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	<title>Culture&#38;Stuff &#187; Royal History</title>
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	<description>A blog that was supposed to be about all sorts, but is now usually found prancing in the footnotes of (often French, and oftener still Parisian) history.</description>
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		<title>Marie Antoinette on Trial: Your Cut-Out-and-Keep Guide to Reading the Trial, Part 4</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/10/09/marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-4/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-4</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Oct 2011 19:16:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[In the last part of the guide to Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial, I looked at the way she dealt with the completely unexpected and totally secret interrogation which was sprung upon her two nights before the trial proper was to begin. The challenge that faced her on the morning of 14th October was very different. This [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-797" title="Marie Antoinette On Trial: An English Account" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop.jpg" alt="" width="751" height="220" /></a></div>
<p>In the<a title="Marie Antoinette on Trial: Your Cut-Out-and-Keep Guide to Reading the Trial, Part 3" href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/09/11/marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-3/"> last part</a> of the guide to Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial, I looked at the way she dealt with the completely unexpected and totally secret interrogation which was sprung upon her two nights before the trial proper was to begin.</p>
<p>The challenge that faced her on the morning of 14th October was very different. This time there was no dark chamber populated by a few shadowy figures. This time the Great Hall of the Revolutionary Tribunal had been transformed into the great political theatre that was in many respects its prime function, and it quickly became clear that this performance would be standing room only. Every available seat was taken, most picturesquely by the infamous <em>tricoteuses &#8211; </em>a gang of ardent women, like some sinister version of Donny Osmond fans, who attended so many trials and executions that they now bought their knitting with them to help pass those interminable moments waiting for the delivery of a verdict or the fall of a guillotine blade. The atmosphere was probably something akin to a circus, with refreshments on sale and lively, expectant chatter &#8211; especially as most of the Revolution&#8217;s darlings, including spidery Robespierre and hogheaded Danton, were in attendance. Fouquier-Tinville, who would be familiar to Marie Antoinette from the secret interrogation, was presiding as President of the Tribunal, a position it&#8217;s easy to confuse with judge, but as we&#8217;ll see his role was really more that of at best ringmaster and at worst chief cheerleader for for the Revolution. The jury, such as it was, was packed partly with Robespierre&#8217;s cronies and partly with humble but stalwart &#8216;grassroots&#8217; supporters of the Revolution.</p>
<p>Marie Antoinette&#8217;s beleaguered lawyers, Tronson Doucoudray and Claude Chaveau-Lagarde, had sent a letter requesting a delay to the start of the trial, so as to allow some extension to the scant day they had been allowed with their client. This letter had gone unanswered.</p>
<p>When the door finally opened and the guest of honour arrived, it&#8217;s hard to know what the reaction of the crowd was to seeing their former queen, but I&#8217;m tempted to imagine that things suddenly fell electrically silent, for a brief moment at least. As Antonia Fraser points out, perhaps the first thought that went through most people&#8217;s minds was &#8216;<em>That&#8217;s</em> Marie Antoinette?&#8217;. Hidden from public view for over a year, Marie Antoinette was utterly transformed, and it must in that instant have seemed impossible to comprehend that this was the woman about whom legends of luxury, frivolity and beauty had been spun. She was on this October morning nothing more than a frail, sick woman &#8211; far older than her 37 years. She went to the armchair on the witness platform, and the tricoteuses shouted complaints that she was being allowed to sit.</p>
<p>What follows was a truly remarkable piece of theatre that I do <a title="Marie Antoinette on Trial: A Contemporary English Account to Read Online" href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/08/05/marie-antoinette-on-trial-a-contemporary-english-account-to-read-online/">urge you to read</a> if you can. This event represents something that&#8217;s quite rare in history &#8211; a person being forced to confront their own legend during their lifetime, and in some respects an entire era, an entire way of life, being put on trial and condemned. Here I&#8217;ll try to pick out some of the most revealing moments.</p>
<p>&gt; Fouquier-Tinville&#8217;s opening statement is one of the most vitriolic, misogynistic tirades you&#8217;re likely to read for a good long while. It&#8217;s hard not read it without picturing a man spitting in great torrents, with an ever-reddening face. To take an example, early on in the speech, Fouquier-Tinville states</p>
<blockquote><p>it appears that, like Messalina, Brunehaut, Fredigonde and Medicis, who were formerly distinguished by the titles of Queens of France, whose names have ever been odious, and will never be effaced from the pages of history &#8211; Marie Antoinette, widow of Louis Capet, has, since her abode in France, been the scourge and the blood-sucker of the French. (p21)</p></blockquote>
<p>There is never any pretence of impartiality in this trial, and the tone of persecution rather than prosecution is established from the very first moments. Here, Marie Antoinette is placed in a long, spectacular and peculiarly French line of female hate figures. Messalina was wife of the Roman Emperor Claudius, and went down in legend as a depraved, promiscuous woman, who would have even killed her husband had her plots not been discovered just in time. Brunehild was the wife of King Sigebert in the medieval French kingdom of Austrasia. Accused of interfering in politics and the line of succession, her grotesque punishment was to be &#8216;tied to a camel for three days, and to be beaten and raped by anyone passing by&#8217; (in the words of Andrew Hussey) on what is now the rue Saint-Honoré. Fredegund, Queen consort of Merovingian king Chilperic I, is said to have murdered the woman who previously held Chilperic&#8217;s heart in order to ascend the throne, and gone on to plot the murders of her her husband&#8217;s half-brother and his son, her own brother-in-law and several more besides, depending on which version of the story you hear. And Catherine de Medici, of course, is an out-and-out monster in French history, renowned for her deviousness, her duplicity, her political power won by machination and poison that prolonged the bitter Wars of Religion and led her to spark the dreaded <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Bartholomew%27s_Day_massacre">St Batholomew&#8217;s Day massacre</a>.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s highly revealing that Marie Antoinette could with absolute seriousness be added to this list. It makes clear that the hatred of her had become so widespread and passionate that she was already regarded more as a myth or a symbol than as an actual human being, and is also indicative of the level on which the trial is going to operate. There&#8217;s a huge disconnect between the gravity of the crimes implied by these comparisons and the evidence that is to be presented in the trial, indeed it is perhaps precisely because Fouquier-Tinville is acutely aware that he has so little to work with that he feels the need to destroy Marie Antoinette before the trial even begins. Later on in the opening statement he goes so far as to make the palpably ridiculous claim that Marie Antoinette was the driving force behind both counter-revolutionary pamphlets <em>and</em> writings &#8220;in which she herself is described in very unfavourable colours, in order to cloak the imposture&#8221;. There is also talk of &#8220;midnight meetings&#8221; and &#8220;creatures in the armies and public offices&#8221;: language, as I&#8217;ve said before, reminiscent of witchcraft trials. From the outset then, Marie Antoinette is painted as a monstrous, sinister woman forever meddling in politics, leader in fact of a vast and dangerous conspiracy.</p>
<p>&gt; More generally there&#8217;s an anxious, heightened tension to the entire proceedings. At times it becomes perfectly clear that what&#8217;s at stake is as much the fate of the Revolution as Marie Antoinette. So we have the odd spectacle of witnesses seemingly included more to incriminate themselves than to shed any useful light on the case in hand. Both Pierre Manuel and Jean Sylvain Bailly were one-time heroes of the revolution who have by this stage turned against it and become its enemies. Both would be executed within a month of this trial. Both Danton and Robespierre would of course both be dead within a year, and even Fouquier-Tinville would follow those he had condemned to the scaffold with two.</p>
<p>&gt; Then there&#8217;s the motley crew of witnesses that it&#8217;s remarkable Fouquier-Tinville even bothers to bring out. Pierre Joseph Terrason, employed in the office of the minister of justice, suggests that Marie Antoinette orchestrated the massacre on the Champ de Mars, on the basis that he once saw her give a &#8216;most vindictive glance; which suggested to him&#8230; the idea that she would certainly take an opportunity for revenge&#8217; for the failed escape to Varenne (p42). Then Rene Mallet, a former &#8216;servant-maid&#8217; who worked in some unspecified context in the Versailles area, recounts the frankly absurd story that Marie Antoinette had planned to assassinate the Duke of Orleans, and having been discovered by the king with two pistols concealed in her undergarments for this very purpose, was confined to her room for a fortnight (p51/52). Interestingly, Marie Antoinette&#8217;s response to this is very confused, saying &#8216;It is possible I might have received an order from my husband to remain a fortnight in my apartment, but it was not for a case similar to the above&#8217;. She is not asked to explain what the case might have been, so we can only wonder what incident she might be referring to. One gets the impression that at times Marie Antoinette, during this gruelling 2 day ordeal, at times slips into autopilot, especially when it&#8217;s so apparent that there&#8217;s really nothing for her to respond to.</p>
<p>&gt; The uselessness of Marie Antoinette having any kind of nominal legal representation is clearly demonstrated when she hands a note to one of her counsel, and is immediately forced to read the note aloud like naughty schoolgirl.</p>
<p>&gt; There are times when the queen is forced to abandon her general policy of flat denial, and the subject of her extravagance is certainly the most painful of these. Fouquier-Tinville asks (p61),</p>
<blockquote><p>Where did you then get the money to build and fit out the Petit Trianon, in which you gave feasts, of which you were always the goddess?</p></blockquote>
<p>In fact, Marie Antoinette had nothing to do with the building of the Petit Trianon, which was commissioned by Louis XV for his mistress Madame de Pompadour (though she did instigate major works in that area of the palace, including her infamous pretend village, the Hameau). She does not point this out, and rather, following further prodding, admits</p>
<blockquote><p>It is possible that the Petit Trianon may have cost immense sums; may be more than I wished. This expence was incurred by inches; in fact I desire more than any one that every person may be informed what has been done there.</p></blockquote>
<p>This is in many ways a damning confirmation of the Marie Antoinette myth: that she was responsible for huge amounts of money being wasted, without ever stopping to even think how much, that in essence she had no understanding of money whatsoever. Since this was the main reason the public hated her, this could have been a high point of the trial, but it isn&#8217;t. Her interrogators immediately swerve away without forcing any more admissions, again seeking to associate the queen with wider conspiracies rather than simple greed and ignorance.</p>
<p>In telling contrast to this admission is the poignant moment when all of Marie Antoinette&#8217;s remaining possessions are shown to the court (p53). These include a table of &#8216;cyphers&#8217; which Marie Antoinette says was &#8216;to teach my child to reckon&#8217;, prayers, portraits of girls she knew as a child in Vienna, a symbol of the flaming heart (a known counter-revolutionary as well as religious symbol) and several locks of hair, which Marie Antoinette says are &#8221;of my children, living and dead, and of my husband&#8217;. After all the excessive luxury of her youth, everything she owns can now be fit into a small parcel.</p>
<p>&gt; Finally, there&#8217;s the moment when rabble-rouser Jacques René Hébert accuses the former queen of sexually abusing her son &#8211; the undoubted low point of the trial, which I&#8217;ve written about in a <a title="Marie Antoinette and her Children: The shocking accusations at Marie Antoinette’s Trial" href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/04/02/marie-antoinette-and-her-children-the-shocking-accusations-at-marie-antoinettes-trial/">previous post</a>. This accusation, based on the coerced confession of a sick and terrified child, is almost certainly without any substance whatsoever, and is revealing of the urgent need felt by Marie Antoinette&#8217;s accusers that she can&#8217;t simply die a criminal or a symbol of extravagance, but as a monster. She must be made to symbolise the complete moral degeneracy and destructiveness of the ancien régime and the pressing need to destroy it absolutely. The powerful and useful hatred felt by the sans-culottes can&#8217;t be allowed to be dissipate with her death, rather her memory must be a continuing force for action and a reminder that the Revolution is always unfinished.</p>
<p>Frankly, this particular ploy fails to land, and even Fouquier-Tinville seems embarrassed to question Marie Antoinette on the matter following Hébert&#8217;s theatrical delivery and, we can assume, a much more mixed reaction in the court room than he had hoped. No-one ever really seems to buy this over-baked and vindictive story, and it did not go on to become one of the elements of the Marie Antoinette myth that persists to this day.</p>
<p>When Marie Antoinette&#8217;s sentence was read out, she was asked by Fouquier-Tinville if she had any objection to make. She simply bowed her head and said nothing (p77). She left the court knowing she would be executed the next day. Marie Antoinette was the first and last Queen ever to be tried in France, and perhaps her greatest achievement in handling it lies in <em>not</em> providing the spectacle everybody hoped for. Innately recognising that the whole affair was a circus, she refused to become a sideshow, remaining calm, impenetrable &#8211; removed, almost, from the hoopla of the event. When the former Queen climbed the scaffold and met her death, the crowd was jubilant (save for the one person who surged forward to dip a cloth in her blood, and was immediately arrested) but for just the same reasons they always would have been. The trial had been revealing of so many things, but ultimately inconsequential. Half a year afterwards, Jacques René Hébert would find himself on trial at the Tribunal. Legend has it he petulantly threw his hat at his judges, then trembled on the scaffold. Marie Antoinette never gave this victory to her enemies. Her trial was her finest hour.</p>
