Military history of France

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However, to the surprise of all, including the French soldiers involved, there have been minor military triumphs every few centuries. Here's quick list of them. For a more comprehensive and full guide to the military history of France, click here.

List of Wars[edit | edit source]

Chronology[edit | edit source]

The French Terror Alert System (FTAS) uses colours as an easy way to indicate the appropriate level of capitulation French citizens should offer to invading armies. Instaured in eary 2003, right before George W. Bush offered an entire country to Al-Qaeda

The following is a compilation of French wars, many of which are considered to be purely mythological, in no particular order:

  • 50 BCJulius Caesar writes On the Gauls about expanding the Roman Empire North East, then West, then North West, then North pushing further into the barbarian lands of the Picts beyond in Saxony. First historical reference to Druidism in France, and where he learned how to chant and sing before battles with the French. Much in the tradition of how Joshua brought the walls of Jericho tumbling down.[1]
  • Gallic Wars 58-52 BC — Lost – the French, too busy fighting with the Germans because all the French women only spoke German, lost to the Italians who had to march a thousand miles to get to them. Tired from the long march, the Italians told the French they were too tired to fight, and to give them a few days rest before they were ready to kick their ass. The French responded by saying it was all the Germans fault and they should attack them and the Belgians, then claimed they were all Dutch and retreated.
  • Hundred Years War 1337-1453 — Mostly lost – at the height of this war with England, Franch had a population of 14 million, England had 2 million, the French, realising they were outnumber by superior British forces, consisting of mainly women and children due to the lack of able bodied men who were being killed off by the plague, decided to attack themselves several times to confuse the British. After several French victories[2][not in given citation] against the British forces, they again attacked themselves in an effort to seduce the defeated British. The French, realising they may be winning the war, took the only commander who had any success against the British, a psychotic female, and sold her to the British in exchange for 10,000 sheep and a few stacks of wood. The wood was later 'stolen' by the English to honour the aforementioned old female, a Miss Johanna Arcangel, by having a grand barbecue in her honour.
  • 1429Joan of Arc had a famous battle with the English Clergy on French soil. She would have won the ground war, but right before an important battle, someone dobbed her in for being too 'manish', and thus ineligible to be a Lady General. Just shows that angel guides can have plans for you more complex than you might think.
  • 1776King Louis the 16th sends funds and a number of his best generals to the American colonies to fight in the War of Colonial Aggression. To show their appreciation for Louis' loyal defence of the interests of the French people, the 'elected' body of Girodins, lead by Robespierre, executed Louis on the guillotine for fleeing the country and being a threat to the rights and new-found freedoms of the citizens of France. More irony.
  • 1798Napoleon invades Egypt and, with the help of an internet search engine, finds the Rosetta Stone. Spent one night inside the sarcophagus in the Queen's Chamber of the Great Pyramid at Giza.[3] Rumour has it, he saw his destiny and told no-one. Born from the phoenix fire of French Revolution, a champion of the hopes and dreams of his people.
Proud !!!
Official graduation patch of the 2006 French Army officer intake from French tri-service officer academy.
  • 1815Napoleon surrenders at Waterloo — Exiled – apparently lost the battle because he was very uncomfortable in his saddle due to a slight case of haemeroids.
  • 1863 — In 1863, the Salon de Paris jury rejected The Luncheon on the Grass (Le déjeuner sur l'herbe) by Édouard Manet, primarily because it depicted a nude woman with two clothed men on a picnic. While nudes were routinely accepted by the Salon when featured in historical and allegorical paintings, the jury condemned Manet for placing a realistic nude in a contemporary setting. Manet felt humiliated by the sharply worded rejection of the jury, which set off a firestorm among many French artists. Although Manet did not consider himself an Impressionist, he led discussions at Café Guerbois where the Impressionists gathered, and he influenced the explorations of the artistic group.
This led to Gustave's Courbet's Origin of the World (1866) – a painting stridently depicting female genitalia, to make an artistic standpoint about freedom of expression.
  • 1940France gets invaded by Nazi Germany, surrenders immediately, but somehow still survives using the help of the European pussies.

See also[edit | edit source]

Footnotes[edit | edit source]

  1. The french were inspired by the lesser-known song of the time from The Style Council - the walls come tumbling down.
  2. History of France, Dorling Kindersley
  3. This Egyption town was named in hounour of the South London army, known as The Geezers