He subsequently held various commands in the
Low Countries, on the
Rhine and in the
Italian Peninsula, where he served as commander in chief up to January 1799. On 6 December 1798, he occupied the Piedmontese capital of
Turin. Resigning the post due to a dispute with the civil authorities, Joubert returned to France. There, he married (in June 1799) Mlle de Montholon, who was the daughter of
Charles-Louis Huguet de Sémonville, and the future wife of
Marshal Jacques Macdonald. Joubert was soon summoned to the field to counter a series of major French defeats in northern Italy. He took over command from
Jean Moreau in mid-July 1799, who remained as his advisor. Joubert and Moreau were quickly compelled to give battle by
Aleksandr Suvorov, at the head of a joint
Russian and
Austrian army. The ensuing
Battle of Novi was disastrous for the French, not only because it was a defeat, but also because Joubert was among the first to fall, shot through the heart by an infanterist of the Ogulinska 3rd Infantry Regiment. Joubert had at one time been marked out as a future great captain by Napoleon, but became just another killed French military commander before the
Napoleonic Wars. After the battle, his remains were brought to
Toulon and buried in the Fort La Malgue. The
French Directory paid tribute to him with a ceremony on the 16 September 1799. A monument to Joubert erected at
Bourg-en-Bresse was later razed by order of
Louis XVIII. Another monument stands in the town of his birth at Pont de Vaux. ==References==