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Pierre Thouvenot

Pierre Thouvenot (9 March 1757 – 21 July 1817) was a French Army officer who served with distinction in the American Revolutionary War. He fled from France during the revolution but returned under an amnesty and went on to serve in Napoleonic Wars. Thouvenot is most famous for his defence of Bayonne in 1814 and the sortie he made when the war was all but over, which drew criticism from both sides, particularly from the Duke of Wellington, who branded him a "blackguard".

Pierre Thouvenot
General Baron Thouvenot by Antoine-Claude Fleury
Born9 March 1757
Toul, France
Died21 July 1817(1817-07-21) (aged 60)
Orly, France
Allegiance Kingdom of France
 Kingdom of the French
 French First Republic
 First French Empire
Service/branchArmy
Years of service1779–1793
RankGeneral
AwardsBaron de l'Empire
Officier de la Légion d'honneur
Chevalier de Saint-Louis

Early career edit

Thouvenot was born on 9 March 1757 in Toul, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France. He did not join the military until 1779, having spent the previous five years as a geographical engineer. He enrolled in L'école d'artillerie de La Fère, leaving as a cadet in the French artillery during December 1779.[1] He served for a time on the Île de Ré where he became a Second-lieutenant in 1780 before being sent to Guadeloupe. He distinguished himself in Bouillé's attack on St Lucia in May 1781, and took part in the subsequent invasion of Tobago.[2] Thouvenot received a promotion to Lieutenant in 1783 and continued to serve in the Caribbean following the Treaty of Paris. He was promoted to Capitain in 1788 and was made a Chevalier de Saint-Louis (Knight of Saint Louis) in 1791 and was appointed to the foundry at Indret, near Nantes, initially as an inspector but later as the director. Towards the end of 1792, Thouvenot was promoted to lieutenant-colonel and was transferred, as director, to the foundry at Malines.[1]

Exile edit

Leaving naval armament behind in December 1792; Thouvenot returned to serving with the army in the field as the commander of the Belgium artillery and in February the following year, he became attached to General Charles François Dumouriez, as his chief of staff.[2] When, some two months later, a warrant for his arrest was issued by the new government in France, Thouvenot was prompted to flee Belgium. He was captured by Austrian soldiers and imprisoned at Treurenberg. After his release in 1794, Thouvenot sought refuge in the neutral Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg where he remained until an amnesty was granted by Napoleon in 1800.[1][3]

Return to military service edit

Thouvenot returned to France and the military; and with a promotion to colonel, was part of a force sent to Saint-Domingue to combat insurgency by the slaves there and served as Chief of staff to Generals Edme Étienne Borne Desfourneaux, Bertrand Clausel and Jean-Baptiste Salme successively.[1][2] Desfourneaux's reprisals were brutal. After his first major operation, Thouvenot recorded how, over a seven-day period, slaves were hunted down and shot, hanged or clubbed to death.[4]

In recognition of his actions, which included the liberation of Port-de-Paix from insurrectionists, Thouvenot was promoted again, on 15 October 1802, this time to general of brigade, and given command of the artillery of the Army of Santo Domingo.[2] On 10 April 1803 Thouvenot was made the army's chief of staff, but the actions and decadent lifestyle of his commanding officer, General Donatien-Marie-Joseph de Vimeur, vicomte de Rochambeau, so enraged Thouvenot and Clausel that they planned to have him removed.[5] On hearing of the plot, Rochambeau accused the conspirators of stealing supplies and had them both deported. Thouvenot returned to France a few months later having found passage via Cuba.[1][6]

Thouvenot's version of events regarding the Rochambeau affair, was accepted by Napoleon,[7] and in 1805; Thouvenot was sent to the Rhineland, where he joined the second division of the II Corps in the Grande Armée and took part in operations in Prussia and Pomerania.[2] Thouvenot served as governor of Würzburg in the then Electorate of Bavaria, before successively taking up the post at Erfurt in Prussia, and the towns of Stettin and Stralsund, both in Pomerania. While on active service with Louis Henri Loison's division in 1807, he was wounded in the siege of Kolberg, on 14 June.[1]

Military Governor of Guipúzcoa edit

Thouvenot was reputed to be an efficient administrator. That is why Napoleón entrusted him with the government of a key province, Thouvenot was sent to Guipúzcoa, Spain, on 18 January 1808, through which most of the imperial troops entered. On 5 March 1808 Thouvenot occupied San Sebastián without encountering resistance.[8]

In his new position, Thouvenot showed himself as an extremely active, competent and honest professional. He always maintained strict discipline and imposed harsh punishments on the resistance, but he was never bloodthirsty or cruel. His reports reveal an extremely realistic appreciation of the situation, but he never questions the war, the occupation or the chances of success of the occupation. He was the typical disciplined soldier who obeyed orders and nothing else.