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		<title>Marie Antoinette on Trial: Your Cut-Out-and-Keep Guide to Reading the Trial, Part 3</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/09/11/marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-3/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-3</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 11 Sep 2011 13:16:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[18th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[French History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[18th century]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[french revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marie antoinette]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cultureandstuff.com/?p=870</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There aren&#8217;t many things I&#8217;m good at doing if I&#8217;m suddenly woken up from sleeping. Operating a pair of trousers is a challenge, walking in a straight line a chore, and conducting a meaningful conversation a scientific impossibility. I don&#8217;t want to become one of those web sites that worship the ground Marie Antoinette walked [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-797" title="Marie Antoinette On Trial: An English Account" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop.jpg" alt="" width="751" height="220" /></a></div>
<p>There aren&#8217;t many things I&#8217;m good at doing if I&#8217;m suddenly woken up from sleeping. Operating a pair of trousers is a challenge, walking in a straight line a chore, and conducting a meaningful conversation a scientific impossibility.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t want to become one of those web sites that worship the ground Marie Antoinette walked on, but on this most basic trouser-operating, conversation-having level, Marie Antoinette was something of a god. On that bitterly cold night, on 12th October 1794, the former queen was woken and taken from her cell to the Great Hall of the Revolutionary Tribunal. The room was inkily dark &#8211; only two candles flickered in the large space &#8211; making it more or less impossible to determine how many people were in the room, who exactly they were, or which shadow was speaking at any one time. Eventually, the figure of Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville, the President of the Tribunal, emerged out of the gloom. Fouquier-Tinville had already earned himself the reputation as one of the Revolution&#8217;s attack dogs, having conducted the trials of such revolutionary bête noires as Charlotte Corday (Marat&#8217;s assassin) and many other less famous unfortunates. Totally ruthless in pursuit of revolutionary justice, legend had it he slept with an armed guard at his door and a hatchet under his bed, for fear of the people he was sworn to protect.</p>
<p><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Antoine_Quentin_Fouquier-Tinville_1746-1795_French_revolutionary.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-878" title="Antoine_Quentin_Fouquier-Tinville_(1746-1795),_French_revolutionary" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Antoine_Quentin_Fouquier-Tinville_1746-1795_French_revolutionary.jpg" alt="" width="218" height="373" /></a></p>
<p><em>Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville</em></p>
<p>Fouqier-Tinville was not an easy man to square up to at the best of times, and these were not the best of times. Marie Antoinette arrived in the chamber for the secret interrogation having no prior knowledge that it was to take place, much less what would be asked of her. She had no legal counsel of any kind, and was utterly alone in the room. She had been imprisoned for many months; both her mental and physical health were as low as they had ever been. But if nothing else, Antoinette was a performer, and in the secret interrogation she turns in the performance of a lifetime.</p>
<p>The entire purpose of the secret interrogation was to try to obtain evidence that could be used against Marie Antoinette in the trial. There was of course no opportunity to plead the Fifth here. As we shall see, though Marie Antoinette&#8217;s guilt was pre-determined and already certain in the minds of almost everyone in France, the actual case that had been assembled against her was in most particulars very far from impressive. Fouquier-Tinville, in short, needed Marie Antoinette to slip up here, to give something away under pressure &#8211; hence fetching her in the middle of the night, hence the darkness, hence the lack of ceremony and quick-fire questioning.</p>
<p>Who knows if Marie Antoinette had decided her gameplan at some point previously, or if it came to her on the spot, but her approach (as it will be throughout the trial) is to remain matter-of-fact to a level which is almost robotic, to never rise to bait or give emotional answers, and to be as brief as possible. This is an especially clever tactic in contrast to the hyperbolic, hysterical fervour of her accusers. Though it was always likely to be construed by her enemies as yet another example of her legendary coldness, it provided her with a solid emotional compass to guide her through the most dramatic moments of the trial. Perhaps we can even go further &#8211; perhaps this is the stance of a woman who deep down knows that her death is coming, and has determined to deny every possible ounce of satisfaction she can to the people who will exact it.</p>
<p>Without losing sight of her overriding tactic, the former queen never capitulates or gives an inch, especially where matters of pride are concerned. Early on, when asked where she had been when she was arrested, she responds that she has never been arrested, but has simply been conveyed to her various prisons (p10) &#8211; a technicality, perhaps, given her current situation, but one which clearly matters to her.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s little in the accusations wheeled out during the secret interrogation that&#8217;s likely to have come as much of a surprise to Marie Antoinette. What might have been more shocking though is the manner in which the accusations were put to her. Even in the past few years, in her private life at least Marie Antoinette had remained relatively shielded from open disrespect or scorn, especially as she always seems to have worked some kind of softening magic on the people who served her. Although the secret interrogation does not rise to the theatrical heights of venom and rage unleashed in the trial itself, her accusers are openly confrontational and superior, and certainly display not a shred of the awed deference with which she had been treated throughout her life as a princess and queen. This was not something she was accustomed to.</p>
<p>The old accusations are trotted out one by one, beginning with the belief that Marie Antoinette provided money to Austria to fund a war against the Revolution. This she flatly denies, and points out astutely that &#8216;my brother did not want money from France&#8217;, which doubtless had none to give anyway. When accused of holding &#8216;secret and nocturnal petty councils&#8217; (in the language, very reminiscent of witchcraft, which is a feature of the trial) with her supporters, she boldly replies that &#8220;the rumour of those committees has constantly existed whenever it was intended to amuse and deceive the people&#8221;. Then, when accused of ignoring the entreaties of the &#8220;then minister of justice&#8221; Danton in November 1791, Marie Antoinette makes a factual correction, saying Danton was not the minister at that time (p12).</p>
<p>Her answers betray an extraordinary amount of self control, clearly holding back very real anger which sometimes nearly breaks through before being reigned in again, as in this exchange (p12-13).</p>
<blockquote><p>TRIBUNAL</p>
<p>Observed, that it was she who taught Louis Capet that profound dissimulation by which he has for too long deceived the kind French nation, who did not believe that perfidy and villainy could be carried to such a degree.</p>
<p>MARIE ANTOINETTE</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Yes, the people have been deceived &#8211; cruelly deceived! But it was neither by her nor her husband.</p>
<p>TRIBUNAL</p>
<p>By whom, then, has the people been deceived?</p>
<p>MARIE ANTOINETTE</p>
<p>By those who felt it their interest; that it has never been theirs to deceive them.</p></blockquote>
<p>Marie Antoinette quickly dismisses questions over the royal family&#8217;s escape plan by sticking to what was always the family&#8217;s official line &#8211; that they had never intended to escape France, but rather to find a safer part of it and &#8220;conciliate thence all parties for the happiness and tranquillity of France&#8221; (p13). Even the most ardent Marie Antoinette fan would have to concede this comes over as a little disingenuous, but bafflingly, the point is not pressed. Instead, her accusers move on to the seemingly trivial and obvious question of why she adopted a false name during the escape.</p>
<p>The former Queen&#8217;s cold, emotionless approach occasionally borders on irony,  giving away her withering contempt for her questioners. In perhaps my favourite of her answers during the trial (when she is again being pressed on the matter of being the ringmaster of the escape plan, and the fact that she opened a door at the Tuileries and made everyone go out), she replies that she &#8220;did not believe that the opening of a door could prove that a person directs the actions of another&#8221; (p14).</p>
<p>Her prosecutors push further (p14).</p>
<blockquote><p>TRIBUNAL</p>
<p>Observed, that she never concealed for a moment her desire of destroying liberty; that she wanted to reign at any cost, and re-ascend the throne upon the corpses of the patriots.</p>
<p>MARIE ANTOINETTE</p>
<p>That they did not want to re-ascend the throne: That they were upon it; that they never had any other desire but the happiness of France. Be it happy: be it but happy! they would always be contented!</p></blockquote>
<p>Somehow the spare third person of the trial record seems to heighten the drama of these exchanges, and draw out the tension between what is being said and what is being so carefully not said.</p>
<p>The prosecutors then move on to the question of whether Marie Antoinette had been in contact with the enemies of the Revolution, both foreign and the emigrated princes, and provided them with vital military information. This is probably Marie Antoinette&#8217;s most vulnerable point; there are reasons to believe she may have actually done this, and she clearly falters here (p15).</p>
<blockquote><p>TRIBUNAL</p>
<p>You have held a correspondence with ci-devant French princes since their quitting France, and with the emigrants; you have conspired with them against the safety of the state.</p>
<p>MARIE ANTOINETTE</p>
<p>She never held any correspondence with any Frenchmen abroad; that with respect to her brothers, she might have written them one or two insignificant letters; but she does not believe she has; and recollects having often refused to do so.</p></blockquote>
<p>Despite the fact that her confidence clearly deserts her here, and the answer she gives is evidently inadequate, this is remarkably not followed up, and the subject is immediately changed, leaving important questions unasked. If she has often refused to write letters, for example, who was trying to make her? Here, the crippling lack of evidence against Marie Antoinette is exposed, with the consequence that her accusers have no trump cards they can use to force more out of her. It simply comes down to their accusation versus her denial.</p>
<p>There are further telling moments, as when Marie Antoinette is asked (p16)&#8230;</p>
<blockquote><p>You regret, without doubt that your son has lost a throne, which he might have ascended, if the people, at length enlightened upon their true rights, had not themselves crushed that throne?</p>
<p>MARIE ANTOINETTE</p>
<p>She shall never regret anything for her son, as long as her country is happy.</p></blockquote>
<p>She seems to find strength in this simple strategy of insisting her only aim was the happiness of her country, and it&#8217;s one she holds to time and again in the trial. Indeed, her confidence seems to grow as she realises the paucity of evidence available to her prosecutors. She even goes so far, when challenged on rumours that she was kept in constant communication with the outside world whilst at the Temple, that &#8220;those who declare anything of the kind, dare not prove it&#8221; (p17).</p>
<p>The secret interrogation comes to an end without having obtained any killer evidence, or indeed anything much of real significance that can be used in the trial. In a poignant moment, Marie Antoinette is asked whether she needs to have counsel appointed by the court for her trial, and she replies that she does, because she &#8216;knows not any one&#8221; (p19).</p>
<p>Tronson Doucoudray and Claude Chaveau-Lagarde are named as her lawyers. Chaveau-Lagarde was perhaps a likely suspect for this job, having already established something of a reputation for defending revolutionary hate figures, including Charlotte Corday, Madame Roland, Jean Sylvain Bailly and several moderate Girondins. Showing great courage, and attracting all kinds of the wrong attention to himself at a time when blending into the background was by far the safest option if one wanted to remain attached to one&#8217;s head, Chaveau-Lagarde provided that basic legal support permitted to lawyers in the Revolutionary Tribunal, in cases which everyone knew were hopeless.</p>
<p>Marie Antoinette returned to her cell knowing that her trial would begin in just two days. Unlike her husband, who had been given weeks with his lawyers to prepare his defence, Marie Antoinette would have less than 24 hours, during which time they were not even aware of what charges were to be brought against her, and would have been under constant surveillance. Her lawyers would not be permitted to speak for her in court, so it is likely that in whatever time they had available their advice would have been more general, on how to stand up to the coming onslaught (of which the secret interrogation been just a taster), and how to frame her answers. Perhaps, with their hands tied so firmly behind their backs, the lawyers&#8217; real contribution was psychological and supportive more than it was detailed or practical. In any event, when the trial began it would become clear that Marie Antoinette would hold to the instinctive course set in the secret interrogation, and was more mentally prepared for the key lines of questioning revealed during this ordeal. In some crucial ways, then, the secret interrogation had been far more beneficial to the former queen than it had her accusers.</p>
<p><strong>Next time: the trial proper begins.</strong></p>
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		<title>Marie Antoinette on Trial: Your Cut-Out-and-Keep Guide to Reading the Trial, Part 2</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/09/01/marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-2/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-2</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Sep 2011 21:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[18th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[French History]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[In the first part of this guide to Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial (the account of which you can read in full here) we looked at the course of events that took the royal family from being an essential, if awkward, part of a constitutional monarchy to being at first an obstacle to further change, then a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-797" title="Marie Antoinette On Trial: An English Account" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop.jpg" alt="" width="751" height="220" /></a></div>
