Honorific-Prefix: | Lieutenant General |
Joseph Joubert Charles La Bastide | |
Office: | Governor of Saint-Domingue |
Term Start: | 11 January 1717 |
Term End: | 10 July 1719 |
Preceded: | Louis de Courbon, comte de Blénac |
Succeeded: | Léon de Sorel |
Death Place: | Paris, France |
Allegiance: | France |
Branch: | French Navy |
Serviceyears: | 1672-1722 |
Rank: | Lieutenant General (Vice Admiral) |
Battles: | War of the League of Augsburg |
Awards: | Order_of_Our_Lady_of_Mount_Carmel Order of Saint Louis |
Joseph Joubert Charles La Bastide, knight and marquis of Chateaumorand (or Château-Morand), was a naval officer and colonial administrator French in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He was a governor of Saint-Domingue between 11 January 1717 and 10 July 1719, and Lieutenant-General of the Naval Armies (1 November 1720). He was a Knight of St. Louis, and Knight of the Royal Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem.
He was the son of Annet Joubert La Bastide, Conde Chateaumorand († 1699) and Francoise de Costentin Tourville, sister of Marshal de Tourville. Among his siblings, two are distinguished in the service of the armies of the king of France: Francis Annet Joubert de la Bastide, Marquis of Chateaumorand, and captain, and Jean Francois Joubert La Bastide, Marquis of Chateaumorand, Lieutenant General of the armies of King and head of St. Louis.
Neveu de Tourville, entered the Navy as part of his uncle in 1672, working with his uncle in all his campaigns. He participated in the War of the League of Augsburg and especially on 29 May 1692, at the Battle of La Hogue.
He was named a Knight in St. Louis by the King in 1693, in the first promoción.[1] The following year, he occupies Toulon.[2] In 1699, after the death of his brother greater, Francis Annet, he became the second Marquis of Chateaumorand.
D'Iberville returned to France in 1697, where he was selected by the Ministry of the Navy at the head of an expedition to rediscover the mouth of the Mississippi and Louisiana to colonize the coveted British. Chateau-Morand is responsible for the escort.
The French fleet sailed from Brest on 24 October 1698. After three months at sea, they reached the island of Santa Rosa's face, in Pensacola, Florida, on 25 January 1699, a Spanish city. D'Iberville abandoned to Mobile Bay, and he started exploring Massacre Island, later renamed Dauphin Island. He stops between Cat Island and Ship Island on 13 February 1699, and continued his explorations to the mainland, in Biloxi, with his brother Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville. On 20 April Castle-Morand, who had only come to escort Iberville, took his boat the way of Europe.
In 1702, he became the captain.[3] In the spring of 1704,[4] addressed towards the Strait of Gibraltar. On 24 August the same year, in the naval Battle of Vélez-Málaga, he commanded the Perfect, 74-gun ship in the battle group led by the Comte de Toulouse, admiral of France.
In 1705, his salary was raised to 2400 pounds per year.[5] He was promoted to the rank of admiral in 1712. He succeeds Charles Courbon as governor of Saint Domingue [6] from 28 January 1716 to July 1718. He was replaced on 1 September 1718 by M. Sorel. He rose to the rank of lieutenant-general of the naval forces in 1720.
He died in Paris on 3 June 1722.