Louis-Gabriel Suchet, duke d’Albufera da Valencia (born March 2, 1770, Lyon, France—died Jan. 3, 1826, Marseille) was a marshal of France, one of the most brilliant of Napoleon’s generals, most notably as commander of the Aragon armies in the Peninsular War.
The son of a Lyon silk manufacturer, Suchet originally had intended to follow his father’s business; but, having in 1792 served as a volunteer in the cavalry of the national guard, he manifested military abilities that secured his rapid promotion. As chef de bataillon he was present at the siege of Toulon in 1793, and, after serving in Tirol in 1797 and also in Switzerland in 1797–98, he was made chief of staff to Guillaume Brune. In July 1799 he was made general of division and chief of staff to Barthélemy Joubert in Italy, and in 1800 he was named by André Masséna his second in command.
Suchet’s action contributed to the success of Napoleon’s crossing the Alps, which culminated in the Battle of Marengo on June 14. In the campaigns of 1805 and 1806, he served at Austerlitz, Saalfeld, Jena, Pultusk, and Ostrołęka. He obtained the title of count on March 19, 1808, and soon afterward was ordered to Spain. He annihilated the British army at Maria on June 14, 1809, and on April 22, 1810, he defeated another force at Lerida. Suchet in 1812 conquered Valencia and received the title of Duke d’Albufera da Valencia (1812).
When the tide turned against the French, Suchet defended his conquests step by step until compelled to retire into France. By Louis XVIII he was made a peer of France, but, having rallied to Napoleon during the Hundred Days, he was deprived of his peerage in 1815.