1919 as a deputy for Aveyron with the
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, within the majority
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, which was classified on the right. He was elected president of the Army Committee. In that capacity, he left his mark on the legislature by having an 18-month military service adopted on 23 April 1923. It was undoubtedly his active participation in political life that prompted the government of Aristide Briand and War Minister
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to remove him from the new list of Marshals announced on 19 February 1921. Indeed, in the eyes of many parliamentarians, including
Léon Blum André Léon Blum (; 9 April 1872 – 30 March 1950) was a French socialist politician and three-time Prime Minister. As a Jew, he was heavily influenced by the Dreyfus affair of the late 19th century. He was a disciple of French Socialist le ...
, Castelnau was becoming more and more of a national leader. That eviction triggered a questioning of the government in the National Assembly. Despite a strong movement of public opinion, as shown by the poll carried out by the daily newspaper ''Le Journal'' in favour of his nomination, Castelnau was never made Marshal. Clemenceau himself was surprised: "I would have been neither surprised nor upset to see the name of General de Castelnau among the six Marshals of France. It is regrettable that he has been forgotten and it is to us and not to him that this oversight does the greatest harm"'. In the 1924 elections, which saw the victory of the Cartel des gauches, he was defeated by the mathematician Émile Borel. Castelnau then wanted to withdraw from public life. However, faced with the resurgence of an anticlerical policy implemented by the new President of the Council, Édouard Herriot, he launched the idea of a vast national federation of various Catholic movements. The
Fédération Nationale Catholique The Fédération Nationale Catholique (FNC) ( en, National Catholic Federation) was a French movement that was active in the 1920s and 1930s, with the purpose of defending the Catholic Church against secular trends in the governments of the time. T ...
(FNC) was born. It had up to two million members. At its head, he forced the government to abandon its entire anticlerical programme in the face of the large demonstrations that Castelnau organised throughout France. That earned him the detestation of part of the Radical Socialist Party and made him be caricatured as a reactionary and royalist character. His detractors went so far as to accuse him of being anti-Dreyfus although he never spoke publicly or privately about Dreyfus. As for the accusation of anti-Semitism, it is all the more unfounded, as Castelnau was one of the right-wing men who was most respected by the French Jewish community. As well, Castelnau never expressed any preference in terms of political regime. As a deputy, he belonged to not a royalist party but a Republican one. It was not until the early 21sr century that contemporary historians such as René Rémond have corrected that image and described him as a moderate right-wing Republican with social ideas ahead of his time.


Second World War

In June 1940, as soon as the Armistice was announced, he distanced himself from all those who rallied to the Vichy regime. He resigned from his position as president of the FNC and was very critical of the Catholic hierarchy, which he thought was too close to Pétain. All of his private correspondence from the period has survived, which makes it possible to follow and to date his thoughts with precision. He encouraged his two grandsons of fighting age, Urbain de la Croix and Gérald de Castelnau, to join the Free French. The former was killed on 31 March 1945 when he was crossing the Rhine, and the latter was seriously wounded on 16 October 1944 during the French Campaign. Although very old, he actively supported the French Resistance and did not hesitate to hide weapons for Colonel Pélissier's Secret Army (AS). He died at the Château de Lasserre, in Montastruc-la-Conseillère, on 18 March 1944 and was buried on 21 March in the family vault in Montastruc. During the burial ceremony, the Bishop of Toulouse, Jules-Géraud Saliège, although very handicapped, had himself carried into the church to honour the memory of Castelnau to whom he was very close. These were his last words at the end of the ceremony: "General de Castelnau was for us a support, a pride, a flag".


