fbpx
Wikipedia

Jean Victor de Constant Rebecque

Jean Victor de Constant Rebecque (22 September 1773 – 12 June 1850) was a Swiss mercenary and member of the house of Constant de Rebecque who distinguished himself in Dutch service. As chief-of-staff of the Netherlands Mobile Army he countermanded the order of the Duke of Wellington to evacuate Dutch troops from Quatre Bras on the eve of the Battle of Quatre Bras, thereby preventing Marshal Michel Ney from occupying that strategic crossroads.

Jean Victor de Constant Rebecque
Portrait by Jan Baptist van der Hulst, 1842
Born22 September 1773
Geneva, Republic of Geneva
Died12 June 1850 (1850-06-13) (aged 76)
Schönfeld, Austrian Silesia
Allegiance Kingdom of France
 Dutch Republic
 Great Britain
 Prussia
 United Kingdom
 Netherlands
Service/branchGeneral staff
Years of service1788–1837
Ranklieutenant-general
UnitNetherlands Mobile Army
Battles/wars
AwardsKnight Commander Military William Order

Biography edit

Family edit

Rebecque was the son of Samuel de Constant Rebecque [nl] (1729–1800) and his second wife Louise Cathérine Gallatin (1736–1814). The father was, like the grandfather Samuel Constant de Rebecque (1676–1782) (who reached the rank of lieutenant-general), a Swiss officer in the service of the Dutch Republic. A nephew (not a brother as sometimes erroneously stated) was Benjamin Constant. Jean Victor de Constant Rebecque married Isabella Catharina Anna Jacoba baroness van Lynden (1768–1836) in Braunschweig on 29 April 1798.[1]

They had children:

  • Victor, (Customary Marquis) Baron of Constant Rebecque
  • Charles Baron de Constant Rebecque
  • Guillaume Baron de Constant Rebecque
  • Louise de Constant Rebecque

Early career edit

Rebecque entered the service of France as a sous-lieutenant in a regiment of Swiss Guards in 1788. He started a journal that year that he faithfully kept every day of the rest of his life, thereby providing useful source material to historians. During the Insurrection of 10 August 1792 at the Tuileries Palace his regiment was massacred by French revolutionaries, but he escaped with his life.[2] He returned to Switzerland where he was in military service until he (like his ancestors before him) entered the service of the Dutch Republic in 1793 in the regiment of Prince Frederick (a younger son of stadtholder William V, Prince of Orange). After the fall of the Republic, and the proclamation of the Batavian Republic he first entered British service (1795–1798) and subsequently Prussian service (1798–1811). During that Prussian service from 1805 he tutored the future William II of the Netherlands in military science and helped him pass his exams as a Prussian officer. When William started his studies at Oxford University he accompanied the young prince there and obtained a doctorate honoris causa from Oxford himself in 1811.[3]

William was next appointed aide-de-camp of the Duke of Wellington during the Peninsular War and Rebecque likewise entered British service again on 12 May 1811 as a major, and participated in every battle the Duke (and William) fought there, distinguishing himself at the Battle of Vittoria.[3]

When William, and his father William I of the Netherlands, returned to the Netherlands in November 1813, Rebecque was appointed a lieutenant-colonel in the Orange-Nassau Legion. He advanced very rapidly after that: colonel and aide-de-camp of the Sovereign Prince on 31 December 1813, and Quarter-master-general on 15 January 1814. He took part in the Siege of Bergen op Zoom (1814), and then was promoted to major-general on 30 November 1814.[3]

Rebecque played a very prominent role in the organization from scratch of the armed forces of the Kingdom of the United Netherlands in 1813–1815. On 11 April 1814 he was appointed chief-of-staff of the new Netherlands Mobile Army that was then formed to besiege the French in Antwerp. In July 1814 he was appointed in a commission that was charged with the formation of a combined Dutch-Belgian army. He played a leading role in that commission. Next he helped Prince Frederick of the Netherlands found the headquarters of the Netherlands Mobile Army, that was to play such an important part in the Waterloo Campaign, on 9 April 1815.[3]

Probably because many Dutch officers (like generals Chassé and Trip) had served in the French Grande Armée this new army was organized along the lines of the French army. In any case its general staff took Marshal Berthier's famous état-major-général as a model, and not the British system. Nevertheless, because Rebecque had long served as a staff officer in Wellington's army, he was well acquainted with British procedures, and knew his opposite numbers personally.[citation needed]

Quatre Bras and Waterloo edit

 

After Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba and quickly overthrew the restored Bourbon monarchy in March 1815, he quickly formed Army of the North, with the help of veterans like Anne-François Mellinet (who organized the Jeune Garde), though he had to do without Marshals Berthier and Murat for various reasons. Threatened by this military build-up the Great Powers declared war on Napoleon personally and started to prepare for the inevitable showdown. The Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands also brought his plans for forming his Kingdom of the United Netherlands forward and proclaimed himself king on 16 March 1815 (see Eight Articles of London). Incidentally, this allowed him to give up his title of Prince of Orange and bestow it upon his eldest son as a courtesy title. That eldest son was now also put in charge of the new Netherlands Mobile Army, though at the same time the Duke of Wellington was appointed a field-marshal in the Dutch army. The arrangement was to be that Wellington would command the combined Anglo-allied army that was now assembling in the "Belgian" part of the United Netherlands, but that the Prince of Orange would be in charge of the Belgian-Dutch troops (with his younger brother Frederick nominally commanding a corps). Only Wellington and his chief-of-staff Lord Hill would be able to give direct orders to the Belgian/Dutch troops, but in practice Wellington always went "through channels" and conveyed his orders to the Belgian/Dutch units via the Prince of Orange.[citation needed]

Beside the Anglo-allied army there also was still a Prussian army under field-marshal Prince Blücher in the Belgian Netherlands, as this part of the country formally still was a Coalition military governorate-general (with king William as its governor-general). The two armies were cantoned over a wide area, with the Prussians taking the south-eastern part, and the Anglo-allies the north-western part. Napoleon strategy was to exploit the dispersal of the two encamped armies by thrusting his Army of the North into the demarcation line between the two armies and by moving quickly to defeat each army in turn (as his Army of the North was larger than each of the Coalition armies separately). For this to succeed he needed the element of surprise, because if the Coalition allies would have known his exact intentions, and would have been able to react in time, they could of course have combined their armies in time and blocked his purpose.[citation needed]

Beside the element of surprise the geo-strategical shape of the theatre of war was also important. The terrain in south-eastern Belgium, where the hilly Ardennes are located, makes only a few invasion routes feasible. Besides, the number of highways was limited in 1815, and this further limited the movements of the opposing armies. Belgium has always been an important theatre of war in the course of the centuries, but in 1815 it had been peaceful since the victory of the French revolutionary armies in 1794, and most generals involved had last campaigned in the country when they were young officers, if at all. Strategic information was therefore at a premium.[citation needed]

Wellington himself had traversed the country on his way to Paris in 1814 and he had at that occasion scouted the area around Waterloo and was aware of its advantages as a battlefield in case Brussels was to be defended. He also commissioned one of his staff officers to survey the area and to assess its strategic choke points. One of those points was the crossroads of the Charleroi-Brussels road and the Nivelles-Namur road at Quatre Bras. It was generally recognized that the first road would be the prime venue for the French to reach Brussels, and the second one was indispensable for maintaining communications between the two Coalition armies. For that reason occupying the crossroads was essential; whichever army controlled it would have a decisive strategic advantage. For that reason Rebecque, as chief-of-staff of the Netherlands army ordered the commander of the Netherlands 2nd division, De Perponcher to secure it at all times on 6 May 1815.[3]

However, Napoleon achieved his strategic surprise, because of a certain reticence on the part of the Coalition allies: the Prussians and British had not declared war on France, just on Napoleon personally (a subtle, but important difference) and they, therefore, refrained from conducting cavalry reconnaissances across the French border. The Netherlands cavalry was not so constrained, and did reconnoitre the border area, but the three Netherlands cavalry brigades were too thin on the ground to cover the area thoroughly. When Napoleon, therefore, started his lightning offensive, this was not discovered before it was almost too late. He was already in Charleroi before the French were discovered and when news of this sudden appearance reached Wellington he still worried that this was just a feint, and that the true advance would come by way of Mons. Because of this possibility of being outflanked, and being cut off from the escape route to the coast, Wellington on the evening of 15 June decided to concentrate his army around Nivelles. His orders went out to all British troops directly, and to the Netherlands troops through the intermediary of the Prince of Orange and his staff (as described above).[citation needed]

These orders to the 2nd Brigade, 2nd Netherlands Division under major-general Prince Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, at Quatre Bras at the time, would have evacuated this essential strategic point. As Saxe-Weimar was aware of the oncoming French because he heard firing from the vicinity of Frasnes, and saw the alarm beacons lighted, the order to evacuate surprised him. He alerted the divisional commander, De Perponcher, who immediately put the other brigade of his division (then at Nivelles) on alert, and sent a staff officer, captain De Gargen, to the Netherlands headquarters at Braine-le-Comte.[4]

