Military high command as seen by revolutionary courts in France: evolutions in the judicial doctrine of war
author | Renaud Faget |
journal | RIDP (ISSN: 0223-5404) |
volume | 2022 |
issue | Military Justice. Contemporary Challenges, History and Comparison |
section | Part 1. Military Justice as it was. History of Military Justice |
date of publication | Dec. 22, 2022 |
language | English |
pagina | 55 |
abstract | Between March 1793 and July 1794, when the French armies were undergoing a difficult period in a European war triggered in 1792, no fewer than forty-three generals were brought before the Revolutionary Tribunal and sentenced to execution. Among them, twenty-seven were found guilty for exclusively military reasons. They were not sanctioned for open treason but for decisions taken by military commanders in managing the army. The revolutionaries reckoned that mistakes by military command were not a matter of professional jurisdiction. Therefore, it was the Revolutionary Tribunal which was tasked with appraising the generals’ conduct: in this case military justice was delivered by exceptional civil justice. |