Henri de la Rochejaquelein
Henri du Vergier, comte de la Rochejaquelein (August 30, 1772 – January 28, 1794[1]), was the youngest general of the Royalist Vendéan insurrection during the French Revolution.
Life
Early activities
Born in the Château de la Durbellière, Saint-Aubin-de-Baubigné, near Châtillon, La Rochejaquelein joined the Royal Polish Regiment, of which his father as colonel, in 1787.[2] In February 1789 he became a member of the Flanders regiment of chasseurs.[3] In March 1792 he became a member of the Constitutional Guard, charged with protecting the king.[4] He fought for the first time defending the Tuileries Palace on the 10th of August attack of 1792, as an officer of the Constitutional Guard of King Louis XVI.
Returning to his home province, he refused to comply with the levée en masse called by the outbreak of the French Revolutionary Wars and joined his cousin Louis Marie de Lescure on the latter's estates in Poitou.
Rebellion
Resistance to conscription soon escalated into a full rebellion, known as the War in the Vendee. Soon after, la Rochejaquelein and his compatriots started fighting the troops of the French Republic with Louis d'Elbée and the Marquis de Bonchamps from April 1793. There, he gave famous order "Mes amis, si j'avance, suivez-moi! Si je recule, tuez-moi! Si je meurs, vengez-moi!" ("Friends, if I advance, follow me! If I retreat, kill me! If I die, avenge me!").
Leading a few thousand Vendéan peasants, La Rochejaquelein gained his first victory over the French Revolutionary Army on 13 April, took part to the taking of Bressuire on 3 May,[5] in the Battle of Fontenay-le-Comte on 25 May and in the Battle of Saumur on 9 June. At Fontenay he was famous for his contempt for danger, wearing three red handkerchiefs - on his head, around his neck and at his waist to defy the Republican gunners.[6] After Fontenay his companions decided that they would also wear three red handkerchiefs so that La Rochejacquelin could not be singled out.[7]
In August, after the Battle of Luçon, he regrouped the Vendéan army, which was on the verge of being disbanded, and won the Battle of Chantonnay on 5 September. On 13 September the thumb of his right hand was shattered by a bullet during an engagement with Republicans at Martigné-Briand but he continued to fire at his opponents. His famous portrait by Pierre Narcisse Guérin shows him with his right arm in a sling, shooting with his left hand.[8] He had to retreat across the Loire after being beaten in the Battle of Cholet, on 17 October.
Final months
On October 20, La Rochejaquelein was elected commander-in-chief of the Royal and Catholic Armies, replacing d'Elbée - who had been severely wounded in Cholet. However, his bravery did not compensate for his lack of experience and strategic skills. He marched onto Granville, took Avranches on November 12, but failed to seize Granville and retreated to Angers in order to cross the Loire.
François Séverin Marceau, Jean Baptiste Kléber and François Joseph Westermann gave chase, defeating him once in Le Mans on December 12, and again, more severely, on 23 December in Savenay. After this decisive rout, the Royal and Catholic Army was no longer a fighting force, and La Rochejacquelein had to take to the woods disguised as a peasant.[9] He managed to save the remains of his army by crossing the Loire, and left under the criticism of his fellow companions.
While trying to pursue a guerrilla war against the Republicans, he was killed by a Republican soldier near Nuaillé on 28 January 1794. On a reconnaissance mission he had spotted two Republican soldiers who pretended to surrender to him, but then shot him in the forehead.[10] He was twenty-two years old. His brother Louis became the head of the royalists in Vendée in 1813 and furthered the royalist cause there during the Hundred Days period. He fell in battle at Pont-de-Mathis on 4 June 1815.[11]
Notes
- ↑ George J. Hill, The Story of the War in La Vendée and the Little Chouannerie (New York: D. & J. Sadlier & Co. n.d.), pp. 154-155.
- ↑ Chronicle of the French Revolution p.43 Longman Group 1989
- ↑ Chronicle of the French Revolution p.83 Longman Group 1989
- ↑ Chronicle of the French Revolution p.256 Longman Group 1989
- ↑ Chronicle of the French Revolution p.336 Longman Group 1989
- ↑ Pernoud, G. & Flaissier, S. The French Revolution, p.300 Secker & Warburg 1960
- ↑ Chronicle of the French Revolution p.338 Longman Group 1989
- ↑ Chronicle of the French Revolution p.367 Longman Group 1989
- ↑ Schama, S. Citizens p.788 Penguin 1989
- ↑ Chronicle of the French Revolution p.367 Longman Group 1989
- ↑ Chambers's encyclopaedia
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
External links
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