<p>In the <a title="Marie Antoinette on Trial: Your Cut-Out-and-Keep Guide to Reading the Trial, Part 1" href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/08/13/marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-1/">first part</a> of this guide to Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial (the account of which you can read in full <a title="Marie Antoinette on Trial: Your Cut-Out-and-Keep Guide to Reading the Trial, Part 1" href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/08/13/marie-antoinette-on-trial-your-cut-out-and-keep-guide-to-reading-the-trial-part-1/">here</a>) we looked at the course of events that took the royal family from being an essential, if awkward, part of a constitutional monarchy to being at first an obstacle to further change, then a magnet for popular hatred, then an irrelevance, and finally an enemy of the Revolution. Once you had entered the latter category, it was really only a matter of time before you were called for your appointment with Madame Guillotine.</p>
<p>By the time Marie Antoinette found herself in the prison of the Conciergerie in August 1793, she was without a doubt deep in the blackest period of her life. The king&#8217;s death had been a great blow to her &#8211; she seems to have entertained some hope that he might be reprieved, hopes that were only finally dashed when she heard the sound of drums and great cheer echoing round the streets, and she knew he was dead. From this point on she would be known as the Widow Capet, and she dressed accordingly in widow&#8217;s weeds. Her daughter was later to write</p>
<blockquote><p>She no longer had any hope left in her heart or distinguished between life and death; sometimes she looked at us with a kind of compassion which was quite frightening.</p></blockquote>
<p>Her physical health began to decline rapidly. By this time she was almost certainly suffering from tuberculosis, and the heavy bleeding that afflicted her may have been an early indicator of uterine cancer (as Antonia Fraser speculates). By this time most of the more legendary aspects of her personality had been stripped away &#8211; the airheaded gaiety, the extravagance, that often remarked upon glowing quality &#8211; leaving behind a cold, hard core of proud tenacity, a fierceness that had something in common with the popular depictions of her as a harpie, or a tigress. She never seems to have entirely abandoned hope, and her behaviour in the trial reveals some inward refusal to give even an inch of ground to her persecutors. Fraser argues that there were some grounds for hope. No queen in history had ever before been put on trial or executed, and there were precedents for royal women to be sent back to their native countries following the end of their marriages.</p>
<p>In Marie Antoinette&#8217;s case though, this seems highly unlikely to have ever been a real possibility, given her potency as a symbol of everything that the Revolution sought to expunge from the world, the strong belief in her active involvement in plots to destroy the Revolution (which would be a recurring theme in the trial) and her massive unpopularity with the increasingly vital sans-culottes. To his shame, even her nephew the Austrian Emperor showed little interest in the furtive negotiations which did take place over the possibility of exchanging the former queen for political prisoners. And it is known for certain that Marie Antoinette&#8217;s fate had been decided at a meeting of the Committee of Public Safety weeks before the trial began.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s crucial though to resist the tempatation to throw up your hands and bewail the trial as a travesty of justice, because it wasn&#8217;t. At least, no more than the other trials undertaken at the Revolutionary Tribunal. Indeed, the very <em>ordinariness </em> of Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trail was an important part of its symbolism. During the debate over the king&#8217;s death, Robespierre had said that she must be sent &#8220;before the courts, like all other persons charged with similar crimes&#8221;. Unlike her husband, her fate would not be debated before a full assembly of the nation&#8217;s elected representatives, and she would be given no opportunity to explain herself or reason with them. In short, there should be no indication that she mattered in any special way. This, for a former queen and daughter of Emperors, was punishment in itself.</p>
<p>In fact, my main tip before reading the trial is to turn your 21st century brain off, because it won&#8217;t help you here. I&#8217;m no expect on the vagaries of the French legal system, but there are a few things it&#8217;s important to remember about Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial in the legal context of the time (these courtesy of an obscure book called <em>The Trials of Five Queens </em>by R. Storry Deans).</p>
<ul>
<li>French trials at the time (and to a lesser extent even now) were not litigious but inquisitional, meaning they didn&#8217;t consist of a prosecution formulating a charge against the accused which it was then required to prove. The trial was instead a more open-ended and general inquisition into the guilt and character of the accused.</li>
<li>Almost nothing in Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial would be admissible as evidence in an English court today, and much of it not even at that time. However, procedures like the secret interrogation before the trial (when the court was not in session and no jury present) were standard procedure in eighteenth century France.</li>
<li>The distinction between thought and deed had not yet been firmly enshrined in law, so establishing that the accused had contemplated doing something, or even that they were the type of person who might contemplate it, was enough. Likewise, opinion, inference and hearsay were acceptable forms of evidence (and formed the bulk of Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial, as concrete evidence is rarely provided).</li>
</ul>
<div>
<p>One of the most difficult things about Marie Antoinette&#8217;s existence at this stage must have been the constant uncertainty. She was never given any forewarning of what was to happen to her, but was instead suddenly confronted with dramatic upheavals and forced to deal with them. In less than a year she had been imprisoned in the Tower, been separated from her husband and then her son, and finally moved to the Conciergerie &#8211; all suddenly, and completely against her will. Once at the Conciergerie she faced days of waiting, never knowing when her trial was to begin &#8211; or even, for certain, if she was to have a trial. Being reduced to a spectator in her own story, Marie Antoinette had started to default to an attitude of numb resignation. Then one night, two hours after she had gone to bed, she was woken roughly and summoned to another part of the prison. With no fanfare and without a second to prepare herself, Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial, and the final fight of her life, had begun.</p>
<div>
<p><strong>In the next part: </strong>The secret interrogation and the beginning of the trial.</p>
</div>
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		<title>Strange Meetings: The Royal Menagerie at Versailles &#8211; an Extract from Vintage Script Magazine</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2011 15:45:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[17th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[18th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Animals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[French History]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Museums]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[french revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[louis xiv]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[louis xvi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[menagerie]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[This month, you&#8217;ll find a piece I&#8217;ve written in Vintage Script, a new magazine dedicated to all things vintage, historical and retro. What&#8217;s most delightful about it is the range of different historical periods, as well as the different approaches taken to bringing them to life. In this month&#8217;s edition you&#8217;ll find stories on the history [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop1.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-846" title="Strange Meetings: The Royal Menagerie at Versailles" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lostparisiletop1.jpg" alt="Royal Menagerie at Versailles" width="751" height="220" /></a></div>
<p>This month, you&#8217;ll find a piece I&#8217;ve written in <a href="http://www.vintagescript.co.uk/" target="_blank">Vintage Script</a>, a new magazine dedicated to all things vintage, historical and retro. What&#8217;s most delightful about it is the range of different historical periods, as well as the different approaches taken to bringing them to life. In this month&#8217;s edition you&#8217;ll find stories on the history of tea time, flapper girls of the 1920s, Durham Cathedral and the truth behind the Scarlet Pimpernel. It really is well worth a read, so do please visit the <a href="all things vintage, historical and retro." target="_blank">web site</a> and take a look.</p>
<p><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Versailles_M2.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-833" title="Versailles_M2" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Versailles_M2-589x370.jpg" alt="Versailles Menagerie by D'Aveline" width="589" height="370" /></a></p>
<p><em>The Versailles Menagerie during Louis XIV&#8217;s reign, by D&#8217;Aveline.</em></p>
<p>In an attempt to whet your appetite, here&#8217;s an extract from my article on the history of the Royal Menagerie at Versailles. You&#8217;ll have to take my word for it, but the stuff I&#8217;ve cut out here is <em>stupendous</em>, so you really should get the magazine!</p>
<p><em>We take up the story from Louis XIV&#8217;s death. Before the Sun King, the French Royals had not had a permanent menagerie but instead contented themselves with a band of exotic or entertaining animals which followed them around their various royal residences. Louis XIV established two permanent menageries &#8211; one at Vincennes and one at Versailles, each with a different purpose and personality. The Vincennes menagerie was used for dramatic fights, such as the battle between a tiger and an elephant staged to amuse the Persian ambassador in 1682. The Versailles menagerie, on the other hand, was a model of order and rationality, where the far more fortunate animals were intended for peaceful display and, as all things at the palace, to augment the glory and prestige of the king. The conflict between these two very different styles of menagerie reflected the conflicts in Louis&#8217; personality and style of leadership, but by the end of his reign the Versailles style had clearly won out, and the Vincennes zoo was closed.</em></p>
<p><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Plan_de_Versailles_-_Gesamtplan_von_Delagrife_1746.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-834" title="Map of Versailles, by Delagrive (1689-1757), 1746." src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Plan_de_Versailles_-_Gesamtplan_von_Delagrife_1746-589x388.jpg" alt="Map of Versailles, by Delagrive (1689-1757), 1746." width="589" height="388" /></a></p>
<p><em>Map of Versailles, by Delagrive (1689-1757), 1746 (via <a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Plan_de_Versailles_-_Gesamtplan_von_Delagrife_1746.jpg" target="_blank">Wikimedia Commons</a>), with the location of the menagerie highlighted. Below, the former site of the menagerie today, from Google Maps.</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><iframe width="598" height="400" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" src="http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=versailles&#038;hl=en&#038;ll=48.804772,2.09502&#038;spn=0.013143,0.033023&#038;t=h&#038;z=16&amp;output=embed"></iframe><br /><small><a href="http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=versailles&#038;hl=en&#038;ll=48.804772,2.09502&#038;spn=0.013143,0.033023&#038;t=h&#038;z=16&amp;source=embed" target="_new" style="color:#0000FF;text-align:left">View larger map</a> </small></p>
<p>In some magical way Versailles transformed itself to match the character of the king at its heart, so when the Sun King died and was succeeded by his grandson Louis XV, everything changed. Louis XV was more interested in hunting animals than observing them in his menagerie, and his taste for exotic wildlife restricted itself more or less to Madame de Pompadour and his seraglio of royal mistresses. Animal gifts kept coming from every corner of the ever-expanding French trading empire, but the king lacked both the funds and the inclination to give them much of a welcome. When an elephant arrived in 1772, it was forced to walk more than three hundred miles from the coast to Versailles.</p>
<p>One can imagine the elephant was quite miffed about the debacle (but must have created quite a stir in the towns and villages along the road) and things got no better once it arrived at Versailles. The pond dug for the exotic birds to wade in was full of silt. The wall enclosing the rhinoceros which arrived two years earlier was literally crumbling (not a good thing, as the rhino was no doubt angered by visitors who laughed at its absurdly wrinkled skin). Even the animals in the once beautiful paintings which lined the walls of the observation room were faded and peeling. The elephant stuck it out for as long as possible, but in 1782, broke free of its enclosure and rampaged round the grounds of Versailles. Next morning, a strange new elephant-shaped island was found floating in the Grand Canal.</p>
<p>Sadly, the elephant died too late to witness the last gasp of the royal menagerie. Louis XVI had ascended the throne in 1775, and found a financial and political situation as neglected as the menagerie. Unlike his grandfather Louis XV, Louis XVI could not rely on winning charm to see him through – he had none. He was therefore much more attuned to symbolism, and strove constantly, in the face of an ever-deepening crisis, to project an image of undimmed power and royal prestige.</p>
<p>Although they never knew it, the animals of the menagerie were a perfect instrument for this. The very fact that they were there at all spoke eloquently of the scope and scale of the king’s influence. Overcoming the difficulties of finding and catching such rare and beautiful creatures, overcoming the problems of long distance travel and communication, overcoming the self-interest of every captain and sailor along the way who might have sold his precious cargo, the king had commanded that animals be brought, and they had come. The strength of his will even seemed to overcome death itself: such animals were notoriously difficult to keep alive on long voyages. Exotic birds especially had an irksome habit of dropping down dead when cannon fired, or simply pining away. Whispers began to circulate that the most beautiful birds of all simply could not live without their liberty.</p>
