Adrien Paul Alexandre Chrétien was a French general who participated in World War I. He spent the war commanding the 30th Army Corps at throughout several battles of the Western Front.
In 1892, he was a captain in the 3rd Algerian Tirailleurs Regiment. When World War I broke out, he was a colonel, but from October 19, 1914, he was given the interim command of an infantry brigade. On December 18, 1914, he was appointed brigadier general, then promoted to division general on December 23, 1915.[1] He commanded the 30th Army Corps on January 19, 1916. On January 26, he alerted the high command to the deplorable state of the defenses in the Battle of Verdun.[2][3]
Chrétien was wounded twice, first disfigured by a bullet which hit him in the right ear during the Tonkin Campaign, then hit in the knee on September 6, 1914. General Chrétien was made Commander of the Legion of Honor on March 25, 1915.
In February 1916, when the Battle of Verdun broke out, he commanded the 30th Army Corps, whose headquarters was located at Fort Souville.[4]
He married Marié à Jeanne Woitier and had one son, Marcel Adrien who was born on February 28, 1898, but was killed in action on August 8, 1918, during World War I as a member of the 3rd Zouave Regiment [fr].[5][6]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul Chrétien.
Annuaire officiel de l'armée française, Berger-Levrault, Paris, 1897, p. 103
« Le général Chrétien », in Le Pays de France, no. 171, January 24, 1918, p. 3
Les armées françaises dans la grande guerre, Imprimerie nationale, 1934
Bernède, Allain (2002), "Verdun 1916 : le point de vue français", Savoir pour comprendre (in French), Le Mans, Cénomane, p. 382, ISBN978-2-905596-85-7, OCLC52158904
G. Douare, Verdun sauvé par le général Chrétien et le 30e corps d'armée, 21-25 février 1916, Berger-Levrault, Paris, 1953, p. 144