Jean François Carteaux
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Jean Baptiste François Carteaux (January 31, 1751 - April 12, 1813) was a mediocre French painter who became a General in the French Revolutionary Army. He is notable chiefly for being the young Napoleon Bonaparte's incompetent commander at the siege of Toulon in 1793.
[edit] History
Born in 1751, Carteaux followed the career of a painter, producing several mediocre works including a portrait of King Louis XVI on horseback.
Following the French Revolution, he became a General and given a command in the Armée des Alpes, despite the fact he had achieved no military training. Soon after his arrival, Carteaux was given the task of defeating a force of royalist Provençal rebels. On July 16, 1793, he succeeded in defeating the small rebel force.
In early August 1793, Carteaux was ordered to Marseille where he was given command of the efforts to recapture the vital port of Toulon. The citizens of Toulon had not only openly rebelled, but had granted the British and Spanish fleets access to the harbour. On August 25, Carteaux began the siege of Toulon. Carteaux handeled the siege ineptly, concentrating his efforts on the relatively unimportant town of Ollioules. During these battles, Carteaux' artillery commander, Elzear Auguste Donmartin, was severely wounded and the Army was left with no capable artillery commander. Despite this, Carteaux focused his efforts on the construction of a battery in a gully near Ollioules, which he imagined would be able to bring fire to bear on the Anglo-Neapolitan ships. Once the battery was completed, it became apparent that the harbour was beyond its range. On September 8, a 6,000 man detachment from the Armée d'Italie under the command of General Lapoype arrived to the east of Toulon and began operations independently of Carteaux' force.
Seeing the lack of progress of Cateaux and the ineptitude of his artillery, the officials from the Committee of Public Safety, Augustin Robespierre and Antoine Christophe Saliceti designated the young Artillery captain Napoleon Bonaparte as Carteaux new artillery commander. With the backing of the all-powerful Robespierre and Saliceti, the dynamic Bonaparte quickly devised a plan for the capture of forts l'Eguillette and Balaguier. Bonaparte correctly surmised that the capture of these would allow accurate fire to be brought to bear on the Anglo-Neapolitan fleet and force it to abandon Toulon. Carteaux was not convinced and ordered a half-hearted attack under the command of Major General Delaborde. This attack not only failed, it also brought the importance of the position to the attention of the Anglo-Neapolitans, who immediately began strengthening their positions.
Following this dismal failure, Carteaux allowed Bonaparte to begin construction of several batteries with which to bombard the newly reinforced Anglo-Neapolitan fortresses. Bonaparte virtually took control of the operation, despite Carteaux' protests that the army was his command. Late in October, Napoleon sent a letter to the Convention, complaining about the quality of his superiors, calling them a bunch of fools. As a result, Carteaux was relieved of his command on November 11, 1793 and for a while was imprisoned. He was replaced by General Jacques François Dugommier.
Despite his imprisonment, Carteaux survived the Terror and was later reinstated to commands in the Vendée against the royalist rebellion. When Bonaparte was elected First Consul, he appointed Carteaux as Administrator of the Loterie Royale de France. Carteaux died in 1813.