<p>Louis sent out a shopping list to his representatives around the world. “An elephant; 2 zebras, male and female; mandrill and baboon monkeys; 6 guineafoul”. Perhaps Louis wished to tame the zebras and teach them to draw his carriage, as some of his more flamboyant contemporaries did. But Louis was never to receive an elephant and only got one of the zebras he asked for, though the menagerie did benefit from an influx of new inmates, including a lion, a panther, some hyenas, a tiger, some ostriches and several kinds of monkey.</p>
<p>The popularity of the menagerie was also boosted by great vogue for the study of nature that flowered during Louis XVI’s reign. Naturalists had grown tired of studying the dusty tombs of Cabinets of Curiosity, where brown pickled fish bobbed in vinegar and faded birds stood stuffed in a peculiar imitation of life that seemed to startle the thought of death into everyone who looked at them. There was now, prompted by the bestselling work of Buffon, a desire to observe living animals. Now then, the animals of the menagerie had a new torment, as fashionable men and women toured the menagerie, staring deep into the eyes of monkeys and, with a pained expression, wondered aloud “What is it to be human?”. Nobody ever seemed to wonder what it is to be monkey.</p>
<p>As it turned out, of course, even if Louis had managed to obtain a hundred zebras to draw his carriage, they couldn’t have saved him from the coming of the Revolution. Perhaps the animals noticed a glow of torchlight up at the palace on the night in October 1789 when a crowd of thousands arrived to remove the royal family and take them back to Paris (henceforth to be caged and regarded with the same mixture of awed and disgusted curiosity that the inhabitants of the menagerie had been).</p>
<p>The menagerie must have been a sad and dispiritingly quiet place for the next couple of years, as history was written elsewhere, and the fate of a dwindling bunch of pampered pets was of no importance. But, in a perverse way, the violence and inhumanity of the revolution was to foster a new concern for these animals. After a few years, with the Terror in full flow, the bourgeois leaders of the Revolution began to grow concerned that the populace was becoming too accustomed to blood, too wild. They needed to be brought back to the civilising influence of orderly society – and what better way to demonstrate its advantages than through the example of these wild animals. If even a lion, when it is well cared for by enlightened rulers, can be tamed and made gentle, then there’s hope for anyone. This attitude to animals was extraordinary: in 1794, the Paris Commune received complaints about ‘disgusting displays’ of animals in the Place de la Révolution, but none about the twenty guillotinings that took place in the same square every day.</p>
<p>At the last minute, the few remaining animals of the royal menagerie, which had been due to be killed and stuffed, were saved, and made a part of plans for a new state menagerie at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris. Following a ban on animal shows, the authorities had sent out agents to round up all wild animals being kept or sold in Paris for this purpose. The only problem was, there was nowhere to put them except the basement of the museum at the Jardins des Plantes.</p>
<p>The wrinkly rhinoceros died before it could make the journey (run through, according to legend, by a revolutionary’s sabre), but the lion from Versailles was taken to Paris in 1794, and found itself in a room full of the motliest collection of animals since the Ark. Here was a leopard, there a sea lion. Perched on a crate were three eagles, bleating in the corner were three sheep with various lurid deformities, and god-knows-where was what had been promised to be a sea lion when the harassed zookeeper agreed to take it on, but was discovered on arrival to be a polar bear. There were in total 32 mammals and 26 birds.</p>
<p>Gradually a permanent, if very basic, home for these forlorn creatures was put together, and, amid trumpeting revolutionary rhetoric that the animals would “no longer wear on their brows, as in the menageries built by the pomp of kings, the brand of slavery”, its doors were opened to the public. This new, state menagerie was intended to be a pacifying haven of contemplation and rational study. It didn’t quite work out that way. As soon as the doors opened, the citizens of Paris made a beeline for the old lion from Versailles. They pulled at his fur, and shouted abuse when he tried to sleep, and spat at him because, they said, he used to be a king too.</p>
<p>The lion bore his torment for a short while, but in the famine-frosted winter of 1795, when there was no money for food and none to buy anyway, half the animals died, the lion probably among them. After this time, conditions at the menagerie slowly improved, and with the conquests of Napoleon, it was repopulated with inhabitants from new outposts of empire.</p>
<p>Today, there’s no trace of the menagerie beneath the impeccably manicured lawns of Versailles, but a piece of it survives. If you go to the Jardins des Plantes, past the small zoo which still survives and into the Natural History Museum, you’ll find a large glass case, containing a leathery rhinoceros, the first to ever be stuffed and preserved. Today people file by and study him quietly, as civilised and dispassionate as they were always meant to be, save perhaps for the occasional chuckle at his absurdly wrinkly skin. But this is an extraordinary survivor, called across the sea by the last pulse of royal power from France, witness to the end of an era, one of the last beings ever to truly live at Versailles, victim of the violence of the revolution – and yet, here he is. Through all the storms of history and politics, the revolutions and counter-revolutions, monarchies and republics, wars and peaces, the rhinoceros has stood safe in its glass case. Even today, the Versailles menagerie is drawing long-severed worlds into strange meetings.</p>
<p><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Le-Rhinoceros-de-Louis-XV-a-MNHN-Service-audiovisuel.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-832" title="Le-Rhinoceros-de-Louis-XV-a-MNHN---Service-audiovisuel" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Le-Rhinoceros-de-Louis-XV-a-MNHN-Service-audiovisuel.jpg" alt="Louis XV's Rhinoceros" width="585" height="347" /></a></p>
<p><em>Louis XV&#8217;s rhinoceros, at the Natural History Museum in Paris.</em></p>
<p><object style="height: 390px; width: 640px;" width="640" height="390" classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/aMjrluh50Cs?version=3" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><embed style="height: 390px; width: 640px;" width="640" height="390" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/aMjrluh50Cs?version=3" allowFullScreen="true" allowScriptAccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" /></object><br />
<em>The rhinoceros was recently featured in an exhibition at </em><a href="http://sciences.chateauversailles.fr/index.php?lang=en">Versailles, &#8216;Sciences and Curiosities at the Court of Versailles</a>, <em>which I&#8217;m bereft at having missed</em>.<em> This nice little video was made to coincide with the exhibition.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>More</p></blockquote>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0801867533/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=0801867533" target="_blank"> ‘Elephant Slaves and Pampered Parrots: Exotic Animals in Eighteenth-Century Paris</a>’ (2002) by Louise E. Robbins has lots more fascinating detail on the menagerie, and 18th century Parisians’ relationship with animals.</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Lost Paris: A Night at the Palais-Royal</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/07/01/lost-paris-a-night-at-the-palais-royal/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=lost-paris-a-night-at-the-palais-royal</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Jul 2011 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[17th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[18th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historical Places]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lost Paris]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paris]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[17th century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[18th century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entertainment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lost paris]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[palais royal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social history]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s a July evening in 1786 and you&#8217;re visiting Paris for the first time. Perhaps you&#8217;re staying with an elderly aunt. You&#8217;re quite fond of the old goose really, and to give her her due, she&#8217;s been an expert guide to most of the sights of Paris you&#8217;ve always dreamt about. But she is a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/palais-royal-top.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-682" title="Lost Paris - A night at the Palais Royal" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/palais-royal-top.jpg" alt="" width="751" height="220" /></a></div>
<p>It&#8217;s a July evening in 1786 and you&#8217;re visiting Paris for the first time. Perhaps you&#8217;re staying with an elderly aunt. You&#8217;re quite fond of the old goose really, and to give her her due, she&#8217;s been an expert guide to most of the sights of Paris you&#8217;ve always dreamt about. But she is a creature of unswerving habit, eating early and packing herself off to bed well before the sun, leaving long nights to fill by yourself. As soon as your beloved tante has retired upstairs and you&#8217;re free to leave the house, there&#8217;s only one place you want to go &#8211; the <em>Palais-Royal</em>.</p>
<p>You&#8217;ll have heard lots of rumours about the Palais-Royal &#8211; in fact, it&#8217;s probably the only thing a lot of people talk about when the subject of Paris comes up. You&#8217;ll have heard them cluck about it, in the same way that in years to come they&#8217;ll cluck about the Moulin Rouge, and explain to you that the Palais-Royal is a wicked place that proves there&#8217;s nothing in Paris but sin. &#8220;In a royal palace <em>too&#8221;, </em>they&#8217;ll say, &#8220;the boyhood home of Louis XIV no less!&#8221;.</p>
<p>And in a way, they&#8217;re right. There is a lot of sin at the Palais-Royal, dilutable to suit all budgets, and available in whatever flavour you happen to prefer. But there&#8217;s so much more besides.</p>
<p>With a mixture of curiosity, excitement and nervousness you wind your way through the streets towards the building at the heart of royal Paris, right opposite the Louvre and next to the Opera. The cluckers were right, too, that this was once a tranquil royal palace, quite suitable for leisurely strolls, and a spot for the well-to-do of the city to see and be seen.</p>
<p><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Plan_de_Turgot_palais-royal1.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-685" title="Plan_de_Turgot_palais-royal" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Plan_de_Turgot_palais-royal1-589x359.jpg" alt="" width="589" height="359" /></a></p>
<p><em>The plan de Turgot gives a good impression of the Palais-Royal before the changes of the 1780s &#8211; the sort of manicured, orderly place of which no-one could have disapproved.</em></p>
<p>The Palais would have stayed that way, were it not for one inescapable problem; the same problem which, when it comes down to it, was behind almost every action taken by royalty and high nobility in the 17th and 18th centuries. That problem was that they were constantly strapped for cash. The Orléans family, which owned the palace, had been forced to convert the gardens into a sort of shopping centre in the early 1780s onwards, adding pavilions for shops and cafés, and enclosing the gardens with new streets. Respectable Parisians were absolutely scandalised at these plans to throw the gates open to the hoi polloi and sully the place with the stain of <em>commerce</em>. The poor Duc d&#8217;Orleans was lampooned in songs and plays, and booed openly on the streets. Even the king mocked his cousin&#8217;s new career as a &#8216;shopkeeper&#8217;. Parisians had decided they hated the new Palais-Royal and always would.</p>
<p>Parisians are &#8211; not just in cliché but in historical fact &#8211; a fickle bunch.</p>
<p>By 1794, they&#8217;d decided that in fact they loved the new Palais-Royal, and always had. It didn&#8217;t matter that some of the more ambitious schemes for the redevelopment had come to nothing due to lack of cash, and as a result what greeted the visitor was rows of sordid, muddy tents (known popularly as the Camp of the Tartars). It didn&#8217;t matter that almost straight away these tents became a notorious hang-out for thieves, swindlers and prostitutes. The Palais was a runaway success, which every Parisian &#8211; even those who&#8217;d bewailed the loss of the polite walking ground &#8211; came to in their droves. The reason for this apparently mystifying about-turn is that strangely, inside the home of one of the most powerful establishment figures in France, an amazingly rich and varied popular culture had quickly taken root, which carried on the communal tradition of the <a title="Lost Paris: The Pont Neuf, ‘the Eiffel tower of the Ancien Régime’" href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/06/16/lost-paris-the-pont-neuf-the-eiffel-tower-of-the-ancien-regime/">Pont Neuf</a> and the now vertiginously declining<a title="Lost Paris: All the Fun of the Fairs" href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2011/06/23/lost-paris-all-the-fun-of-the-fairs/"> annual fairs</a> &#8211; for which Parisians of this time undoubtedly had a need as fundamental as breathing.</p>
<p><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/PromenadePalaisRoyal.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-686" title="Promenade Palais-Royal" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/PromenadePalaisRoyal.jpg" alt="" width="536" height="482" /></a></p>
<p>So, you, back in the role of our wide-eyed tourist, follow the pulsating glow and the amazing cocophony of sounds until you find yourself inside the Palais. At this point, the Palais became a dizzying &#8216;Choose Your Own Adventure&#8217; story.</p>
<p>- It really is the sin you&#8217;re after, and you want to meet one of the famously obliging Parisiennes. Perhaps clutching a copy of<em> Almanach des adresses des desnoiselles of Paris de tout genre et de toutes de les classes</em>, a published guide which gives full details on what&#8217;s available, you find a girl to suit your budget and your proclivities, and head to the corresponding café. Perhaps you&#8217;re here to visit one of the <em>sosies de vedette</em> &#8211; a speciality of the Palais &#8211; girls who dress up as celebrities of the day, especially opera stars and actresses. It&#8217;s unlikely that anyone will judge you. There are 2,000 prostitutes to be found in the Palais at any time of day, and a steady stream of customers. Most of the men of Paris have probably indulged at one time or another.</p>
