Marshal of the Empire In May 1804, after
Napoleon ascended to
Emperor, Soult was made one of the first eighteen
Marshals of the Empire. He commanded a corps in the
advance on
Ulm, and at
Austerlitz he led the decisive attack on the Allied centre. Soult played a great part in many of the famous battles of the
Grande Armée, including the Battle of Austerlitz in 1805 and the
Battle of Jena in 1806. However, he was not present at the
Battle of Friedland because on that same day he was capturing
Königsberg. After the conclusion of the
Treaties of Tilsit, he returned to France and in 1808 was anointed by Napoleon as 1st Duke of
Dalmatia (French:
Duc de Dalmatie). The awarding of this honour greatly displeased him, for he felt that his title should have been Duke of Austerlitz, a title which Napoleon had reserved for himself. In the following year, Soult was appointed as commander of the II Corps with which Napoleon intended to conquer Spain. After winning the
Battle of Gamonal, Soult was detailed by the emperor to pursue
Lieutenant-General Sir John Moore's British army. At the
Battle of Coruña, in which Moore was killed, Soult failed to prevent British forces escaping by sea.
Peninsular War , by
Joseph Beaume For the next four years, Soult remained in
Spain engaged in the
Peninsular War. In 1809, he invaded
Portugal and took
Porto, but was isolated by General
Francisco da Silveira's strategy of contention. Busying himself with the political settlement of his conquests in French interests and, as he hoped, for his own ultimate benefit as a possible candidate for the Portuguese throne, he attracted the hatred of Republican officers in his army. Unable to move, he was eventually driven from Portugal in the
Second Battle of Porto by Lieutenant-General
Sir Arthur Wellesley (later the
Duke of Wellington), making a painful and almost disastrous retreat over the mountains, pursued by General
William Beresford and Silveira. After the
Battle of Talavera, Soult was made chief of staff of French forces in Spain with extended powers, and on 19 November 1809, won a great victory at the
Battle of Ocana. In 1810, he invaded
Andalusia, which he quickly overran. He stated, "Give me
Seville and I will answer for
Cádiz." However, because he then turned to seize Seville, the capture of Cádiz eluded him, this led to the prolonged and futile
Siege of Cádiz, a strategic disaster for the French. In 1811, Soult marched north into
Extremadura and took
Badajoz. When the Anglo-Portuguese army laid siege to the city, he marched to its rescue, nearly winning the famous and bloody
Battle of Albuera on 16 May. In 1812, after Wellington's great victory at
Salamanca, Soult was obliged to evacuate Andalusia. In the subsequent
Siege of Burgos, he was able to drive Wellington's Anglo-allied army back to Salamanca. There, Soult failed to attack Wellington despite a superiority in numbers, and the British Army retired to the Portuguese frontier. Soon after, he was recalled from Spain at the request of
Joseph Bonaparte (who had been installed by his brother as King of Spain) with whom, as with the other marshals, he had always disagreed.
In Germany and defending southern France In March 1813, Soult assumed command of the
IV Corps of the
Grande Armée and commanded the centre at
Lützen and
Bautzen, but he was soon sent, with unlimited powers, to the South of France to repair the damage done by the defeat at
Vitoria. It is to Soult's credit that he was able to reorganise the demoralised French forces. His last offensives into Spain were turned back by Wellington in the
Battle of the Pyrenees (
Sorauren) and by General
Manuel Freire's Spaniards at
San Marcial. Pursued onto French soil, Soult was maneuvered out of several positions at
Nivelle,
Nive, and
Orthez, before suffering what was technically a defeat at Wellington's hands at the
Battle of Toulouse. He nevertheless inflicted severe casualties on Wellington and was able to stop him from trapping the French forces.
Hundred Days and Waterloo After Napoleon's
first abdication in 1814, Soult declared himself a
royalist, received the
Order of Saint Louis, and acted as
Minister of War from 26 November 1814 to 11 March 1815. When Napoleon
returned from
Elba, Soult at once declared himself a
Bonapartist, was made a
Peer of France, and acted as chief of staff to the emperor during the
Waterloo campaign, in which role he distinguished himself far less than he had done as commander of an over-matched army. In his book,
Waterloo: The History of Four Days, Three Armies and Three Battles,
Bernard Cornwell summarizes the opinions of several historians that Soult's presence in the
Army of the North was one of several factors contributing to Napoleon's defeat, because of the animosity between him and Marshal
Michel Ney, the other senior commander, and because, in spite of his experience as a soldier, Soult lacked his predecessor Marshal
Louis-Alexandre Berthier's administrative skills. The most glaring instance of this was his written order, according to Napoleon's instructions, to Marshal
Emmanuel de Grouchy to position his force on the Anglo-allied army's left flank in order to prevent reinforcement by the Prussians. Cornwell decries the wording of Soult's order as
"almost impenetrable nonsense", and Grouchy misinterpreted the order, instead marching against the Prussian rearguard at
Wavre. == Political career ==