When Joseph Bonaparte arrived in San Sebastián in June 1808, Thouvenot sent a report to Paris explaining without any hesitation the coldness of the reception and the hostility of the population.[9] Gipuzkoa priests began a hidden strike. They resisted to celebrate the mass. To resolve the matter without repressive measures, Thouvenot increased the pay of the priests.[10] It was also relatively common for him to give in to the pleas of the authorities or the neighbors to pardon a detainee, or to reduce his sentence.

On 18 July 1809, Thouvenot founded the first Masonic lodge in Spain, the Frères Unis. All the members were French soldiers, but they expected some important figures from the province of Guipuzcoa to join the lodge. The French used this system across Europe to recruit collaborators, but in the Basque Country, a very Catholic region, only managed a recruit.[11]

During these years, Thouvenot rarely saw combat, focusing on administrative problems. On the other hand, he had very few troops. When the British and the guerrillas coordinated a systematic amphibious offensive in July 1809, General Thouvenot did not launch a counterattack, because: I do not have a single soldier to set in motion (...). My forces here do not reach 300 men able to carry arms, and therefore it is impossible for me to send forces against the enemy. It is painful in such circumstances not to have a single soldier and to see the enemy destroy all the defenses of the coast.

Military Governor of the 4th Military Government "Vizcaya" (Basque Country) edit

In February 1810 Napoleon created four military governments, separating Spain from the border regions with France. The 4th Military Government, called 'Vizcaya' actually covered the three Basque Provinces. Thouvenot was appointed governor and created an advisory council in each province, consisting of two owners, two merchants, an accountant and a treasurer. Above these provincial councils there was a council of nine members, three per province, which responded to Thouvenot himself. The members had to be large owners or rich businessmen, be able to read and write and speak French, since Thouvenot humbly admitted that he did not speak Spanish.[12]

Thouvenot tried to attract the population through good administration. He was informed in detail about the situation in the country. He issued pardons, left all possible matters in the hands of local authorities and organized numerous parties in San Sebastian. On 17 April he ordered the creation of public libraries, using the books of the suppressed convents. He appointed official architects in each province to deal with public works such as bridges, roads, hydraulic works, etc. He also took hygienic precautions to avoid epidemics. As an essential element of his government action, Thouvenot created an official newspaper, La Gaceta de Vizcaya, which appeared three times a week. Mixed news, propaganda and official communications. The administrative work of Thouvenot was favored by his stability in the position, since he remained in the same until the end of the war, while other commands were replaced with excessive frequency. For example, Navarra had six different governors during the six years of the Napoleonic occupation. His salary was high and he lived with great luxury at the expense of the Basques, but he never devoted himself to plundering the occupied territory for his own benefit. That puts him well above the average of the Napoleonic military who sacked Spain.

The Thouvenot system of government was authoritarian and centralist, suppressing any municipal autonomy. He appointed and dismissed the mayors. Many of the new mayors had not even presented themselves as candidates, and tried by all means to avoid the appointment, so coveted previously. Military governments had been created expressly to collect many taxes and finance the French army. In 18 months, Thouvenot raised 40 million reais. Raising so much money impoverished many people, who joined the guerrillas.

