Louis-Félix-François Franchet d’Esperey (born May 25, 1856, Mostaganem, Alg.—died July 8, 1942, Albi, Fr.) was a marshal of France and one of the most effective French military leaders of World War I. He was responsible for driving Bulgaria out of the war, thereby opening the road to Vienna for the Allies.
Trained at Saint-Cyr, d’Esperey served during the prewar period in Algeria and Tunisia. At the outbreak of World War I, he was a corps commander at Lille. His successful leadership resulted in his being promoted to command the eastern army group (March 1916) and later the northern army group (January 1917). But after a defeat by the Germans on the Chemin des Dames (a road between the Aisne and Ailette rivers in the Aisne district of northern France) in May 1918, d’Esperey was sent to command the polyglot Allied armies in Macedonia. There he achieved the decisive victory (Sept. 15–29, 1918) that forced Bulgaria out of the war. He then led a bold thrust to the Danube, resulting in the collapse of demoralized German divisions hurriedly sent back from Russia and the surrender of Hungary. He was created a marshal of France in 1921 and was elected to the French Academy in 1934.