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Charles François Dumouriez

Charles-François du Périer Dumouriez (French pronunciation: [ʃaʁl fʁɑ̃swa dy peʁje dymuʁje], 26 January 1739 – 14 March 1823) was a French military officer, minister of Foreign Affairs, minister of War in a Girondin cabinet and army general during the French Revolutionary War. Dumouriez is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe, on Column 3.

Charles François Dumouriez
Portrait miniature by de:Pierre-Louis Bouvier, 1796/7
Born26 January 1739
Cambrai, Kingdom of France
Died14 March 1823(1823-03-14) (aged 84)
Turville, United Kingdom
Buried
Allegiance Kingdom of France
 Kingdom of the French
 French First Republic
Service/branch French Army
Years of service1758–1814
RankDivisional general
Battles/wars
AwardsOrder of Saint Louis
Names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe
Other workMinister of War, Minister of Foreign Affairs (France)
Signature

With General Kellermann he shared the first French victory at Valmy where the Prussian army was forced to draw back. He rapidly advanced north (till Moerdijk); before entering Holland he decided to return to Brussels when the French armies lost territory in the east of Belgium and the Siege of Maastricht (1793). He disagreed with his successor Pache, the radical Convention and Jacobin deputies, like Robespierre and Marat, on the annexation of the wealthy Netherlands and the introduction of assignats. After losing the Battle of Neerwinden (1793), he deserted the Revolutionary Army. He refused to surrender himself to the recently installed Revolutionary Tribunal - as he would be executed - and defected to the Austrian army.[1][2]

Early life edit

Dumouriez was born in Cambrai, on the Scheldt River in northern France, to parents of noble rank. His father, Antoine-François du Périer, served as a commissary of the royal army, and educated his son most carefully and widely. He continued his studies in Paris at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, and was then sent to his uncle in Versailles for a year. In 1757 began his military career as a volunteer and served in six campaigns of the Seven Years' War. In the Battle of Rossbach, he served as a cornet in the Régiment d'Escars. He was stationed in Emden, Münster, Wesel and carried a small library with him.[3] He received a commission for good conduct in action, with distinction (receiving 22 wounds during the battle of Corbach). In 1761 he recovered in the baths at Aachen. After the peace of Hubertusburg he retired at Abbeville as a captain, with a small pension (which was never paid), a love affair with his niece and the cross of St Louis.[4]

Dumouriez then visited Italy, Spain and Corsica, and his memoranda to the duc de Choiseul on Corsican afairs at the time of the Corsican Republic led to his re-employment on the staff of the French expeditionary corps sent to the island, for which he gained the rank of lieutenant-colonel.[4] In 1769 Choiseul gave Dumouriez a military command as deputy quartermaster general to the army under the Marquis de Chauvelin.[5] After two campaigns on the island, he became a member of the Secret du Roi, the secret service under Louis XV, which gave full scope to his diplomatic skills. The fall of Choiseul (1770) brought about Dumouriez's recall. In 1770 he undertook a mission into Poland, where, in addition to his political business, he organized a Polish militia for the Bar Confederation.[4] There he met with Jozef Miaczinsky, the commander of a regiment. His Polish soldiers were pushed back by the Russian forces of General Alexander Suvorov in the first clash but Suvorov failed in the second clash. On 21 May 1771, Dumouriez' Polish soldiers were smashed in the third clash.

In 1772, upon returning to Paris, Dumouriez sought a military position from the marquis de Monteynard, Secretary of State for War, who gave him a staff position with the regiment of Lorraine writing diplomatic and military reports. In 1773, he was arrested in Hamburg found himself imprisoned in the Bastille for six months, apparently for diverting funds intended for the employment of secret agents into the payment of personal debts. During his captivity Dumouriez occupied himself with literary pursuits. He was sent to Caen, where he remained in detention until the accession of Louis XVI in 1774. Dumouriez was then recalled to Paris and assigned to posts in Lille and Boulogne-sur-Mer by the comte de Saint-Germain, the new king's minister of war.

 
Louis XVI visitant le port de Cherbourg en juin 1786

Upon his release, Dumouriez married his cousin, a certain Mademoiselle de Broissy. In the meantime, Dumouriez had turned his attention to the internal state of his own country, and amongst the very numerous memoranda which he sent to the government was a project on the defence of Normandy and Cherbourg navy port, which procured for him in 1778 the post of commandant of Cherbourg.[6] He administered it with much success for more than ten years.[7] The construction of the fortifications and dikes began in 1779/1782 and extended in 1786. He used a plan by Vauban to create an outer port.[8] The city grew and even the King came to La Manche see it. For his ingenuity in fortifying he became a maréchal de camp in 1788. After the Storming of the Bastille he became commander of the National Guard in July 1789, but his ambition was not satisfied.[4] Business and trade dropped in Cherbourg.[9] He proved a neglectful and unfaithful husband, and the couple separated. Madame Dumouriez took refuge in a convent.

Political career edit

 
Charles-François Dumouriez, Général en chef de l'Armée du Nord (1739–1823), portrait by Jean Sébastien Rouillard, 1834
 
Valmy with windmill
 
Buste de Dumouriez par Houdon, 1792 - musée des Beaux-Arts d'Angers.

At the outbreak of the Revolution, seeing the opportunity for carving out a new career, he went to Paris, where he joined the Jacobin Club. In 1790, Dumouriez was appointed French military advisor to the newly established United Belgium States and remained dedicated to the cause of an independent Belgian Republic.[10] In 1791 he was sent to the coast. The death of Mirabeau, to whose fortunes he had attached himself, proved a great blow. However, opportunity arose again when, in his capacity as a lieutenant-general and the commandant of Nantes, he offered to march to the assistance of the National Constituent Assembly after the royal family's unsuccessful flight to Varennes.[4] Minister of War, Louis Lebègue Duportail, promoted Dumouriez from president of the War Council to major-general in June 1791 and attached him to the Twelfth Division, which was commanded by General Jacques Alexis de Verteuil.

He then attached himself to the Girondist party and, on 15 March 1792, became the French minister of foreign affairs. In March 1792 selected Lebrun-Tondu as his first officer for Belgian and Liégeois affairs.[11] The relationship between the Girondists and Dumouriez was not based on ideology, but rather based on the practical benefit it gave to both parties. Dumouriez needed people in the Legislative Assembly to support him, and the Girondists needed a general to give them legitimacy in the army.[12] He played a major part in the declaration of war against Austria (20 April), and he ordered General Dillon, commander of Lille, to attack Tournai, and the invasion of the Austrian Netherlands. His foreign policy was greatly influenced by Jean-Louis Favier.[13] Favier had called for France to break its ties with Austria.