To fight against the guerrillas, Thouvenot tried to create local collaborationist militia called Civic Guards. They were formed by the mayors and the wealthiest neighbors of each municipality. Some of them caused serious problems to the guerrillas during 1810 and 1811, but by the end of 1811 all had deserted or been disarmed by the guerrillas, often without resistance.[13]

Baron of the Empire edit

In January 1811 Thouvenot government moved its headquarters from San Sebastian to Vitoria. It was a more central position, better communicated with Burgos, Bilbao, Logroño, Pamplona and the Bessieres General Headquarters in Valladolid. This year he was rewarded for his service, being made a Baron de l'Empire (Baron of the Empire) and Officier de la Légion d'honneur (Officer of the Legion of Honour).[1]

In 1812 the harvests were disastrous. 1812 was "The Year of Hunger". In August the food crisis was so bad in Bilbao that Thouvenot organized the distribution of an 'economic soup'. Very few other imperial commands would have even conceived the idea of doing something for ordinary people. The municipalities stopped paying taxes. In Bilbao, the members of the municipality and the consulate of commerce were arrested by order of Thouvenot and taken prisoner to Vitoria, as hostages to force the town to pay the taxes.

During 1812–1813, Basque guerrillas grew in number and organization until they could defeat in open field battle Napoleonic forces equal in number. The French lost control of rural areas and were expelled from the city of Bilbao. This meant a serious strategic threat to the Napoleonic communications, because most of the troops and supplies arriving from France crossed the Basque Provinces.[14] Thouvenot had to focus on protecting convoys of supplies. He showed great skill, cunning, cold blood in this campaign, fighting on many fronts at the same time with insufficient resources. Even as the Battle of Vitoria on 21 June 1813, was about to begin, he found time to attend to the complaints of a priest and order uncontrolled soldiers to stop looting a municipality in Alava.[15]

Battle of Bayonne edit

 
The sortie from the besieged city of Bayonne on 14 April 1814, which took place despite news of Napoleon's abdication having already reached both sides

After the Battle of Vitoria, General Thouvenot joined Marshal Soult's army in the Pyrenees where he held various commands before being appointed General of division on 25 November 1813. In February the following year, Thouvenot was made governor of the city of Bayonne.[16]

On 27 February 1814, having crossed the River Adour, Wellington's army began to lay siege to the city of Bayonne. During the fight for the suburb of St Etienne, which the British required to complete their investment, Thouvenot was wounded by a bullet to the thigh.[17] The British and their allies were slow to start their preparations and had thus failed to force the city to surrender when, on 13 April 1814, news of Napoleon's abdication reached the British lines. Despite having received the news unofficially on 12 April and although it was widely known that a new French government would sue for peace; Thouvenot ordered a sortie which proved to be the last major action of the Peninsular War.[18][19] On the morning of 14 April, Thouvenot attacked the British siege lines with 6,000 men.[20] The French sortie was defeated but with heavy losses on both sides. The Allies lost 838 men, including Major General Andrew Hay who was killed defending the church of St Etiene[18] and Sir John Hope, who was wounded and captured while charging into a melee on his horse.[20] French casualties totaled 905 men, including 111 killed, 778 wounded and 16 missing. The siege of Bayonne continued obstinately until 27 April when written orders from Marshal Soult finally compelled Thouvenot to hand the fortress over to the British.[21]

Thouvenot's actions were condemned by both sides as a needless waste of lives. Particularly scathing was the Duke of Wellington who branded Thouvenot a "blackguard".[18] In Bayonne however a monument was raised and an annual celebration of Thouvenot's "brave" defence still takes place.[22] Sir Charles Colville did not join in the criticism either. He thought Thouvenot to be, "a well intentioned and gentlemanly individual" and suggested that perhaps the sortie had been forced upon him by his subordinates.[16]

Thouvenot was sent back to Bayonne when Napoleon returned from exile in Elba but after defeat at Waterloo and the restoration of the monarchy, Thouvenot was labelled inactive and never served the French military again. He died in Orly on 21 July 1817. Pierre Thouvenot is one of the 660 names inscribed on the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.[1][3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Jensen, Nathan D. (23 February 2014). "General Pierre Thouvenot". Arc de Triomphe info. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e "L'Oublie de la Gloire" (PDF). Press release (in French). Edhisto Editions. 27 April 2011. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  3. ^ a b Corrigan 2001, p. 273
  4. ^ Girard, Philippe R. (2012). (PDF). Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. p. 561. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  5. ^ Girard 2011, pp. 300–301.
  6. ^ Girard 2011, pp. 301 & 306
  7. ^ Girard 2011, p. 301
  8. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, p. 48.
  9. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, p. 57.
  10. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, p. 148.
  11. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, p. 166–67.
  12. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, p. 127–130.
  13. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, pp. 206–209.
  14. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, pp. 272–273.
  15. ^ Sanchez Arreseigor 2010, p. 337.
  16. ^ a b Haythornthwaite 1998, p. 138
  17. ^ Haythornthwaite 2004, p. 61
  18. ^ a b c Heathcote 2010, p. 62
  19. ^ Haythornthwaite 2002, p. 8
  20. ^ a b Smith 1998, p. 524
  21. ^ Gates 2001, p. 467
  22. ^ "Pierre Thouvenot Lorrain oublié". Le Républicain Lorrain. 16 October 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2014.

