The French Period (1715-1810)
In September 1715, Guillaume Dufresne D’Arsel on the route to India landed on the island of Mauritius to make it a French Colony, ergo re-naming it as “Isle de France”. Nonetheless, in 1721, the French established a concrete occupation. With the coming of the French Governor, Mahé de Labourdonnais, the island started developing effectively.
Under Mahé de Labourdonnais’s governorship, Port Louis was established as a naval base and a ship-building centre and numerous buildings were built which still stands today; from the Government House, the Chateau de Mon Plaisir at Pamplemousses, the Line Barracks. The island was under the administration of the French East India Company which maintained its presence until 1767.
From that year until 1810, the island was in charge of officials appointed by the French Government, except for a brief period during the French Revolution, when the inhabitants set up a Government virtually independent of France.
During the Napoleonic wars, the "Isle de France" became a base from which French corsairs organised successful raids on British commercial ships until 1810 when a strong British expedition was sent to capture the island. A preliminary attack was foiled at Grand Port in August 1810. However, the main attack launched in December of the same year from Rodrigues, which was already captured by the British. The British landed in large numbers in the north of the island and rapidly overpowered the French, who capitulated. By the Treaty of Paris in 1814, the "Isle de France" which regained its former name `Mauritius', was ceded definitely to Great Britain, together with its dependencies which included Rodrigues and the Seychelles. In the act of capitulation, the British guaranteed that they would respect the language, the customs, the laws and the traditions of the inhabitants.