<p>- You could never face your aunt over breakfast in the morning if you dallied in any of <em>that</em>, thank you very much, so you sidestep the prostitutes. You&#8217;re here for the spectacles. You want to see the <em>ombres chinoises, </em>a popular shadow show where tempests, cascades, shipwrecks, and the forges of vulcan are conjured before your very eyes. You want to see the <em>Petits Comédiens, </em>where to circumvent the Comédie-Italienne&#8217;s monopoly on stage performance, small children are employed to stand on stage and move their mouths precisely in time with adult actors who sing songs and deliver speeches unseen from off stage. Maybe you want to go to a first night in another theatre, and enjoy the rumpus as rival playwrights come to shout insults and drown out the piece being performed. Like it or not, you can&#8217;t avoid seeing Paul Butterbrodt, the 400-pound man, and you might as well drop the few coins necessary to see the miraculously preserved corpse of Zulima (who died 200 years ago), or enter Monsieur Curtis&#8217;s waxwork museum, where a reproduction of Marie-Antoinette and her family is the prize exhibit. But what fills you with the most child-like glee is undoubtedly the balloons, which are all the rage at the palais. Tonight, a balloon that&#8217;s shaped like a galleon and 26 feet long is bobbing above the Palais. A few weeks ago, it was a lifesize dirigible horse, ridden by a chevalier over their awed heads of the gawpers below.</p>
<p>- You&#8217;re a learned soul and demand something more edifying than petty entertainment. You could witness one of the many automaton displays, or watch the universe turn on its axes in Sieur Belon&#8217;s mechanical model of the solar system. You could go to a demonstration of scientific experiments. You&#8217;ll find these attractions right next to the cheap theatres and cafés, and may be surprised that the queue outside them is just as long. In Paris, the line between magic and science remains blurred, and both are delivered with equal amounts of razzmatazz. There&#8217;s a mania for all things new and genuine wonder in scientific discovery. Here at the Palais, there&#8217;s even the Musée de Comte d&#8217;Artois, a serious institution frequented by some of the great names in contemporary science, and open to any male deemed &#8216;respectable&#8217;. There&#8217;s the Club des Planteurs ou Societe des Colons, open only to colonial pioneers, and the Club du Salon des Arts, where members can play chess or peruse opera scores. The Societé Olympique is a sort of League of Extraordinary Gentlepeople, where the criteria for joining seems to have been simply that you were somehow amazing (three Princesses of the Blood were card-carrying members). The Masons are here, of course, and there&#8217;s the Societé Philharmonique, a musicians&#8217; club which annoyed the other clubs by constantly making a racket.</p>
<p>- You&#8217;re here to shop. Not a bad motive for travelling to these parts, as in the little boutiques one can buy bear grease (for thinning hair), fans, ink, books (including some forbidden and filthy ones), telescopes, opera glasses, stolen dogs, fold-up rubber raincoats, royal lottery tickets, enchanting glowing phosphorous trapped in glass bottles, and a thousand and one other delights.</p>
<p>- You&#8217;re here to drink. I admire your honesty. Pick a café &#8211; there are lots around &#8211; and order any beverage your addled mind can think of. The most famous is the Café de Foy, where, along with your refreshment, you&#8217;ll find willing ears for any kind of talk &#8211; and, increasingly, it&#8217;s political chatter that you&#8217;ll hear buzzing around you. One day soon, Camille Desmoulins will jump onto one of these very tables and ignite the revolution, and even the palace&#8217;s owner, Philippe d&#8217;Orléans will get swept up in the excitment fizzing about in his own backyard, style himself Philippe Égalité and go down in history as the man who voted his own cousin, the King, to the guillotine. But not yet. For now, the politics is whispered, and drowned out by the din of people having fun.</p>
<p>However you chose to spend your night at the Palais-Royal, you&#8217;re sure to remember it long after the indigestion of your breakfast with auntie has faded. Nowhere else in the world can offer the kaleidoscopic range of entertainments and stimulations. Nowhere else seems to stimulate every nerve in your body in quite the same way. A Russian who visited in 1790 called it &#8216;the heart, the soul, the brain, the very synopsis of Paris&#8217;. It&#8217;s for precisely this reason that the revolution was cradled here, because ironically, within the walls of a palace, the ancien régime hadn&#8217;t held sway for a while now. Here, a specifically Parisian form of democracy &#8211; both ancient and breathtakingly modern &#8211; was the governing force. Here, where there was relatively little reverence for the traditional class system, the church or high nobility, any idea could succeed if it excited the hearts and minds of enough people, and any voice could be heard if it was powerful and interesting enough to rise above the racket. Soon, the king himself would come to resemble one of those children with mouths gaping like fish as others provided his words, and the people of Paris would find the courage to shout from the audience that they&#8217;d seen this tired old play before, and it was time for a new and more thrilling spectacle.</p>
<blockquote><p>Traces Today</p></blockquote>
<p>In 21st century Paris, the Palais is still a wonder, but for totally opposite reasons. It will often be quiet even on very busy days in Paris, and sitting inside at one of the cafés it&#8217;s very easy to forget that you&#8217;re in the city at all. There&#8217;s a sad, morning-after feeling, coupled with the romance of faded grandeur.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s one relic of the scientific mania that gripped the palais in its heyday. In the gardens is a small canon, once fitted with a lens which caused it to fire every day at noon. Its a strange little survivor, but perhaps if you contemplate the eccentricity of this oddity, and multiply that by a thousand, and picture the whole Palais full of such wonders all competing for your attention, you might get close to some sense of what the Palais was like in its prime.</p>
<p><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/3664648347_f8f4382a32_o.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-680" title="Le petit canon du Palais Royal" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/3664648347_f8f4382a32_o-589x392.jpg" alt="The canon at the Palais-Royal" width="589" height="392" /></a></p>
<p><em>The canon at the Palais-Royal, by dalbera via<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/dalbera/3664648347/"> flickr</a>.</em></p>
<p><em><br />
</em></p>
<blockquote><p>More</p></blockquote>
<ul>
<li><em><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0195036484/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=0195036484" target="_blank">Farce and Fantasy: Popular Entertainment in Eighteenth Century Paris</a> </strong></em><strong>by Robert M Isherwood – </strong>a key source for this post, wonderful on popular entertainment in all its forms in the 17th and 18th centuries.</li>
</ul>
<p><em> The photo used at the top of this article is by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domiketu/" target="_blank">DomiKetu</a> via <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domiketu/5410357806/" target="_blank">Flickr</a>.<br />
</em></p>
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		<title>Marie Antoinette and her Children: The shocking accusations at Marie Antoinette&#8217;s Trial</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/04/02/marie-antoinette-and-her-children-the-shocking-accusations-at-marie-antoinettes-trial/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=marie-antoinette-and-her-children-the-shocking-accusations-at-marie-antoinettes-trial</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Apr 2010 14:04:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[18th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Biography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[French History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[french revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marie antoinette]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[trial]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The most striking thing about reading the record of Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial before the Revolutionary Tribunal in October 1793 is realising what an astonishing mess the whole thing really was. In most other accounts, revolutionary justice always seems so swift, so merciless, so ruthlessly efficient. Many of those who stood trial before the Tribunal had [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="Wide"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-387" title="Marie Antoinette's trial before the revolutionary tribunal" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/mariantoinettetrialtop.jpg" alt="Marie Antoinette's trial before the revolutionary tribunal" width="751" height="220" /></div>
<p>The most striking thing about reading the record of Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial before the Revolutionary Tribunal in October 1793 is realising what an astonishing mess the whole thing really was. In most other accounts, revolutionary justice always seems so swift, so merciless, so ruthlessly efficient. Many of those who stood trial before the Tribunal had few real crimes to answer for, and yet they were quickly exposed as monsters and condemned to die by public guillotining. So, on the balance of things, you would have thought Marie Antoinette &#8211; a figure universally despised by a populace which had been spoonfed wild propaganda and grotesque fantasies about her since before she even came to France &#8211; wouldn&#8217;t have presented many problems.</p>
<p>And yet as you keep reading the account of her two day trial, one question increasingly plays on your mind &#8211; <em>is this it</em>?</p>
<p>The king&#8217;s trial and execution had turned out to be a painful and awkward affair. Louis argued his case with a quiet dignity, and the final vote to decide his fate revealed the extent of lingering doubt and latent sympathy for the former king. 361 deputies voted for Louis&#8217; immediate execution, but 288 voted against the death penalty. On the streets of Paris, where public executions had become something of a spectator sport, Louis&#8217; end brought its share of rejoicing, but somehow failed to offer the hoped-for catharsis, the line in the sand between the old regime and the revolutionary future.</p>
<p>If Louis&#8217; execution had the atmosphere of a funeral, Marie Antoinette&#8217;s was expected to have more in common with a rowdy wake. The people had never hated Louis as much as they had come to despise Marie Antoinette, indeed in the popular version of events Louis was usually cast as a hapless, blundering but essentially good puppet being manipulated by the calculating Marie Antoinette for her own nefarious ends. Until she was removed from the equation, the revolution could never feel entirely secure.</p>
<p>The trial was presided over by Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville, President of the Tribunal. He oversaw all the key trials of the period, and had earned a reputation as one of the revolution&#8217;s most fearsome figures. Ruthless and single-minded in the pursuit of revolutionary justice, rumour had it that he was terrified of the people, sleeping with an armed guard at his door and a hatchet under his pillow. One can only imagine his feelings as he received word that Marie Antoinette was finally to stand before his court. Here was an opportunity for a spectacular showpiece, a chance to reaffirm and reenergise the revolution. All that was really necessary was to  provide a reminder of the crimes that the majority of people were already convinced Marie Antoinette had committed.</p>
<p>Marie Antoinette was given just two days to prepare for her trial, unlike her husband who had been afforded months tucked away with his lawyers at the Temple. As per the rules of the Tribunal, her lawyers would not be allowed to speak for her during the trial itself, so she alone must respond to all examination.</p>
<p>On 14th October, when the galleries had filled with expectant crowds (including the diehard groups of women who attended so many trials and executions that they now brought their knitting with them to do while they watched), the trial commenced. As expected Foquier-Tinville began with a lengthy, vitriolic speech in which he outlined the charges, and placed Marie Antoinette in a long line of infamously wicked women &#8216;like Messalina, Brunhilda, Fredegund and Medici&#8217;. He described her as &#8216;the scourge and the blood-sucker of the French&#8217;, and in language reminiscent of witchcraft accusations talked of the &#8216;creatures&#8217; and &#8216;midnight meetings&#8217; she employed.</p>
<p>From the outset then it was clear that the trial was to proceed along familiar lines of character assassination, the rationale seemingly being that proving Marie Antoinette&#8217;s complete moral degeneracy would show her capable of committing <em>any</em> crime, thereby absolving the need to prove her guilty of actually committing particular ones. Anyone with a bad word to say about Marie Antoinette, however unilluminating, is roped in to the court. Thus, Jean Baptiste Lapiere, a former guard at the Tuileries, testifies that he was on duty on the night the royal family made their escape, &#8216;but not withstanding his vigilence he had seen nothing&#8217;. Pierre Joseph Terrason observes that when the family had been captured and returned to the Tuileries, he saw Marie Antoinette &#8220;throw upon the national guards who escorted her, and likewise upon the citizens in her way as she passed along, a most vindictive glance; which suggested to me the idea that she would certainly take revenge; in reality a short time after the scene of [the massacre at] the Champ de Mars took place&#8221;. Rene Mallet, a former maid at Versailles, even goes so far as to relay a rumour she had heard that Marie Antoinette had conceived a plot to assassinate the Duke of Orleans, keeping two pistols secreted in her skirts in case any opportunity to carry out the murderous plan should present itself.</p>
<p>Evidence like this dominates the trial in part because of the corner the revolutionary authorities had backed themselves into. Most of the people who ever had any real contact with Marie Antoinette had long since fled France, or had already faced the Tribunal themselves. A few such associates were found for the trial, but Fouqier-Tinville is so keen to establish that they too are guilty and odious that he is forced to demolish their credibility and render their testimony next to useless. Jean-Frederic Latour Dupin gave evidence on the second day of the trial. As an ex-Minister of War he initially claims to know nothing of any of the charges laid against Marie Antoinette, and rather than pressing him on this, Fouqier-Tinville devotes much time to scrutinising Latour Dupin&#8217;s actions as minister, many of which have little or no bearing on Marie Antoinette. Even when he eventually does prompt Latour Dupin to concede that Marie Antoinette had asked him for military details, which he duly supplied, Fouqier-Tinville quickly becomes distracted by questions over whether she &#8216;abused the influence you had over your husband, in asking him continually for drafts on the public treasury?&#8217;. The crucial point of whether or not Marie Antoinette betrayed the armies of France (so pivotal to the charge of treason at the centre of the trial) is therefore never satisfactorily resolved.</p>