On the king's dismissal of Roland, Clavière and Servan (13 June 1792), he took Servan's post of minister of war, but resigned it a few days days later on account of Louis XVI's refusal to come to terms with the National Constituent Assembly, concerning his suspensive veto. Within a week he joined the army of the North under Marshal Luckner. After the émeute of 10 August 1792 and Lafayette’s flight, he gained appointment to the command of the "Army of the Centre". At the same moment, France's enemies assumed the offensive. Dumouriez acted promptly from Sedan, Ardennes.

On August 24, 1792, Dumouriez wrote to his ally General François Kellermann about the void in military power within France. Within this letter, Dumouriez voices his opinions adamantly that Lafayette was a "traitor"[14] to France after being arrested for mobilizing his army from the borders of France to Paris to protect the Royal family from revolutionaries who were dissatisfied with the monarchy of France at the time. Within this letter, Dumouriez's attachment to the Jacobin club is explicitly present as he tells Kellermann that the army was finally "purged of aristocrats".[15] Dumouriez's loyalty to France's military which was evident within this letter was instrumental to him ascending to his future position of Foreign Minister of France from March 1792 to June 1792, restoring the natural borders of France. Dumouriez outmaneuvered the invading forces of the Duke of Brunswick in the forest of Argonne. His subordinate Kellermann repulsed the Prussians at Valmy (20 September 1792). After these military victories, Dumouriez was ready to invade Belgium to spread revolution in the Flanders campaign.

Army of the North edit

 
Bataille Jemmapes

Supported by minister Lebrun-Tondu, he declared in the National Convention on 12 October that he would liberate the Belgians and the Liège people. On 27 October, 1792, he invaded the Austrian Netherlands. Dumouriez himself severely defeated the Austrians at Jemappes (6 November 1792).[4] He became a military hero for this decisive victory, for which the newspaper "Révolutions de Paris" proclaimed him the liberator of the Belgians.[16] On 14 November he arrived in Brussels. Several times he received a mission of Dutch revolutionary patriots, with whom he agreed on the principles; De Kock, Daendels and his friends settled in Antwerp.[17] Cambon pointed at the empty treasury and the wealthy Dutch. Dumouriez wrote a letter to the Convention scolding it for not supplying his army to his satisfaction and for the Decree of 15 December, which allowed the French armies to loot in the territory they had won, besides the introduction of the inflation-prone assignats in the conquered areas, and to expropriate church property.[18][19] The Decree insured that any plan concerning Belgium would fail due to a lack of popular support among the Belgians.

Dumouriez wanted to establish an independent Belgian state, free of Austrian control, which would act as a buffer on France's eastern borders, but that would not worry the British. To achieve this he began negotiations with the local authorities in Belgium, but on 15 December the Convention passed a decree ordering the military commanders in the occupied territories to implement all revolutionary laws.[20]

War with the Dutch Republic edit

 
Map of Belgium in 1786. From The Historical Atlas by William R. Shepherd, 1926

Returning to Paris on 1 January 1793, Dumouriez encountered popular ovation, but he gained less sympathy from the revolutionary government. On 12 January he had a meeting with Lebrun-Tondu; on 23 January he was sent back.[21] The Dutch were willing to pay and an invasion of the Netherlands was postponed. To the more radical elements in Paris, it became clear that Dumouriez was not a true patriot but worked during the trial of Louis XVI to save him from execution. On 29 January Dumouriez lost his negotiating mandate.[22] With the help of the Girondists, Dumouriez ensured that defaulting Pache had to resign at the end of January 1793;[23] at the most critical moment of the war.[24]

 
Louis Philippe in 1792, by Léon Cogniet (1834)
 
Abbey at Saint-Amand-les-Eaux

To declare war had always been a prerogative of the king. On 1 February Brissot declared war against King of Great Britain and the stadtholder of the Dutch Republic, not the people. The next day Francisco de Miranda, the only general from Latin America in French service, gave the command of the French forces back to Dumouriez. Although Dumouriez advised the government simply to recognise Belgium's independence, the Jacobins sent several agents.[25] On 7 February Dumouriez appreciated the secret proposals of Van de Spiegel and Baron Auckland: in exchange for recognition of French Republic, France would have to refrain from aggression against other countries.[26] On 15 February, Johan Valckenaer addressed Cambon, the president of the Convention, to give not the committee but Dumouriez all powers to depose regents and restore others to power.[27] Lazare Carnot proposed that annexation be undertaken on behalf of French interests whether or not the people to be annexed so wished.[28] On 17 February 1793, the French troops and the Batavian Legion crossed the Dutch border. Miranda, Stengel, Dampierre, Valence, and Eustace went northeast; Dumouriez and Daendels went northwest. Breda, Klundert, and Geertruidenberg were occupied with an army of Sans-Culottes that lacked almost everything.[29] After the French lost Venlo, Aachen, Maastricht and all the supply at Liège in early March,[30] Dumouriez was ordered to return to Brussels rather than further entering Holland.[31][32] The situation was alarming. Miranda wrote Dumouriez to continue his plan and not return to Belgium.[33]

On 11 March, Dumouriez addressed the Brussels assembly, apologizing for the actions of the French commissioners and looting soldiers.[34] On 12 March Dumouriez wrote an angry, insolent letter which is considered a "declaration of war on the Convention".[35][12] He criticized the interference of officials of the War Ministry which employed many Jacobins.[36] He attacked not only Pache, the former minister of war, but also Marat and Robespierre.[37] Meanwhile Danton initiated the creation of the Revolutionary Tribunal to interrogate the generals at some time. Dumouriez had long been unable to agree with the course of the Convention. He was disenchanted with the radicalization of the revolution and its politics and put an end to the annexation efforts.[38] He was liked by the Belgium population. It seems both Eustace and Miranda disagreed; on 14 March Eustace wrote a letter to Dumouriez.[39] On 18 March 1793, Dumouriez's army attacked the Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands, also the brother of the Austrian emperor, Josias of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld's army. A major defeat in the Battle of Neerwinden nearly ended the French invasion. On 20 March Danton and Charles-François Delacroix were sent to Louvain.[40] On 22 March Dumouriez opened negotiations with the Austrian General Mack.[41] He allowed Dumouriez to retreat to Brussels; Dumouriez' soldiers were deserting in large numbers. The next day Dumouriez promised the Austrians he would leave Belgium (though he had no permission and was without approval of the convention.[42])

Dumouriez had long been unable to agree with the course of the Convention. Dumouriez prevented the execution of the decrees of 15 and 27 December, according Robespierre.[43] He did not want the Dutch Republic to come under French authority, or even to be incorporated. It was his army that liberated the south of the Netherlands, and he would not allow it to fall into the hands of commissioners of the Convention. On 25 March Dumouriez asked Karl Mack for his support to march on Paris.[44] There he would negotiate peace, dissolve the convention, restore the French Constitution of 1791, plea for the restoration of a constitutional monarchy, and free Marie-Antoinette and her children.[45][46] He urged Louis Philippe I Duke of Chartres, though still a teenager, to join his plan. The Jacobin leaders were quite sure that France had come close to a military coup mounted by Dumouriez and supported by Pétion and Brissot de Warville.

