Charles Guillaume Vial d'Alais

Charles Guillaume Vial d'Alais
Governor General of Guiana
In office
October 1788 – June 1789
Preceded byPierre François de Mareuilh de Villeboi
Succeeded byJacques Martin de Bourgon
Governor General of Guiana
In office
23 September 1792 – 1793
Preceded byHenri Benoist
Succeeded byHenri Benoist
Personal details
Born(1749-02-12)12 February 1749
Died18 February 1819(1819-02-18) (aged 70)

Charles Guillaume Vial d'Alais (12 February 1749 – 19 February 1819) was a French military man and Governor General of Guiana.

Biography

Charles Guillaume Vial d'Alais was born on 12 February 1749 in Paray-le-Monial, Burgundy, Kingdom of France[1]: 420  to a Protestant and irenic family.[2]

Vial d'Alais entered military service in 1766. He joined the mousquetaires on 17 May 1768. On 29 May 1778, he was named captain of the Infantry Regiment of Picardy, then captain-commander of the first company of foreign volunteers of the navy on November 1. On 1 April 1780, he was named captain-commander of the 1st Volunteer Company of Lauzun.[1]: 420 

He joined the Order of Saint-Louis as a knight around 1781. Under Armand de Kersaint, d'Alais participated in the conquest of Dutch Guiana, Demerara and Essequibo. He distinguished himself during this campaign, and on 16 May 1782, he became deputy commander of Démérary with the rank of major.[1]: 420–421 

On 6 July 1784, he was named major of the Île Bourbon. On 5 June 1785, he became major of Cayenne's battalion.[1]: 421 

First term and subsequent military service

Vial d'Alais was interim Governor General of Guiana from October 1788 to June 1789.[3]: 92 

To avoid abuse, Vial d'Alais enforced work contracts between colonists and Native Americans.[2]

He was promoted colonel on 4 March 1791. He became colonel in the Regiment of Monsieur on 7 March 1792 then maréchal-de-camp on 13 May 1792.[1]: 421 

Second term and later life

In July 1792, the Legislative Assembly confirmed the annulation of the expulsions by the Colonial Assembly of Guiana, that the law of 4 April 1792 instituting the equality of men was to be enforced and that the Colonial assembly had to be reorganized, and thus reelected. To apply these decisions, the Ministère de la Marine named d'Alais Governor General of Guiana.[4]: 37 

Vial d'Alais and the new Civil Commissioneer, Guillot, arrived in Cayenne on 23 September 1792. Unbeknownst to Guillot and d'Alais, the Republic had taken power in France by their arrival.[4]: 37 

Guillot and d'Alais's relationship strained after disagreements on the matter of the returned expulsed, and d'Alais increasingly sided with the Colonial Assembly leaders. After the election, d'Alais ratified the Colonial Assembly's local constitution against Guillot's wishes.[4]: 39–40 

Vial d'Alais ordered refractory priests to take the oath of loyalty to France and the Civil Constitution of the Clergy under threat of deportation.[5]

He was recalled to France alongside Guillot[4]: 40  in 1793.[6]

Vial d'Alais's ship was shipwrecked, and he was taken prisoner by the English. He returned to France on parole on 4 October 1794. He retired on 7 February 1799. He died in Paray-le-Monial on 18 February 1819.[1]: 421 

Legacy

Vial d'Alais was an early French supporter of slavery's abolition. He opposed slavery on moral grounds, but also believed slavery to be economically inefficient due to slaves' work-to-rule. The Human Rights League of Paray-le-Monial gave an exposition on Vial d'Alais in May 2023 and apposed a commemorative plaque at his Paray-le-Monial home on 30 May 2025 [2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f de Courcelles, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien (1823). Dictionnaire historique et biographique des généraux français, depuis le onzième siècle jusqu'en 1820 (in French). Self-published.
  2. ^ a b c "Charles-Guillaume Vial d'Alais (1749-1819) abolitionniste de l'esclavage". Histoire coloniale et postcoloniale (in French). 2025-06-15. Retrieved 2026-02-12.
  3. ^ Costantini, Aimé (1967). "Problèmes militaires de la Guyane française durant la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle". Revue historique des Armées. 23 (3): 80–93. doi:10.3406/rharm.1967.6117.
  4. ^ a b c d Bénot, Yves (1997). La Guyane sous la Révolution (in French). Ibis Rouge Éditions. ISBN 978-2-911390-25-8.
  5. ^ Revolutions, Age of (2019-12-02). "Before Papillon: French Guiana and Deported Catholic Clergy". Age of Revolutions. Retrieved 2026-02-12.
  6. ^ Henrat, Philippe (2023). "GUILLOT Frédéric Joseph". cths.fr. Retrieved 2026-01-23.