Charlotte Corday - The Napoleon Series

Transcription

Charlotte Corday - The Napoleon Series
The Napoleon Series
Charlotte Corday was born in Argentan, July 27th, 1768. She was the fourth child
in a poor noble family. Her mother died when Corday was 13. The Abbess of the Abbaye
aux Dames at Caen, a friend of her mother’s, took charge of Corday and her younger sister,
and brought the girls to live in the convent. There, Corday received an education and
enjoyed reading the works of Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Guillaume Raynal.
These works made her passionate about politics in France.
In 1790, convents were closed as part of the revolutionary process to dechristianize
France.1 Corday went to live with her cousin in Caen, where she had more freedom to
plunge into readings and discuss politics. She listened to the Girondins2 speeches and grew
very fond of the Girondist groups in Caen. She respected them and believed the Girondist
Party would ultimately save France. Gradually, though, the Girondin’s moderate approach
to revolution lost influence, especially when France went to war with other European
countries in 1792. The war did not go well, and other groups in the National Convention
began to undermine Girondin authority.
1
The dechristianization of France occurred over several years during the early Revolution.
National Constituent Assembly was formed from the Estates General, the parliament of France. It was
followed by the Legislative Assembly (October 1791 to September 1792) and the National Convention
(1792 to 1795).
2
Girondin: also known as Brissotin , a republican group which took moderate approach in
revolutionary France, it did not support the execution of Louis XVI.
During Reign of Terror,3 the Jacobin4 party executed many Girondins by guillotine
under the pretense that they were enemies of revolution. Jean-Paul Marat was a leading
member of the radical Jacobin faction. As a journalist, he exerted influence through his
newspaper, L'Ami du peuple ("The Friend of the People") and successfully instigated
events like the September Massacre and the bread insurrection. Marat and Corday were
ideological opposites.
3
Reign of Terror: Conflicts between Jacobin and Girondin after Louis XVI died. Revolution
government decided to take harsh measure against suspected enemies of the Revolution
4
Jacobin: also known as Montagnard, a republican group which took moderate approach in
revolutionary France, they wanted to create revolutionary dictatorship and a strong central government.
As a Girondist sympathizer, Corday strongly opposed the Reign of Terror and she
held Marat most responsible for the deaths of Girondins. She believed that Marat was a big
threat to the Republic, and that his death would terminate the violence in France. Fearing
an all-out civil war, she decided to take action.
On the 9th of July, 1793, Corday went to Paris and bought a six-inch kitchen
knife. Upon arriving in Paris she discovered that Marat no longer attended party
meetings because he had an incurable skin disease. Marat had to soak in a bath of
medicinal herbs all day.
Corday went to Marat’s home, but was turned away by Marat’s wife, Simmone
Evrard, twice. To gain access to Marat, in the evening, Corday brought a list of the names
of Girondins, and told Simmone she was there to betray the Girondins. Marat agreed to
meet her.
Marat worked from a bathtub because of his debilitating skin condition. While
Marat was writing down the names of the Girondists that Corday provided, Corday pulled
out the knife and plunged it into his chest. She had succeeded. Marat was murdered in
his bath.
Marat became a martyr and he received a hero’s funeral, which became one of the
greatest propaganda events during the Reign of Terror. Marat's assassination was
his apotheosis. The painter Jacques-Louis David painted his Death of Marat, which
beautified Marat’s diseased skin in order to glorify his figure, his role in the Revolution,
and his death.
In contrast, Corday was captured and imprisoned at the Conciergerie, the
antechamber to the guillotine. She was executed by guillotine only four days after she killed
Marat, on the 17th of July, 1793. At the trial, Corday did not show any regret and testified
she carried out the assassination alone. She justified her act, saying,’ I killed one man to
save 10,000’.
Public opinion on Charlotte Corday varied. People from outside of France tended
to admire her but people in France consider her a villain. She was the second most hated
woman after Marie Antoinette in revolutionary France. The French doubt her decision to
target a dying man to bring peace to the Nation.
Also, Corday’s act led to more deaths, rather than ending the violence as she
wanted. Since Jacobins believed Girondins were plotting with Corday to murder Marat,
even though this collaboration was never proven. By the end of 1793, most of the
Girondin deputies to the National Convention had been executed.
Despite Corday’s negative reputation within France, she is remembered for her
bravery and determination to act. Even though she was a woman, who were often
considered uneducated and unpolitical, and were only good for raising children and
cooking during that time. It was unprecedented that young woman like Corday would
take a political stance and assassinate an influential person. Corday's act turned the
attention of the revolutionary French government towards the growing demands of
women’s liberation. Her action impacted Europe in a whole, inspiring women to stand up
and fight for their freedom.
Corday had a large influence on the revolution. Many artists created work about
her in memory of her spirit. Writer Alphonse de Lamartine gave Corday the posthumous
nickname l'ange de l'assassinat (the Angel of Assassination), as a testament of her
bravery.
Bibliography
Primary Sources (Document collections, autobiographies, etc)
Alstine, Jeannette V. Charlotte Corday. London: W. H. Allen, 1890. Print.
Perez, Damien, and Sophie Ricaume. L'ordre Du Chaos. Paris: Delcourt, 2014. Print.
Books (Secondary sources, biographies, textbooks, etc)
Whitham, J. Mills. Men and Women of the French Revolution. Freeport, NY: for
Libraries, 1968. Print.
Montfort-Howard, Catherine. Literate Women and the French Revolution of 1789.
Birmingham, Ala.: Summa Publications, 1994. Print.
Journal Articles, Book Chapters (scholarly journals)
Towle, Sarah. "Charlotte Corday and the Bathtub Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat."
France Revisited Life in Paris Travel in France Charlotte Corday and the Bathtub
Assassination of JeanPaul Marat Comments. N.p., 31 July 2012. Web. 01 Apr. 2015.
<http://francerevisited.com/2012/07/charlotte-corday-and-the-bathtub-assassination-ofjean-paul-marat/>.
Newspapers
Frye, Patrick. "Assassin’s Creed 5: Female Assassin Like Charlotte Corday Would Make
The French Revolution Real For AC5." The Inquisitr News. 21 June 2014. Web. 23 Feb.
2015.
"Mad. Marie Ann Char. Corday." London Times 10 Aug. 1793: 2. 17 Feb. 2000. Web. 1
Apr. 2015. <http://oldsite.english.ucsb.edu/faculty/ayliu/research/around-1800/FR/times8-10-1793.html>.
"France." London Times 30 July 1793: 3. 17 Feb. 2000. Web. 1 Apr. 2015.
<http://oldsite.english.ucsb.edu/faculty/ayliu/research/around-1800/FR/times-7-301793.html>.
Websites
Golding, Dan. "Notes on Ubisoft's Charlotte Corday." Dan Golding — Notes on Ubisoft’s
Charlotte Corday. 13 June 2014. Web. 23 Feb. 2015.
Video
Charlotte Corday A-t-elle Assassiné Marat. Secrets D'Histoire, 30 Jan. 2015. Web. 1 Apr.
2015. <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_2ih2wsgDY>.
Placed on the Napoleon Series: May 2015