Here, Rebecque (on the strength of De Gargen's report), in consultation with De Perponcher, decided to countermand Wellington's order, and instead ordered De Perponcher to reinforce Saxe-Weimar immediately with the 1st Brigade, 2nd Netherlands Division, under major-general Willem Frederik van Bylandt. He immediately reported this decision to the Prince of Orange in Brussels, who informed Wellington of it at the famous ball of the Duchess of Richmond.[4][5] A lesser man might have just sent a suggestion to Wellington, meanwhile letting the order stand. Wellington was not known for looking kindly upon having his orders disregarded, let alone countermanded,[a] as Rebecque must have been well aware, as one of Wellington's former staff officers. He therefore displayed that rare commodity: moral courage.[citation needed]

The decision was not a minor one. Rebecque probably made it to keep communications with Blücher open, which may not have been the first thing on Wellington's mind. In any case, in the event Wellington did not come to Blücher's aid at the Battle of Ligny. But the strategic importance of Quatre Bras did not only hinge on the Nivelles-Namur road. Probably even more important was the Charleroi-Brussels road for Napoleon's political objective: the speedy occupation of Brussels. Had Marshal Michel Ney succeeded in occupying the crossroads and the road to the north, as Napoleon intended, the way would have been wide open for the French to quickly march north after their victory at Ligny; Brussels would probably have fallen, without Wellington being able to do anything about it; and with the fall of Brussels king William's little project of the Kingdom of the United Netherlands would have failed and his budding country might have been pushed out of the war. In any case, there probably would not have been a battle of Waterloo.[b]

As it was, Ney was frustrated by the far-outnumbered Netherlands troops; Wellington won the Battle of Quatre Bras; the Anglo-allied was able to make a strategic withdrawal to Wellington's preferred battleground near Waterloo. Rebecque of course was also present at that battle as a staff officer, busily oiling the wheels of command and occasionally playing a decisive command role himself, as when he helped rally the broken Dutch militia battalions of Bijlandt's Brigade when they retreated to the position of the steadfast 5th Militia Battalion, which sustained such heavy casualties at Waterloo, only to be maligned by later historians. For his gallantry Rebecque was made a Knight Commander in the Military William Order on 8 July 1815.[citation needed]

Belgian Revolution and Ten Days Campaign edit

After the Netherlands Mobile Army returned from the campaign in France in 1816, Rebecque was confirmed as Chief of the General Staff of the Netherlands army (which he would remain until his retirement). As such he capably organised that army and the system of conscription on which it was based in close cooperation with Prince Frederick.[6] He was promoted to lieutenant-general in 1816. In 1826 he was appointed gouverneur (tutor) of the young sons of the Prince of Orange, like he had been the tutor of their father from 1805.[7] When in 1830 king William was asked to act as arbiter in the matter of the conflict over the delineation of the Maine and New Brunswick border, the Northeastern Boundary Dispute (a matter that was only finally settled by the Webster-Ashburton Treaty in 1842,[8] Rebecque headed the fact-finding commission that prepared the arbitrage award.[7]

This award was made in August 1830, just about when the Belgian Revolution erupted in which Rebecque was to play a controversial role. During the years the United Kingdom of the Netherlands existed, several complaints were raised by the Belgians towards the regulations of the government. This eventually led to the Brussels insurrection of August 1830, with its anti-Dutch overtones therefore came as a rude shock. At first they reacted with indecision and with reluctance to apply military severity. Especially the Prince of Orange had the illusion that he could rely on his undoubted popularity (he was far more liberal than his paternalistic father, and for that reason hardly on speaking terms with the king) and might be able to reason with the insurrectionists.[citation needed]

However, the échec of Orange's brave entry into the hostile city on 1 September with only a few companions (of which Rebecque was one), which almost ended in a lynching, put an end to that. Rebecque (who was the political antipode of his liberal nephew Benjamin Constant, probably because of his traumatic experience in the Tuileries in 1792) now counseled playing the military card. He is credited with (or blamed for) having made the plan for the assault on Brussels on 21 September, which ended catastrophically, and caused much bloodshed. Rebecque himself was wounded in the street fighting. The Dutch army retreated to Antwerp where the next catastrophe, the indefensible bombardment of the city by general Chassé, happened.[9]