Dumouriez' defection edit

 
Dumouriez receiving the four commissioners at Saint-Amand-les-Eaux in the afternoon of 2 April.
 
Dumouriez sending the arrested commissioners to Tournai; print by Reinier Vinkeles
 
The treason of Dumouriez

On 25 March Robespierre became one of members of the Committee of General Defence, to coordinate the war effort.[47] By the end of the month Robespierre called for the removal of Dumouriez, who in his eyes aspired to become a Belgian dictator.[48][49][50] A body of four commissioners was sent to question and arrest him.[51][52] The commissioners Camus, Bancal-des-Issarts, Quinette, and Lamarque were accompanied by the acting Minister of War, Pierre Riel de Beurnonville. Dumouriez sensed a trap and invited them to his headquarters at Saint-Amand-les-Eaux and ordered Miaczinski to arrest them at Orchies.[a] After an hour of deliberations he refuses to accept the decree by the convention to go with them to Lille and Paris.[62] Instead Dumouriez arrested the five and send them over to General Clerfayt on the next day.[b]

Robespierre was convinced Brissot and Dumouriez wanted to overthrow the First French Republic.[64] On 3 April Robespierre declared before the Convention that the whole war was a prepared game between Dumouriez and Brissot to overthrow the First French Republic.[65]

On 4 April the convention declared Dumouriez a traitor and outlaw and put a prize on his head.[66] Davout's volunteer battalion tried to arrest Dumouriez.[67][68] Dumouriez unsuccessfully tried to persuade Davout to his side and made a move to save himself from his radical enemies. He attempted to persuade his troops to march on Paris and overthrow the revolutionary government. The attempt proved unfeasible because many of his soldiers were staunch republicans and several of his officers opposed him.[4] Without escort he rode on horseback to Tournai,[69] along with his chief of staff Pierre Thouvenot, the Duke of Chartres, duc de Montpensier he arrived on 5 April 1793 into the Austrian camp at Maulde. This blow left the Brissotins vulnerable due to their association with Dumouriez. Dumouriez's defection changed the course of the events for the Brissotins. On 6 April the Committee of Public Safety was installed. Suspicion rose against Phillipe Égalité, because of his eldest son who fled with Dumouriez in the Austrian camp. Philippe Égalité was then put under continuous surveillance.

In Brussels Dumouriez met with Metternich and received a passport for Germany. On 10 April Robespierre accused him in a speech: "Dumouriez and his supporters have brought a fatal blow to the public fortune, preventing circulation of assignats in Belgium".[70]

The French armies took positions behind the frontier. The Army of Holland deployed near Lille, the Army of the Ardennes at Maulde, the Army of the North at Saint-Amand, and the Army of Belgium at Condé-sur-l'Escaut and Valenciennes.[71]

Later life and death edit

 
Dumouriez's funerary monument in St Mary the Virgin church in Henley-on-Thames

Following his defection on 5 April 1793, Dumouriez remained in Brussels for a short time, and then travelled to Cologne, seeking a position at the elector's court. He soon learned he had become an object of suspicion among his countrymen, the royal houses, aristocracies, and clergy of Europe. In response, Dumouriez wrote and published in Hamburg (1794) a first volume of memoirs in which he offered his version of the previous year's events. He became a royalist intriguer during the reign of Napoleon as well as an adviser to the British government. Dumouriez wrote political pamphlets and letters analyzing the coastal defence of England and Ireland.[72][73]

Dumouriez now wandered from country to country, occupied in ceaseless royalist intrigues, until 1804 when he settled in England, where the British government granted him a pension. He became a valuable adviser to the British War Office, and the Duke of York and Albany in his struggle against Napoleon's planned invasion of the United Kingdom, and the British anti-invasion preparations of 1803–05.[74]

In 1808 Castlereagh had been warned by Dumouriez that the best policy England could adopt with respect to colonies in Spanish America was to relinquish all ideas of military conquest by Arthur Wellesley and instead support the emancipation of the territories. Furthermore, Dumouriez suggested that once emancipation was achieved, a constitutional monarchy should be established with the exiled Duke of Orleans as King.[75]

In 1814 and 1815, he endeavoured to procure from Louis XVIII the baton of a marshal of France, but failed to do so.[4] He died at Turville Park, near Henley-on-Thames, on 14 March 1823.[4] An enlarged edition, La Vie et les mémoires du Général Dumouriez, appeared at Paris in 1823.

