Jacques François Coquille (French pronunciation:[ʒakfʁɑ̃swakɔkij]), known as Dugommier (French pronunciation:[dyɡɔmje]; 1 August 1738 – 18 November 1794), was a French military leader during the French Revolutionary Wars.
Early life and career
Jacques François Coquille was born on 1 August 1738 in Trois-Rivières in the island of Guadeloupe, in the French West Indies.[1] He was the son of Germain Coquille, a planter and royal councilor, and Claire Laurent. In 1785, he took the name "Dugommier" after the coffee plantation "Le Gommier" in Basse-Terre, which he bought from his parents in 1768.[2][3] Dugommier began his military career in the company of "gentlemen cadets" of the colonies in Rochefort, at the age of fifteen.[4] He was employed in the naval batteries at La Rochelle and Île de Ré before being assigned to an infantry company in 1758.[1]
At the start of the French Revolution, Dugommier was one of the few planters in Guadeloupe who supported the revolutionary cause. They were opposed to the aristocratic planters, who controlled the colonial assembly and held influence over the governor of Guadeloupe. A long conflict then opposed the two camps.[5] In 1790, part of the troops of the Guadeloupe Regiment, led by Dugommier, participated in three expeditions in support of the revolutionaries of Martinique, but failed to overthrow the governor and the colonial assembly.[5] Dugommier left Guadeloupe definitively in July 1791, in order to represent the interests of the revolutionaries of the colonies in Paris, as a deputy to the National Convention.[2]
Dugommier was promoted to general of division on 3 November 1793.[1] On the same day, he was appointed to succeed General Jean François Carteaux as commander of the army carrying out the Siege of Toulon.[1] Recognizing that the attack plan of a young artillery captain, Napoleon Bonaparte, was the correct one, Dugommier implemented it. He suffered bruises in the right arm and shoulder while repelling a British sortie on 30 November.[1] On that occasion, Bonaparte reported that "General Dugommier fought with true republican courage."[6] On 17 December, Dugommier led the final assault which recaptured Toulon's fortifications, bringing the siege to a successful conclusion.[1]
Eastern Pyrenees campaign
In January 1794, Dugommier was appointed commander of the Army of the Eastern Pyrenees, which was engaged in the War of the Pyrenees against Spain.[1] His assignment was to retake the territory of Roussillon from the Spanish army of Antonio Ricardos Carrillo. He reorganized the army, weakened as it was by the hard combat of the preceding year spent incessantly and fruitlessly storming the Spanish positions. The Spanish became paralyzed by a leadership crisis following the successive deaths of Carrillo and his replacement, Alejandro O'Reilly, to disease, making Dugommier's task easier.
On 28 April, Dugommier was victorious at the Battle of Tech, followed by a success at the Battle of Albere on 30 April. He achieved a decisive victory against the Count of La Unión at the Battle of Boulou on 1 May, which led to the recovery of Roussillon.[1]Port-Vendres was evacuated by La Unión (who had under his command 400 French noblemen of the Légion Panetier) in May. Collioure fell on 29 May after a four-week siege, in the course of which Dugommier was wounded.[1] He repelled a Spanish assault on 13 August in the Battle of Sant Llorenç de la Muga, and retook the Fort de Bellegarde on 17 September (the siege had lasted since 7 May).[1] On 22 September, an audacious attack gave Dugommier the redoubt and camp of Coustouges, putting the Spanish army to flight and capturing most of its equipment.
Dugommier was killed by a Spanish artillery shell on 18 November at the Battle of the Black Mountain. His successor in command, General Dominique-Catherine Pérignon, ended the battle with a French victory on 20 November. Dugommier was buried under a liberty tree in the Fort de Bellegarde on 19 November,[1] and later reburied in Perpignan, where he rests in a pyramidal monument. On 25 November, the National Convention ordered his name to be engraved on a column of the Panthéon in Paris.[1] Napoleon kept his souvenir, bestowing 100,000 Francs to his son for the memory of the Siege of Toulon.
Legacy
His name is inscribed in the Panthéon.
The Boulevard Dugommier in Marseille is named in his honour.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqSix, Georges (1934). "DUGOMMIER (Jacques Coquille, dit)". Dictionnaire biographique des généraux et amiraux français de la Révolution et de l'Empire : 1792-1814 (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Librairie Historique et Nobilaire. p. 386.