Background
Villars was born at Moulins (in the present-day département of Allier) in a noble but poor family — his father was the diplomat Pierre de Villars.
Villars was born at Moulins (in the present-day département of Allier) in a noble but poor family — his father was the diplomat Pierre de Villars.
Villars distinguished himself as a colonel of a cavalry regiment in Louis XIV’s war against the Dutch (1672–78). He was made a commissary general of the cavalry upon the outbreak of the War of the Grand Alliance (1689–97) between France and the other major European powers. In 1698 he became ambassador to Vienna.
Three years later the dispute over the succession to the Spanish throne brought France and Spain to war with the British, the Austrians, and the Dutch. Assigned to protect Upper Alsace from invasion, Villars crossed the Rhine and severely defeated the forces of Louis of Baden at Friedlingen (October 1702). His troops then hailed him as a marshal of France, and Louis XIV granted the appointment and gave him the command of the French army in Germany. Although Villars defeated an Austrian army at Höchstädt an der Donau in September 1703, he asked to be recalled after quarreling bitterly with his ally Maximilian II Emanuel, elector of Bavaria, who had rejected his plan for a march on Vienna.
Villars was fighting Huguenot rebels (Camisards) in the Cévennes in southern France when the British general John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, and the Austrian commander Prince Eugene of Savoy inflicted a catastrophic defeat on Franco-Bavarian forces at Blenheim in August 1704. The following year he was made a duke and sent back to the Rhine to prevent Marlborough from invading France. He crossed the Rhine in 1707 and advanced deep into Swabia before being forced to retreat.
Appointed commander of the severely demoralized French forces in Flanders in 1709, Villars inflicted extremely heavy casualties on the armies of Marlborough and Prince Eugene at the Battle of Malplaquet on September 11. Because Marlborough would not risk another such encounter, France was saved from invasion. After Marlborough lost his command, Villars defeated Prince Eugene at Denain (July 24, 1712), thereby ending the struggle in Flanders. Returning to the Rhine, Villars captured Landau and Freiburg in 1713 and then concluded with Prince Eugene the Treaty of Rastatt (March 1714), which became part of the final peace settlement of Utrecht.
Villars was a member of the Council of Regency in the opening years of the reign of young Louis XV (ruled 1715–74). At the beginning of the War of the Polish Succession (1733–38) he was given the exceptional title of marshal general of France and sent to attack Austrian possessions in northern Italy. He died less than a year later.
Villars's memoirs show us a fanfaron plein d'honneur, as Voltaire calls him. He was indeed boastful, and also covetous of honours and wealth. But he was also described as an honourable man of high courage, moral and physical, and certainly a very skilled soldier. He was famous for his love for young men as wrote the Duchess of Orleans in her letters.