Serving in Morocco during the early days of WWI, Frenchman
Hubert Lyautey
(1854-1934) was recalled to Paris during the last month of 1916 to
become War Minister under Aristide Briand’s government. He soon became
convinced that the planned offensive by French, British and Russian
troops against the German Western Front would be a massive mistake.
Powerless to stop the disastrous campaign, he resigned his office just
three months into the job, returning to Morocco, where he was able to
pursue his interest in handsome young men, especially those under his
own command.
In Keith Stern’s “
Queers in History,” he writes, “The flamboyant
Lyautey made no secret of his admiration for young men. In fact, he went
so far as to claim that he could not work with men unless he had sex
with them first.” French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau noted that
Lyautey was "an admirable, courageous man, who has always had balls
between his legs – even when they weren’t his own."
Though Lyautey preferred handsome young officers as companions, he never
promoted their careers unfairly and was thus able to maintain the
loyalty of the soldiers under his command. They suppressed any
criticisms about his sexual orientation in appreciation of his abilities
as a soldier, administrator, and leader. In 1921 General Lyautey was
made Marshal of France, the highest rank in the French army, and in May
1931, his image graced the cover of Time magazine, which honored him as
an “empire builder” for his work in northern Africa. At the time Lyautey
was considered France’s greatest colonial soldier.
A statue of Lyautrey in Casablanca, which he had helped develop into a seaport:
In “
Heroes of Empire: Five Charismatic Men and the Conquest of Africa,”
Edward Berenson’s chapter on Lyautey in Morocco points out that the
army “was one of the best places for gay men to remain discreet; there a
homosexual could spend his life in the company of young soldiers while
exhibiting the virility and honor seemingly inherent in a military
career.”
As a youth, the only women in Lyautey’s life were his mother and
sisters, with whom he was close. To escape a young woman who wanted
desperately to marry him, he fled to Indochina in 1894, stating that he
was personally incompatible with the institution of marriage. While in
Indochina he served as chief of staff to General Gallieni, who shared
Lyautey’s sexual proclivities. When Gallieni was made military commander
of Madagascar in 1897, Lyautey followed him.
Lyautey wrote admiringly of the naked male body and penned homoerotic
prose about the Islamic, Greek and Ceylonese youths he encountered
during his military career. He liked to dress up in Arab garb and
favored Persian carpets, luxurious silks and porcelain as decorations
for his offices – even his tents.
In one of his diary entries (1886), Lyautey wrote: “...this
sub-lieutenant, who pleases me so much and came from ten p.m. to two
a.m. to warm up my thirty-year-old self with his hot and rich sap...what
a young, vigorous and generous nature! I regret his departure.”
Well, there you have it.
Nevertheless, Lyautey did finally marry at age fifty-five; however, this
union with Inès de Bourgoing, the daughter of the squire of Napoleon
III, produced no children. His marriage was described as a companionate
union, rather than one of love or lust. Writer Douglas Porch (“
The Conquest of Morocco” 1982) relates that Lyautey married primarily to have someone to manage his social calendar.
Upon his death at age 79 in 1934, Lyautey’s body was interred in his
native Nancy before being moved to Rabat, at the request of the Sultan
of Morocco. As evidence of the esteem in which he was held by the people
of France, in 1961 Lyautey’s body was transferred to the DĂ´me des
Invalides in Paris, near the tomb of Napoleon Bonaparte. Lyautey’s
elaborate tomb bears inscriptions in Arabic and French. The remains of
Lyautey’s wife, however, were buried in Thorey-Lyautey, in northeastern
France.