Legacy

Like all the great military leaders of the Great War, Castelnau has had his supporters and detractors. The judgement of current historians who describe him as one of the most brilliant and accomplished, if not the most accomplished, general officers of his generation is the same as that of many of his peers. General
Maurice Pellé Maurice César Joseph Pellé (18 April 1863 – 16 March 1924) was a French général de division, leader of the French Military Mission to Czechoslovakia and first Chief of staff of Czechoslovak Army from February 1919 to January 1921. Early li ...
, Major General at the GQG, wrote in July 1915, "General de Castelnau has seen a lot in his career and worked a lot; he knows war. He sees quickly and accurately. His battle preparations are admirable: they are thorough in their detail and leave as little as possible to chance". The opinion of Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner, a member of the
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, is interesting. Comparing Castelnau to the other great French and British military leaders, he said, " Marshal Haig saw nothing, prepared nothing, General Pétain was only concerned with preserving the situation, while
General Foch Ferdinand Foch ( , ; 2 October 1851 – 20 March 1929) was a French general and military theorist who served as the Supreme Allied Commander during the First World War. An aggressive, even reckless commander at the First Marne, Flanders and Art ...
is a sick man, an impulsive man who treats the Divisions like a football ball. The only general to emerge was General de Castelnau, who told me what the Germans were going to do, where they would attack, what parade to take, and all this three months before it happened and that it was happening point by point".' Marshal Haig was very admiring of Castelnau's victory at the
Battle of the Trouée de Charmes The Battle of the Trouée de Charmes (french: Bataille de la trouée de Charmes) or Battle of the Mortagne was fought at the beginning of World War I, between 24 and 26 August 1914 by the French Second Army (France), Second Army and the German 6th ...
, which he described as an "enormous victory" In his memoirs, Major
James Harbord Lieutenant General James Guthrie Harbord (March 21, 1866 – August 20, 1947) was a senior officer of the United States Army and president and chairman of the board of RCA. Early life Harbord was born in Bloomington, Illinois, the son of Geo ...
of the
American Expeditionary Force The American Expeditionary Forces (A. E. F.) was a formation of the United States Army on the Western Front of World War I. The A. E. F. was established on July 5, 1917, in France under the command of General John J. Pershing. It fought alon ...
stated, "It was General de Castelnau, whom many considered the best French general, but a royalist and a Catholic, and therefore suspect. The Americans were very fond of Castelnau, partly because of his aversion to long speeches. Good old Castelnau limited his remarks to raising his glass and wishing that we could soon water our horses together in the Rhine".'


Quotes

Many of the quotes attributed to Castelnau are apocryphal. On the other hand, there some are attested to by irrefutable documents. For example, Castelnau was quoted as saying "Forward, everywhere, all the way" on 25 August 1914 at the Battle of the Charmes. Colonel Charles à Court Repington, a war correspondent, reported in '' The Times'' after his visit to Verdun the words of General de Castelnau: "Rather than submit to German slavery, the whole French race will perish on the battlefield". In his tribute to the army for the newspaper '' L'Écho de Paris'' on 14 July 1919, Castelnau wrote, "The French infantry triumphed over this infernal outburst of fury and horror that surpassed anything the human imagination could ever conceive". Here is his opinion on Pétain and Vichy during the summer of 1940: "More than ever, the armistice seems to me to be ignominious; I can only explain this act by the profound intellectual and moral failure of Pétain,
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and Co In him, senile pride when 'he gives his person to France', defeatism, intellectual weakness compete with cowardice [...The Marshal's government is awful in its mentality. The path it leads us down will be that of catastrophe". In 1942, to a priest who had come to bring him a message from Cardinal Pierre-Marie Gerlier asking him to moderate his criticism of the Marshal, Castelnau replied, "So your cardinal has a tongue? I thought he had worn it out licking Pétain's arse".Charles d'Aragon, ''La Résistance sans héroïsme'', Paris: Le Seuil, 1977, 25.


Military career

* 25/03/1906 : Brigadier * 21/12/1909 : Major General * 12/07/1912 : Lieutenant General * 19/12/1916 : General * 1921 General retained in activity without limit of time.


Honours

Légion d'honneur : chevalier (29/12/1891), officier (12/09/1899), commandeur (30/12/1911), grand-officier (18/09/1914), grand-croix (08/10/1915) ; Médaille militaire (25/06/17) ; Médaille commémorative de la guerre 1870-1871 ; Croix de Guerre 1914-1918 ; Médaille interalliée 1914-1918 ; Médaille commémorative de la Grande Guerre;
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath The Most Honourable Order of the Bath is a British order of chivalry founded by George I on 18 May 1725. The name derives from the elaborate medieval ceremony for appointing a knight, which involved bathing (as a symbol of purification) as one ...
(GCB); Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) War Order of Virtuti Militari Pologne) ; Grand Cross Imperial Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky ( Russia) ; Great Cross of Order of the White Eagle ( Russia) ; Grand Cross of Order of Saint Stanislaus ( Russia) ; Grand Cross of Order of Saint Anna ( Russia) ;
Croix de guerre (Belgium) The ''Croix de guerre'' ( French) or ''Oorlogskruis'' (Dutch), both literally translating as "Cross of War", is a military decoration of the Kingdom of Belgium established by royal decree on 25 October 1915. It was primarily awarded for bravery o ...
;
Distinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army) The Distinguished Service Medal (DSM) is a military decoration of the United States Army that is presented to soldiers who have distinguished themselves by exceptionally meritorious service to the government in a duty of great responsibility. Th ...
Grand Cross Order of St. Gregory the Great Vatican) ; Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus


Remembrance

Rue De Castelnau and De Castelnau metro station in Montreal are named after the general. School year n° 198 of the Ecole Speciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr (2011-2014) was called Castelnau's school year in honour of the general.