<p>The trial often falls into a pattern, with Fouqier-Tinville throwing accusations at Marie Antoinette without any tangible evidence, and Marie Antoinette sticking to what must have been her planned approach of giving short, unemotional responses &#8211; usually one word answers, or simply stating that she had no knowledge of what witnesses alleged.</p>
<p>Given the motley crew of witnesses assembled for the trial and the paltry store of evidence, the revolutionary authorities must have known that it had the makings of a repeat of Louis&#8217; confused and messy hearing. What they needed was a piece of killer evidence &#8211; some new juicy scandal that even the rumour-weary people of Paris had never heard before &#8211; to turn this trial and execution into the triumph they needed it to be. And in searching for someone to take on the role of showman/muck-racker, they didn&#8217;t have to look very far.</p>
<p>Jacques René Hébert was one of those deliciously intriguing personalities that make studying the French Revolution such a joy. As editor of the incendiary (and, even today, shockingly foul-mouthed) newspaper <em>Le Père Duchesne, </em>Hébert had achieved great influence among his hundreds of thousands of readers, and had already made repeated calls for the destruction of Marie Antoinette, &#8216;the Austrian bitch&#8217;. Hébert himself was a figure riddled with contradictions. His newspaper was peppered with obscene language and visceral, violent imagery, and he adopted the persona of the archetypal <em>sans-culotte</em>; yet he himself came from a bourgeois background, dressed finely and, in some accounts, was in private a remarkably ordinary family man. And while his huge popular following made him the envy (and, latterly, the enemy) of figures as powerful as Robespierre, Hebert was never able to win a major elected position, and his attempts to do so ended in frankly embarrassing results.</p>
<p>He was, however, able to secure a position as the second substitute of the <em>procureur </em>of the Paris commune, and in this position he shared responsibility for the imprisonment of the royal family in the Temple. In this capacity he was privy to every detail of the actions of the family, shared responsibility for the decision to separate Louis Charles from his mother (as examined in a <a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/03/10/marie-antoinette-and-her-children-the-mystery-and-the-history-of-the-prince-in-the-tower-part-1/" target="_blank">previous story</a>) and from then enjoyed a powerful influence over the boy. For a man like Hébert this was a golden opportunity. All he had to do now was figure out how to use it.</p>
<p>Marie Antoinette&#8217;s personality had been assailed on almost every front &#8211; her wild extravagance was well known and unquestioned; her supposedly perverse and numberless sexual proclivities had been the stock in trade of pornographers and gossips for years; and at one and the same time she was dismissed as intellectually vapid and reviled as a cunning, Machiavellian enemy of the revolution. But through all this, one positive light had continued to shine on Marie Antoinette: the glow of motherhood. This aspect of her role was especially important to Marie Antoinette herself; in part because it had taken her so agonisingly long to become pregnant, in part, perhaps, because of the epic example of motherhood provided by her mother the Empress Maria Theresa, and in part simply because of her own naturally maternal personality. The image had been deliberately fostered through public events and in official portraits, especially those of preferred painter Élisabeth-Louise Vigée-Le Brun. That it had a profound impact on the public was powerfully demonstrated in October 1789 when the crowds who invaded Versailles called for Marie Antoinette to appear before them on a balcony. When she attempted to come out with her family, the mob yelled &#8216;No children! No children!&#8217;, as if wanting to strip her of the cushioning aura of her motherhood.</p>
<p>If there was one thing Hébert knew it was how to whip up the people, and so he quickly arrived at a plan to destroy the one last vestige of humanity left in the public image of Marie Antoinette, and speed her on her way to the guillotine. At some point, it was mentioned to Hébert that when Louis Charles was frightened Marie Antoinette would comfort him and let him sleep in her bed. This planted the seeds of an idea. Hébert decided to frame a story that Marie Antoinette abused her son sexually, teaching him to masturbate and making him sexually dependant upon her. There has been some speculation that in order to provide this story with a foundation,  Hébert ordered Louis Charles&#8217; guard Simon to encourage him to masturbate, and even bring prostitutes into his cell. Certainly, Louis Charles was subject to all manner of physical abuse by his jailers, and there is no way of knowing how far this extended. However, it is clear that Hébert knew better than most men that truth was far less important than what people could be made to believe. He operated in the realm of words rather than action, and would have seen that subjecting the boy to actual sexual abuse was unnecessary for the plan to succeed. Louis Charles was, anyway, a vulnerable and easily-led boy.</p>
<p>In early October 1793 Hébert visited Louis Charles in the Tuileries, and got him to sign a pre-drafted confession. Most cruelly, Louis Charles was also made to confront his sister and aunt (who had not seen him for 3 months) with the accusations, and they too were then interrogated. Though only 15 years old and unable to understand the full weight of the accusation, Marie-Thérèse knew enough to recognise it as an obscene lie, and was profoundly upset by the incident. Aunt Elisabeth refused even to respond to the questions.</p>
<p>Armed with this c<em>oup de grâce</em>, Hebert arrived at the great hall of the Revolutionary Tribunal on 14th October for Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial. When called to give evidence, he began unremarkably enough, with recollections of finding counter-revolutionary symbols belonging to Marie Antoinette, and insinuations about Lafayette&#8217;s role in the escape plan. Is it too much to detect a little nervousness in Hébert&#8217;s opening remarks? He&#8217;s certainly watching his language, and there&#8217;s something hesitant, stumbly in his hotchpotch accusations. Finally though, he gets to the point, and the wind floods back into his sails.</p>
<blockquote><p>In fine, young Capet, whose constitution became every day impaired, was surprised by Simon in practices destructive to his health, and at his period of life very uncommon; he was asked who had instructed him in these practices; he replied that it was his mother and his aunt.</p></blockquote>
<p>Hebert went on, keen to prove that Marie Antoinette could not even engage in child abuse without some still more sinister motive.</p>
<blockquote><p>There is reason to believe that this criminal indulgence was not dictated by the love of pleasure, but by the political hope of enervating the constitution of the child, whom they supposed destined to sit on the throne, in order that they might acquire ascendancy over his mind.</p></blockquote>
<p>The court fell silent as the accusations landed, then an ambiguous murmur rippled round the crowd. Fouquier-Tinville hastily asked Marie Antoinette what she had to respond, Marie Antoinette replied &#8220;I have no knowledge of the facts of which Hebert speaks&#8221;. Even Fouquier-Tinville now seems unwilling to delve any deeper into this appalling line of questioning, and instead begins asking questions about some of Hébert&#8217;s earlier, more mundane accusations. He is interrupted by a member of the jury, who demands that the Queen answer the accusations about her son.</p>
<p>Suddenly the bricked-off, emotionless, almost robotic Marie Antoinette of the rest of the trial disappears.</p>
<blockquote><p>If I have not replied it is because Nature itself refuses to answer such a charge laid against a mother.</p></blockquote>
<p>Standing to face the assembled crowd directly, she challenged them.</p>
<blockquote><p>I appeal to all mothers here present &#8211; is it true?</p></blockquote>
<p>Hébert&#8217;s time as witness here ends abruptly and the trial swiftly moved on. As far as it is possible to tell from the accounts, the reaction to Hébert&#8217;s revelation was not what he had expected. There was at best dismay and at worst a wellspring of sympathy for Marie Antoinette, especially from the mothers to whom she had appealed. Not that it mattered, of course. The trial ended the next day, and the following morning Marie Antoinette went to the guillotine.</p>
<p>Few figures in history have suffered as much as Marie Antoinette from the distorting influence of myths and lies. The very first thing that most people will say if you mention her name is &#8216;Let them eat cake!&#8217;, a cold-hearted and idiotic comment that almost certainly never passed her lips. But at least the last great lie in her story has never taken hold, and the myth of Marie Antoinette as child abuser was seen for just what it was. Revolutionary karma had an ironic sense of humour, and the old adage &#8216;what goes around comes around&#8217; has never been truer than in this case. Less than half a year after Marie Antoinette&#8217;s execution, Hébert fell foul of Robespierre and was himself tried at the Revolutionary Tribunal. Legend has it he responded with far less dignity than Marie Antoinette, throwing his hat at his judges and trembling on the scaffold before a crowd clearly relishing every drop of irony. Fouquier-Tinville too fell from grace in 1795. He protested that &#8220;It is not I who ought to be facing the tribunal, but the chiefs whose orders I have executed. I had only acted in the spirit of the laws passed by a Convention invested with all powers.&#8221; His trial lasted 41 days, but ended in in the same journey to the guillotine endured by so many of those he had judged.</p>
<p>It is too easy to dismiss Marie Antoinette&#8217;s trial as an empty sham, too tempting to gloss over its details in the rush towards the tragic finale of her story. But to do so is to miss out on a rich insight both into Marie Antoinette&#8217;s character at this final stage in her life, and into the mentality and operation of a revolution spiralling rapidly out of control. Marie Antoinette remains a polarising figure, but whichever side you take, the squalid details of her trial and final days, and the unnecessary attempts to blacken the character of a woman already certain to die, serve as a chilling example of human cruelty.</p>
<blockquote><p>Sources</p></blockquote>
<p>Infuriatingly, there is no published account of the trial available in English. For this story I relied on a contemporary account published in The Times in 1793, and printed as a book under the title <em>Authentic Trial at Large of Marie Antoinette, Late Queen of France, Before the Revolutionary Tribunal at Paris, </em>published by Chapman&amp;Co 1793. This is available to request at the British Library.</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1841155896?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=1841155896"><em>The Lost King of France: The Tragic Story of Marie-Antoinette&#8217;s Favourite Son</em></a><em><img style="border: none !important; margin: 0px !important;" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=cultstuf-21&amp;l=as2&amp;o=2&amp;a=1841155896" border="0" alt="" width="1" height="1" /> </em>by Deborah Cadbury<br />
Moving account of the fate of Louis Charles, and the many legends surrounding his death.</li>
<li><em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/075381305X?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=075381305X" target="_blank">Marie Antoinette</a></em><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=cultstuf-21&amp;l=as2&amp;o=2&amp;a=075381305X" border="0" alt="" width="1" height="1" /> by Antonia Fraser<br />
The best overall biography of Marie Antoinette, and the one that comes the closest to giving the reader a sense of what this complicated, enigmatic woman might actually have been like. I met Antonia Fraser recently, and babbled like a fool.</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Marie Antoinette and her Children: The mystery and the history of Louis Charles in the tower. Part 1</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/03/10/marie-antoinette-and-her-children-the-mystery-and-the-history-of-louis-charles-in-the-tower-part-1/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=marie-antoinette-and-her-children-the-mystery-and-the-history-of-louis-charles-in-the-tower-part-1</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Mar 2010 15:28:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[18th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Biography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[French History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[french revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[louis charles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marie antoinette]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marie antoinette and her children]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cultureandstuff.com/?p=335</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On the morning of 11th August 1792, an exhausted and increasingly sweaty royal family sat in the reporters&#8217; box of the National Assembly, a stone&#8217;s throw from the Seine in Paris. The night before, the Tuileries (the 16th-century royal palace near the Louvre which had been their residence since they were removed from Versailles in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-336" title="The Temple in Paris, where Louis Charles died. Or did he?" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/louischarlestop.jpg" alt="Louis Charles mystery Marie Antoinette" width="751" height="220" /></div>
<p>On the morning of 11th August 1792, an exhausted and increasingly sweaty royal family sat in the reporters&#8217; box of the National Assembly, a stone&#8217;s throw from the Seine in Paris. The night before, the Tuileries (the 16th-century royal palace near the Louvre which had been their residence since they were removed from Versailles in 1789) had been invaded by the people, and a chaotic and brutal battled ensued. The king had been forced to flee the palace and seek refuge with the Assembly.</p>
<p>As debate raged around them over the future of the monarchy, one thing was already clear. The Tuileries was no longer a suitable residence for the royal family, and an alternative must be found urgently. And so it was that on 13th August, Louis, Marie Antoinette and their children were transported to the Temple. This would have come as no great surprise to Marie Antoinette, indeed she had predicted that they would ultimately be moved there several months before it came to pass. But it was nonetheless a frightening development. Marie Antoinette had always disliked the Temple &#8211; a complex of buildings including a rather lovely seventeenth-century palace and the far more ominous Tower, a decaying hulk of a building constructed by the Knights Templar in the 12th century. Earlier in her life, Marie Antoinette was even said to have suggested to her brother-in-law (then owner of the palace) that the Tower should be knocked down.</p>
<div class="vert">
<div id="attachment_372" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><img class="size-full wp-image-372" title="The Temple Tower" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/templeparismarieantoinetteprison.jpg" alt="The Temple, Marie Antoinette's prison" width="300" height="393" /><p class="wp-caption-text">The Temple Tower</p></div>