Rebecque was back the next year, when he helped organise the ill-fated Ten Days Campaign. This attempt to retrieve terrain lost, was executed brilliantly in a military sense, but politically it was a disaster. One wonders what Rebecque and his political masters hoped to achieve, even if the French had not intervened? They could easily beat the nascent Belgian army, but what would have been next? It seems unlikely that the Dutch would have had the stomach for the kind of repression that Russia used to quell the Polish Insurrection of 1830–1831. As White makes clear, the real objective may more properly have been to strengthen the Dutch position in the following negotiations, which the Dutch successes arguably did. But a reunification of the two countries, as king William seems to have hoped for, was never in the cards.[10]

One small detail of the Campaign involved Rebecque posthumously. The armistice was signed on 12 August 1832 but shortly afterwards a young Belgian artillery officer, Alexis-Michel Eenens thought he saw a Dutch violation of the ceasefire and opened fire on the Dutch troops. This minor incident got a peculiar follow-up when Eenens (by then a lieutenant-general and military historian), published Documents historiques sur l'origine du royaume de Belgique. Les conspirations militaires de 1831 (Bruxelles, 1875, 2 vols.) in 1875. This work caused a furore, because Eenens accused a number of prominent Belgians of treason in the course of the Revolution. And he also raked up the old alleged ceasefire violation, accusing the Prince of Orange of culpability. All of this caused a heated polemic with a number of Dutch generals and historians. A grandson of Rebecque published an extract of Rebecque's journal as Constant Rebecque, J.D.C.C.W. de (1875) Le prince d'Orange et son chef d'état-major pendant la journée du 12 août 1831, d'après des documents inédits, in an attempt to contradict Eenens' accusations.[citation needed]

Rebecque retired from the service in 1837. He was made a Dutch baron on 25 August 1846 by his old protégé, now king William II. He retired to his estates in Silesia and died there in 1850, almost 77 years old.[7]

Notes edit

  1. ^ General Karl Freiherr von Müffling, the Prussian liaison officer at Wellington's headquarters recounts an anecdote where two commanders of cavalry brigades at Waterloo, Vivian and Vandeleur, were so scared of disobeying Wellington's order not to move, that they refused to come to the aid of Ponsonby's troopers when those were slaughtered at Waterloo (Müffling 1853, pp. 245, ff).
  2. ^ See for an appreciation of the importance of the actions of Rebecque and Perponcher before the Battle of Quatre Bras see Bas & T'Serclaes 1908, pp. 440–444

Citations edit

  1. ^ Recueil historique, généalogique, chronologique et nobiliaire des maisons et ...
  2. ^ Tornare 2003, p. 511.
  3. ^ a b c d e Tornare 2003, p. 512.
  4. ^ a b Hamilton-Williams 1993, p. 177.
  5. ^ Bas & T'Serclaes 1908, pp. 395–411.
  6. ^ White 1835, p. 133.
  7. ^ a b c Nationaal Archief.
  8. ^ Hyde 1922, pp. 116–117.
  9. ^ White 1835, pp. 221 ff, 337–359.
  10. ^ White 1835, pp. 324–325.

References edit

  • Bas, François de; T'Serclaes, Jacques Augustin Joseph Alphonse Regnier Laurent Ghislain T'Serclaes de Wommerson (comte de) (1908), La campagne de 1815 aux Pays-Bas d'après les rapports officiels néerlandais (in Dutch), vol. 1, A. Dewit, p. 395–411
  • Hamilton-Williams, D (1993), Waterloo. New Perspectives. The Great Battle Reappraised, John Wiley & Sons, p. 177, ISBN 0-471-05225-6
  • Müffling, K.F. von (1853), Passages from My Life: Together with Memoirs of the Campaign of 1813 and 1814, pp. 245 ff
  • Hyde, C.H. (1922), International Law Chiefly as Interpreted and Applied by the United States, pp. 116–117
  • Israel, Jonathan J. (1995), The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness and Fall, 1477–1806, Oxford University Press, pp. 515–523, ISBN 0-19-873072-1
  • Nationaal Archief, Jean Victor baron de Constant Rebecque (1773–1850) (in Dutch)[permanent dead link]
  • Tornare, A.-J. (2003), Les Vaudois de Napoléon: des Pyramides à Waterloo 1798–1815 (in French) (Cabedita ed.), pp. 511–512, ISBN 9782882953810
  • White, C (1835), The Belgic revolution of 1830[full citation needed]

