Eugène Daumas

Eugène Daumas
Born 4 October 1803
Delémont, Switzerland
Died May 1871
Camblanes-et-Meynac
Allegiance France
Service/branch French Army
Rank Divisional General

Melchior Joseph Eugène Daumas (October 4, 1803 in Delémont, Switzerland May 1871 in Camblanes), was a French general and writer.

Biography

Eugène Daumas entered the army in 1822. He became an officer in 1827 and went on to the cavalry school in Saumur. In 1835 he was posted to Algeria, which Charles X had invaded in 1830. But the new colony proved difficult to subdue. Under the orders of Marshal Bertrand Clausel, Daumas took part in the campaigns in of Mascara and Tlemcen. While in Algeria, Daumas learned the Arab language and became one of the French army's best experts on the Arab culture in North Africa. Tribesmen came to respect him for his skills on horseback.

Between 1837 and 1839, Daumas resided in Mascara as consul and personally got to know Abd El-Kader, the Emir of Mascara, who once called Daumas his "friend" in a letter.[1] General Christophe Juchault de Lamoricière, upon becoming commander-in-chief of the restive colony for a short period, created the affaires arabes, the Arab affairs department, and put Daumas in charge of the province of Oran. When Thomas Robert Bugeaud became governor general of Algeria in 1840, he reinstated the bureaux arabes, the main instrument to administer cooperative tribes during in the insurgency, on 17 August 1841. The same day Daumas was named the head of the colony's entire Arab affairs program. One of his explicit tasks was to gather intelligence about potential unrest.[2]

In April 1850 he became director of Algerian affairs in the Ministry of War in Paris. On 14 January 1853 he was promoted to divisional general. On 12 August 1857 he was named a Senator.

Several of Daumas' works were translated into English in the 19th century. His book on horses was particularly appreciated among contemporaries.[3]

Major works

References

  1. "Abd el-Kader on Horseback," in: The Living Age, 1853, April/May/June, p. 643.
  2. Jacques Frémeaux, Les Bureaux arabes dans l’Algérie de la conquête (Paris: Denoël 1993), p. 287.
  3. R.L. Playfair (1878) Handbook for Travellers in Algeria and Tunis, London:John Murray, p.72.
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