References


Further reading

* « Édouard de Castelnau », in ''Dictionnaire des parlementaires français (1889-1940)'', under the direction ofJean Jolly, PUF, 1960. * Victor Giraud, ''Le Général de Castelnau'', Éd. Spes, 1928. *
Yves Gras Yves may refer to: * Yves, Charente-Maritime, a commune of the Charente-Maritime department in France * Yves (given name), including a list of people with the name * ''Yves'' (single album), a single album by Loona * ''Yves'' (film), a 2019 Fren ...
, ''Castelnau, ou l'art de commander : 1851-1944'' , Paris, Denoël, 1990, 466 p. , . * Corinne Bonafoux-Verrax, « Le général de Castelnau au service de la patrie et de la foi », dans Olivier Forcade (dir.), ''Militaires en république, 1870-1962, les officiers, le pouvoir et la vie publique en France : actes du colloque international tenu au Palais du Luxembourg et à la Sorbonne les 4, 5 et 6 avril 1996,'' Paris, Publ. de la Sorbonne, coll. « Histoire de la France aux XIXe et XXe siècles », 1999, 734 p. , , lire en ligne rchive. * Corinne Bonafoux-Verrax, ''À la droite de Dieu : la Fédération nationale catholique, 1924-1944,'' Paris, Fayard, coll. « Nouvelles études contemporaines », 2004, 658 p. , . * François Cochet (dir.) et Rémy Porte (dir.), ''Dictionnaire de la Grande Guerre 1914-1918'', Paris, Robert Laffont, coll. « Inedit ; Bouquins », 2008, 1120 p. , , « Castelnau, général Noël, Joseph, Édouard de Curières de (1851-1944) ». * Corinne Bonafoux-Verrax, « Un conservatisme modéré ? Le cas de la Fédération nationale catholique », dans Jacques Prévotat (dir.) et Jean Vavasseur-Desperriers (dir.) et al., Villeneuve d'Ascq, Presses universitaires du Septentrion, coll. « Histoire et civilisations », 2013, 485 p. , . * Jean-Paul Huet, ''Édouard de Castelnau, 1851-1944 : l'artisan de la victoire'', Turquant, Anovi, 2013, 118 p. , . *
Patrick de Gmeline Patrick may refer to: *Patrick (given name), list of people and fictional characters with this name *Patrick (surname), list of people with this name People *Saint Patrick (c. 385–c. 461), Christian saint *Gilla Pátraic (died 1084), Patrick or ...
, ''Le Général de Castelnau (1851-1944). L'homme, le soldat, le chrétien'', Janzé, Charles Hérissey Éditions, 2013, 244 p. , . * Benoît Chenu, ''Castelnau : « le quatrième maréchal » 1914-1948'', Paris, Bernard Giovanangeli éditeur, 2017, 446 p. , . * Léon Zeller, Louis Zeller et Claude Franc (préf.
Jean-Louis Georgelin Jean-Louis Georgelin (born 30 August 1948 in Aspet, Haute-Garonne) is a French Army General who was Chief of the Defence Staff ("Chef d'état-major des armées", CEMA) between 4 October 2006 and 25 February 2010. Since 9 June 2010, he has ser ...
), ''Souvenirs du maréchal Joffre et du général de Castelnau'', Paris, Economica, 2020, 272 p. . * Benoît Chenu, ''La bataille des cinq empires,'' Paris, éditions L’Artilleur, 2021, 528 p. (, ). * Benoît Chenu, The Battle of the Five Empires, Paris, Guêche Publishing, 2022, 494 p. (ISBN 978-2-9585377-1-5).


External links


Extract from the military record book of General de Castelnau

Channel dedicated to General de Castelnau on Youtube [archive
/nowiki>">rchive">Channel dedicated to General de Castelnau on Youtube [archive
/nowiki> {{DEFAULTSORT:Castelnau, Noel Marie Joseph Edouard, Vicomte De Curieres De 1851 births 1944 deaths People from Aveyron Politicians from Occitania (administrative region) French Roman Catholics Republican Federation politicians Members of the 12th Chamber of Deputies of the French Third Republic Members of the Ligue des Patriotes Anti-Masonry French generals École Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr alumni French military personnel of the Franco-Prussian War French military personnel of World War I Grand Croix of the Légion d'honneur