Arsène Mathurin Louis Marie Lambert was born at four in the morning[4] in Carhaix (Finistère) in the far north-west of France.[2] He was baptised in the town at the church of Saint Trémeur the next day.[4][5] His mother, born Joséphine Maillet, is identified as the owner of a piece of land at Saint-Joseph on the island département of Réunion, east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean.[6] His father, Jean François Hervé Lambert, served as an army officer, and it was presumably as a result of the engineering skills he acquired in the army that he was subsequently appointed to a position as "conducteur des Ponts et Chaussées", involved in bridge and road construction and maintenance.[6]
Arsène Lambert also decided on a military career at a relatively young age. There was nevertheless another side to him. He was deeply interested in the arts and literature. He displayed talents as an artist and sculptor. In his later years he also wrote histories of the wars in which he had participated.
He married, on 11 May 1870, Isabelle Eugénie Joséphine Delisle, a French woman of Cuban provenance.[6]
There followed a six year posting to Réunion between 19 May 1863 and 28 August 1869, where he was stationed at Saint-Denis as a captain of the marines ("capitaine d'infanterie de marine".[8] He was involved in containing the riots that erupted at Saint-Denis in 1868. In 1869 he was promoted again, becoming a battalion commander. Almost immediately after that he became deputy chief of staff, assigned to General Élie de Vassoigne, with the 12th infantry regiment.[2]
With a handful of men Lambert was given the task of organising the defence of the Rougerie Inn which had become a key focus of the fighting and which later became a little museum known as the House of the Last Cartridge ("Maison de la dernière cartouche"). The little force put up an obstinate resistance lasting several hours. Captain Arsène Lambert homself had the honour of firing the final cartridge before the defenders were forced to surrender. The Bavarian commander was so impressed by the courage shown by the defenders that he spared their lives, despite allowing a massacre by his troops of the local population whose support for the French forces enraged the German forces. Lambert was taken prisoner but managed to escape.[9][10]
He managed to escape and reconnect with the French army. He was with the army that on 21 May 1871 entered Paris and regained control from the revolutionarycommunards who had taken over the city, in the chaos following the four month Prussian army siege, on 18 March 1871. Arsène Lambert succeeded in taking control of several strategically important locations including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs building, the parliament building ("Corps législatif (Second Empire)") and the Gare d'Orléans, which was the Paris rail terminus for trains to Tours. (The provisional French government had decamped to Tours in September/October 1870 during the first part of the Siege of Paris.[11] In recognition of his contributions he was appointed an officer of the Legion of Honour, the award being announced on 10 June 1871.[6] The award ceremony took place on 14 September 1871: the honour was physically handed over by his former military commander, General Élie de Vassoigne who had already, in May of the previous year, attended and signed off at Lambert's marriage as a witness.[6]
Third republic
Despite the immediate recognition of Arsène Lambert's heroic contributions during the Franco-Prussian War and the rapid termination of the commune experiment, the French Third Republic was born out of military defeat. For the military establishment that was little to celebrate, which may explain why within the army further promotion came slowly for Arsène Lambert. He was made a full colonel only in 1885.[2]
Five years later, and having become known as a committed supporter of the Republican establishment despite having spent the first part of his career serving the Empire, he became a Brigadier general (général de brigade) at the end of 1888 (or, according to some sources, during 1890[8]) and, in around 1890, "commandant militaire du Sénat".[1]
By 1892 (when he was a witness at a marriage) he was giving his domicile as Quimper,[12] where he was given charge of an infantry brigade ("130e régiment d’infanterie de ligne").[1] Despite a developing arms race among the principal military powers of Europe and continuing colonising activity, both in Africa and further afield, on the home front the 1890s was essentially a decade of peace, coupled with social and economic progress. In 1896, by now aged 62, Arsène Lambert was released from active military service. Within the Legion of Honour his retirement was marked, on 22 June 1896, by a promotion to the rank of "Grand Officier".[6] He was elected to the presidency of two veterans associations, the "Société nationale des vétérans de terre et de mer" and the "Union des sociétés régimentaires".
^Lambert Arsène, « Voyage dans le Fouta-Djalon côtes occidentales d’Afrique (février-juin 1860) », Revue maritime et coloniale, 1861, n°2, pp. 1-51.
^ abc"Arsène Lambert, 23 juin 1834 - 10 janvier 1901"(PDF). Esclavage et La Réunion .... source: La revue littéraires - 1930. The source comprises a succession of mostly two page biographical summaries concerning men involved in the colonisation of La Réunion. Note that when posting the summaries on this (single) web page the compiler organised the individuals by surname / family name alphabetically, thereby over-riding the printed page numbers. L'Académie de l'île de La Réunion & Les Routes du Philanthrope (Le Boucan). pp. 117–118. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
^André Thiéblemont (colonel en retraite). "Comment comprendre la commémoration de combats sacraficiels?"(PDF). Le soldat et la mort, Numéro 35. La revue inflexions, Paris (Impression / printed by le Ministère de la Défense. pp. 147–149. Retrieved 16 November 2019.