Rochambeau, Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de - Facts from the Encyclopedia - Yahoo! Education
Yahoo! Education > Reference > Encyclopedia > Rochambeau, Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de

Encyclopedia: Rochambeau, Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de


Reference
Dictionary
Encyclopedia
Thesaurus
World Factbook
Spanish Dictionary
Anatomy
Conversion Calculator
 
Rochambeau, Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de
 (zhäN bätēst´, kôNt dsymbol rôshaNbō´) , 1725—1807, marshal of France. He took part in the wars of King Louis XV and had been promoted to lieutenant general by 1780, when King Louis XVI sent him, with some 6,000 regulars, to aid General Washington in the American Revolution. He landed in Newport, R.I., and remained there a year because the French fleet was blockaded off Narragansett. In July, 1781, he joined Washington on the Hudson River and the two armies marched south against General Cornwallis. The result was the Yorktown campaign, which ended the war. In the French Revolution, Rochambeau was made (1791) a marshal and commanded the Northern Army, but he resigned (1792) after a disagreement with General Dumouriez. He was imprisoned in the Terror and barely escaped execution. Napoleon restored him to his rank. His memoirs of the American Revolution were translated in 1838.

See biography by A. Whitridge (1965); J.-E. Weelen, Rochambeau, Father and Son (1936).