References edit

 
Dumouriez - Pache - Correspondance durant la campagne de Belgique, 1792
  1. ^ P.C. Howe (1982) Foreign Policy and the French Revolution, p. 179-180
  2. ^ Banat 2006, p. 396.
  3. ^ "La vie et les mémoires du général Dumouriez". 1822.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dumouriez, Charles François". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 667.
  5. ^ "La vie et les mémoires du général Dumouriez". 1822.
  6. ^ "Charles François du Perrier Dumouriez (1739-1823)".
  7. ^ "Charles-François du Périer Dumouriez | French general | Britannica".
  8. ^ "La vie et les mémoires du général Dumouriez". 1822.
  9. ^ Mémoires 2, p. 247
  10. ^ P.C. Howe, p. 2
  11. ^ P.C. Howe, p. 2
  12. ^ a b Brace, Richard Munthe, General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792-1793, in The American Historical Review, Vol. 56, No. 3, (April, 1951), pp. 493-509.
  13. ^ Savage, Gary. Favier’s Heirs: The French Revolution and the Secret du Roi, in The Historical Journal, Vol. 41, No. 1, (March 1998), pp. 225-258.
  14. ^ "From Hero To 'Traitor': The French Revolution." Lafayette: Citizen of Two Worlds. Cornell University, n.d. Web. 26 Mar. 2017. <http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/lafayette/exhibition/english/traitor/>
  15. ^ Dumouriez, Charles François. "Letter to General François Kellermann". 24 August 1792.<http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/lafayette/exhibition/pdf/REX029_051.pdf>
  16. ^ "Department of History." Illustrations from Révolutions De Paris | Department of History. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Feb. 2017.
  17. ^ J. Rosendaal, p. 349, 351, 355, 361
  18. ^ Hubrecht G. Les assignats en Belgique. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 29, fasc. 2-3, 1951. pp. 455-459. DOI : https://doi.org/10.3406/rbph.1951.2098 www.persee.fr/doc/rbph_0035-0818_1951_num_29_2_2098
  19. ^ P.C. Howe, p. 117-119, 123,
  20. ^ Rickard, J. (2009), Charles François Dumouriez, 1739-1823, [1]
  21. ^ J. Rosendaal, p. 369
  22. ^ J. Rosendaal, p. 370-371
  23. ^ Richard Munthe Brace: General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792–1793. In American Historical Review 56, Nr. 3, (1951), S. 499 f.
  24. ^ Banat 2006, p. 379.
  25. ^ Mémoires du général Dumouriez, Band 2, p. 67, 78, 123
  26. ^ J. Rosendaal, p. 371
  27. ^ J. Rosendaal, pp. 389, 693; note 168
  28. ^ P.C. Howe (2018) Foreign Policy and the French Revolution, p. 154
  29. ^ Mémoires du général Dumouriez, Band 2, p. 27, 30, 32, 38, 42, 54
  30. ^ "Chapter 16. Robespierre’s Putsch ( June 1793)". Revolutionary Ideas: An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2014, pp. 420-449. [2]
  31. ^ Mémoires du général Dumouriez, Band 2, p. 61
  32. ^ Patricia Chastain Howe (2008) Foreign policy and the French Revolution. Charles-Francois Doyle, Pierre Lebrun, and the Belgian Plan, 1789-1793. Palgrave Macmillan, London, p. 159, 172
  33. ^ Dumouriez par Arthur Chuquet, p. 164
  34. ^ P.C. Howe, p. 160
  35. ^ Wikisource: Œuvres complètes de Maximilien Robespierre. Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 [3]
  36. ^ I. Davidson, p. 108, 150
  37. ^ Sampson Perry (1796) An Historical Sketch of the French Revolution. Band 2, p. 377
  38. ^ P.C. Howe, p. 162
  39. ^ "Founders Online: To Alexander Hamilton from John Skey Eustace, [20 November 1798]".
  40. ^ Mémoires 4, p. 139
  41. ^ Mémoires du général Dumouriez, Band 2, p. 127
  42. ^ P.C. Howe, p. 164, 166
  43. ^ Wikisource: Œuvres complètes de Maximilien Robespierre. Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 [4]
  44. ^ Dumouriez par Arthur Chuquet, p. 185
  45. ^ Dinwiddy, J. R. (1 July 1992). Radicalism and Reform in Britain, 1780–1850. A&C Black. ISBN 978-0-8264-3453-1 – via Google Books.
  46. ^ P.C. Howe (1982) Foreign Policy and the French Revolution, p. 175-176
  47. ^ France and Its Revolutions: G. Long (1850) A Pictorial History 1789–1848, p. 265
  48. ^ P.C. Howe, p. 167
  49. ^ Dumouriez par Arthur Chuquet, p. 181
  50. ^ Wikisource: Œuvres complètes de Maximilien Robespierre. Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 Discours contre Brissot & les girondins
  51. ^ La vie et les mémoires du général Dumouriez, p. 129
  52. ^ Thompson, J.M. (1929) Leaders of the French Revolution, p. 215
  53. ^ a b c Banat 2006, p. 392.
  54. ^ Bulletin des Amis de la Vérité, 7 avril 1793, p. 2
  55. ^ Bulletin Du Tribunal Criminel Révolutionnaire, p. 148, 151
  56. ^ Leleu E. La tentative de Dumouriez sur Lille en 1793. In: Revue du Nord, tome 9, n°34, mai 1923. pp. 81-109. DOI : https://doi.org/10.3406/rnord.1923.1342 www.persee.fr/doc/rnord_0035-2624_1923_num_9_34_1342
  57. ^ Le Républicain français, 5 avril 1793; Mercure français, 13 avril 1793
  58. ^ H. Wallon (1880-1882) Histoire du tribunal révolutionnaire de Paris: avec le journal de ses actes, p. 101-103
  59. ^ Nouvelles politiques, nationales et étrangères, 6 avril 179
  60. ^ p. 139, 157-158
  61. ^ Banat 2006, p. 461.
  62. ^ La vie et les mémoires du général Dumouriez, p. 149, 157-159, 164-165, 175-176, 187-188, 207
  63. ^ Un Général diplomate au temps de la révolution
  64. ^ Journal des débats et des décrets, 3 avril 1793
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on January 28, 2023. Retrieved January 22, 2023.
  66. ^ Banat 2006, p. 398.
  67. ^ Un Général diplomate au temps de la révolution
  68. ^ Daniel Reichel (1975) Davout et l'art de la guerre: recherches sur la formation, l'action pendant la Revolution et les commandements du maréchal Davout, duc d'Auerstaedt, prince d'Eckmühl, 1770-1823
  69. ^ Mémoires du général Dumouriez, Band 2, p. 207
  70. ^ Wikisource: Œuvres complètes de Maximilien Robespierre. Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 Discours contre Brissot & les girondins
  71. ^ Phipps, Ramsay Weston (2011). The Armies of the First French Republic: Volume I The Armée du Nord. USA: Pickle Partners Publishing. pp. 155–157. ISBN 978-1-908692-24-5.
  72. ^ 'Mémoire militaire sur l'Angleterre (1799)
  73. ^ John Holland Rose and Alexander Meyrick Broadley (1909) Dumouriez and the Defence of England Against Napoleon
  74. ^ French plans for the invasion of England, ca. 1804
  75. ^ Great Britain and Argentina by K. Gallo, p. 87

Note edit

  1. ^ The commissioners were escorted by Chevalier de Saint-Georges,[53] who immediately drove back to Lille.[54][53][55][56][53] In the evening Lille was successfully defended by Saint-Georges against Miaczinsky who was sent by Dumouriez to seize the city[57][58] His troops were forced to camp outside the city walls.[59] It is supposed that Dumouriez sent Miaczinsky to Lille and arrest the other seven commissioners. Saint-Georges who kept the troops outside the walls became the hero.[60] Dumouriez blamed the famous mulatto for thwarting his plans.[61] Saint-Georges prohibited the arrest of the other commissioner. Instead Miaczinsky was arrested and taken to Paris by the commissioners. After a trial on 17 May he was executed.
  2. ^ In the evening he had supper with Madame de Genlis.[63]

Sources edit

  • Patricia Chastain Howe (2008) Foreign Policy and the French Revolution. Charles- François Dumouriez, Pierre LeBrun, and the Belgian Plan, 1789–1793
  • J.M. Thompson (1929) Leaders of the French Revolution: Dumouriez, p. 200-216
  • Banat, Gabriel (2006). The Chevalier de Saint-Georges: Virtuoso of the Sword and the Bow. Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press. ISBN 978-1-57647-109-8. OCLC 63703876.


Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
12/15 March 1792 – 12 June 1792
Succeeded by
Pierre-Paul de Méredieu
Preceded by Secretaries of State for War
13 June 1792 – 18 June 1792
Succeeded by

charles, françois, dumouriez, charles, françois, périer, dumouriez, french, pronunciation, ʃaʁl, fʁɑ, peʁje, dymuʁje, january, 1739, march, 1823, french, military, officer, minister, foreign, affairs, minister, girondin, cabinet, army, general, during, french,. Charles Francois du Perier Dumouriez French pronunciation ʃaʁl fʁɑ swa dy peʁje dymuʁje 26 January 1739 14 March 1823 was a French military officer minister of Foreign Affairs minister of War in a Girondin cabinet and army general during the French Revolutionary War Dumouriez is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe on Column 3 Charles Francois DumouriezPortrait miniature by de Pierre Louis Bouvier 1796 7Born26 January 1739Cambrai Kingdom of FranceDied14 March 1823 1823 03 14 aged 84 Turville United KingdomBuriedHenley on Thames United KingdomAllegiance Kingdom of France Kingdom of the French French First RepublicService wbr branchFrench ArmyYears of service1758 1814RankDivisional generalBattles warsSeven Years War French conquest of Corsica War of the Bar Confederation Battle of Lanckorona French Revolutionary Wars Battle of Valmy Flanders campaign Battle of Jemappes Batlle of Tienen Battle of Neerwinden Peninsular WarAwardsOrder of Saint Louis Names inscribed under the Arc de TriompheOther workMinister of War Minister of Foreign Affairs France SignatureWith General Kellermann he shared the first French victory at Valmy where the Prussian army was forced to draw back He rapidly advanced north till Moerdijk before entering Holland he decided to return to Brussels when the French armies lost territory in the east of Belgium and the Siege of Maastricht 1793 He disagreed with his successor Pache the radical Convention and Jacobin deputies like Robespierre and Marat on the annexation of the wealthy Netherlands and the introduction of assignats After losing the Battle of Neerwinden 1793 he deserted the Revolutionary Army He refused to surrender himself to the recently installed Revolutionary Tribunal as he would be executed and defected to the Austrian army 1 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 3 Army of the North 3 1 War with the Dutch Republic 3 2 Dumouriez defection 4 Later life and death 5 References 6 Note 7 SourcesEarly life editDumouriez was born in Cambrai on the Scheldt River in northern France to parents of noble rank His father Antoine Francois du Perier served as a commissary of the royal army and educated his son most carefully and widely He continued his studies in Paris at the Lycee Louis le Grand and was then sent to his uncle in Versailles for a year In 1757 began his military career as a volunteer and served in six campaigns of the Seven Years War In the Battle of Rossbach he served as a cornet in the Regiment d Escars He was stationed in Emden Munster Wesel and carried a small library with him 3 He received a commission for good conduct in action with distinction receiving 22 wounds during the battle of Corbach In 1761 he recovered in the baths at Aachen After the peace of Hubertusburg he retired at Abbeville as a captain with a small pension which was never paid a love affair with his niece and the cross of St Louis 4 Dumouriez then visited Italy Spain and Corsica and his memoranda to the duc de Choiseul on Corsican afairs at the time of the Corsican Republic led to his re employment on the staff of the French expeditionary corps sent to the island for which he gained the rank of lieutenant colonel 4 In 1769 Choiseul gave Dumouriez a military command as deputy quartermaster general to the army under the Marquis de Chauvelin 5 After two campaigns on the island he became a member of the Secret du Roi the secret service under Louis XV which gave full scope to his diplomatic skills The fall of Choiseul 1770 brought about Dumouriez s recall In 1770 he undertook a mission into Poland where in addition to his political business he organized a Polish militia for the Bar Confederation 4 There he met with Jozef Miaczinsky the commander of a regiment His Polish soldiers were pushed back by the Russian forces of General Alexander Suvorov in the first clash but Suvorov failed in the second clash On 21 May 1771 Dumouriez Polish soldiers were smashed in the third clash In 1772 upon returning to Paris Dumouriez sought a military position from the marquis de Monteynard Secretary of State for War who gave him a staff position with the regiment of Lorraine writing diplomatic and military reports In 1773 he was arrested in Hamburg found himself imprisoned in the Bastille for six months apparently for diverting funds intended for the employment of secret agents into the payment of personal debts During his captivity Dumouriez occupied himself with literary pursuits He was sent to Caen where he remained in detention until the accession of Louis XVI in 1774 Dumouriez was then recalled to Paris and assigned to posts in Lille and Boulogne sur Mer by the comte de Saint Germain the new king s minister of war nbsp Louis XVI visitant le port de Cherbourg en juin 1786Upon his release Dumouriez married his cousin a certain Mademoiselle de Broissy In the meantime Dumouriez had turned his attention to the internal state of his own country and amongst the very numerous memoranda which he sent to the government was a project on the defence of Normandy and Cherbourg navy port which procured for him in 1778 the post of commandant of Cherbourg 6 He administered it with much success for more than ten years 7 The construction of the fortifications and dikes began in 1779 1782 and extended in 1786 He used a plan by Vauban to create an outer port 8 The city grew and even the King came to La Manche see it For his ingenuity in fortifying he became a marechal de camp in 1788 After the Storming of the Bastille he became commander of the National Guard in July 1789 but his ambition was not satisfied 4 Business and trade dropped in Cherbourg 9 He proved a neglectful and unfaithful husband and the couple separated Madame Dumouriez took refuge in a convent Political career edit nbsp Charles Francois Dumouriez General en chef de l Armee du Nord 1739 1823 portrait by Jean Sebastien Rouillard 1834 nbsp Valmy with windmill nbsp Buste de Dumouriez par Houdon 1792 musee des Beaux Arts d Angers At the outbreak of the Revolution seeing the opportunity for carving out a new career he went to Paris where he joined the Jacobin Club In 1790 Dumouriez was appointed French military advisor to the newly established United Belgium States and remained dedicated to the cause of an independent Belgian Republic 10 In 1791 he was sent to the coast The death of Mirabeau to whose fortunes he had attached himself proved a great blow However opportunity arose again when in his capacity as a lieutenant general and the commandant of Nantes he offered to march to the assistance