Claude-Henri Belgrand de Vaubois | |
|---|---|
Portrait of de Vaubois | |
| Born | 1 October 1748 (1748-10) Clairvaux,Aube |
| Died | 14 July 1839(1839-07-14) (aged 90) |
| Allegiance | Kingdom of France French First Republic |
| Branch | French Royal Army French Revolutionary Army |
| Service years | 1768–1801 |
| Rank | Divisional general |
| Conflicts | |
Divisional-GeneralClaude-Henri Belgrand de Vaubois (French pronunciation:[klodɑ̃ʁibɛlɡʁɑ̃dəvobwa]; 1 October 1748 – 14 July 1839) was aFrench Army officer who served in theFrench Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. He is best known for hisunsuccessful defence of Malta from 1798 to 1800. On 20 August 1808, he was made aCount of the Empire. De Vaubois' name was inscribed on theArc de Triomphe'Kléber Arch.
Vaubois was born at Clairvaux (now part ofVille-sous-la-Ferté,Aube). In 1765 he was appointed a lieutenant ofartillery in the Regiment of Metz. In 1789 he was appointed a Captain Commandant of Artillery. In 1791 he became alieutenant colonel of volunteers. During service with the Army of the Alps, he was promoted togeneral of brigade in September 1793 and togeneral of division in 1796. After transferring to GeneralNapoleon Bonaparte's Army of Italy, he led his troops in the capture ofLivorno. Appointed to command a division in theBassano campaign, he participated in the victory at theBattle of Rovereto on 4 September.[1]
During theArcola campaign, Vaubois defendedTrento with a 10,500-man division.Paul Davidovich's Austrian corps proved to be unexpectedly strong and fell upon Vaubois with 18,000 men. In a series of skirmishes, Vaubois was driven out of Trento and pushed back toCalliano where his command was defeated on 7 November. Bonaparte arrived to stabilize the situation but the French army commander left Vaubois to do the best he could while Bonaparte attacked the main Austrian army at Arcole. The French won the three-day battle of Arcole on 17 November, the same day that Davidovich beat Vaubois again atRivoli Veronese. The defeat had little consequence, since Bonaparte soon massed against Davidovich and sent his corps fleeing northward. Soon after, Bonaparte gave Vaubois' division toBarthélemy Joubert.
On 24 November 1796, Bonaparte wrote of him, "Vaubois is a brave man. Has the proper qualifications for the commander of a besieged place but not for the commander of a division in a very active army or in a war so vigorously conducted as this."[2] The events of 1798-1800 were to prove he was certainly the right choice to command a besieged place.
Today he is most often remembered inMalta, whereNapoleon appointed himCommandant en chef des Isles de Malte et du Goze) on 19 June 1798, just seven days after theKnights Hospitaller, rulers of this archipelago from 1530, signed a surrender on boardL'Orient, Napoleon's flagship. Napoleon and his expedition then set sail forEgypt, with the Knight's treasure, worth five million francs in gold and one million in silver plate, on board the flagship. (Nelson's fleet destroyedL'Orient on 1 August atAbū Qīr Bay in theBattle of the Nile; the Knights' treasures are still on the bottom of sea there.)
Napoleon left behind a garrison of 3,053 men, 5 companies ofartillery and a medical unit in Malta andGozo. The French proceeded to institute a number of policies. They declared theFrench language to be the official language. Although the French initially tried to win the support of theCatholic Church, they soon came into conflict with theMaltese Church as they institutedFrench revolutionary reforms. They abolished papal jurisdiction, authorized civil marriage, expelled all priests,regular clergy and nuns who were not native of Malta, and plundered the churches of gold and silver artifacts and paintings. The plundering of their churches outraged the staunchly pious Maltese. Furthermore, French draining of most of the cash of theMonte di Pietà and theMassa Frumentaria precipitated an unprecedented financial crisis. On 2 September 1798 the Maltese rose against the French garrison in Notabile (Città Vecchia orMdina). Soon both Malta andGozo were in full rebellion, with the Maltese forming a National Assembly. They dispatched to a petition toFerdinand I of the Two Sicilies, their official Suzerain, in Naples, to help them in their struggle against the French occupiers. Though Ferdinand promised much, he did little, having enough of his own troubles to worry much about his loyal Maltese subjects.