Further reading edit

  • Bas, F. de (1908–1909), La campagne de 1815 aux Pays-Bas d'après les rapports officiels néerlandais (in French), vol. 1 (volume 1 Quatre Bras; Vol. 2 Waterloo ed.)

jean, victor, constant, rebecque, september, 1773, june, 1850, swiss, mercenary, member, house, constant, rebecque, distinguished, himself, dutch, service, chief, staff, netherlands, mobile, army, countermanded, order, duke, wellington, evacuate, dutch, troops. Jean Victor de Constant Rebecque 22 September 1773 12 June 1850 was a Swiss mercenary and member of the house of Constant de Rebecque who distinguished himself in Dutch service As chief of staff of the Netherlands Mobile Army he countermanded the order of the Duke of Wellington to evacuate Dutch troops from Quatre Bras on the eve of the Battle of Quatre Bras thereby preventing Marshal Michel Ney from occupying that strategic crossroads Jean Victor de Constant RebecquePortrait by Jan Baptist van der Hulst 1842Born22 September 1773Geneva Republic of GenevaDied12 June 1850 1850 06 13 aged 76 Schonfeld Austrian SilesiaAllegianceKingdom of France Dutch Republic Great Britain Prussia United Kingdom NetherlandsService wbr branchGeneral staffYears of service1788 1837Ranklieutenant generalUnitNetherlands Mobile ArmyBattles warsInsurrection of 10 August 1792 War of the First Coalition Flanders campaign Napoleonic Wars Peninsular War Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo 2nd Siege of Badajoz 3rd Siege of Badajoz Battle of Salamanca Battle of San Millan Osma Battle of Vitoria Siege of Pamplona Siege of San Sebastian Battle of the Pyrenees War of the Sixth Coalition Siege of Bergen op Zoom Hundred Days Battle of Quatre Bras Battle of Waterloo Belgian Revolution Assault on Brussels Ten Days CampaignAwardsKnight Commander Military William Order Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family 1 2 Early career 1 3 Quatre Bras and Waterloo 1 4 Belgian Revolution and Ten Days Campaign 2 Notes 3 Citations 4 References 5 Further readingBiography editFamily edit Main article Constant de Rebecque Rebecque was the son of Samuel de Constant Rebecque nl 1729 1800 and his second wife Louise Catherine Gallatin 1736 1814 The father was like the grandfather Samuel Constant de Rebecque 1676 1782 who reached the rank of lieutenant general a Swiss officer in the service of the Dutch Republic A nephew not a brother as sometimes erroneously stated was Benjamin Constant Jean Victor de Constant Rebecque married Isabella Catharina Anna Jacoba baroness van Lynden 1768 1836 in Braunschweig on 29 April 1798 1 They had children Victor Customary Marquis Baron of Constant Rebecque Charles Baron de Constant Rebecque Guillaume Baron de Constant Rebecque Louise de Constant RebecqueEarly career edit Rebecque entered the service of France as a sous lieutenant in a regiment of Swiss Guards in 1788 He started a journal that year that he faithfully kept every day of the rest of his life thereby providing useful source material to historians During the Insurrection of 10 August 1792 at the Tuileries Palace his regiment was massacred by French revolutionaries but he escaped with his life 2 He returned to Switzerland where he was in military service until he like his ancestors before him entered the service of the Dutch Republic in 1793 in the regiment of Prince Frederick a younger son of stadtholder William V Prince of Orange After the fall of the Republic and the proclamation of the Batavian Republic he first entered British service 1795 1798 and subsequently Prussian service 1798 1811 During that Prussian service from 1805 he tutored the future William II of the Netherlands in military science and helped him pass his exams as a Prussian officer When William started his studies at Oxford University he accompanied the young prince there and obtained a doctorate honoris causa from Oxford himself in 1811 3 William was next appointed aide de camp of the Duke of Wellington during the Peninsular War and Rebecque likewise entered British service again on 12 May 1811 as a major and participated in every battle the Duke and William fought there distinguishing himself at the Battle of Vittoria 3 When William and his father William I of the Netherlands returned to the Netherlands in November 1813 Rebecque was appointed a lieutenant colonel in the Orange Nassau Legion He advanced very rapidly after that colonel and aide de camp of the Sovereign Prince on 31 December 1813 and Quarter master general on 15 January 1814 He took part in the Siege of Bergen op Zoom 1814 and then was promoted to major general on 30 November 1814 3 Rebecque played a very prominent role in the organization from scratch of the armed forces of the Kingdom of the United Netherlands in 1813 1815 On 11 April 1814 he was appointed chief of staff of the new Netherlands Mobile Army that was then formed to besiege the French in Antwerp In July 1814 he was appointed in a commission that was charged with the formation of a combined Dutch Belgian army He played a leading role in that commission Next he helped Prince Frederick of the Netherlands found the headquarters of the Netherlands Mobile Army that was to play such an important part in the Waterloo Campaign on 9 April 1815 3 Probably because