</div>
<p>The prospect of life in the Temple was very different to the one they had known in the Tuileries. Though certainly well past its best, and a precipitous step down from Versailles, the Tuileries was at least a royal palace, and while they had been tucked away there, a sort of calm had descended, allowing questions over the exact status of the royal family to be conveniently postponed or half-answered. The family had enjoyed considerable independence in the Tuileries, where there was space to walk outside and to house supporters, and enough leeway for many of the traditions and rites of Versailles to continue in some form or another. Security had even been lax enough to allow the royal party to make its ill-fated escape attempt earlier in the year.</p>
<p>The Temple, it was clear to everyone, was to allow none of this ambiguity. In moving to the Temple, Marie Antoinette and her family were being imprisoned, physically and psychologically. Though their quarters were cramped, damp and cold, there were still touches of luxury in their furnishings, meals continued to be lavish, and the King was allowed his own study. What made the real difference was that the King and Queen were now strictly monitored and controlled by jailers who openly disrespected them, and clearly enjoyed inflicting what Antonia Fraser calls &#8216;petty humilations&#8217; on them whenever possible. What&#8217;s more, any chance of escape, except in the most fervid daydreams of die-hard monarchists and paranoid republicans, had now well and truly passed. Most painful of all for the king and queen must have been the dawning realisation that they were now powerless &#8211; locked out of the way whilst their fate, and that of France, was being decided elsewhere.</p>
<p>From now on, events moved rapidly. On 21st September, the National Assembly declared France a republic, and abolished the monarchy &#8211; adding new urgency to the question of what should be done with its former monarchs. In October, Louis was separated from his family in preparation for trial. His jailers presented him with a choice &#8211; he could be allowed to see his children during this time, or they could be left with Marie Antoinette, but it must be one or the other. They would not be allowed to see both parents. Louis chose to leave the children with their mother, and he would be reunited with his family just one more time, on the night before his execution on 21st January 1793. He bade them a tearful farewell, but promised to see them again the next morning before he was taken away.</p>
<p>Louis was fascinated by history, and had spent much of his life reading history books. Some observers had wondered why, because the king had never seemed to learn much from it. But recently he had been fixated on the story of Charles I of England, and in particular the fearless and noble way he met his own execution. It was said that Charles had secretly worn two overshirts as he stepped onto the scaffold that January morning, so that his people would not see him shiver from cold and think him afraid. Louis was determined that his people should not see him shiver, finding, as he faced his death, a resolution and strength he had so often lacked in life.</p>
<p>This newfound resilience called upon all of Louis&#8217; emotional reserves, so when dawn came, he found himself unable to face the strain of of seeing his family again. He broke his promise. Marie Antoinette and her children waited in the Tower, unaware of what was going on. It was only when they heard drums and a huge cheer echoing round the streets that they knew Louis was dead. Later, some would claim that in that instant Marie Antoinette turned to her son Louis-Charles and said &#8216;The king is dead, long live the king&#8217;, expressing the tradition that monarchy itself never dies &#8211; kings come and go, but kingship passes down a divinely-ordained and unbroken ancient line.</p>
<p>The comment seems emotionally out of place, but whether or not Marie Antoinette actually said it, it was true that, with French law forbidding a woman to hold the crown, for those unwilling to accept that monarchy in France was a thing of the past, the seven-year-old Louis Charles had suddenly become King Louis XVII.</p>
<div class="vert">
<div id="attachment_363" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Louis_Charles_of_France.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-363" title="Louis Charles of France" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Louis_Charles_of_France.jpg" alt="Louis Charles, son of Marie Antoinette" width="300" height="380" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Louis Charles, painted in 1792 by Alexander Kucharsky</p></div>
</div>
<p>Louis Charles can&#8217;t have remembered much of life before the revolution, and in one way or another conflict had overshadowed his whole life. Portraits of the boy show an angelic and spirited but delicate looking child, and this matches well with the reports of everyone who knew him. He was said to be loyal and loving, and his stubborn pride was certainly forgiveable (indeed, almost a requirement) in a dauphin of France. He was adored by his parents and his sisters, and proved capable of charming even his most implacable enemies.  The revolution would severely test the boy, and though he endured numerous terrifying episodes in which he and his family could easily have been killed, he did not emerge unscathed. These experiences seem in particular to have reinforced a pair of key character traits which Marie Antoinette and others had noted despairingly even before the upheavals of 1789. Firstly, Louis Charles had always been easily scared. At Versailles, more often than not it was the sound of dogs that startled him, but by 1793 his nerves had become so frayed that he cowered at almost any disturbance. Secondly, Louis Charles, like many young boys, had a tendency to repeat things that he had heard too freely, adding his own invented details to enhance the telling, without consciously meaning to lie. This it seems was a symptom of a more general desire to please, and to be loved.</p>
<p>This particular combination of character traits, though not exactly unusual in a boy of his age, was to prove disastrous in the new phase of Louis Charles&#8217; life that was now beginning. With his father dead and mistrust and hatred for Marie Antoinette as widespread as ever, it was decided that the boy should be separated from his mother. This was done in June, without warning. When men entered to take him away, Marie Antoinette clung to her son for over an hour, refusing to release him even when her life was threatened. Only when the guards shifted tactic and threatened her daughter did Marie Antoinette finally relent.</p>
<p>Louis Charles now posed a problem for the revolutionary authorities. He was too young to be tried like his father, and he could certainly not be allowed to go into exile, where he would provide the counter-revolutionaries with a potent figurehead. And though the problem of his father had been solved by killing him, doing the same to this cherubic, innocent boy would present a most unpleasant image of the revolution to the world, and could inspire a backlash of monarchist sympathy. So, it seems to have been decided, the only thing to do with Louis Charles was to keep him out of sight of the public and hope that in time he would be forgotten. More deliciously for some, a close, solitary imprisonment even presented the tantalising possibility that Louis Charles might be made to forget himself. The Commune, which oversaw the imprisonment of Louis Charles, spoke explicitly in terms of a &#8216;re-education&#8217;, and the ultimate hope was that the boy should &#8216;lose the recollection of his royalty&#8217;, in the words of Jacques-René Hébert, and become a revolutionary.</p>
<p>The man chosen for this &#8216;re-education&#8217; would be, in any other circumstances, an unlikely tutor. Antoine Simon was one of life&#8217;s failures, making a mess of everything he tried his hand at. Training initially as a shoemaker, nobody was interested in buying his wares, and his cheap tavern by the Seine proved equally disastrous. His luck seemed in when his first wife died and by some miracle he managed to attract another who came with a hefty dowry attached, but this too was soon frittered away. Rather than accepting that his own laziness and lack of business acumen had been the primary cause of the string of failures that riddled his adult life, Simon became increasingly angry and bitter, blaming anyone but himself for keeping him from the success he richly deserved. The Revolution was a gift to Simon, dovetailing nicely with his paranoid conspiracy theories, encouraging him to paint the aristocracy as being responsible for keeping men like him in their lowly stations. Even in the midst of this revolution, dominated by legendary characters and awesome personalities, Simon&#8217;s commitment and zeal marked him out, and he was soon noticed by those in authority. Simon was a man who would put the revolution above anything, and would not allow sentiment or affection to prevent him from following orders. Consequently when Jacques-René Hébert and his superiors at the Commune were searching for a man to watch over Louis Charles and break his royal spirit, Simon was a natural choice. One can only imagine Simon&#8217;s feelings on discovering his new destiny. He had spent his life railing impotently against the aristocratic Hydra laying waste to his hopes and dreams. Now one of its last remaining heads was his to control &#8211; and destroy.</p>
<p>Louis Charles&#8217; re-education could not begin immediately as for the first few days he simply huddled in a corner, weeping uncontrollably, terrified by the slightest noise. Eventually though, things began to settle into a routine, and at least in this early stage, Louis Charles was not treated too badly. He was washed and his clothes were cleaned, he was given toys and sometimes even got to play with the laundry woman&#8217;s daughter. He was allowed outside into a small garden for air, and on one of these occasions Louis Charles found the courage to demand of some officials who had come to see him &#8216;I want to know what law you are using that says I should be separated from my mother&#8230; Show me this law, I want to see it!. Louis Charles&#8217; short walk to the garden took him directly past Marie Antoinette&#8217;s cell, and if she craned her neck to a certain crack in the wall she could catch the merest glimpse of him as he walked by. Marie Thérèse wrote later that her mother would stand for hours with her eye crammed against that crack, waiting to see her son &#8211; &#8216;it was her sole hope, her sole occupation&#8217;.</p>
<p>In these early days of his isolation, there seems to have been some uncertainty about what exactly was to be done with Louis Charles. Simon didn&#8217;t like uncertainty, and resolved to clarify the situation. In July he went to the Commune, demanding what their intentions were for the boy. Their answer was clear and unequivocal &#8211; &#8216;We want to get rid of him!&#8217;.</p>
<p>From this point on the life of Louis Charles took a far more sinister turn.</p>
<p><em><a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/05/04/marie-antoinette-and-her-children-the-mystery-and-the-history-of-louis-charles-in-the-tower-part-2/">Click here for part 2 of this story &gt;&gt;</a></em></p>
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		<title>Queen Victoria’s Black Sheep: Prince Eddy and the Ripper Rumours, Part 2</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/02/08/queen-victoria%e2%80%99s-black-sheep-prince-eddy-and-the-ripper-rumours-part-2/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=queen-victoria%25e2%2580%2599s-black-sheep-prince-eddy-and-the-ripper-rumours-part-2</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Feb 2010 14:29:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[19th Century]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[British History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historical Places]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[jack the ripper]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[As we saw in Part 1 of this story, there are many theories on the real identity of Jack the Ripper doing the rounds, which range from the hypothetically plausible to the palpably absurd. Delving a little deeper, it is interesting to note how many of the suspects suggested over the years involve highly respected [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-206" title="Queen Victoria's Black Sheep: Prince Eddy and Jack the Ripper Rumours" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/princealbertvictoreddytop.jpg" alt="Prince Albert Victor 'Eddy'" width="751" height="220" /></div>
<p>As we saw in <a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/02/04/queen-victoria%E2%80%99s-black-sheep-prince-eddy-and-the-ripper-rumours-part-1/" target="_self">Part 1</a> of this story, there are many theories on the real identity of Jack the Ripper doing the rounds, which range from the hypothetically plausible to the palpably absurd. Delving a little deeper, it is interesting to note how many of the suspects suggested over the years involve highly respected figures from the very top of Victorian society. Perhaps this should not be entirely surprising, as there is a strong and distinct social element in the Jack the Ripper story and its lasting emotional resonance. The Ripper scandal drew attention to the squalor and abject poverty of the East End of London where the murders took place, and the extreme inequalities that riddled complacent Victorian society. <a href="http://victorianpeeper.blogspot.com/search?q=ripper" target="_blank">Recently uncovered census records</a> have revealed that in 1881 (7 years before the murders took place) several of the Ripper&#8217;s victims were living with husbands and families. Presumably, in the years before 1888, these marriages must have disintegrated, with consequences for the abandoned women that eventually led them into prostitution.</p>
<p>There is a case to be made that part of the outrage over the murders was (and is) prompted not just by the barbarity of the acts themselves, but also by a feeling of shared guilt, that society as a whole could allow fellow human beings to fall so low and be forced into such dangerous and degrading means of survival. In this version of the narrative, it is fitting that many should seek to cast the grandees of Victorian Society in the role of Jack the Ripper. The story seems to work better (and certainly have more moral impact) if the Ripper was socially the polar opposite of his victims, his calculated murders being only an extreme, twisted version of polite society&#8217;s cold indifference. This perspective on events has developed over time. Contemporary suspects more often than not lived amongst, and in similar conditions to, their supposed victims, and included many immigrants, and known domestic murderers. As time has passed, however, new information on the always shifting, historically invisible community of Whitechapel has become harder and harder to obtain, necessitating perhaps a shift away from simple homicide on a human, local scale, and towards grand conspiracy theories and elaborate whodunit yarns, with ever more unlikely culprits.</p>