Bibliography edit

  • Corrigan, Gordon (2001). Wellington: A Military Life. London: Hambledon Continuum. ISBN 1-85285-262-3.
  • Gates, David (2001). The Spanish Ulcer: A History of the Peninsular War. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81083-2.
  • Girard, Philippe R. (2011). The Slaves Who Defeated Napoleon: Toussaint, Louverture and the Haitian War of Independence, 1801 - 1804. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 9780817317324.
  • Glover, Michael (2001). The Peninsular War 1807–1814. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-139041-7.
  • Haythornthwaite, Philip J. (1998). Who Was Who in the Napoleonic Wars. London: Cassel Publishing. ISBN 978-1854093912.
  • Haythornthwaite, Philip J. (2002). Napoleon's Commanders 2. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-345-4.
  • Haythornthwaite, Philip J. (2004). The Peninsular War: The Complete Companion to the Iberian Campaigns 1807 - 1814. London: Brassey’s Almanacs. ISBN 1-85753-329-1.
  • Heathcote, T. A. (2010). Wellington's Peninsular War Generals and Their Battles. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Books. ISBN 978-1-84884-061-4.
  • Sanchez Arreseigor, Juan José (2010). Vascos contra Napoleón (in Spanish). Madrid: Editorial Actas. ISBN 978-84-9739-099-6.
  • Smith, Digby (1998). The Greenhill Napoleonic Wars Data Book. London: Greenhill Books. ISBN 1-85367-276-9.

Further reading edit

  • Six, Georges (1934). "Thouvenot (Pierre, baron)". Dictionnaire biographique des généraux et amiraux français de la Révolution et de l'Empire: 1792–1814 (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: Librairie Historique et Nobilaire. pp. 499–450.
  • Thouvenot, Daniel (2011). L'Oublié de la Gloire... Moyenmoutier: Edhisto. ISBN 9782355150098.