many Dutch officers like generals Chasse and Trip had served in the French Grande Armee this new army was organized along the lines of the French army In any case its general staff took Marshal Berthier s famous etat major general as a model and not the British system Nevertheless because Rebecque had long served as a staff officer in Wellington s army he was well acquainted with British procedures and knew his opposite numbers personally citation needed Quatre Bras and Waterloo edit Main articles Battle of Quatre Bras and Battle of Waterloo nbsp After Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba and quickly overthrew the restored Bourbon monarchy in March 1815 he quickly formed Army of the North with the help of veterans like Anne Francois Mellinet who organized the Jeune Garde though he had to do without Marshals Berthier and Murat for various reasons Threatened by this military build up the Great Powers declared war on Napoleon personally and started to prepare for the inevitable showdown The Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands also brought his plans for forming his Kingdom of the United Netherlands forward and proclaimed himself king on 16 March 1815 see Eight Articles of London Incidentally this allowed him to give up his title of Prince of Orange and bestow it upon his eldest son as a courtesy title That eldest son was now also put in charge of the new Netherlands Mobile Army though at the same time the Duke of Wellington was appointed a field marshal in the Dutch army The arrangement was to be that Wellington would command the combined Anglo allied army that was now assembling in the Belgian part of the United Netherlands but that the Prince of Orange would be in charge of the Belgian Dutch troops with his younger brother Frederick nominally commanding a corps Only Wellington and his chief of staff Lord Hill would be able to give direct orders to the Belgian Dutch troops but in practice Wellington always went through channels and conveyed his orders to the Belgian Dutch units via the Prince of Orange citation needed Beside the Anglo allied army there also was still a Prussian army under field marshal Prince Blucher in the Belgian Netherlands as this part of the country formally still was a Coalition military governorate general with king William as its governor general The two armies were cantoned over a wide area with the Prussians taking the south eastern part and the Anglo allies the north western part Napoleon strategy was to exploit the dispersal of the two encamped armies by thrusting his Army of the North into the demarcation line between the two armies and by moving quickly to defeat each army in turn as his Army of the North was larger than each of the Coalition armies separately For this to succeed he needed the element of surprise because if the Coalition allies would have known his exact intentions and would have been able to react in time they could of course have combined their armies in time and blocked his purpose citation needed Beside the element of surprise the geo strategical shape of the theatre of war was also important The terrain in south eastern Belgium where the hilly Ardennes are located makes only a few invasion routes feasible Besides the number of highways was limited in 1815 and this further limited the movements of the opposing armies Belgium has always been an important theatre of war in the course of the centuries but in 1815 it had been peaceful since the victory of the French revolutionary armies in 1794 and most generals involved had last campaigned in the country when they were young officers if at all Strategic information was therefore at a premium citation needed Wellington himself had traversed the country on his way to Paris in 1814 and he had at that occasion scouted the area around Waterloo and was aware of its advantages as a battlefield in case Brussels was to be defended He also commissioned one of his staff officers to survey the area and to assess its strategic choke points One of those points was the crossroads of the Charleroi Brussels road and the Nivelles Namur road at Quatre Bras It was generally recognized that the first road would be the prime venue for the French to reach Brussels and the second one was indispensable for maintaining communications between the two Coalition armies For that reason occupying the crossroads was essential whichever army controlled it would have a decisive strategic advantage For that reason Rebecque as chief of staff of the Netherlands army ordered the commander of the Netherlands 2nd division De Perponcher to secure it at all times on 6 May 1815 3 However Napoleon achieved his strategic surprise because of a certain reticence on the part of the Coalition allies the Prussians and British had not declared war on France just on Napoleon personally a subtle but important difference and they therefore refrained from conducting cavalry reconnaissances across the French border The Netherlands cavalry was not so constrained and did reconnoitre the border area but the three Netherlands cavalry brigades were too thin on the ground to cover the area thoroughly When Napoleon therefore started his lightning offensive this was not discovered before it