of the National Constituent Assembly after the royal family s unsuccessful flight to Varennes 4 Minister of War Louis Lebegue Duportail promoted Dumouriez from president of the War Council to major general in June 1791 and attached him to the Twelfth Division which was commanded by General Jacques Alexis de Verteuil He then attached himself to the Girondist party and on 15 March 1792 became the French minister of foreign affairs In March 1792 selected Lebrun Tondu as his first officer for Belgian and Liegeois affairs 11 The relationship between the Girondists and Dumouriez was not based on ideology but rather based on the practical benefit it gave to both parties Dumouriez needed people in the Legislative Assembly to support him and the Girondists needed a general to give them legitimacy in the army 12 He played a major part in the declaration of war against Austria 20 April and he ordered General Dillon commander of Lille to attack Tournai and the invasion of the Austrian Netherlands His foreign policy was greatly influenced by Jean Louis Favier 13 Favier had called for France to break its ties with Austria On the king s dismissal of Roland Claviere and Servan 13 June 1792 he took Servan s post of minister of war but resigned it a few days days later on account of Louis XVI s refusal to come to terms with the National Constituent Assembly concerning his suspensive veto Within a week he joined the army of the North under Marshal Luckner After the emeute of 10 August 1792 and Lafayette s flight he gained appointment to the command of the Army of the Centre At the same moment France s enemies assumed the offensive Dumouriez acted promptly from Sedan Ardennes On August 24 1792 Dumouriez wrote to his ally General Francois Kellermann about the void in military power within France Within this letter Dumouriez voices his opinions adamantly that Lafayette was a traitor 14 to France after being arrested for mobilizing his army from the borders of France to Paris to protect the Royal family from revolutionaries who were dissatisfied with the monarchy of France at the time Within this letter Dumouriez s attachment to the Jacobin club is explicitly present as he tells Kellermann that the army was finally purged of aristocrats 15 Dumouriez s loyalty to France s military which was evident within this letter was instrumental to him ascending to his future position of Foreign Minister of France from March 1792 to June 1792 restoring the natural borders of France Dumouriez outmaneuvered the invading forces of the Duke of Brunswick in the forest of Argonne His subordinate Kellermann repulsed the Prussians at Valmy 20 September 1792 After these military victories Dumouriez was ready to invade Belgium to spread revolution in the Flanders campaign Army of the North edit nbsp Bataille JemmapesSupported by minister Lebrun Tondu he declared in the National Convention on 12 October that he would liberate the Belgians and the Liege people On 27 October 1792 he invaded the Austrian Netherlands Dumouriez himself severely defeated the Austrians at Jemappes 6 November 1792 4 He became a military hero for this decisive victory for which the newspaper Revolutions de Paris proclaimed him the liberator of the Belgians 16 On 14 November he arrived in Brussels Several times he received a mission of Dutch revolutionary patriots with whom he agreed on the principles De Kock Daendels and his friends settled in Antwerp 17 Cambon pointed at the empty treasury and the wealthy Dutch Dumouriez wrote a letter to the Convention scolding it for not supplying his army to his satisfaction and for the Decree of 15 December which allowed the French armies to loot in the territory they had won besides the introduction of the inflation prone assignats in the conquered areas and to expropriate church property 18 19 The Decree insured that any plan concerning Belgium would fail due to a lack of popular support among the Belgians Dumouriez wanted to establish an independent Belgian state free of Austrian control which would act as a buffer on France s eastern borders but that would not worry the British To achieve this he began negotiations with the local authorities in Belgium but on 15 December the Convention passed a decree ordering the military commanders in the occupied territories to implement all revolutionary laws 20 War with the Dutch Republic edit nbsp Map of Belgium in 1786 From The Historical Atlas by William R Shepherd 1926Returning to Paris on 1 January 1793 Dumouriez encountered popular ovation but he gained less sympathy from the revolutionary government On 12 January he had a meeting with Lebrun Tondu on 23 January he was sent back 21 The Dutch were willing to pay and an invasion of the Netherlands was postponed To the more radical elements in Paris it became clear that Dumouriez was not a true patriot but worked during the trial of Louis XVI to save him from execution On 29 January Dumouriez lost his negotiating mandate 22 With the help of the Girondists Dumouriez ensured that defaulting Pache had to resign at the end of January 1793 23 at the most critical moment of the war 24 nbsp Louis Philippe in 1792 by Leon Cogniet 1834 nbsp Abbey at Saint Amand les EauxTo declare war had always been a prerogative of the king On 1 February Brissot declared war against King of Great Britain and the stadtholder of the Dutch Republic not the people The next day Francisco de Miranda the only general from Latin America in French service gave the command of the French forces back to Dumouriez Although Dumouriez advised the government simply to recognise Belgium s independence the Jacobins sent several agents 25 On 7 February Dumouriez appreciated the secret proposals of Van de Spiegel and Baron Auckland in exchange for recognition of French Republic France would have to refrain from aggression against other countries 26 On 15 February Johan Valckenaer addressed Cambon the president of the Convention to give not the committee but Dumouriez all powers to depose regents and restore others to power 27 Lazare Carnot proposed that annexation be undertaken on behalf of French interests whether or not the people to be annexed so wished 28 On 17 February 1793 the French troops and the Batavian Legion crossed the Dutch border Miranda Stengel Dampierre Valence and Eustace went northeast Dumouriez and Daendels went northwest Breda Klundert and Geertruidenberg were occupied with an army of Sans Culottes that lacked almost everything 29 After the French lost Venlo Aachen Maastricht and all the supply at Liege in early March 30 Dumouriez was ordered to return to Brussels rather than further entering Holland 31 32 The situation was alarming Miranda wrote Dumouriez to continue his plan and not return to Belgium 33 On 11 March Dumouriez addressed the Brussels assembly apologizing for the actions of the French commissioners and looting soldiers 34 On 12 March Dumouriez wrote an angry insolent letter which is considered a declaration of war on the Convention 35 12 He criticized the