pierre, thouvenot, march, 1757, july, 1817, french, army, officer, served, with, distinction, american, revolutionary, fled, from, france, during, revolution, returned, under, amnesty, went, serve, napoleonic, wars, thouvenot, most, famous, defence, bayonne, 1. Pierre Thouvenot 9 March 1757 21 July 1817 was a French Army officer who served with distinction in the American Revolutionary War He fled from France during the revolution but returned under an amnesty and went on to serve in Napoleonic Wars Thouvenot is most famous for his defence of Bayonne in 1814 and the sortie he made when the war was all but over which drew criticism from both sides particularly from the Duke of Wellington who branded him a blackguard Pierre ThouvenotGeneral Baron Thouvenot by Antoine Claude FleuryBorn9 March 1757Toul FranceDied21 July 1817 1817 07 21 aged 60 Orly FranceAllegiance Kingdom of France Kingdom of the French French First Republic First French EmpireService wbr branchArmyYears of service1779 1793RankGeneralAwardsBaron de l Empire Officier de la Legion d honneur Chevalier de Saint Louis Contents 1 Early career 2 Exile 3 Return to military service 4 Military Governor of Guipuzcoa 5 Military Governor of the 4th Military Government Vizcaya Basque Country 6 Baron of the Empire 7 Battle of Bayonne 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further readingEarly career editThouvenot was born on 9 March 1757 in Toul Meurthe et Moselle France He did not join the military until 1779 having spent the previous five years as a geographical engineer He enrolled in L ecole d artillerie de La Fere leaving as a cadet in the French artillery during December 1779 1 He served for a time on the Ile de Re where he became a Second lieutenant in 1780 before being sent to Guadeloupe He distinguished himself in Bouille s attack on St Lucia in May 1781 and took part in the subsequent invasion of Tobago 2 Thouvenot received a promotion to Lieutenant in 1783 and continued to serve in the Caribbean following the Treaty of Paris He was promoted to Capitain in 1788 and was made a Chevalier de Saint Louis Knight of Saint Louis in 1791 and was appointed to the foundry at Indret near Nantes initially as an inspector but later as the director Towards the end of 1792 Thouvenot was promoted to lieutenant colonel and was transferred as director to the foundry at Malines 1 Exile editLeaving naval armament behind in December 1792 Thouvenot returned to serving with the army in the field as the commander of the Belgium artillery and in February the following year he became attached to General Charles Francois Dumouriez as his chief of staff 2 When some two months later a warrant for his arrest was issued by the new government in France Thouvenot was prompted to flee Belgium He was captured by Austrian soldiers and imprisoned at Treurenberg After his release in 1794 Thouvenot sought refuge in the neutral Duchy of Brunswick Luneburg where he remained until an amnesty was granted by Napoleon in 1800 1 3 Return to military service editThouvenot returned to France and the military and with a promotion to colonel was part of a force sent to Saint Domingue to combat insurgency by the slaves there and served as Chief of staff to Generals Edme Etienne Borne Desfourneaux Bertrand Clausel and Jean Baptiste Salme successively 1 2 Desfourneaux s reprisals were brutal After his first major operation Thouvenot recorded how over a seven day period slaves were hunted down and shot hanged or clubbed to death 4 In recognition of his actions which included the liberation of Port de Paix from insurrectionists Thouvenot was promoted again on 15 October 1802 this time to general of brigade and given command of the artillery of the Army of Santo Domingo 2 On 10 April 1803 Thouvenot was made the army s chief of staff but the actions and decadent lifestyle of his commanding officer General Donatien Marie Joseph de Vimeur vicomte de Rochambeau so enraged Thouvenot and Clausel that they planned to have him removed 5 On hearing of the plot Rochambeau accused the conspirators of stealing supplies and had them both deported Thouvenot returned to France a few months later having found passage via Cuba 1 6 Thouvenot s version of events regarding the Rochambeau affair was accepted by Napoleon 7 and in 1805 Thouvenot was sent to the Rhineland where he joined the second division of the II Corps in the Grande Armee and took part in operations in Prussia and Pomerania 2 Thouvenot served as governor of Wurzburg in the then Electorate of Bavaria before successively taking up the post at Erfurt in Prussia and the towns of Stettin and Stralsund both in Pomerania While on active service with Louis Henri Loison s division in 1807 he was wounded in the siege of Kolberg on 14 June 1 Military Governor of Guipuzcoa editThouvenot was reputed to be an efficient administrator That is why Napoleon entrusted him with the government of a key province Thouvenot was sent to Guipuzcoa Spain on 18 January 1808 through which most of the imperial troops entered On 5 March 1808 Thouvenot occupied San Sebastian without encountering resistance 8 In his new position Thouvenot showed himself as an extremely active competent and honest professional He always maintained strict discipline and imposed harsh punishments on the resistance but he was never bloodthirsty or cruel His reports reveal an extremely realistic appreciation of the situation but he never questions the war the occupation or the chances of success of the occupation He was the typical disciplined soldier who obeyed orders and nothing else When Joseph Bonaparte arrived in San Sebastian in June 1808 Thouvenot sent a report to Paris explaining without any hesitation the coldness of the reception and