was almost too late He was already in Charleroi before the French were discovered and when news of this sudden appearance reached Wellington he still worried that this was just a feint and that the true advance would come by way of Mons Because of this possibility of being outflanked and being cut off from the escape route to the coast Wellington on the evening of 15 June decided to concentrate his army around Nivelles His orders went out to all British troops directly and to the Netherlands troops through the intermediary of the Prince of Orange and his staff as described above citation needed These orders to the 2nd Brigade 2nd Netherlands Division under major general Prince Bernhard of Saxe Weimar Eisenach at Quatre Bras at the time would have evacuated this essential strategic point As Saxe Weimar was aware of the oncoming French because he heard firing from the vicinity of Frasnes and saw the alarm beacons lighted the order to evacuate surprised him He alerted the divisional commander De Perponcher who immediately put the other brigade of his division then at Nivelles on alert and sent a staff officer captain De Gargen to the Netherlands headquarters at Braine le Comte 4 Here Rebecque on the strength of De Gargen s report in consultation with De Perponcher decided to countermand Wellington s order and instead ordered De Perponcher to reinforce Saxe Weimar immediately with the 1st Brigade 2nd Netherlands Division under major general Willem Frederik van Bylandt He immediately reported this decision to the Prince of Orange in Brussels who informed Wellington of it at the famous ball of the Duchess of Richmond 4 5 A lesser man might have just sent a suggestion to Wellington meanwhile letting the order stand Wellington was not known for looking kindly upon having his orders disregarded let alone countermanded a as Rebecque must have been well aware as one of Wellington s former staff officers He therefore displayed that rare commodity moral courage citation needed The decision was not a minor one Rebecque probably made it to keep communications with Blucher open which may not have been the first thing on Wellington s mind In any case in the event Wellington did not come to Blucher s aid at the Battle of Ligny But the strategic importance of Quatre Bras did not only hinge on the Nivelles Namur road Probably even more important was the Charleroi Brussels road for Napoleon s political objective the speedy occupation of Brussels Had Marshal Michel Ney succeeded in occupying the crossroads and the road to the north as Napoleon intended the way would have been wide open for the French to quickly march north after their victory at Ligny Brussels would probably have fallen without Wellington being able to do anything about it and with the fall of Brussels king William s little project of the Kingdom of the United Netherlands would have failed and his budding country might have been pushed out of the war In any case there probably would not have been a battle of Waterloo b As it was Ney was frustrated by the far outnumbered Netherlands troops Wellington won the Battle of Quatre Bras the Anglo allied was able to make a strategic withdrawal to Wellington s preferred battleground near Waterloo Rebecque of course was also present at that battle as a staff officer busily oiling the wheels of command and occasionally playing a decisive command role himself as when he helped rally the broken Dutch militia battalions of Bijlandt s Brigade when they retreated to the position of the steadfast 5th Militia Battalion which sustained such heavy casualties at Waterloo only to be maligned by later historians For his gallantry Rebecque was made a Knight Commander in the Military William Order on 8 July 1815 citation needed Belgian Revolution and Ten Days Campaign edit Main articles Belgian Revolution and Ten Days Campaign After the Netherlands Mobile Army returned from the campaign in France in 1816 Rebecque was confirmed as Chief of the General Staff of the Netherlands army which he would remain until his retirement As such he capably organised that army and the system of conscription on which it was based in close cooperation with Prince Frederick 6 He was promoted to lieutenant general in 1816 In 1826 he was appointed gouverneur tutor of the young sons of the Prince of Orange like he had been the tutor of their father from 1805 7 When in 1830 king William was asked to act as arbiter in the matter of the conflict over the delineation of the Maine and New Brunswick border the Northeastern Boundary Dispute a matter that was only finally settled by the Webster Ashburton Treaty in 1842 8 Rebecque headed the fact finding commission that prepared the arbitrage award 7 This award was made in August 1830 just about when the Belgian Revolution erupted in which Rebecque was to play a controversial role During the years the United Kingdom of the Netherlands existed several complaints were raised by the Belgians towards the regulations of the government This eventually led to the Brussels insurrection of August 1830 with its anti Dutch overtones therefore came as a rude shock At first they reacted with indecision and with reluctance to apply military severity Especially the Prince of Orange had the