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luò 杜洛 doswéi yōng Francois Villon · bèi lāi Joachim du Bellay
gāo nǎi Pierre Corneillewéi duō · guǒ Victor Hugoxià 'ěr · lāi 'ěr Charles Baudelaire
fāng · měi Stephane Mallarmewèi 'ěr lún Paul-Marie Veriaineluò léi 'ā méng Comte de Lautréamont
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hēng · xiū Henri Michauxāi léi José Maria de Herediaā 'ěr tuō Antonin Artaud
wéi Pierre Reverdybài Saint-John Perse duō Sully Prudhomme
nèi · xià 'ěr René Char fán · 'ěr Yvan Goll kǎi Alain Bosquet
Yves Bonnefoy nèi · sài Rene Groussetā lán · pèi léi fěi Alain Peyrefitte
xiē 'ěr · wèi - wēi 'ěr Michelle David - Willbái jìn Joachim Bouvet lín · nài Katrina resistant
ruò · léi shí José Frèches xiē 'ěr - shī nài Michelle - Schneider · Nicolas Sarkozy
ā · níng Anaïs Ninràng · duō · bào Jean-Dominique Bauby xiē 'ěr - ān tuō · Michel-Antoine Burnier
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ràng · fěi To Philip · zhā 'ěr 尼玛扎玛尔 luò wéi shì Clovis I
luò tài 'ěr shì Clothaire Ier 'ěr sān shì Childeric III píng Pepin III
chá Charlemagne shì Louis the Piouschá 'èr shì Charles II (le Chauve)
'èr shì Louis II sān shì Louis III luò màn 'èr shì Carloman II
fěi · bèi dāng Henri Philippe Pétain
guó wéi guó  (1856niánsìyuè24rì1951niánqīyuè23rì)
kāiduānzhōngjié
zàiwèi1940nián1940nián

  hēng · fěi · bèi dāng : HenriPhilippePétain, 1856 nián 4 yuè 24 1951 nián 7 yuè 23 ), guó jūn jiànglǐngzhèng zhì jiā shì guó wéi zhèng de yuán shǒuzǒng céng zài shì jiè zhàn jiān dān rèn jūn zǒng lìngdài lǐng guó guó duì zhànbèi rèn wéi shì mín yīng xióng, 1918 nián shēng rèn guó yuán shuàidàn 1940 nián rèn guó zǒng shí xiàng guó tóu jiàngzhì jīn zài guó réng bèi shì wéi pàn guó zhězhàn hòu bèi pàn xínghòu gǎi pàn zhōng shēn jiān jìn
  
   zǎo nián
  
   bèi dāng shì tiān zhù jiào nóng mín zhī zài 1876 nián jiā guó jūn
   shì jiè zhàn
  
   bèi dāng zài zhàn jiān chéng wéi guó yīng xióngbèi chēng wéi fán 'ěr dēng de jiù xīng zài 1914 nián kāi zhàn shíbèi dāng shì zhèng dài tuì xiū de shàng xiàozhàn zhēng kāi shǐ hòu bèi shēng wéi chánghòu shēng wéi shī chángzài 10 yuè rèn 'èr jūn jūn cháng, 1915 nián 7 yuè shēng wéi 'èr jūn tuán lìngzài 1916 nián de fán 'ěr dēng zhàn zhōng zhǐ huī dāng jūn tuì jūn jìn gōng。 1917 nián bèi dāng shēng wéi guó jūn zǒng lìng, 1918 nián 11 yuè shēng rèn guó yuán shuài
   liǎng zhàn jiān
  
   bèi dāng zài 1929 nián yuán shuài shì shì hòu wèi chū rèn lán xué yuàn yuàn shì。 1934 nián shí céng jìn nèi rèn guó fáng cháng zhí
   'èr shì jiè zhàn wéi guó
  
  1940 nián 6 yuèbèi dāng zài jūn xiàng guó nèi tuī jìn zhī jiù rèn guó zǒng zài 6 yuè 22 guó qiān dìng tíng huǒ xié dìnggēn gāi xié dìng guó de fèn bèi jūn zhàn lǐngzhǐ yòu nán dōng nán dài wàisuí hòu guó guó huì tōng guò 'ànshòu bèi dāng xiàn xíng zhèng quán bìng zàn tíng xiàn lìng bèi dāng yōng yòu cái zhě de quán bèi dāng zhèng zǒng shè zài guó zhōng fēi zhàn lǐng de wéi bèi chēngwéi zhèng ”。 wéi zhèng wéi zhóu xīn guó gōng liàng yòu céng xià lìng zài hǎi wài shǔ de jūn duì kàng méng jūn róng zhóu xīn jūn zài hǎi wài shǔ guò jìng。 1942 nián 11 yuè 11 jūn rán zhàn lǐng guó xià de fēi zhàn lǐng 。 1944 nián méng jūn dēng guó hòuwéi zhèng zài 9 yuè qiān zhì guó jìng nèi
   zhàn hòu shěn pàn
  
  1945 nián 4 yuèbèi dāng huí dào guó jiē shòu pàn guó zuì shěn xùn hòu bèi dìng zuì pàn chù xíngbèi dāng zài 8 yuè huò dài gāo nián lǎo wéi yóu jiǎn xíng zhì zhōng shēn jiān jìnzài 1951 nián shì


  Henri Philippe Benoni Omer Joseph Pétain (24 April 1856 – 23 July 1951), generally known as Philippe Pétain or Marshal Pétain (Maréchal Pétain), was a French general who reached the distinction of Marshal of France, and was later Chief of State of Vichy France (Chef de l'État Français), from 1940 to 1944. Pétain, who was 84 years old in 1940, ranks as France's oldest head of state.
  
  Because of his outstanding military leadership in World War I, particularly during the Battle of Verdun, he was viewed as a hero in France. However, during the 1920s and 1930s, while remaining the highest ranking military authority, he failed to modernize the French military except for the ineffective Maginot Line. After the French defeat in June 1940, Pétain was legally voted in as Head of State (Chef de l'Etat) by the French Parliament. However, Pétain surrendered France to Germany and, along with his cabinet, including later on Pierre Laval, transformed the French Republic into the French State, an authoritarian (not totalitarian) dictatorship administered from the town of Vichy in central France. As the war progressed, the Vichy Government sank deeper into collaboration with the German occupiers which finally took control of the totality of metropolitan France. Petain's actions during World War II resulted in a conviction and death sentence for treason, which was commuted to life imprisonment by Charles de Gaulle. In modern France he is remembered as an ambiguous figure while pétainisme is a derogatory term for certain reactionary policies.
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