the hostility of the population 9 Gipuzkoa priests began a hidden strike They resisted to celebrate the mass To resolve the matter without repressive measures Thouvenot increased the pay of the priests 10 It was also relatively common for him to give in to the pleas of the authorities or the neighbors to pardon a detainee or to reduce his sentence On 18 July 1809 Thouvenot founded the first Masonic lodge in Spain the Freres Unis All the members were French soldiers but they expected some important figures from the province of Guipuzcoa to join the lodge The French used this system across Europe to recruit collaborators but in the Basque Country a very Catholic region only managed a recruit 11 During these years Thouvenot rarely saw combat focusing on administrative problems On the other hand he had very few troops When the British and the guerrillas coordinated a systematic amphibious offensive in July 1809 General Thouvenot did not launch a counterattack because I do not have a single soldier to set in motion My forces here do not reach 300 men able to carry arms and therefore it is impossible for me to send forces against the enemy It is painful in such circumstances not to have a single soldier and to see the enemy destroy all the defenses of the coast Military Governor of the 4th Military Government Vizcaya Basque Country editIn February 1810 Napoleon created four military governments separating Spain from the border regions with France The 4th Military Government called Vizcaya actually covered the three Basque Provinces Thouvenot was appointed governor and created an advisory council in each province consisting of two owners two merchants an accountant and a treasurer Above these provincial councils there was a council of nine members three per province which responded to Thouvenot himself The members had to be large owners or rich businessmen be able to read and write and speak French since Thouvenot humbly admitted that he did not speak Spanish 12 Thouvenot tried to attract the population through good administration He was informed in detail about the situation in the country He issued pardons left all possible matters in the hands of local authorities and organized numerous parties in San Sebastian On 17 April he ordered the creation of public libraries using the books of the suppressed convents He appointed official architects in each province to deal with public works such as bridges roads hydraulic works etc He also took hygienic precautions to avoid epidemics As an essential element of his government action Thouvenot created an official newspaper La Gaceta de Vizcaya which appeared three times a week Mixed news propaganda and official communications The administrative work of Thouvenot was favored by his stability in the position since he remained in the same until the end of the war while other commands were replaced with excessive frequency For example Navarra had six different governors during the six years of the Napoleonic occupation His salary was high and he lived with great luxury at the expense of the Basques but he never devoted himself to plundering the occupied territory for his own benefit That puts him well above the average of the Napoleonic military who sacked Spain The Thouvenot system of government was authoritarian and centralist suppressing any municipal autonomy He appointed and dismissed the mayors Many of the new mayors had not even presented themselves as candidates and tried by all means to avoid the appointment so coveted previously Military governments had been created expressly to collect many taxes and finance the French army In 18 months Thouvenot raised 40 million reais Raising so much money impoverished many people who joined the guerrillas To fight against the guerrillas Thouvenot tried to create local collaborationist militia called Civic Guards They were formed by the mayors and the wealthiest neighbors of each municipality Some of them caused serious problems to the guerrillas during 1810 and 1811 but by the end of 1811 all had deserted or been disarmed by the guerrillas often without resistance 13 Baron of the Empire editIn January 1811 Thouvenot government moved its headquarters from San Sebastian to Vitoria It was a more central position better communicated with Burgos Bilbao Logrono Pamplona and the Bessieres General Headquarters in Valladolid This year he was rewarded for his service being made a Baron de l Empire Baron of the Empire and Officier de la Legion d honneur Officer of the Legion of Honour 1 In 1812 the harvests were disastrous 1812 was The Year of Hunger In August the food crisis was so bad in Bilbao that Thouvenot organized the distribution of an economic soup Very few other imperial commands would have even conceived the idea of doing something for ordinary people The municipalities stopped paying taxes In Bilbao the members of the municipality and the consulate of commerce were arrested by order of Thouvenot and taken prisoner to Vitoria as hostages to force the town to pay the taxes During 1812 1813 Basque guerrillas grew in number and organization until they could defeat in open field battle Napoleonic forces equal in number The French lost control of rural areas and were expelled from the city of Bilbao This meant a serious strategic threat to the Napoleonic communications because most of the troops and supplies arriving from France crossed the Basque Provinces 14 Thouvenot had to focus on protecting convoys of supplies He showed great skill cunning cold blood in this campaign fighting on many fronts at the same time with insufficient resources Even as the Battle of Vitoria on 21 June 1813 was about to begin he found time to attend to the complaints of a priest and order uncontrolled