in 1796, with
Savoy in the
Kingdom of Sardinia. The
National Assembly of the Allobroges, also known as the Assembly of Deputies of the Communes of Savoy, convened in Chambéry’s cathedral in late October 1792. On October 26–27, it abolished key elements of the
Ancien Régime, including the sovereign rights of the
House of Savoy, noble privileges, feudal dues (without compensation), the tithe, and confiscated Church property. On October 29, the assembly dissolved after expressing a desire for annexation to France, contingent on preserving Savoyard religious liberties, a condition the French National Convention did not uphold. François Amédée Doppet and Philibert Simond presented the annexation request to the Convention in Paris. With support from
Abbé Grégoire, the Convention decreed
Savoy’s annexation on
November 27, 1792, establishing it as the Department of Mont-Blanc. Four commissioners—Grégoire, ,
Hérault de Séchelles, and
Jagot—were appointed to organize the department, which was divided into seven districts:
Annecy,
Carouge,
Chambéry,
Cluses,
Moûtiers,
Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, and
Thonon. Between 1792 and 1793, Savoy contributed five battalions of national volunteers to France. involved around 3,000 peasants who revolted in May, declaring, “Long live Jesus-God, long live our king!” Jean Avrillon, a royalist leader from Grand-Bornand, was captured on May 21 and executed on May 29. Rebellious peasants were executed, and their homes burned. The uprisings aligned with
Sardinian military presence in the Alps. In April 1793, King
Victor Amadeus III joined the
European coalition against France, launching a counteroffensive in August to retake Savoy via Faucigny, Tarentaise, Maurienne, and Briançonnais. Annecy rebelled on August 20–21, but French forces, after reorganizing, repelled the coalition. Following the
Battle of Méribel on September 28, 1793, coalition troops withdrew from Faucigny. Until 1796, the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia remained in conflict with France. Following Napoleon
Bonaparte’s victories, King Victor Amadeus III signed the
Treaty of Paris, recognizing French sovereignty over the Duchy of Savoy and the
County of Nice. In January 1794,
Antoine Louis Albitte became the
representative on mission in Chambéry, succeeding Philibert Simond, who was recalled to Paris. Albitte’s tenure ended in September 1794, after
Robespierre’s fall, when was appointed as the new representative by the National Convention. If Albitte fills the prisons, he also sometimes empties them—for instance, when, after observing during one of his rounds the extreme poverty in the
Maurienne, he releases suspicious laborers so they can return to working the land. Gautier and the other representatives on mission sent by the Convention are more moderate. == Religious question from 1793 until the Concordat ==