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Catholic and Royal Army of Anjou and Haut-Poitou
Armée catholique et royale d'Anjou et du Haut-Poitou
Type of flag of the Catholic and Royal army, parish company of La Verrie.
Active1793–1800
Allegiance Kingdom of France
Size40,000[1]
Motto(s)Pour Dieu et le Roi (lit.'For God and the King')
Engagements

The Catholic and Royal Army of Anjou (French: Armée catholique et royale d'Anjou) or Catholic and Royal Army of Anjou and Haut-Poitou (French: Armée catholique et royale d'Anjou et du Haut-Poitou), also nicknamed the Grande Armée (lit.'Grand Army'), was the largest royalist army during the War in the Vendée against the French First Republic.[1][2] It was formed and operated in the northern and eastern parts of the coastal region.[2]

The army's mobilization capacity was 40,000 men.[1] Although the unit had permanent organization, it was very loose.[1] The army was organized into divisions that grouped parish companies, with no intermediate units.[2]

The army successfully stormed Saumur on 9 June 1793.[1] On June 12, Jacques Cathelineau was elected the army commander.[1] Then, the highest-level Royalist commanders decided to attack Nantes, but the attack in the end of June failed due to the lack of coordination between the army of Anjou and Haut-Poitou and the army of Pays de Retz and Bas-Poitou.[1] Cathelineau died in the fighting in Nantes.[1]

Order of Battle[edit]

Order of Battle in March–July 1793[3]
Division of Divisional general Strength
Saint-Florent-le-Vieil Charles de Bonchamps, later Jacques Cathelineau 12,000
Cholet and Beaupréau Maurice d'Elbée 9,000
Maulévrier Jean-Nicolas Stofflet 3,000
Châtillon-sur-Sèvre Henri de la Rochejaquelein 7,000
Bressuire Louis Marie de Lescure 6,000
Argenton-les-Vallées de Laugrenière 2,000
Loroux François Lyrot [fr] 3,000

General Staff[edit]

In June 1794, the army's general staff was reorganized:[4]

Role Person
General in Chief Jean-Nicolas Stofflet
Lieutenant General La Bouëre
Major General Trottouin
Chief of Cavalry Rostaing
Chief of Infantry Berrard
Chief of Artillery Bertrand Poirier de Beauvais [fr]
Secretary-general Henri Michel Gibert
Commissioner-General, responsible for civil affairs Abbot Étienne-Alexandre Bernier

References[edit]

Sources[edit]

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