Still, on 18 September, aPortuguese squadron of four ships began a blockade of Malta. That blockade - although varying in the number and national composition of the ships - continued until the French surrendered. Nelson dispatched British forces under the command of CaptainAlexander Ball, who arrived on 12 October 1798. The Maltese insurrectionist forces forced the French to withdraw toValletta and the Three Cities around theGrand Harbour. On 28 OctoberGozo Island fell as the French commander there surrendered himself and his 217 men to Captain Ball. With General Vaubois's forces besieged in Valletta, Captain Ball's ships continued the blockade. Expecting the imminent French capitulation, Nelson wrote to Ball in January 1799:
... Respecting the situation ofMalta with theKing of Naples, it is this – he is the legitimate Sovereign of the Island: therefore, I am of opinion his Flag should fly. At the same time, a Neapolitan garrison would betray it to the first man who would bribe him. I am sure the King would have no difficulty in giving his Sovereignty to England; and I have lately, withSir William Hamilton, got a Note that Malta should never be given to any Power without the consent of England ...
P.S. – In case of the Surrender of Malta, I beg you will not do anything which can hurt the feelings of their Majesties. Unite their Flag with England's, if it cannot, from the disposition of the Islanders, fly alone.
In February 1799, the Maltese insurgents, having lost hope in an intervention of King Ferdinand, requested that Ball, who had previously landed near the village ofQrendi on the south of the island, preside over the National Assembly. He changed the name of the assembly to that of National Congress and declared himself chief of government. In March, the Congress appealed to KingGeorge III to assume sovereignty over Malta, but no answer came fromPitt's ministry.
The starving French garrison received a little relief at the beginning of February 1799. The frigateLa Boudeuse ran the blockade and entered theGrand Harbour. However, she was the last ship to re-supply Vaubois and his men.
On 1 November 1799 Nelson was offValletta on board theFoudroyant. Vaubois, who was still hoping for relief fromFrance, summarily rejected a new surrender demand. Vaubois wrote: "Mindful of being worthy of the respect of your country, as you are with our own, we are resolved to defend this fortress to the last."[citation needed]
Nelson ordered Ball to take command of the Maltese forces – about 2,000 Maltese troops along with about 1,500 irregulars, unpaid, ill-equipped and half-starving. A hard pressed King Ferdinand agreed to confirm Ball as Governor of Malta.
The whole Maltese population, running short of essential provisions, was living close to famine so that the siege was turning into a race of which side would starve first. The British and Maltese, together with a Neapolitan contingent of 1,200 men, got some relief in January 1800.
However, General Vaubois waited in vain for supplies. French preparations had dragged on until Napoleon—nowPremier Consul—appointedContre-amiralJean-Baptiste Perrée to command a relief expedition. The squadron, comprisingLe Généreux (one of the two survivors of the Battle of the Nile), three corvettes serving as armed storeships, and one armed storeship, all with some 3,000 men, arms, food and ammunition on board, sailed fromToulon-sur-Mer on 6 February 1800. The expedition ended in disaster. On the morning of 18 February English ships met the French squadron offLampedusa island.Contre-amiral Perrée was killed at the start of the action and at 1.30 p.m.Le Généreux struck her colours. The rest of the French convoy returned toToulon.
On 24 August Vaubois dispatched the frigatesLa Diane andLa Justice to run the blockade to France. TheSuccess sighted them, with theNorthumberland and the capturedLe Généreux, now crewed by the British, giving chase. The British capturedLa Diane butLa Justice escaped under cover of darkness.
The siege was nearing its end. The French garrison had eaten all the horses, the mules, the dogs, the cats and the rats of Valletta. Finally, on 4 September 1800, Vaubois sent an emissary under a flag of truce to the British commander Major-GeneralHenry Pigot. The following day, Pigot and Captain George Martin, RN, negotiated terms of surrender with General Vaubois andContre-amiral Villeneuve. (Ironically the French excluded Captain Alexander Ball, as chief of the Maltese, from the negotiations, as the French did not want to surrender to the Maltese.) The British granted Vaubois and the French fair terms and the honours of war, including the right to keep their arms and spoils. Vaubois and his troops were quickly repatriated toMarseille.
While the siege continued, Vaubois became a senator on 27 July 1800. He was named a Grand Officer of theLegion of Honour in 1804 and aCount of theEmpire in 1808. In 1809 he led a division of the National Guard.[3] He became a peer of France and Knight of St. Louis in 1814. During theHundred Days in 1815, Vaubois did not join Napoleon. During the Coalition'soccupation of France from 1815 to 1818, Vaubois wrote to the occupational army's commander, theDuke of Wellington, to protest against looting by Coalition troops. Wellington responded by stating:
The fact is, General, that France, by carrying its arms abroad, has brought misfortune, devastation and ruin there: I myself have witnessed the destruction of the properties of entire provinces which did not want to submit to the yoke of the tyrant, and which had been forced to be abandoned as a result of the operations of the war. Although vengeance should never be the motive of man, and it certainly is not that of the Allied sovereigns, one cannot expect that soldiers, men of the poorest and most hardworking class of society, having seen their properties or those of their relatives burned, ransacked and destroyed by the French, will have great regard for the properties of the French when, as a result of the events of the war, they find themselves in France.[4]
Vaubois died in 1839.