illusion that he could rely on his undoubted popularity he was far more liberal than his paternalistic father and for that reason hardly on speaking terms with the king and might be able to reason with the insurrectionists citation needed However the echec of Orange s brave entry into the hostile city on 1 September with only a few companions of which Rebecque was one which almost ended in a lynching put an end to that Rebecque who was the political antipode of his liberal nephew Benjamin Constant probably because of his traumatic experience in the Tuileries in 1792 now counseled playing the military card He is credited with or blamed for having made the plan for the assault on Brussels on 21 September which ended catastrophically and caused much bloodshed Rebecque himself was wounded in the street fighting The Dutch army retreated to Antwerp where the next catastrophe the indefensible bombardment of the city by general Chasse happened 9 Rebecque was back the next year when he helped organise the ill fated Ten Days Campaign This attempt to retrieve terrain lost was executed brilliantly in a military sense but politically it was a disaster One wonders what Rebecque and his political masters hoped to achieve even if the French had not intervened They could easily beat the nascent Belgian army but what would have been next It seems unlikely that the Dutch would have had the stomach for the kind of repression that Russia used to quell the Polish Insurrection of 1830 1831 As White makes clear the real objective may more properly have been to strengthen the Dutch position in the following negotiations which the Dutch successes arguably did But a reunification of the two countries as king William seems to have hoped for was never in the cards 10 One small detail of the Campaign involved Rebecque posthumously The armistice was signed on 12 August 1832 but shortly afterwards a young Belgian artillery officer Alexis Michel Eenens thought he saw a Dutch violation of the ceasefire and opened fire on the Dutch troops This minor incident got a peculiar follow up when Eenens by then a lieutenant general and military historian published Documents historiques sur l origine du royaume de Belgique Les conspirations militaires de 1831 Bruxelles 1875 2 vols in 1875 This work caused a furore because Eenens accused a number of prominent Belgians of treason in the course of the Revolution And he also raked up the old alleged ceasefire violation accusing the Prince of Orange of culpability All of this caused a heated polemic with a number of Dutch generals and historians A grandson of Rebecque published an extract of Rebecque s journal as Constant Rebecque J D C C W de 1875 Le prince d Orange et son chef d etat major pendant la journee du 12 aout 1831 d apres des documents inedits in an attempt to contradict Eenens accusations citation needed Rebecque retired from the service in 1837 He was made a Dutch baron on 25 August 1846 by his old protege now king William II He retired to his estates in Silesia and died there in 1850 almost 77 years old 7 Notes edit General Karl Freiherr von Muffling the Prussian liaison officer at Wellington s headquarters recounts an anecdote where two commanders of cavalry brigades at Waterloo Vivian and Vandeleur were so scared of disobeying Wellington s order not to move that they refused to come to the aid of Ponsonby s troopers when those were slaughtered at Waterloo Muffling 1853 pp 245 ff See for an appreciation of the importance of the actions of Rebecque and Perponcher before the Battle of Quatre Bras see Bas amp T Serclaes 1908 pp 440 444Citations edit Recueil historique genealogique chronologique et nobiliaire des maisons et Tornare 2003 p 511 a b c d e Tornare 2003 p 512 a b Hamilton Williams 1993 p 177 Bas amp T Serclaes 1908 pp 395 411 White 1835 p 133 a b c Nationaal Archief Hyde 1922 pp 116 117 White 1835 pp 221 ff 337 359 White 1835 pp 324 325 References editBas Francois de T Serclaes Jacques Augustin Joseph Alphonse Regnier Laurent Ghislain T Serclaes de Wommerson comte de 1908 La campagne de 1815 aux Pays Bas d apres les rapports officiels neerlandais in Dutch vol 1 A Dewit p 395 411 Hamilton Williams D 1993 Waterloo New Perspectives The Great Battle Reappraised John Wiley amp Sons p 177 ISBN 0 471 05225 6 Muffling K F von 1853 Passages from My Life Together with Memoirs of the Campaign of 1813 and 1814 pp 245 ff Hyde C H 1922 International Law Chiefly as Interpreted and Applied by the United States pp 116 117 Israel Jonathan J 1995 The Dutch Republic Its Rise Greatness and Fall 1477 1806 Oxford University Press pp 515 523 ISBN 0 19 873072 1 Nationaal Archief Jean Victor baron de Constant Rebecque 1773 1850 in Dutch permanent dead link Tornare A J 2003 Les Vaudois de Napoleon des Pyramides a Waterloo 1798 1815 in French Cabedita ed pp 511 512 ISBN 9782882953810 White C 1835 The Belgic revolution of 1830 full citation needed Further reading editBas F de 1908 1909 La campagne de 1815 aux Pays Bas d apres les rapports officiels neerlandais in French vol 1 volume 1 Quatre Bras Vol 2 Waterloo ed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Victor de Constant Rebecque amp oldid 1206731462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.