- Mont-Blanc (department)
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Mont-Blanc was the name of a département of the First French Empire. It was named after Mont Blanc, the highest mountain in Western Europe. It was formed in 1792, when the Savoy region, (part of the Kingdom of Sardinia) was occupied by the French. The department ceased to exist following Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo when the territory was restored to its former rulers.
Chronology
During the night of 21 September 1792, French troops under General Moutesquiou launched a surprise attack on the Duchy of Savoy, which at the time was a dependent territory of the Kingdom of Sardinia. The king, who was in residence at Chambéry, accompanied by his army, numerous administrators and clergy, fled across the Alps to his Piedmontese lands.
At the end of October, the so-called Assembly of the Allobroges (who named themselves after an ancient people thought to have occupied the region two thousand years earlier) convened in the cathedral at Chambéry. Their agenda followed the revolutionary script that by now was becoming familiar across France, as they declared an end to despotism, forced labour and the hated salt tax. The meeting was dissolved on 29 October 1792, but not before passing a resolution expressing the wish for The Duchy of Savoy to be incorporated into revolutionary France. Two deputies, named Doppet and Simond, were mandated to convey this wish to the revolutionary National Convention in Paris.
The next month, on 27 November 1792, the Savoyards became, for the next 23 years, French citizens, by means of the Decree covering the joining of Savoy to France. This was the document that also created the Department of Mont-Blanc, named after the highest mountain peak in the Alps which then, as now, marked the frontier between France and Piedmont.
In 1798, after the French took Geneva the northern part of the Mont-Blanc département was transferred to the new Léman département. After the first defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte in 1814, France lost Geneva The formerly French department of Léman disappeared and the department of Mont-Blanc seems to have been restored approximately to the frontiers established for it in 1792.
Although the department remained French territory under the terms of the 1814 Treaty of Paris, harsher terms were imposed on France after Napoleon's escape from his Elban exile, and under the 1815 Treaty of Paris the territory covered by the department of Mont-Blanc was returned to its former rulers, and integrated back into the Kingdom of Sardinia.
A little less than half a century later, under the terms of the Treaty of Turin, Savoy was reintegrated into France as part of a deal between the leaders of the French government and the Piedmontese government, being the price of French support for the unification of Italy under Piedmontese leadership. However, the department of Mont-Blanc was not reinstated. Instead, the territory that it had formerly covered was divided between the newly created departments of Savoie and Haute-Savoie (partly).
Administration
The capital of Mont-Blanc département was Chambéry. The département (after 1798) was subdivided into the arrondissements of Chambéry, Annecy, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne and Moûtiers.
See also
- The 130 départements of the Napoleonic Empire
Territories annexed by the First French Empire (1804–1814) 44 départements (now parts of Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Switzerland and Spain) created from annexed territoriesAlpes-Maritimes · Apennins · Arno · Bouches-de-l'Èbre / Bouches-de-l'Èbre-Montserrat · Bouches-de-l'Elbe · Bouches-de-l'Escaut · Bouches-de-l'Yssel · Bouches-de-la-Meuse · Bouches-du-Rhin · Bouches-du-Weser · Deux-Nèthes · Doire · Dyle · Ems-Occidental · Ems-Oriental · Ems-Supérieur · Escaut · Forêts · Frise · Gênes · Jemmape · Léman · Lippe · Lys · Marengo · Méditerranée · Meuse-Inférieure · Mont-Blanc · Montserrat · Mont-Terrible · Mont-Tonnerre · Montenotte · Ombrone · Ourthe · Pô · Rhin-et-Moselle · Roer · Rome · Sambre-et-Meuse · Sarre · Sègre / Sègre-Ter · Sésia · Simplon · Stura · Tanaro · Taro · Ter · Tibre · Trasimène · Yssel-Supérieur · Zuyderzée
Categories:- Former departments of France in France
- States and territories established in 1792
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