interference of officials of the War Ministry which employed many Jacobins 36 He attacked not only Pache the former minister of war but also Marat and Robespierre 37 Meanwhile Danton initiated the creation of the Revolutionary Tribunal to interrogate the generals at some time Dumouriez had long been unable to agree with the course of the Convention He was disenchanted with the radicalization of the revolution and its politics and put an end to the annexation efforts 38 He was liked by the Belgium population It seems both Eustace and Miranda disagreed on 14 March Eustace wrote a letter to Dumouriez 39 On 18 March 1793 Dumouriez s army attacked the Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands also the brother of the Austrian emperor Josias of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld s army A major defeat in the Battle of Neerwinden nearly ended the French invasion On 20 March Danton and Charles Francois Delacroix were sent to Louvain 40 On 22 March Dumouriez opened negotiations with the Austrian General Mack 41 He allowed Dumouriez to retreat to Brussels Dumouriez soldiers were deserting in large numbers The next day Dumouriez promised the Austrians he would leave Belgium though he had no permission and was without approval of the convention 42 Dumouriez had long been unable to agree with the course of the Convention Dumouriez prevented the execution of the decrees of 15 and 27 December according Robespierre 43 He did not want the Dutch Republic to come under French authority or even to be incorporated It was his army that liberated the south of the Netherlands and he would not allow it to fall into the hands of commissioners of the Convention On 25 March Dumouriez asked Karl Mack for his support to march on Paris 44 There he would negotiate peace dissolve the convention restore the French Constitution of 1791 plea for the restoration of a constitutional monarchy and free Marie Antoinette and her children 45 46 He urged Louis Philippe I Duke of Chartres though still a teenager to join his plan The Jacobin leaders were quite sure that France had come close to a military coup mounted by Dumouriez and supported by Petion and Brissot de Warville Dumouriez defection edit nbsp Dumouriez receiving the four commissioners at Saint Amand les Eaux in the afternoon of 2 April nbsp Dumouriez sending the arrested commissioners to Tournai print by Reinier Vinkeles nbsp The treason of DumouriezOn 25 March Robespierre became one of members of the Committee of General Defence to coordinate the war effort 47 By the end of the month Robespierre called for the removal of Dumouriez who in his eyes aspired to become a Belgian dictator 48 49 50 A body of four commissioners was sent to question and arrest him 51 52 The commissioners Camus Bancal des Issarts Quinette and Lamarque were accompanied by the acting Minister of War Pierre Riel de Beurnonville Dumouriez sensed a trap and invited them to his headquarters at Saint Amand les Eaux and ordered Miaczinski to arrest them at Orchies a After an hour of deliberations he refuses to accept the decree by the convention to go with them to Lille and Paris 62 Instead Dumouriez arrested the five and send them over to General Clerfayt on the next day b Robespierre was convinced Brissot and Dumouriez wanted to overthrow the First French Republic 64 On 3 April Robespierre declared before the Convention that the whole war was a prepared game between Dumouriez and Brissot to overthrow the First French Republic 65 On 4 April the convention declared Dumouriez a traitor and outlaw and put a prize on his head 66 Davout s volunteer battalion tried to arrest Dumouriez 67 68 Dumouriez unsuccessfully tried to persuade Davout to his side and made a move to save himself from his radical enemies He attempted to persuade his troops to march on Paris and overthrow the revolutionary government The attempt proved unfeasible because many of his soldiers were staunch republicans and several of his officers opposed him 4 Without escort he rode on horseback to Tournai 69 along with his chief of staff Pierre Thouvenot the Duke of Chartres duc de Montpensier he arrived on 5 April 1793 into the Austrian camp at Maulde This blow left the Brissotins vulnerable due to their association with Dumouriez Dumouriez s defection changed the course of the events for the Brissotins On 6 April the Committee of Public Safety was installed Suspicion rose against Phillipe Egalite because of his eldest son who fled with Dumouriez in the Austrian camp Philippe Egalite was then put under continuous surveillance In Brussels Dumouriez met with Metternich and received a passport for Germany On 10 April Robespierre accused him in a speech Dumouriez and his supporters have brought a fatal blow to the public fortune preventing circulation of assignats in Belgium 70 The French armies took positions behind the frontier The Army of Holland deployed near Lille the Army of the Ardennes at Maulde the Army of the North at Saint Amand and the Army of Belgium at Conde sur l Escaut and Valenciennes 71 Later life and death edit nbsp Dumouriez s funerary monument in St Mary the Virgin church in Henley on ThamesFollowing his defection on 5 April 1793 Dumouriez remained in Brussels for a short time and then travelled to Cologne seeking a position at the elector s court He soon learned he had become an object of suspicion among his countrymen the royal houses aristocracies and clergy of Europe In response Dumouriez wrote and published in Hamburg 1794 a first volume of memoirs in which he offered his version of the previous year s events He became a royalist intriguer during the reign of Napoleon as well as an adviser to the British government Dumouriez wrote political pamphlets and letters analyzing the coastal defence of England and Ireland 72 73 Dumouriez now wandered from country to country occupied in ceaseless royalist intrigues until 1804 when he settled in England where the British government granted him a pension He became a valuable adviser to the British War Office and the Duke of York and Albany in his struggle against Napoleon s planned invasion of the United Kingdom and the British anti invasion preparations of 1803 05 74 In 1808 Castlereagh had been warned by Dumouriez that the best policy England could adopt with respect to colonies in Spanish America was to relinquish all ideas of military conquest by Arthur Wellesley and instead support the emancipation of the territories Furthermore Dumouriez suggested that once emancipation was achieved a constitutional monarchy should be established with the exiled Duke of Orleans as King 75 In 1814 and 1815 he endeavoured to procure from Louis XVIII the baton of a marshal of France but failed to do so 4 He died at Turville Park near Henley on Thames on 14 March 1823 4 An enlarged edition La Vie et les memoires du General Dumouriez appeared at Paris in 1823 References edit nbsp Dumouriez Pache Correspondance durant la campagne de Belgique 1792 P C Howe 1982 Foreign Policy and the