Louis de Cormontaigne

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Louis de Cormontaigne
Born(1696-05-04)4 May 1696

Louis de Cormontaigne (French pronunciation:

Vauban (1633-1707) and his principles formed the basis of the curriculum used by the École royale du génie, established at Charleville-Mézières
in 1744.

Life

Louis de Cormontaigne was born in Strasbourg in Alsace, a city part of the Holy Roman Empire until 1681, when it was annexed by France. His family are described as escuyer or esquire, making him a member of the minor gentry.

He married Marie Aimé de Gougon and they had a daughter Marie Antoinette (1749-?), whose husband was Maurice Regnault (1740-?), an official of the Regional Parliament of Lorraine.

He died in Metz on 30 March 1752.

Career

Fort Moselle, Metz in 1838; constructed by de Cormontaigne in 1733

De Cortmontaigne joined the French army in 1713, participating in the

Rhineland campaign, the final part of the War of the Spanish Succession before passing the exam for the Corps royal du génie in 1715.[1] Entry was carefully controlled; between 1699 and 1743, only 630 candidates were accepted, the vast majority relatives of existing or former members.[2]

One of the principles behind the 18th century Age of Enlightenment was the idea that every activity could be expressed in terms of a universal system, including military tactics.[3] The preference for a single approach, a tendency to recruit from within and Vauban's huge legacy meant French military engineering became ultra-conservative. Many 'new' works either used his designs, or professed to do so, which persisted into the late 19th century; Fort de Queuleu, built in 1867 near Metz, was a Vauban-style strongpoint, despite being long since been rendered obsolete by advances in artillery.[4]

Thionville, Moselle
; built by Cormontaigne in 1745-1746 and still in use today

France was largely at peace in the first part of de Cortmontaigne's career; by 1728, he had reached the rank of captain but the 1733-1735

crownworks at Bellecroix, Fort Moselle and Yutz, which he claimed to be adaptations of Vauban's original designs and in 1745, he was appointed Director of Fortifications for the Three Bishoprics.[5]

Unlike Vauban, de Cortmontaigne never commanded a siege and was a relatively junior official for much of his career, only reaching the rank of

Maréchal de Camp in 1748. Although viewed as a competent engineer, his prominence has been attributed to the ability to write clear and concise memoranda, with a wealth of detail; during a debate in 1741 with Forest de Bélidor over upgrades to the defences of Metz and Neuf-Brisach, he 'proved' his designs superior, using calculations he claimed were based on Vauban's principles. As the Marquis de Montalembert remarked after the unsuccessful 1779-1783 Siege Gibraltar, using the same approach he could 'prove' Gibraltar should have been taken after six days.[6]

crownworks
at Bellecroix; the Porte de Sarrelouis

Asfeld managed the engineering corps like an extended family; over the years, ability became less important than connections and after his death in 1743, the

Comte d'Argenson, Minister of War, sought to impose a more structured approach.[7] Much of the detail behind this was provided by de Cortmontainge, including the curriculum for the new École royale du génie established at Charleville-Mézières in 1744.[8] He published very little in his lifetime but after his death in 1752, his precepts were collected and published in three volumes; the first, on the design and construction of fortifications, the second on offensive siege tactics and the third, defensive.[9]

Their publication coincided with a reassessment of French military tactics, partly due to Prussian successes in the War of the Austrian Succession, which was attributed to greater mobility. As far back as 1701, Marlborough had argued winning one battle was more beneficial than taking 12 fortresses; this line was followed by many others, notably Marshall Saxe, the most successful French general of the period, whose work on the art of war, Mes Rêveries, was published posthumously in 1757.[10] The debate increased after French losses in the 1756-1763 Seven Years' War and in 1776, Montalembert published the first of twelve volumes on La Fortification perpendiculaire. A rejection of the principles advocated by Vauban and de Cormontaingne, his ideas were largely dismissed in France but became prevailing orthodoxy in much of Europe.[11]

In addition to the Pont de Cormontaigne, built at

Thionville, Moselle between 1745 and 1746 and still in use today, he is commemorated by the Lycée Louis De Cormontaigne in Metz, while one of the stations on the Lille Metro
is named after him.

References

  1. ^ "Louis de Cortmontaigne 1696-1752". Chemins de Memoire. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
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  7. ISBN 978-0262122580.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  8. .
  9. ^ "De Cormontaigne; Oeuvres posthumes". Antiquarian Forum. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  10. ^ Smith, Bryan L. (Spring 2012). "From Myth-Conceived to Myth-Understood: France's Revolutionary Ordre Profond Revisited".
  11. ^ Delon, Michel (ed), Picon, Antoine (author) pp. 540-541

Sources

External links