soldiers to stop looting a municipality in Alava 15 Battle of Bayonne editMain article Battle of Bayonne nbsp The sortie from the besieged city of Bayonne on 14 April 1814 which took place despite news of Napoleon s abdication having already reached both sides After the Battle of Vitoria General Thouvenot joined Marshal Soult s army in the Pyrenees where he held various commands before being appointed General of division on 25 November 1813 In February the following year Thouvenot was made governor of the city of Bayonne 16 On 27 February 1814 having crossed the River Adour Wellington s army began to lay siege to the city of Bayonne During the fight for the suburb of St Etienne which the British required to complete their investment Thouvenot was wounded by a bullet to the thigh 17 The British and their allies were slow to start their preparations and had thus failed to force the city to surrender when on 13 April 1814 news of Napoleon s abdication reached the British lines Despite having received the news unofficially on 12 April and although it was widely known that a new French government would sue for peace Thouvenot ordered a sortie which proved to be the last major action of the Peninsular War 18 19 On the morning of 14 April Thouvenot attacked the British siege lines with 6 000 men 20 The French sortie was defeated but with heavy losses on both sides The Allies lost 838 men including Major General Andrew Hay who was killed defending the church of St Etiene 18 and Sir John Hope who was wounded and captured while charging into a melee on his horse 20 French casualties totaled 905 men including 111 killed 778 wounded and 16 missing The siege of Bayonne continued obstinately until 27 April when written orders from Marshal Soult finally compelled Thouvenot to hand the fortress over to the British 21 Thouvenot s actions were condemned by both sides as a needless waste of lives Particularly scathing was the Duke of Wellington who branded Thouvenot a blackguard 18 In Bayonne however a monument was raised and an annual celebration of Thouvenot s brave defence still takes place 22 Sir Charles Colville did not join in the criticism either He thought Thouvenot to be a well intentioned and gentlemanly individual and suggested that perhaps the sortie had been forced upon him by his subordinates 16 Thouvenot was sent back to Bayonne when Napoleon returned from exile in Elba but after defeat at Waterloo and the restoration of the monarchy Thouvenot was labelled inactive and never served the French military again He died in Orly on 21 July 1817 Pierre Thouvenot is one of the 660 names inscribed on the Arc de Triomphe in Paris 1 3 References edit a b c d e f g h Jensen Nathan D 23 February 2014 General Pierre Thouvenot Arc de Triomphe info Retrieved 7 August 2014 a b c d e L Oublie de la Gloire PDF Press release in French Edhisto Editions 27 April 2011 Retrieved 10 August 2014 a b Corrigan 2001 p 273 Girard Philippe R 2012 Jean Jacques Dessalines and the Atlantic System A Reappraisal PDF Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture p 561 Archived from the original PDF on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 17 August 2014 Girard 2011 pp 300 301 Girard 2011 pp 301 amp 306 Girard 2011 p 301 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 p 48 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 p 57 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 p 148 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 p 166 67 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 p 127 130 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 pp 206 209 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 pp 272 273 Sanchez Arreseigor 2010 p 337 a b Haythornthwaite 1998 p 138 Haythornthwaite 2004 p 61 a b c Heathcote 2010 p 62 Haythornthwaite 2002 p 8 a b Smith 1998 p 524 Gates 2001 p 467 Pierre Thouvenot Lorrain oublie Le Republicain Lorrain 16 October 2011 Retrieved 5 August 2014 Bibliography editCorrigan Gordon 2001 Wellington A Military Life London Hambledon Continuum ISBN 1 85285 262 3 Gates David 2001 The Spanish Ulcer A History of the Peninsular War Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 81083 2 Girard Philippe R 2011 The Slaves Who Defeated Napoleon Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian War of Independence 1801 1804 Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press ISBN 9780817317324 Glover Michael 2001 The Peninsular War 1807 1814 London Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 139041 7 Haythornthwaite Philip J 1998 Who Was Who in the Napoleonic Wars London Cassel Publishing ISBN 978 1854093912 Haythornthwaite Philip J 2002 Napoleon s Commanders 2 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 345 4 Haythornthwaite Philip J 2004 The Peninsular War The Complete Companion to the Iberian Campaigns 1807 1814 London Brassey s Almanacs ISBN 1 85753 329 1 Heathcote T A 2010 Wellington s Peninsular War Generals and Their Battles Barnsley Pen and Sword Books ISBN 978 1 84884 061 4 Sanchez Arreseigor Juan Jose 2010 Vascos contra Napoleon in Spanish Madrid Editorial Actas ISBN 978 84 9739 099 6 Smith Digby 1998 The Greenhill Napoleonic Wars Data Book London Greenhill Books ISBN 1 85367 276 9 Further reading editSix Georges 1934 Thouvenot Pierre baron Dictionnaire biographique des generaux et amiraux francais de la Revolution et de l Empire 1792 1814 in French Vol 2 Paris Librairie Historique et Nobilaire pp 499 450 Thouvenot Daniel 2011 L Oublie de la Gloire Moyenmoutier Edhisto ISBN 9782355150098 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Thouvenot amp oldid 1152722001, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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