French Revolution p 179 180 Banat 2006 p 396 La vie et les memoires du general Dumouriez 1822 a b c d e f g h i nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Dumouriez Charles Francois Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 667 La vie et les memoires du general Dumouriez 1822 Charles Francois du Perrier Dumouriez 1739 1823 Charles Francois du Perier Dumouriez French general Britannica La vie et les memoires du general Dumouriez 1822 Memoires 2 p 247 P C Howe p 2 P C Howe p 2 a b Brace Richard Munthe General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792 1793 in The American Historical Review Vol 56 No 3 April 1951 pp 493 509 Savage Gary Favier s Heirs The French Revolution and the Secret du Roi in The Historical Journal Vol 41 No 1 March 1998 pp 225 258 From Hero To Traitor The French Revolution Lafayette Citizen of Two Worlds Cornell University n d Web 26 Mar 2017 lt http rmc library cornell edu lafayette exhibition english traitor gt Dumouriez Charles Francois Letter to General Francois Kellermann 24 August 1792 lt http rmc library cornell edu lafayette exhibition pdf REX029 051 pdf gt Department of History Illustrations from Revolutions De Paris Department of History N p n d Web 19 Feb 2017 J Rosendaal p 349 351 355 361 Hubrecht G Les assignats en Belgique In Revue belge de philologie et d histoire tome 29 fasc 2 3 1951 pp 455 459 DOI https doi org 10 3406 rbph 1951 2098 www persee fr doc rbph 0035 0818 1951 num 29 2 2098 P C Howe p 117 119 123 Rickard J 2009 Charles Francois Dumouriez 1739 1823 1 J Rosendaal p 369 J Rosendaal p 370 371 Richard Munthe Brace General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792 1793 In American Historical Review 56 Nr 3 1951 S 499 f Banat 2006 p 379 Memoires du general Dumouriez Band 2 p 67 78 123 J Rosendaal p 371 J Rosendaal pp 389 693 note 168 P C Howe 2018 Foreign Policy and the French Revolution p 154 Memoires du general Dumouriez Band 2 p 27 30 32 38 42 54 Chapter 16 Robespierre s Putsch June 1793 Revolutionary Ideas An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre Princeton Princeton University Press 2014 pp 420 449 2 Memoires du general Dumouriez Band 2 p 61 Patricia Chastain Howe 2008 Foreign policy and the French Revolution Charles Francois Doyle Pierre Lebrun and the Belgian Plan 1789 1793 Palgrave Macmillan London p 159 172 Dumouriez par Arthur Chuquet p 164 P C Howe p 160 Wikisource Œuvres completes de Maximilien Robespierre Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 3 I Davidson p 108 150 Sampson Perry 1796 An Historical Sketch of the French Revolution Band 2 p 377 P C Howe p 162 Founders Online To Alexander Hamilton from John Skey Eustace 20 November 1798 Memoires 4 p 139 Memoires du general Dumouriez Band 2 p 127 P C Howe p 164 166 Wikisource Œuvres completes de Maximilien Robespierre Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 4 Dumouriez par Arthur Chuquet p 185 Dinwiddy J R 1 July 1992 Radicalism and Reform in Britain 1780 1850 A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 8264 3453 1 via Google Books P C Howe 1982 Foreign Policy and the French Revolution p 175 176 France and Its Revolutions G Long 1850 A Pictorial History 1789 1848 p 265 P C Howe p 167 Dumouriez par Arthur Chuquet p 181 Wikisource Œuvres completes de Maximilien Robespierre Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 Discours contre Brissot amp les girondins La vie et les memoires du general Dumouriez p 129 Thompson J M 1929 Leaders of the French Revolution p 215 a b c Banat 2006 p 392 Bulletin des Amis de la Verite 7 avril 1793 p 2 Bulletin Du Tribunal Criminel Revolutionnaire p 148 151 Leleu E La tentative de Dumouriez sur Lille en 1793 In Revue du Nord tome 9 n 34 mai 1923 pp 81 109 DOI https doi org 10 3406 rnord 1923 1342 www persee fr doc rnord 0035 2624 1923 num 9 34 1342 Le Republicain francais 5 avril 1793 Mercure francais 13 avril 1793 H Wallon 1880 1882 Histoire du tribunal revolutionnaire de Paris avec le journal de ses actes p 101 103 Nouvelles politiques nationales et etrangeres 6 avril 179 p 139 157 158 Banat 2006 p 461 La vie et les memoires du general Dumouriez p 149 157 159 164 165 175 176 187 188 207 Un General diplomate au temps de la revolution Journal des debats et des decrets 3 avril 1793 Speech against Dumouriez and Brissot to be delivered at the Jacobin Club on April 3 1793 Archived from the original on January 28 2023 Retrieved January 22 2023 Banat 2006 p 398 Un General diplomate au temps de la revolution Daniel Reichel 1975 Davout et l art de la guerre recherches sur la formation l action pendant la Revolution et les commandements du marechal Davout duc d Auerstaedt prince d Eckmuhl 1770 1823 Memoires du general Dumouriez Band 2 p 207 Wikisource Œuvres completes de Maximilien Robespierre Speech Robespierre against Brissot and the girondins Delivered to the Convention on 10 April 1793 Discours contre Brissot amp les girondins Phipps Ramsay Weston 2011 The Armies of the First French Republic Volume I The Armee du Nord USA Pickle Partners Publishing pp 155 157 ISBN 978 1 908692 24 5 Memoire militaire sur l Angleterre 1799 John Holland Rose and Alexander Meyrick Broadley 1909 Dumouriez and the Defence of England Against Napoleon French plans for the invasion of England ca 1804 Great Britain and Argentina by K Gallo p 87Note edit The commissioners were escorted by Chevalier de Saint Georges 53 who immediately drove back to Lille 54 53 55 56 53 In the evening Lille was successfully defended by Saint Georges against Miaczinsky who was sent by Dumouriez to seize the city 57 58 His troops were forced to camp outside the city walls 59 It is supposed that Dumouriez sent Miaczinsky to Lille and arrest the other seven commissioners Saint Georges who kept the troops outside the walls became the hero 60 Dumouriez blamed the famous mulatto for thwarting his plans 61 Saint Georges prohibited the arrest of the other commissioner Instead Miaczinsky was arrested and taken to Paris by the commissioners After a trial on 17 May he was executed In the evening he had supper with Madame de Genlis 63 Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Francois Dumouriez Patricia Chastain Howe 2008 Foreign Policy and the French Revolution Charles Francois Dumouriez Pierre LeBrun and the Belgian Plan 1789 1793 J M Thompson 1929 Leaders of the French Revolution Dumouriez p 200 216 Banat Gabriel 2006 The Chevalier de Saint Georges Virtuoso of the Sword and the Bow Hillsdale New York Pendragon Press ISBN 978 1 57647 109 8 OCLC 63703876 Political officesPreceded byClaude Antoine de Valdec de Lessart Minister of Foreign Affairs12 15 March 1792 12 June 1792 Succeeded byPierre Paul de MeredieuPreceded byJoseph Marie Servan de Gerbey Secretaries of State for War13 June 1792 18 June 1792 Succeeded byPierre August Lajard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Francois Dumouriez amp oldid 1188027811, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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