Width Style: | person |
Aristide du Petit-Thouars | |
Birth Date: | 31 August 1760 |
Birth Place: | Boumois, Anjou, France |
Branch Label: | Branch |
Serviceyears Label: | Service years |
Serviceyears: | 1778–1798 |
Rank: | French: [[Capitaine de vaisseau]] |
Battles Label: | Battles |
Battles: |
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Aristide Aubert du Petit-Thouars (pronounced as /fr/; 31 August 1760 – 2 August 1798) was a French naval officer, and participant of the French defeat at the Battle of the Nile, where he was killed in action.
He was born on 31 August 1760, in Boumois Castle, near Saumur. He studied at the Collège Royal de La Flèche, and entered the French Navy in 1778. He participated that same year in the Battle of Ouessant.
He then served in the Antilles, under Luc Urbain de Bouexic, comte de Guichen, against George Brydges Rodney on the 80-gun . He was at the Battle of the Saintes.
He was promoted to lieutenant in 1792. He left that year on board the 12-gun brig Diligent, in search of Jean-François de La Pérouse. In Brazil, he was imprisoned by the Portuguese, but released in 1793. After that he lived for three years in the United States.
Back in France, he was reintegrated—he had become destitute as an aristocrat—and was promoted to captain, commander of the at the Battle of Aboukir Bay, where he died on 2 August 1798. During the battle, his men heavily battered, inflicting casualties of 50 killed, including Captain George Blagdon Westcott, and 143 wounded.[1] [2] After having lost both legs and an arm, he continued to command from a bucket filled with wheat until he died.[3]
His last order was allegedly to nail the flag of the Tonnant to her mizzen-mast and never to surrender the ship.[4] The Tonnant was eventually captured by the British.