Marie Pierre Louis de Frotté (August 1, 1766–February 18, 1800) was a French soldier and royalist.
De Frotté was born in Alençon.[1] He joined the Royal Army in 1781, and was in command of infantry units by 1789, when the French Revolution broke out. Frotté joined the émigrés, leaving France and serving in the combined Prussian and Austrian army of the Duke of Brunswick, which aimed to restore the absolute monarchy in France.
Frotté fought at Valmy in 1792, and, after Brunswick's unsuccessful campaign, sailed to England. There, he joined the émigré regiment of the vicomte de Bussy, venturing into Brittany several times and linking up with Chouan royalists, who had risen up against the French Republic, which had evolved from the Revolution.
Frotté soon became a leader of the Chouan revolt, organizing the rebels into military units and forming a staff.[2] By 1796, however, forces under General Hoche had scored several victories, defeating the Chouans and forcing Frotté to flee abroad, after repulsing his assault on Tinchebray. Returning to England, he was enlisted by Charles, Count of Artois (the executed King Louis XVI's brother), in an attempt to start yet another rebellion in his native Normandy.
This rebellion was fairly successful, but, after Napoleon Bonaparte seized power, the tide began to turn against Frotté, as most of his direct subordinates were killed.[3] When, in early 1800, many rebel soldiers began to desert, he began to negotiate with the government, eventually being invited by General Guidal to a meeting in Alençon.
Frotté met with Guidal at the Hôtel de Cygne, where he realized he had been lured into a trap. During the meeting, the rebel leader was arrested and, three days later, brought before a military tribunal, which sentenced him to death. He was shot by a firing squad on February 18.