Charles de Sales was born in 1625 in the
Château de Sales in what is today
Thorens-Glières, Haute-Savoie, France. His father was Louis, comte de Sales (1577–1654), brother of Saint
Francis de Sales, a noble of the
Duchy of Savoy. Charles de Sales became a chevalier of the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem (Knights Hospitaller) in 1643, and fought in several campaigns against the Turks. He contributed to the defense of
Crete in 1650. In 1651 the
Compagnie des Îles de l'Amérique went bankrupt and
Phillippe de Longvilliers de Poincy persuaded Jean-Paul Lascaris-Castellar, grand master of the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem, to buy the French part of Saint-Christopher Island and the smaller islands of
Saint Barthélemy,
Saint Martin and
Saint Croix for 120,000
écus. King
Louis XIV remained sovereign of the islands, and Poincy was confirmed as governor of Saint Christophe. Charles de Sales was sent by the Order to govern with Poincy in 1657 on the death of the Chevalier
Charles de Montmagny. In 1659 the French and English in the Antilles concluded an offensive and defensive league against the
Island Caribs in the
Leeward Islands. In the event of hostilities being declared between the two countries the union was to continue for six months. The agreement was signed by Governor
Charles Houël du Petit Pré of
Guadeloupe and Charles de Sales for the French, and by governors Roger Osborne of
Montserrat and James Russell of
Nevis for the English. ==Governor of Saint Christophe (1660–66)==