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Women Affiliated with the Jacobin Movement in the Face of Bonaparteâs Repression after the Rue Saint-Nicaise Attack
I am not infallible, so please feel free to correct me.
It is generally accepted in historiography that after the attack on the Rue Saint-Nicaise, which targeted Bonaparte, although the royalists were in fact the real perpetrators, the event allowed Napoleon to eliminate the left-wing opposition, more specifically the Jacobins.
Until the Battle of Marengo, Bonaparteâs regime still rested on fragile foundations, but after Napoleonâs victory, he was finally able to rid himself of this opposition. Some historians believe that Napoleon genuinely thought the Jacobins were responsible for the attack. However, I believe that he knew they were innocent and that the attack merely served as a convenient pretext. The proof lies in the fact that even after the real culprits were identified, he nevertheless allowed the repression to continue, as seen in the executions of Topino-Lebrun, Ceracchi, Arena, and Demerville during the Conspiracy of the Daggers, as well as in the deportation of other Jacobins. Some of these deportees were only able to return in 1809, others not until 1814, and some never returned at all; several died as a result of their deportation.
Moreover, some of those deported had already been imprisoned since 1797 (I am thinking in particular of the Babouvists Charles Germain, Cazin, and Moroy), which made it impossible for them, despite their opposition to Bonaparte, to have conspired against him.
But what was the place of women in all this?
I will first highlight the position of those who were imprisoned beginning on 16 NivĂŽse, Year IX, and explain why they were the ones âchosenâ to be incarcerated despite their innocence.
On 17 NivĂŽse, other Jacobin opponents were placed under surveillance, including Antonelle, as well as men such as Laignelot, Cochet, and Ricord. However, the day before, on 16 NivĂŽse, Year IX, an order for administrative detention was issued. This order concerned the arrest and incarceration of certain women.
The imprisonment of women affiliated with the Jacobin movement after the attack on Rue de Saint-Nicaise
I have identified four such women, all of whom had been well known during their lifetimes in the French Revolution: Henriette Simonin, the widow of Chaumette; Simone Evrard, the companion of Marat; Albertine Marat, sister of Jean-Paul Marat; and Marie-Anne Victoire Langlet, widow of Babeuf.
I have not been able to determine exactly where Simone Evrard and Albertine Marat were imprisoned during this period. The only available information is that Simone Evrard was interrogated six days after her incarceration. Here is her interrogation:
Q: Whatâs your name, place of birth, residence? And how old are you?
A: My nameâs Simonne Ăvrard, Jean-Paul Maratâs Widow. Iâm 36 years old. I was born in Tournus, department of SaĂŽne-et-Loire. I currently live in Rue Saint-Jacques n° 674 division of Thermes with my sister.
Q: Why were you arrested?
A: I donât know.
Q: Where were you on NivĂŽse the 3rd?
A: I stayed at home all day long.
Q: Who did you welcome that day?
A: Nobody.
Q: There were people at your place that evening; we saw various people around a table lit by three lights.
A: I had been cleaning the whole day and I finished in the evening, at nine. My sister had only her lamp, she works at the watchmakerâs shop. I went out only to get a litre of wine and I dined alone with my sister. It has been ten years since I welcomed somebody to my place.
Q: Who have you met this month?
A: Only Citizen Tamu, the watchmaker, who lived in Rue de la Barilliere and offered a job to my sister. He came from a small village located near ours, which I forgot the name of.
Q: Who are your neighbours?
A: Citizen Digard, the oven owner. The rest of the building is shared with other women.
Q: When and how did you know of the event of the 3rd?
A: It was the baker who told me the following day that a house was blown up to crush Bonaparte.
Q: By refusing to name the people you engage with, I am inclined to think you met with the enemies of the government.
A: I told you the truth. I do not welcome anybody, because Iâm also extremely poor since I receive only 560 from the state.
Marie-Anne Victoire Babeuf was imprisoned in the Madelonnettes prison along with her son Caius, who was three years old. Her two other sons, Camille (who was eleven) was waiting for her and Ămile (sixteen), was enrolled as boarding student.
She wrote to her eldest son, Ămile, on 20 NivĂŽse, Year IX (that is, 10 January 1801):
In another letter dated 11 PluviĂŽse, Year IX (31 January 1801), she expresses happiness at having news from her son, but asks him to write as often as possible.
Here is an excerpt from this new letter, along with comments by Robert Legrand:
âYou know my sensitivity toward all that remains dear to me in this world. I would take great pleasure in seeing you, but I believe you are already too old; I think permissions are given to small children, and besides, I would rather embrace you freely than there. Try to imagine a dreadful visiting room, me on one side and you on the other. I confess that it would remind me of the memory of my unfortunate fate.â
She wishes that her son Camille not be worried. As a clear-headed woman, she also thinks about letters that might arrive at her address. She says that she does not need money, but adds:
âYou would please me by sending me four melons to revive my appetite, for I assure you that I am quite weary of eating peas and beans. I am very pleased with the good idea someone had of putting a padlock on my shop; that was yet another of my worries⊠Say a thousand kind things to the people who are still willing to take an interest in meâŠâ
As for Henriette Simonin, the widow of Chaumette, I have found no records, no letters, nor any interrogation reports, apart from the fact that she was imprisoned for some time.
Why were these four women imprisoned, and why them in particular?
LenĂŽtre simply states that, in the case of Simone Evrard, it was an unfortunate coincidence that on the evening of 3 NivĂŽse she had lit three candles in her home which would explain why she was arrested . I do not believe this.
In his excellent thesis on Ălisabeth Le Bas, âVeuve de Thermidorâ, @sieclesetcieux makes a very perceptive remark about the arrest of Simone Evrard in 1800, which I will quote here:
âIt is difficult to leave the political world once one has been marked by it: Simone Evrard, the widow of Marat, was arrested and interrogated in connection with the attack on the Rue Saint-Nicaise of 3 NivĂŽse, Year IX.â
Napoleon Bonaparte deeply despised the Babouvists and the very name of Gracchus Babeufâa hostility that was fully reciprocated, as can be seen here:
https://www.tumblr.com/nesiacha/767626191447392256/the-journey-of-the-forgotten-french-revolutionary?source=share
For example if Buonarroti, at the beginning of the Consulate (having been imprisoned since the failure of the Babouvist conspiracy), was able to benefit from improved conditions, this was not due to Napoleon. Their former friendship had long since turned into mutual animosity. Rather, Buonarroti owed this improvement to Napoleonâs brother, Lucien Bonaparte.
One might argue that their imprisonment resulted from the fact that they were âMaratists,â defenders of Maratâs legacy, and from their other revolutionary activitiesâsuch as Simone Evrardâs speech at the Convention, or Albertine Maratâs political letters addressed to the Cordeliers Club and other revolutionary clubs. This is without even mentioning that Bonaparte seems to have harbored a deep dislike for Marat himself. However, I believe it was their links to Gracchus Babeuf that ultimately led to their incarceration.
Marie-Anne Victoire Babeuf played a far more significant role than that of a mere collaborator in the publication of her husbandâs journal. She acted as a liaison agent for her husband, skilled enough to evade the police, a perceptive adviser capable of political cunningâor even deceptionâin order to protect her husband and his allies. Her role was crucial, though far less visible than that of other women, and took place largely in political clandestinity. When her husband claimed that she could neither read nor write, or when he minimized her abilities, this was a deliberate falsehood intended to protect her. Moreover, the simple fact that she was married to Gracchus Babeuf certainly did not help her case. In the context of the Jacobin repression that was about to unfold, it sadly seemed logical that she too would be arrested.
It is therefore surprising that on this occasion she was not interrogated, despite having been accustomed to such procedures throughout her life. I believe this merely underscores how well the authorities knew, at a deeper level, that the Jacobins were innocent in this affair. Had there been any real danger, immediate interrogations would undoubtedly have taken place.
The Role of Women Supporting the Jacobins in the Face of Repression
Faced with this Jacobin repression, women did everything they could to free their husbands or acquaintances from the judicial machinery. Some relied on more conventional methods.
âThey are accused of having spoken insultingly of the governmentâand even if that were true, who does not speak ill of it? Should we then indict all French citizens?â
The public prosecutor remained silent » (Robert Legrand, Babeuf et ses compagnons de route).
âThe wife of the deportee Dufour, residing on Rue Papillon, stands out for the boldness of her remarks; she is a true fury; she constantly runs between brothers and friends; she openly proclaims the imminent success of the Jacobins. This woman was once involved in Babeufâs conspiracy; it was in her home that most of the meetings were held.â
(quoted by Aulard)
Unfortunately, her efforts proved futile. The deportations were carried out, and most of the deporteesâincluding her husbandâdied in exile (in Year X).
Another case should be mentioned in the context of Jacobin repression, although it predates the Rue Saint-Nicaise attack. This is that of the widow Brisset, who sheltered Topino-Lebrun on the Rue de Tournon for an entire month while he was being hunted by Bonaparteâs police. His eventual arrest occurred by chance, demonstrating her considerable skill in maintaining secrecy.
It must be understood that most women suffered from the loss of the Jacobins not only politically, but also economically. Their husbands were often the primary providers for their families, and many households were plunged into extreme hardship when these men were condemned to deportation. One must also recognize the immense courage these women displayed. After the Rue Saint-Nicaise attack, Parisiansâincited by the censored and government-controlled pressâwere violently hostile toward the Jacobins, mistakenly believing them responsible for the attack. Crowds would assault anyone suspected of Jacobinism. To openly support the Jacobins at that time was therefore extremely dangerous.
Nevertheless, the shift toward clandestine opposition to Bonaparte further increased the political role of women. A police report dated 13 Brumaire, Year IX (4 November 1800), shortly before the Rue Saint-Nicaise attack, states:
âThe men scarcely go out anymore; it is the women who spread the news and collect money.â
Women were already playing a political role in opposition to Bonaparte.
âBorn in Mesnil-Aubry (Seine-et-Oise) in 1755. (âŠ) He took part in the storming of the Bastille. In September 1789, he became an officer in the company of the âVictors of the Bastille.â He was appointed brigadier general in the Army of the Coasts on 2 October 1793, having previously come to Abbeville as a commissioner.
âI have just learned with the greatest surprise that my name appears on a list sent to the Central Bureau in order to issue a warrant for my arrest, as an accomplice in a conspiracy that was to break out in Paris in recent days. I solemnly protest, in the name of all that is most sacred, that not only did I have no knowledge of such a plot, but that I attended no secret meeting whatsoever. I therefore defy the wretches who denounced me to provide the slightest substantiated evidence in support of their accusation.â
He added that he had always been in the field during the Revolution, that his health was now ruined, and that he found himself without resources. As a fugitive, he was not arrested. He was nevertheless indicted at VendĂŽme, tried in absentia, and acquitted. Granted retirement pay. Reinstated on 9 September. Retired again in 1798. Reinstated once more on 14 August 1799 for service with the Army of Italy, though he would not depart.â
From my perspective, however, Parein du Mesnil knew more about the Babouvist conspiracy than he ever admitted even though he didn't play a major role .He met Babeuf from time to time, and even if he was not one of the conspirators himself, his colleague Rossignolâwhom he frequently associated withâwas far more deeply involved. At that moment, Parein said nothing against Babeuf or the others, even though doing so might have ensured his own safety.
In his biography of Ronsin, General Herlaut notes that Parein du Mesnil also spent time with Ronsinâs widow, who was a subscriber to Le Tribun du Peuple (later she would become the wife of Turreau, who was the adoptive father of Camille Babeuf, son of Gracchus) and frequently attended revolutionary clubs. She was even an âAmazonâ for the Jacobins, leading them on horseback on one occasion during Fructidor under the Directory. Yet Parein had nothing to gain by associating with the widow of a man who had been executed and never rehabilitated. He nevertheless did so, which I believe stemmed from respect for Ronsin, shared political convictions, and perhaps personal friendship (she, like him, would later rally to Bonaparteâs regime).
At that point, despite everything that could be reproached to himâparticularly his role in Lyonâhe was not yet a political weathercock, ready to abandon his former comrades for personal safety or financial gain. He was initially hostile to the coup of Brumaire, which suggests a certain political consistency.
Even worse, Robert Legrand demonstrates in his thesis, through convincing evidence, that Parein betrayed the trust of the deporteesâ wives, who had come to him seeking assistance. They must have trusted him deeply, knowing him well and perhaps sharing memories from the Babouvist conspiracy or from other traumatic revolutionary events. Another document concerning him states:
In any case, this episode illustrates how a man who had once associated with Babeuf and his companions, and who in his own way had supported them under the Directory, could ultimately turn against them in such a manner.
Source :
Robert Legrand Babeuf et ses compagnons de route
Natalie Petiteau
Victor Daline
Alain Jouffroy and Philippe BordesGuillotine et Peinture: Topino-Lebrun et ses amis
Stefania di Pasquale Madame Marat
Aulard
For the information I have been able to find about the life of Chaumetteâs widow, see here:
https://www.tumblr.com/nesiacha/804044312295964672/the-information-i-have-been-able-to-find-about?source=share
For information on the life of Ronsinâs widow, later the wife of Turreau, see here:
https://www.tumblr.com/nesiacha/794437214869340160/marie-ang%C3%A9lique-lequesne-widow-of-ronsin-and-wife?source=share
For the relationship between Babeuf and Jean-Paul Marat (and therefore with Simone Evrard and Albertine Marat), as well as access to Albertine Maratâs letter, see here:
https://www.tumblr.com/nesiacha/767708756031176704/i-am-so-exhausted-that-i-only-now-realize-that-i?source=share
On the role played by Simone Evrard and Albertine Marat in support of Babeuf during his conflict with Guffroy, see here:
https://www.tumblr.com/nesiacha/780339711912869888/the-collaboration-and-eventual-break-between?source=share
For certain aspects of the life of Marie-Anne Babeuf, see here:
https://www.tumblr.com/nesiacha/771850387276873728/edit-here-is-an-excerpt-from-the-arrest-of?source=share
and here:
https://www.tumblr.com/nesiacha/777915103545786368/the-personality-of-marie-anne-victoire-babeuf-n%C3%A9e?source=share
(which I plan to update).