Pichegru, Charles

Pichegru, Charles

▪ French general
in full  Jean-Charles Pichegru  
born February 16, 1761, near Arbois, France
died April 5, 1804, Paris
 general of the French Revolutionary Wars (French revolutionary and Napoleonic wars) who played a leading role in the conquest of the Austrian Netherlands and Holland (1794–95); he subsequently ruined his reputation by conspiring with counterrevolutionaries (1795) and against Napoleon Bonaparte (Napoleon I) (1804).

      Born into a peasant family, Pichegru taught mathematics at the military academy at Brienne before he joined an artillery regiment in 1780. He was sergeant major at the outbreak of the Revolution in 1789 and in 1792 became lieutenant colonel. Appointed commander of the Army of the Rhine in October 1793, he helped General Lazare Hoche (Hoche, Lazare) drive the Austro-Prussian armies from Alsace in December. Nevertheless, Pichegru was jealous of Hoche. By convincing the government that Hoche was a traitor, he managed to have his rival imprisoned (March 1794). Pichegru was given command of the 150,000 troops of the Army of the North.

      In April 1794, Pichegru and General Jean-Baptiste Jourdan (Jourdan, Jean-Baptiste, Count), commander of the Army of the Moselle, launched an invasion of the Austrian Netherlands, capturing Amsterdam by January 1795. Returning to Paris, Pichegru was hailed as a saviour of his country. Although he was appointed commander of the Armies of the Rhine and Moselle in mid-1795, he had already begun to turn against France's republican regime. He initiated secret contacts with agents of French émigrés in August.

      In March 1796, Pichegru resigned his commission. Elected president of the Council of Five Hundred (the lower chamber of the legislature) in May 1797, he sided with the royalist deputies. Nevertheless, word of his previous treasonable contacts reached Paris, and, when the royalists were expelled from the government in the coup d'état of 18 Fructidor, year V (September 4, 1797), Pichegru was arrested and deported to French Guiana.

      Escaping, Pichegru made his way to Germany, then to England. In January 1804 he secretly entered France and began plotting to overthrow Bonaparte's military regime. Arrested in Paris on February 28, he was found strangled with his cravat in Temple prison on April 5; it is not known whether he was murdered or committed suicide.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Pichegru, Charles — (1761 1804)    military figure    Born in Arbois, Charles Pichegru, who fought in the American war of Independence, served during the revolution of 1789 as commander in chief of the Army of the Rhine and later of the Army of the North, conquering …   France. A reference guide from Renaissance to the Present

  • PICHEGRU, CHARLES —    French general, born at Arbois, in Jura; served with distinguished success in the army of the Republic on the Rhine and in the Netherlands, but sold himself to the Bourbons, and being convicted of treason, was deported to Cayenne, but escaped… …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Charles Pichegru — Pichegru was a distinguished French general of the Revolutionary Wars. He overran Belgium and Holland before fighting on the Rhine front. His subsequent involvement in a royalist conspiracy to remove Napoleon from power led to his arrest and… …   Wikipedia

  • Pichegru — (Charles) (1761 1804) général français. Il conquit la Belgique et les Pays Bas (1795), mais se rallia aux royalistes et démissionna (1796). Arrêté (1797), déporté en Guyane, il s en évada et gagna l Angleterre (1798). En 1804, il conspira avec… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • PICHEGRU (J. C.) — PICHEGRU JEAN CHARLES (1761 1804) Fils d’un cultivateur du pays d’Arbois, Pichegru parvient très jeune à devenir répétiteur de mathématiques à Brienne; il s’engage comme soldat en 1780 (contrairement à la légende, Napoléon n’aura donc guère eu le …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Charles François Dumouriez — Charles François du Périer Dumouriez (25 January 1739 – 14 March 1823) was a French general during the French Revolutionary Wars. He shared the victory at Valmy with General François Christophe Kellermann, but later deserted the Revolutionary… …   Wikipedia

  • Pichegru —   [piʃ gry], Charles, französischer General, * bei Arbois 16. 2. 1761, ✝ (Selbstmord) Paris 6. 4. 1804; war 1797 führend an der royalistischen Verschwörung gegen das Direktorium beteiligt. Deportiert, entkam Pichegru 1798 nach England. Sein mit G …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Charles X of France — Charles X redirects here. For the King of Sweden, see Charles X Gustav of Sweden, for the Catholic claimant of 1589, see Charles, Cardinal de Bourbon. Charles X King Charles X by François Pascal Simon Gérard, 1825 …   Wikipedia

  • Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord — Charles de Talleyrand Périgord Talleyrand by Pierre Paul Prud hon 1st Prime Minister of France In office 9 July 1815 – 26 Sept …   Wikipedia

  • Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel — Charles William Ferdinand Duke of Brunswick Wolfenbüttel Reign 26 March 1780 – 16 October 1806 Predecessor Charles I …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”