After Toussaint L'Ouverture created a separatist constitution, Napoleon Bonaparte sent an expedition of 30,000 men under the command of his brother-in-law, General Charles Leclerc, to retake the island. Leclerc's mission was to oust L'Ouverture and restore slavery. The French did achieve some victories and Leclerc invited Toussaint to a parley, kidnapped him and sent him to France, where he was imprisoned at Fort de Joux. He died there in 1803 of exposure and tuberculosis or malnutrition and pneumonia. Especially between the years 1800 and 1802, Toussaint L'ouverture had tried to rebuild the collapsed economy of Haiti and reestablish commercial contacts with the United States and Britain. His rule permitted the colony a taste of freedom which, after his death in exile, was gradually destroyed during the successive reigns of a series of despots. Back in Haiti,the native leader Jean-Jacques Dessalines, long an ally of Toussaint L'Ouverture, defeated the French troops at the Battle of Vertières. At the end of this double battle for both their emancipation and independence, the former slaves proclaimed the independence of Saint-Domingue on 1 January 1804, declaring the new nation as Haiti, honoring one of the indigenous Taíno names for the island. Beginning as Governor-General, Dessalines later named himself Emperor Jacques I of Haiti. He exiled or killed the remaining whites and ruled as a despot enforcing a harsh regimen of plantation labour. |  |