Charles-Guillaume-Marie-Apollinaire-Antoine Cousin-Montauban, count de Palikao (born June 24, 1796, Paris—died Jan. 8, 1878, Versailles, Fr.) was a French general who commanded an expeditionary force in China, capturing Peking (1860), and later headed the French government briefly during the collapse of the Second Empire.
Commissioned in the army in 1815, Cousin-Montauban passed through the staff college and went with the 1823 expedition to Spain to restore Ferdinand VII to the throne. Serving in Algeria from 1831 to 1857, he won rapid promotion, being appointed divisional general in 1855. From 1857 to 1860 he held three commands in metropolitan France before being sent to China in 1860 to command French troops in the joint Anglo-French expedition sent to enforce Chinese compliance with the Treaty of Tientsin (1858). He defeated a large force of Chinese troops at Pa-li-ch’iao (French: Palikao), a town near Peking, on September 21 and entered the Chinese capital on October 12; worldwide indignation was aroused when troops under his command took part in the pillage and burning of the summer palaces outside Peking. A hero at home, however, he was appointed to the French Senate in December and named Count de Palikao by Napoleon III in 1862.
After the outbreak of the Franco-German War, Palikao was designated prime minister by the empress regent Eugénie on Aug. 9, 1870. His government, which lasted less than a month, witnessed the downfall of the Second Empire. Despite his attempts to reorganize forces for the defense of France, he was unable to prevent the catastrophic defeat at Sedan (September 1–2) and was ousted by the republican revolution of September 4. Fleeing to Belgium, he retired to private life.