Admiral of France
The title Admiral of France is one of the Great Officers of the Crown of France, the naval equivalent of Marshal of France.
The title was created in 1270 by Louis IX of France, during the Eighth Crusade. At the time it was equivalent to the office of Constable of France. The Admiral was responsible for defending the coasts of Picardy, Normandy, Aunis, and Saintonge. In times of war, it was his responsibility to assemble French merchant ships into a navy. He had to arm, equip, and supply the ships for the course of the war, and give letters of marque to corsairs. In peacetime, he was responsible for the maintenance of the royal fleet (when one existed). He was also responsible for maritime commerce and the merchant fleet.
During the modern era, few admirals were sailors — moreover, with the exception of Claude d'Annebault, none of them actually commanded the fleet. It must be said that the actual power of the admiral was rather small, partly because of the creation of other admirals (the Admiral of the Levant for Provence, the Admiral of Brittany, and the Admiral of the West for Guyenne), and because of the creation of the General of the Galleys and the Secretary of State for the Navy.
The title, like the title of Constable, had much more political importance (which would eventually lead to the suppression of both titles). It was also a lucrative position: the admiral was allocated a part of the fines and confiscations imposed by the admiralty, and he had a right to unclaimed ships and shipwrecks as well as a tenth of the spoils taken in battle. He also had juridical rights, comparable to those exercised by the constable and the marshal. This was known as the Table de marbre, after the seat of the admiralty in Paris. A second headquarters of the admiralty was established at Rouen, and about 50 other headquarters were set up at various other places around the coast of France. These tribunals judged cases dealing with fishing disputes and any crimes committed in the country's ports.
The Admiralty was suppressed in 1627 by Cardinal Richelieu, who had been named to the newly created post of Grand Master of Navigation and who wanted to bring all naval authority under one position. The position was recreated in 1669, but was now only an honorific title. The first new admiral was Louis, Count of Vermandois, who at the time was only 2 years old. Thereafter, only Louis Alexandre, Count of Toulouse involved himself in maritime affairs.
It was suppressed once more in 1791, restored in 1805 in the person of Marshal of France Joachim Murat. Currently, the most recent Admiral of France was François Thomas Tréhouart, in 1869.
This dignity remains fully valid today as a 2005 law article recalls : "The title of Marshal of France and that of Admiral of France, is a dignity in the state"[1]
Admirals
- Florent de Varennes 1270 - First admiral of France
- Aubert II de Longueval, dead in naval combat in 1283 along the coasts of the Crown of Aragon
- Othon de Torcy : 1296-1297
- Mathieu IV of Montmorency : 1297-1304
- Rainier I of Monaco, Lord of Cagnes 1304–1314
- Hugues Quiéret 1335[2]
- Antonio Aithone Doria 1339[3]
- Luis de la Cerda, prince of Fortunate Isles, 1341
- Charles I, Lord of Monaco, 1342
- Pierre Flotte de Revel, March 28, 1345 – 1347[4]
- Jean de Nanteuil 1347-1356
- vacancy in the office 1356-1359
- Enguerran de Mentenay 1359
- Jean « Baudran » de la Heuse : 1359-1368
- François de Perilleux 1368-1369
- Aymeri VI, Viscount of Narbonne 1369-1373
- Jean de Vienne 1373–1396
- Renaud de Trie, lord of Sérifontaine 1397-1405
- Pierre de Bréban, called Clignet 1405-1408
- Jacques de Châtillon, lord of Dampierre 1408-1415
- Robert de Bracquemont called Robinet : 1417-1418
- Jeannet de Poix : 1418
- Charles de Recourt, viscount of Beauvoir : 1418-1419
- Georges de Beauvoir de Chastellux : 1420
- Louis de Culant 1421–1437
- André de Laval-Montmorency, seigneur de Lohéac and baron de Retz 1437–1439
- Prigent VII de Coëtivy 1439-1450
- Jean V de Bueil 1450–1477
- Jean de Montauban : 8 of October, 1461-1466[5]
- Louis de Bourbon, comte de Roussillon, bastard son of Charles I, Duke of Bourbon 1466-1486
- Charles II d'Amboise 1508–1511
- Louis Malet de Graville 1511-1516
- Guillaume Gouffier, seigneur de Bonnivet 1517–1525
- Philippe de Chabot called Amiral de Brion " 1525–1543
- Claude d'Annebault 1543–1552
- Gaspard de Coligny 1552–1572
- Charles, Duke of Mayenne1578-1582
- Anne de Joyeuse 1582–1587
- Jean Louis de Nogaret de La Valette 1587-1589
- Antoine de Brichanteau, marquis de Nangis 1589-1590
- Bernard de Nogaret 1589-1592
- Charles de Gontaut, duc de Biron 1592–1594
- André de Brancas 1594–1595
- Charles de Montmorency-Damville, duc de Damville : 1596-1612
- Henri II de Montmorency 1612-1626
Period of grand masters of navigation :
- Cardinal Richelieu 1626-1642
- Jean Armand de Maillé-Brézé 1642-1646
- Anne of Austria 1646-1650
- César, Duke of Vendôme 1651–1665
Restoration of title Admiral of France
- Louis, Count of Vermandois 1669–1683
- Louis Alexandre, Count of Toulouse 1683–1737
- Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre 1737–1789
- Charles Hector d'Estaing : 1792
- Joachim Murat 1805–1814
- Louis-Antoine d’Artois, Duke of Angoulême : 1814-1830
- Guy-Victor Duperré : 1830
- Laurent Truguet 1831
- Albin Roussin 1840–1847
- Ange René Armand 1847-1854[6]
- Charles Baudin 1854
- Ferdinand-Alphonse Hamelin 1854
- Alexandre Ferdinand Parseval-Deschenes December 2, 1854
- Armand Joseph Bruat 1855
- Joseph Romain-Desfossés 1860
- Charles Rigault de Genouilly 1864
- Léonard Charner 1864
- François Thomas Tréhouart 1869
English admirals
Henry VI of England appointed two English aristocrats during the ministrations of Louis de Culant and André de Laval-Montmorency. Accordingly, they were not recognized by the Kingdom of France.
- William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk 1424-1437 (during the ministration of Louis de Culant)
- Edward de Courtenay : 1439 (during the ministration of André de Laval-Montmorency)
References
- ↑ Article 19 of Law No. 2005-270 of 24 March 2005 on the general status of militaries
- ↑ Ernest Prarond Histoire de cinq villes et de trois cents villages, hameaux et fermes, T.2, p.272, 1863
- ↑ Froissart's Chronicles, T.2, 1824, p.29
- ↑ Anselme de Sainte-Marie, Histoire généalogique de la maison royale de la France et des grands officiers de la couronne, p.752
- ↑ Musée national de Versailles Galeries historiques du Palais de Versailles, book 7, p. 102, Imprimerie royale, 1842
- ↑ Ernest Lehr, L'Alsace noble: suivie de Le livre d'or du patriciat de Strasbourg, Volumes 1 to 3, p.336
Sources
- B. Barbiche, Les institutions de la monarchie française à l'époque moderne, Presses universitaires de France, 1999.
- Musée national de Versailles Galeries historiques du Palais de Versailles, book 7, Imprimerie royale, 1842.
- Philippe Le Bas, France dictionnaire encyclopedique, tome 1, A-AZ, 1810.