Peace King
Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia looked with disfavour on the
French Revolution but refused to get involved in the troubles of his large neighbor. His sons-in-law the Count of Provence (who later became
Louis XVIII) and his brother the Count of Artois (who later became
Charles X) fled to the Kingdom of Sardinia during the revolution. The two sons-in-law caused tensions by plotting against the French government, but both left the kingdom by early 1791. Historically, many Frenchmen looked covetously upon the
Duchy of Savoy and the
County of Nice, Piedmont-Sardinian lands which were located on the French side of the Alpine crests. They argued that France must expand to her "natural frontiers". If France acted on this impulse, the geographic locations of
Savoy and
Nice would make them difficult to defend. In July 1791, Victor Amadeus asked the
Habsburg monarchy for help in case France invaded his kingdom. The Habsburgs owned the adjoining
Duchy of Milan. It was tricky negotiating with the Habsburgs since they proved themselves capable of seizing a weaker nation's lands in the
First Partition of Poland in 1773. The French government created the
Army of the Midi on 13 April 1792 and ordered its commander General
Anne-Pierre, marquis de Montesquiou-Fézensac to invade Savoy and Nice by 15 May 1792. Since, his army was not ready, Montesquiou could not obey his instructions, but the Sardinians were aware that the French were getting ready to attack. Victor Amadeus finally got an agreement for 8,000 Austrian soldiers under
Feldmarschall-Leutnant Leopold Lorenz von Strassoldo to help defend the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont when needed. The agreement was signed on 22 September, but it was already too late.
War On 21 September 1792, the Army of the Midi under Montesquiou invaded Savoy. Montesquiou had approximately 25,000 soldiers in 33 infantry battalions, 11 cavalry squadrons, and some
National Guards. He was opposed by 10,000–12,000 Piedmont-Sardinian troops. By 24 September, the French were in
Chambéry. On 29 September,
Lieutenant General Jacques Bernard d'Anselme with 10,000 troops occupied
Nice against little resistance. The French invaders easily overcame their opponents with little fighting because the 70-year old Piedmontese commander General Lazary was incompetent. A fellow general,
Charles-François Thaon, Count of Saint-André wrote, "Our War Office is badly constituted, badly directed and nothing in it is secret". On 1 October 1792, the French government split the Army of the Midi into the
Army of the Alps and the
Army of the Pyrenees. On 7 October, Anselme's force was separated from the Army of the Alps and named the
Army of Italy. At this time, Swiss troops occupied
Geneva and the French government demanded that Montesquiou deal with this threat. He negotiated a satisfactory treaty with the Swiss, but hostile politicians in the
National Convention secured his arrest on 9 November on baseless charges. Tipped off in advance, Montesquiou fled to
Switzerland on 13 November. D'Anselme was sacked on 16 December. Winter weather soon brought operations to a halt. Aghast at the ease at which his western lands had fallen, Victor Amadeus requested that Habsburg Austria send him a commander-in-chief. On 21 December 1792, the Habsburgs sent
Feldzeugmeister Joseph Nikolaus De Vins, a 61 year old veteran of the
Seven Years' War and the
Austro-Turkish War. In December 1792, Lieutenant General
François Christophe de Kellermann took command of the Army of the Alps. Since many units had been sent to the Army of the Pyrenees, the army had only five regular regiments, 30 volunteer battalions, two regular cavalry regiments, and some independent companies. There were 30,000 men on the muster rolls but only 16,000–20,000 were fit for service. In May 1793 the Army of the Alps numbered 45,000 but it was hard to procure weapons for every soldier. The army's left (north) flank was south of Geneva in the
Arve river valley, also called the
Faucigny. Going south, the army defended the
Isère river valley and its upper reaches, called the
Tarentaise Valley; the
Arc river valley, also called the
Maurienne; the
Durance river; and the
Ubaye river. The right (south) flank was anchored by the fortified
Camp de Tournoux. Kellermann proved to be an excellent organizer. During his command tenure, he set up depots with enough supplies to clothe 50,000 men and arm 32,000. These events occurred during the
Reign of Terror when popular suspicion fell upon many generals as traitors. Pierre Chépy, the political commissioner with the Army of the Alps believed that Kellermann was a secret Royalist. Chépy proposed to the Minister for Foreign Affairs that every general condemned to death should have his head struck off and hung upside down with a sign posted on his corpse, "This monster sold himself to the enemies of the country..."
Marie-Jean Hérault de Séchelles and Philibert Simond, the
representatives on mission with the Army of the Alps, opened Kellermann's mail and discovered that the commander preferred regular troops to the volunteers, wanted to hire Swiss mercenaries, and was willing to withdraw from some positions so that he could drill his raw troops. Horrified that their army commander might be a traitor, the representatives, some soldiers, and civil authorities cross-examined Kellermann for four hours. Keeping calm, Kellermann patiently convinced them that he was loyal to the government. A revolt began brewing in
Lyon on 29 May 1793. As early as 8 July, the representative
Edmond Louis Alexis Dubois-Crancé wanted Kellermann to lead his army to Lyon, but the commander insisted on a written order. The leading
Jacobin of Lyon,
Joseph Chalier had a
guillotine sent to that city from Paris. He planned to execute 900 counter-revolutionaries in Lyon, but he was seized instead. On 18 July, Chalier became a victim of his own guillotine. On 20 July, the National Convention ordered Kellermann to put down the revolt in Lyon. The general was reluctant, pointing out that moving against Lyon would cause him to remove troops needed to defend the Alpine border. Nevertheless, Kellermann set out with 10,000 infantry and 3,000 cavalry on 6 August. Eventually, 28,000 troops were required to bring the
Siege of Lyon to a conclusion. ==Battle==