On 27 May 1806, the forces of the
Empire of France occupied the neutral
Republic of Ragusa. Upon entering Ragusan territory without permission and approaching the capital, the French General
Jacques Lauriston demanded that his troops be allowed to rest and be provided with food and drink in the city before continuing on to take possession of their holdings in the
Bay of Kotor. However, this was a deception because as soon as they entered the city, they proceeded to occupy it in the name of Napoleon. Almost immediately after the beginning of the French occupation, Russian and Montenegrin troops entered Ragusan territory and began fighting the French army, raiding and pillaging everything along the way and culminating in a siege of the occupied city (during which 3,000 cannonballs fell on the city). In 1808
Marshal Marmont issued a proclamation abolishing the
Republic of Ragusa and amalgamating its territory into the French Empire's client state, the
Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy. Marmont himself claimed the newly created title of "Duke of Ragusa" (
Duc de Raguse) and in 1810 Ragusa, together with
Istria and
Dalmatia, went to the newly created French
Illyrian Provinces. After seven years of French occupation, encouraged by the desertion of French soldiers after the failed
invasion of Russia and the reentry of Austria in the
war in August 1813, all the social classes of the Ragusan people rose up in a general insurrection, led by the patricians, against the Napoleonic invaders. On 18 June 1813, together with British forces they forced the surrender of the French garrison of the island of
Šipan, soon also the heavily fortified town of
Ston and the island of
Lopud, after which the insurrection spread throughout the mainland, starting with
Konavle. They laid siege to the occupied city, helped by the British
Royal Navy, who had enjoyed
unopposed domination over the Adriatic sea, under the command of Captain
William Hoste, with his ships HMS
Bacchante and . Working in conjunction with the Austrian armies now invading the Illyrian Provinces and Northern Italy, Rear Admiral
Thomas Fremantle's ships were able to rapidly transport British and Austrian troops from one point to another, forcing the surrender of the strategic ports one after another December. Captain
William Hoste with his ship
HMS Bacchante (38 guns) had already
captured the mountain fortress of Kotor with the help of Montenegrin forces in early January. After this victory Hoste along with HMS
Saracen an 18 gun brig, immediately sailed to Ragusa. Soon the population inside the city joined the insurrection. The
Austrian Empire sent a force under General Todor Milutinović offering to help their Ragusan allies. However, as was soon shown, their intention was to in fact replace the French occupation of Ragusa with their own. Seducing one of the temporary governors of the Republic,
Biagio Bernardo Caboga, with promises of power and influence (which were later cut short and who died in ignominy, branded as a traitor by his people), they managed to convince him that the gate to the east was to be kept closed to the Ragusan forces and to let the Austrian forces enter the City from the west, without any Ragusan soldiers, once the French garrison of 500 troops under General
Joseph de Montrichard had surrendered. The French under command of
Joseph de Montrichard had less than 600 men left in the entire region after losing over a third of his men who had defected since the war with Austria began. ==Siege==