Bertrand-François Mahé count de la Bourdonnais
- Born:
- Feb. 11, 1699, Saint-Malo, France
- Died:
- Nov. 10, 1753, Paris (aged 54)
Bertrand-François Mahé count de la Bourdonnais (born Feb. 11, 1699, Saint-Malo, France—died Nov. 10, 1753, Paris) was a French naval commander who played an important part in the struggle between the French and the British for control of India.
La Bourdonnais entered the service of the French East India Company as a lieutenant at 19, was promoted to captain in 1724, and took part in the capture of Mahé on the Malabar Coast (southwestern India) in 1726. From 1735 to 1740, he was governor of Île de France (Mauritius) and Île de Bourbon (Réunion) in the Indian Ocean, but with the outbreak of war between France and Great Britain, he was put in command of a fleet in Indian waters.
La Bourdonnais distinguished himself in the defense of the French outpost of Mahé and the relief of the governor-general of French East India, Joseph-François Dupleix, at Pondicherry; he defeated British forces in two naval actions. His blockade of Madras by sea enabled the French to capture this important port in September 1746. Bad relations with Dupleix, however, exacerbated by Dupleix’s removal of him as governor of Île de France, obliged him to return to France. Although his ship was captured by the British, he was allowed to return home on parole. Arrested in 1748 on charges of corruption, he was imprisoned in the Bastille for more than two years. He was tried in 1751 and acquitted.