Jean-Baptiste Philibert Vaillant
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Jean-Baptiste Philibert Vaillant, 1st Comte Vaillant (December 6, 1790 – June 4, 1872), born in Dijon, was a Marshal of France.
Vaillant entered the French army in 1809 in the corps of engineers. He served in the French invasion of Russia (1812) and the next year became a prisoner of war after the Battle of Kulm. During the Hundred Days Vaillant fought at Ligny and Waterloo. Vaillant commanded a battalion in the 1830 campaign against Algiers. Promoted to lieutenant colonel, he served under Gérard in the expedition into Belgium in 1831.
Vaillant commanded the fortress at Algiers from 1837 to 1838, recalled to France, he was made director of the École polytechnique. Promoted to lieutenant general, Vaillant was put in charge of the building of the Parisian fortifications in 1845 under the command of Dode de la Brunerie. In 1849, Vaillant was given command of the engineers in the French expeditionary corps to Rome. Promoted to Marshal of France in 1851, Vaillant served as minister of war from 1854 to 1859, holding the position throughout the Crimean War, but was replaced following the outbreak of the Franco-Austrian War that broke out in the latter year. In 1860, Vaillant became minister responsible for the Imperial House and in 1864, he was made Grand Chancellor of the Legion d'Honneur. After the fall of the Second French Empire in September 1870, Vaillant was banished from France but was allowed back, returning in 1871. He died in Paris the next year.
Preceded by | Minister of War March 11, 1854 – May 5, 1859 |
Succeeded by Jacques Louis Randon |
References
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- Pages with reference errors
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- Marshals of France
- 1790 births
- 1872 deaths
- People from Dijon
- French military personnel of the Napoleonic Wars
- French Ministers of Public Education and Religious Affairs
- French Ministers of Defence
- 19th-century French politicians
- People of the Second French Empire
- Honorary Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath