Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution (54 page)

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43.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 9, p. 623.

44.
Ibid.

45.
Ibid., p. 624.

46.
Ibid., p. 625.

47.
Thompson (1989), p. 182.

48.
Croker (1857), p. 561.

49.
Jones (1990), p. 204.

50.
Carnot’s decree of August 1793,
Archives parlementaires
, vol. 73, p. 121.

51.
Charlotte does not date this trip in her memoirs, but Augustin wrote to Buissart in Arras on 20 July 1793 telling him he had agreed to go on mission; see Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 3a, p. 176. It was during this trip that Augustin and Charlotte first met Napoleon Bonaparte, who later gave Charlotte a state pension of thirty-six hundred francs when he became premier consul; see Laponneraye (2000), p. 113.

52.
Laponneraye (2002), pp. 87–88.

53.
Ibid., p. 94.

54.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 9, p. 539.

55.
Thompson (1939), p. 446; Mathiez (1973), p. 138.

56.
Lazare Carnot and Claude Prieur joined the Committee of Public Safety on 14 August, just over a fortnight after Robespierre, then Jacques Billaud-Varenne and Jean Marie Collot d’Herbois joined on 6 September; see Palmer (1965), p. 4.

57.
Carlyle (1848), vol. 3, p. 277.

58.
Robespierre (1828), vol. 2, pp. 13–15.

59.
Hardman (1999), p. 112.

60.
Archives parlementaires
, vol. 74, pp. 303–4.

61.
Doyle (1990), p. 253.

62.
Croker (1857), p. 263.

63.
Ibid.

64.
Ibid., p. 264.

65.
Le moniteur
, vol. 18, p. 146.

66.
Croker (1857), p. 357.

67.
Thompson (1989), p. 89.

68.
Ibid., p. 70.

69.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 159.

70.
Claretie (1908), pp. 194–95.

71.
Thompson (1989), p. 90.

72.
Croker (1857), p. 564.

73.
Archives parlementaires
, vol. 77, p. 500.

74.
Robespierre (1920), p. 3.

75.
Archives parlementaires
, vol. 77, pp. 500–501.

76.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, pp. 32–33.

77.
Saint-Just (1908), vol. 2, pp. 492–536.

78.
Hardman (1999), p. 114.

79.
Thompson (1939), p. 430.

80.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 8, p. 233.

81.
Ibid., vol. 10, p. 195.

82.
Thompson (1939), p. 428; Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 9, p. 194.

83.
Belloc (1927), p. 281.

84.
Palmer (1965), p. 127.

85.
Le vieux Cordelier
, p. 73.

86.
Ibid., p. 75.

87.
Aulard (1889–97), vol. 5, p. 569; Belloc (1927), p. 284.

88.
Le vieux Cordelier
, p. 14.

89.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 309.

90.
Le vieux Cordelier
, p. 20.

91.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 309.

92.
Aulard (1889–97), vol. 5, p. 603.

93.
Ibid., pp. 601–2.

94.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 352.

95.
Ibid., p. 357.

96.
Ibid., p. 374.

97.
Thompson (1989), p. 129.

98.
Hardman (1999), p. 137.

99.
Hamel (1987), vol. 2, p. 335.

100.
Thompson (1989), p. 129. Williams (n.d.), p. 128, describes Danton’s conversations with prisoners in the Conciergerie.

101.
The source of this story is a friend of a friend of E. Hamel. See Thompson (1939), p. 463; Hamel (1987), vol. 2, p. 337.

102.
Danton (1910), p. 247.

103.
Michelet (1979), vol. 2, p. 753.

104.
Belloc (1910), p. 301.

105.
Saint-Just (1908), vol. 2, pp. 305–32.

106.
There is evidence to suggest that Robespierre’s notes were written in response to an initial draft of Saint-Just’s speech, in which case the collaboration between them was even more complex. See Mathiez (1973), pp. 121–56.

107.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 414.

108.
Desmoulins (1874), pp. 389–91.

109.
Danton (1910), p. 248.

110.
Michelet (1979), vol. 2, p. 745.

111.
Danton (1910), p. 250.

112.
Ibid., pp. 257–58.

113.
Ibid., pp. 259–64.

114.
Ibid., pp. 251–52.

115.
Archives Parlementaires
, vol. 88, pp. 151–52.

116.
Danton (1910), p. 271.

117.
Le vieux Cordelier
, p. 170.

118.
Belloc (1910), p. 336, claims a Mme Gély was the source of this story. See also Claretie (1908), pp. 285–86 (who assumes Danton was thinking of his wife when he muttered “I shall never see her again”), and Michelet (1979), vol. 2, p. 758.

10: Robespierre’s Red Summer

1.
The title “Robespierre’s Red Summer” is borrowed from Richard Cobb. See also Hardman (1999), p. 125.

2.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 426.

3.
Hardman (1999), p. 162; Robespierre (1828), vol. 2, p. 7.

4.
Robespierre, (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 437.

5.
Ibid., p. 444.

6.
Ibid., p. 452.

7.
Ibid., p. 448.

8.
Thompson (1939), p. 530.

9.
Croker (1857), p. 279.

10.
Ibid., p. 279.

11.
Ibid., p. 500.

12.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 471.

13.
Ibid., vol. 3b, pp. 127–28.

14.
Belloc (1927), p. 310.

15.
Williams (n.d.), p. 142.

16.
Favone (1937), pp. 49–50. On the extent of popular support for Robespierre’s new religion, see Vovelle (1988).

17.
Croker (1857), p. 447.

18.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 481.

19.
Hardman (1999), p. 143.

20.
Thompson (1939), p. 548.

21.
Hardman (1999), pp. 154–56.

22.
Ibid., p. 109.

23.
Stéfan-Pol (1900), p. 75.

24.
Hardman (1999), p. 109.

25.
Ibid., p. 131.

26.
Ibid., p. 132.

27.
Ibid., p. 182.

28.
Laponneraye (2002), pp. 106–9.

29.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 496.

30.
Ibid., p. 497.

31.
Croker (1857), p. 401. The original source is A. Lamartine, whose accuracy Croker doubts.

32.
Relying on the Committee of Public Safety’s register, Belloc (1927), p. 315, claims Robespierre was only absent six times during the period between 22 Prairial and 9 Thermidor, but Thompson (1939), p. 540, doubts the accuracy of the register and notes that Robespierre’s signature appears only three times on the committee’s documents during this period.

33.
Croker (1857), pp. 400–401.

34.
Hardman (1999), p. 150.

35.
Archives Parlementaires
, vol. 87, p. 100.

36.
Ibid., vol. 93, p. 553.

37.
Thompson (1939), p. 550.

38.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 519.

39.
Ibid., p. 520.

40.
Ibid., p. 522.

41.
Hardman (1999), p. 139.

42.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 528.

43.
Ibid., p. 529.

44.
Ibid., p. 534.

45.
Croker (1857), p. 397; Hardman (1999), pp. 138–39.

46.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 543.

47.
Ibid., pp. 544–45.

48.
Ibid., p. 546.

49.
Ibid., p. 547.

50.
Ibid., pp. 554–55; Croker (1857), pp. 406–7.

51.
Ibid., p. 560.

52.
Ibid., p. 559.

53.
Ibid., p. 561.

54.
Ibid., p. 575.

55.
Ibid., p. 576.

56.
Croker (1857), p. 413.

57.
Robespierre (1910–67), vol. 10, p. 587.

58.
Saint-Just (1908), vol. 2, p. 477.

59.
Thompson (1939), p. 567.

60.
Saint-Just (1908), vol. 2, p. 332.

61.
Croker (1857), p. 421;
Archives parlementaires
, vol. 93, pp. 553–54.

62.
Archives parlementaires
, vol. 93, p. 555.

63.
Palmer (1965), p. 380.

64.
Croker (1857), p. 423.

65.
Robespierre (1828), vol. 2, p. 72.

66.
Ibid., p. 74.

67.
Ibid.

68.
It was rumored that Robespierre had secretly married Eléanore Duplay with Saint-Just as a witness; see Proyart (1850), pp. 208–9.

69.
Proyart (1850), p. 210; Pernoud and Flaissier (1960), p. 336.

70.
Aulard (1889–97), vol. 5, p. 594.

71.
Palmer (1965), p. 381.

Index

The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

MR = Maximilien Robespierre

 

Academy of Amiens

Academy of Arras

Academy of Metz

Achilles

A la nation artésienne, sur la nécessité de reformer les États d’Artois
(pamphlet)

Alexander the Great

Altar of the Fatherland

American Revolution

bills of rights and

Ami des noirs
(abolitionist society)

Ami du peuple, L’
(newspaper)

Anson’s Voyage Round the World
(Walter)

Antifédéraliste
(newspaper)

Arles, archbishop of

Arras

elections and taxation and

Estates General and

on eve of Revolution

history and economy of

Jacobin Club in

judicial system in

MR elected to Estates General for

MR practices law in

MR visits

shame surrounding MR in

Arras, bishop of

Arras Commune

Artois, Count of (brother Louis XVI)

Artois province

counterrevolution in

atheism and de-Christianization

Audrein, Yves-Marie

Austria

war with

Austrian Netherlands

 

Bacon, Francis

bad blood

Bailly, Jean Sylvain

Barère, Bertrand

Barnave, Antoine

Bastille

Bastille, fall and demolition of.
See also
Festival of Federation

first anniversary of

second anniversary of

fifth anniversary of

Bastille of Artois

Beaumarchais, Pierre-Augustin Caron de

Beauvais, bishop of

Beccaria, Cesare

Becket, Saint Thomas

Belgium

Bentabole, Pierre-Louis

Bentley, William

Bergasse, Nicolas

Bernard, Jacques-Claude

Bertrand, Francis

Bicêtre reformatory massacre

Billaud-Varenne, Jacques

Bonnet rouge

Bouillé, Marquis de

Bourbon alliance

Bourbon dynasty

Bourdon, Léonard

Boyer-Fonfrède, Jean-Baptiste

bread prices

bread riots of 1789

Bréard, Jean

Breton Club

Brissot, Jacques (“Phédor”)

advocates republic

background of

Danton and

expelled from Jacobins

fall of monarchy and

influence of, with Louis XVI

leads Girondins

leads pro-war party

MR attacks

trial and execution of

British constitutional model

Brunswick, Duke of

Brutus

Brutus
(play)

Buissart, Antoine “Barometer,”

Buissart, Mme

Buonarotti, Philippe

Burke, Edmond

 

Cabanis, Pierre Jean George

Cabarrus, Thérésa

Caen Girondins

Caesar

Cambon, Pierre Joseph

Capet, Hugh

Carlyle, Thomas

Carmelites, convent of

Carnot, Lazare

Carraut, Jacqueline Marguerite (mother)

Carraut, (maternal grandparents)

Carrier, Jean Baptist

Catherine de Médicis

Catherine the Great, Czarina of Russia

Catholic Church

confession debate

counterrevolution and

National Assembly debates future and wealth of

tithes stopped

Catiline

censorship

Cercle Social

certificate of
civisme

Chalier, Joseph

Champ de Mars massacre

Charles I, king of England

Châteauvieux rebellion (Nancy mutiny)

celebration of freed soldiers

Châtelet massacre

Chaumette, Pierre Gaspard

Cherubini, Luigi

Chronique de Paris

Cicero

Cietty, Pierre

citizens, active vs. passive

Civil Constitution of the Clergy

signed by Louis XVI

civil war.
See
federalist revolt threat of, in 1790

Clavière, Etienne

clergy

Estates General and

MR defends

National Assembly and

resistance by

Revolution and

Collège d’Arras

Collège Louis-le-Grand (Paris)

Collot d’Herbois, Jean Marie

comités de surveillance

Commission for Civil Administration and Police

Committee of General Security

Committee of Public Safety

created

Dantonists trial and

MR trial and

suspends constitution

Terror initiated by

Condé, Prince de

Condorcet, Marquis de

Confessions
(Rousseau)

Conseil d’Artois (Council of Artois)

Constitutional Committee

Cook, James

Corday, Charlotte

Cordeliers Club

Danton loses control of

fall of monarchy and

led by Hébert

Coronelli, Vincenzo

Correspondence Committee of Paris Jacobin Club

counterrevolution

Courier français

Couthon, Georges

criminal code

Crinchon river

Croker, John Wilson

Cromwell, Oliver

Cunosse, Melanie

 

Dalibard, Thomas-François

Damiens, Robert-François

Danton, Gabrielle

Danton, George Jacques

advocates deposition of king

“audacity” speech by

Champ de Mars massacre and

Cordeliers led by

death of wife and

defends MR

fall of

fall of monarchy and

Hébert opposed by

insurrection of 1793 and

Louis XVI and

on MR

personality of

remarriage of

Revolutionary Tribunal and

September Massacres and

Terror advocated by

trial and execution of

trial of Louis XVI and

voted off CPS

war and

Dantonists

Dauchez, Jean Baptiste

David, Jacques-Louis

death penalty

for Louis XVI

debtors law

Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen

Défenseur de la constitution, Le
(journal)

Deflue, Louis

Delacroix, Jean

De l’esprit des lois
(Montesquieu)

Delmas, Jean

democracy

democratic war

Descartes, René

Deshorties, Anais

Desmoulins, Camille

early censorship of

early friendship with MR

execution of Girondins and

fall and execution of

fall of monarchy and

National Convention and

Paris riots and

Desmoulins, Lucile Horace

Dickens, Charles

dioceses, number reduced by National Assembly

Dubois de Fosseux

Duchesne, James

Dumerbion, Pierre

Dumont, Pierre Étienne Louis

Dumouriez, Charles

Duplay, Eléonore

Duplay, Elisabeth

Duplay, Maurice

Duplay, Françoise-Eléonore

Duplay family

Dupond, M.

Dutch Republic

 

East India Company

Edgeworth de Firmont, Henry Essex

education issue

Élisabeth, Mme (sister of Louis XVI)

Eloge de la Rose
(speech)

Emery, Louis

émigrés

Émile
(Rousseau)

Enemies of the Fatherland Unmasked, The
(pamphlet)

“enemies of the people (or within),”

enragés

equality

Estates General

election chaos

Louis XVI agrees to convene

meetings of

MR elected to

opening ceremony

third estate declares itself National Assembly

Estates of Artois

executive power

executive veto

 

Fabre d’Églantine, Philippe

Fauchet, Claude

federalist revolt

federal republic idea

Ferrières, Marquis de

Festival of Federation

Festival of the Supreme Being

feudalism

Feuillants Club

Fillion, Didier

Flesselles, Jacques

Fleurus, battle of

Fouché, Joseph

Foulon, Jospeh François

Fouquier-Tinville, Antoine

France

declares war on Holy Roman Emperor

fall of monarchy (10 August 1792)

monarchy

monarchy abolished

provisional government of

Republic declared by National Convention

Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor

Franklin, Benjamin

freedom of press

freedom of religion

freedom of speech

Freemasons

French Academy of Sciences

French army

levee en masse and

new federal

French constitution of 1791 (consitutional monarchy)

accepted by Louis XVI

escape of royal family threatens

fall of

written

French republican constitution of 1793

suspended

written and ratified

French Revolution of 1789

causes of

complexity and vividness of

Jacobins as guardians of

Lafayette and Louis XVI and

MR as embodiment of

Fréron, Louis Marie Stanislaus

Friends of Chalier

Furet, François

 

Galileo

General Maximum Law (1793)

general strike of 1793

George III, king of England

Gérard, François

Gerle, Dom

Girondins

constitution and

Danton and

expelled from National Convention

execution of

Lyon revolt and

Marat assassination and

Paine and

private property and

trial of Louis XVI and

Gobel, Jean-Baptiste-Joseph

Goethe, Johan Wofgang von

Gossec, François-Joseph

Gouges, Olympe de

Gouvon, Geneviève

Gracchus
(play)

Gravier, Claude

Great Britain

war with

Greece, ancient

Grenoble riots

Gresset, Jean Baptiste

Guadet, Marguerite-Elie

Guillotin, Joseph-Ignace

guillotine

Guyton, Louis

 

Hanriot, François

Hardman, John

Harduin, Alexandre

Harvey, William

Hébert, Jacques René

Helvétius, Claude-Adrien

Henry, Jean Baptiste

Henry II, king of France

Henry IV, king of France

Hérault de Séchelles, Marie Jean

Hérivaux, abbé

Herman, Martial Joseph Armand

Historic Doubts on the Life and Reign of King

Richard III
(Walpole)

honor

 

Insurrectionary Commune

Invalides, storming of

Isnard, Maximin

 

Jacobin Club of Paris

assassination attempt on MR and

Billaud-Varenne and Collot d’Herbois expelled by

Brissot and

Brissot and Louvet expelled by

Châteauvieux soldiers and

clubs in provinces affiliate with

Danton and

Desmoulins expelled from

elections of 1792

and

expulsion policy established

fall of monarchy and

fall of MR and

Feuillants split from

formed

Fouché expelled by

Girondins battle with

Lafayette denounces

Marat assassination and

Mirabeau and

Mme Roland and

mob violence and

MR addresses, on arming for war and internal enemies

MR addresses, on atheism

MR addresses, on
citoyens passif
and National Guard

MR addresses, on conspiracy after death of Danton

MR addresses, on escape attempt of Louis XVI

MR addresses, on freedom of press and speech

MR addresses, on massacre of Champ de Mars

MR addresses, on patriotism

MR addresses, on religious faith

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