<p>Given this line of investigation, there could be no more perfect candidate for Jack than a royal, and it so happens that the contemporary royal brood had a black sheep who could quite easily be made to fit the bill, and has been the subject of not one but three distinct Ripper theories. Prince Albert Victor (always known as Eddy) was grandson to Queen Victoria and son of Prince Albert Edward, and as such stood to inherit the throne on the death of his father. But somehow, even amongst the Hanoverians (for whom <a href="http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/01/14/frederick-the-hated-prince/" target="_blank">spectacularly fractured and unhappy families were something of a tradition</a>), Eddy seems particularly awkward, never quite fitting the role he was destined to play. He was an odd, listless character. Opinions vary over his lack of intelligence, but the argument is only over its extent not its existence, with assessments ranging from his tutor&#8217;s report that his mind was &#8216;abnormally dormant&#8217;, to persistent but unverified rumours that he had learning disabilities. Lack of intelligence was, however, no impediment to a young prince gaining admission to Cambridge, and he was helpfully excused from examinations during his time there from 1883 to 85.</p>
<div class="vert">
<div id="attachment_237" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><img class="size-full wp-image-237" title="Prince Albert Victor (Eddy)" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Prince_Albert_Victor_Duke_of_Clarence_1864-1892_by_William_1829-18__and_Daniel_Downey_18_-1881.jpg" alt="Prince_Albert_Victor,_Duke_of_Clarence_(1864-1892)_by_William_(1829-18_)_and_Daniel_Downey_(18_-1881" width="300" height="459" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Prince Albert Victor (Eddy). What secrets are hidden by that impeccably moustachioed smile?</p></div>
</div>
<p>As he entered adulthood, Eddy found himself in the unusual position of being simultaneously renowned as a ladies man and reviled as a homosexual. In 1889, his name became involved in the Cleveland Street Scandal, in which it emerged that several high-profile figures (including an Equerry to the Prince of Wales) were clients at a male brothel. All homosexual acts between men were illegal at this time, and punishable by up to two years&#8217; imprisonment with hard labour, so these were serious accusations. However, it seems there was no evidence linking Eddy to the establishment, and his name was probably only thrown into the mix to distract attention from those who had actually been involved. Keen to avoid a scandal (having already created quite enough of his own), Eddy&#8217;s father stepped in to make the matter go away, effectively ending the investigation  into the affair. This ultimately seems to have done more harm than good, the cover-up encouraging gossips to believe that Eddy did in fact have something to hide. Certainly, whispers of homosexuality (which seem to have very little grounding other than this case) have clung to him ever since.</p>
<p>Like his father, it seems Eddy also had dalliances with a string of women, leading to other scandals, including Margery Haddon&#8217;s (almost certainly false) claim that he was the father of her son, and subsequent blackmailing by the &#8216;son&#8217; himself. In 1891, he was also blackmailed by two prostitutes who claimed to be in possession of compromising letters written in his hand. Though these claims, too, are now thought to have been fraudulent, there is little doubt that Eddy had his fair share of amatory adventures, and it is has been widely claimed that at some stage he contracted a venereal disease, possibly gonorrhoea.</p>
<p>The increasingly vexed question of Eddy&#8217;s eminent unsuitability to ever assume the crown was abruptly resolved in 1892, when he died, suddenly. The cause of death was officially recorded as influenza, though the shocking timing of his death, aged just 28, has prompted further conspiracy theories that he was poisoned, or pushed off a cliff, or that his death was faked in order to remove him from the succession.</p>
<p>Mix all of these elements together and you have a stew whose peppery aromas would attract any Young Turk looking to make his mark and his fortune on the Jack the Ripper scene. Although there is no evidence of anyone making the connection at the time of the murders, Eddy has subsequently become the linchpin of several theories.</p>
<blockquote><p>Theory One: The Lone Madman</p></blockquote>
<p>This theory, originally popularised by Dr Thomas Stowell in 1970, did not name Eddy directly, but there is enough evidence in his explanation to make it clear who he is referring to. According to this account, Eddy was suffering from syphilis, exotically contracted in the West Indies, which drove him mad and set him on the murderous course of Jack the Ripper. The royal family is said to have known that Eddy was the killer from at least the second murder, but did not act until after the fourth, when he was locked away in an asylum. He somehow escaped to murder Mary Jane Kelly, at which point he was re-interred and died of &#8216;softening of the brain&#8217; in a private mental hospital at Sandringham.</p>
<p>Stowell died shortly after publishing this theory, and his papers were destroyed by his family. This has made many elements of the story impossible to substantiate. More damagingly, official records show that Eddy was not in London on the murder dates (but then, they would do, wouldn&#8217;t they?).</p>
<p>The theory was elaborated by Frank Spiering, who claimed to have seen notes of royal physician Sir William Gull, in which he described hypnotising Eddy and watching in horror as he acted out the Ripper murders. When the New York Academy of Medicine, Spiering&#8217;s stated source for this material, claimed that it had no such records, Spiering went on to challenge the Queen to throw open the royal archives and publicly reveal the truth about Eddy&#8217;s murderous secret. When the royal household said they would gladly allow Spiering access to the archives (as they will to anyone who applies), Spiering stroppily replied that he didn&#8217;t want to see the files anyway, so there.</p>
<p><strong>Bunkometer Rating:</strong> A theory which, aside from being based on a paper trail which no-one can prove exists, seems to offer no tangible connection between Eddy and the murders, other than that he had a sexually transmitted disease and therefore must have despised all women madly, and killed a string of them. Codswallop.</p>
<blockquote><p>Theory Two: Eddy As Jack&#8217;s Muse</p></blockquote>
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<div id="attachment_239" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 210px"><img class="size-full wp-image-239" title="James Kenneth Stephen" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Jkstephenoval.jpg" alt="James Kenneth Stephen - Jack the Ripper?" width="200" height="253" /><p class="wp-caption-text">James Kenneth Stephen</p></div>
</div>
<p>Accepting that the idea of Eddy as Jack the Ripper has colander-level water-holding abilities, but unwilling to leave him out of the story entirely, another theory has emerged with Eddy the unlikely inspiration for enough searing sexual jealousy to fuel the fires of history&#8217;s most infamous serial killer. This theory, advocated by Michael Harrison, centres around James Kenneth Stephen, a poet, and Eddy&#8217;s tutor at Cambridge (as well as cousin of Virginia Woolf).</p>
<p>Stephen was undoubtedly an unusual character, and any hint of being a little bit odd is blood in the water for your second-rate Ripper researcher. It is undeniable that some of Stephen&#8217;s poetry did contain a misogynistic streak. Take, for example, his poem <em>In the Backs</em>, which contains the following lines about a woman he comes across and takes an instant disliking to,</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;I do not want to see that girl again:<br />
I did not like her: and I should not mind<br />
If she were done away with, killed, or ploughed.<br />
She did not seem to serve a useful end :<br />
And certainly she was not beautiful.</p></blockquote>
<p>Chilling words, certainly, but is it any more than poetic hyperbole? Harrison certainly seems to think so. According to his version of events, Stephen fell passionately in love with Prince Eddy during his time at Cambridge, and Eddy initially responded to his advances, entering into a sexual relationship. Soon though, Eddy grew tired of Stephen, and took the excuse of his enrolment in the army to end the affair. Less controversially, two years later Stephen suffered a brain injury, as a result of either being hit by an object falling from a moving train, or far more romantically being thrown by his horse into the spinning vane of a windmill. Thus began a period of mental deterioration, culminating, says Harrison, in complete insanity.</p>
<p>Enraged by Eddy&#8217;s widely rumoured flings with women, whom he clearly lusted after in a way Stephen had never been able to inspire, Stephen determined to take his revenge on an entire gender by committing the Ripper murders. Precisely why Stephen should pick these East End prostitutes as way of hurting Eddy is not fully explained.</p>
<p><strong>Bunkometer Rating:</strong> This theory seems to be based on the apparently groundless belief in Eddy and Stephen&#8217;s homosexuality, and yet again relies on an implied and murky, yet clearly direct and unswayable, relationship between sex, madness and the murder of prostitutes. In going to far greater lengths to establish the suspect&#8217;s immorality and strangeness than any direct link to the murders, it&#8217;s as if the author is suggesting that, in effect, the former proves the latter. Crapola.</p>
<blockquote><p>Theory Three: The Royal Conspiracy</p></blockquote>
<p>Everyone likes a conspiracy, and this one is so juicy that it has gained a lot of ground in recent decades, and has frequently been portrayed in television, film and popular books.</p>
<p>Based on the claims of Joseph Gorman, this version of events holds that Eddy secretly married and had a child with a Alice Mary Crook, a Catholic shop assistant (of all things!) in the East End. On hearing of this brewing scandal, the royal family, including Victoria herself, formed an unholy alliance with (you guessed it) the Freemasons to cover up the awful mess. Key figures, including Lord Salisbury and, yet again, royal physician Sir William Gull, masterminded a plot to eliminate everyone who knew about Eddy&#8217;s child, and at the same time send a powerful coded message, broadcasting the abiding power of the freemasonry. For some reason, the motley crew stopped short of killing Alice, instead whisking her off to an asylum where Gull conducted experiments on her to make her forget what had happened, and plunge her into lunacy.</p>
<p><strong>Bunkometer Rating: </strong>Balderdash! Eddy plays only a supporting role in this one, his accepted profligacy making him a suitable donor of the wild royal oats needed to get this potboiler going. There are several gaping holes here: notably why was Alice not murdered, and how is it that the covering up of this ripe rumour only necessitated the killing of five women, all of them prostitutes? The final nail in the coffin should have been Joseph Gorman&#8217;s later admission that he had made the whole thing up, but the rumour is out in the wild now, and seemingly unstoppable.</p>
<p>What all of this seems to suggest is that the British, as affectionate as many of them are towards the royal family, take only a very little prompting to believe that this august and ancient institution has a dark, rotten heart, and a mind programmed entirely differently from our own. The fact that such flimsy theories, contradictory of each other and often of themselves, have gained any currency at all reflect our willingness to see the royals as characters in the vividly painted, infinitely flexible story of history rather than as fellow human beings, operating in a unique but real set of social circumstances. But then, we needn&#8217;t have looked to history to highlight that.</p>
<p>Anyone for another Diana enquiry?</p>
<blockquote><p>Further Reading</p></blockquote>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.casebook.org/" target="_blank">Casebook: Jack the Ripper (site)</a> &#8211; a refreshingly sober and sceptical but still engaging guide to the world of Ripperology.</li>
</ul>
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		<title>How do you solve a problem like Victoria: was Queen Victoria illegitimate?</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/02/02/how-do-you-solve-a-problem-like-victoria-was-queen-victoria-illegitimate/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=how-do-you-solve-a-problem-like-victoria-was-queen-victoria-illegitimate</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Feb 2010 16:04:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[19th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Biography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[British History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[19th century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[george III]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[illegitimate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[queen victoria]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cultureandstuff.com/?p=193</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Of the 41 monarchs of England since the arrival of William the Conqueror, only 7 have been women. But stop and think of the 41 figures on that list: how many do you feel any real connection with, how many produce an emotional response when you picture them? And, crucially, how many do you have [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-194" title="Just who were Queen Victoria's parents?" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/victoriatop.jpg" alt="Queen Victoria - illegitmate?" width="751" height="220" /></div>
<p>Of the 41 monarchs of England since the arrival of William the Conqueror, only 7 have been women. But stop and think of the 41 figures on that list: how many do you feel any real connection with, how many produce an emotional response when you picture them? And, crucially, how many do you have any genuine respect for?</p>
<p>When you whittle things down this way, the list starts looking decidedly feminine. There are very few monarchs who can match the imaginative appeal of Elizabeth I and Victoria; none who seem so absolutely inseparable from their age. The majority of our male kings seem to run together into a blur of degeneracy or mediocrity, and frequently both. Perhaps precisely <em>because</em> of the essential masculinity of the role, many of our Queens seem to have worked much harder, given much more and left a far more unique legacy. Heck, to use a phrase borrowed (worryingly) from my parents, they just had more <em>spunk.</em></p>
<p>In 2002, the BBC conducted a poll to find the &#8216;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/100_Greatest_Britons" target="_blank">100 Greatest Britons</a>&#8216;. There are three monarchs in the top twenty &#8211; Alfred the Great, Elizabeth I and Victoria. So it seems, despite the fact that still only a puny one in five of our elected officials in the House of Commons is female, when it comes to strength, leadership and respectability, the monarchy has had no better, more lastingly memorable and characteristic representatives than Elizabeth and Victoria.</p>
<p>So what if many of the features that made Queen Victoria remarkable and rejuvenating were owed not to her connection to the ancient royal bloodline, but to her <em>disconnection</em> from it? What if Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, was not her real father? And what if Victoria&#8217;s troublesome genetic legacy is the smoking gun that can prove it?</p>
<p>This claim has been made most forcefully by the formidable Victorian specialist A.N Wilson, but questions have also been raised by those with a far more intimate connection to the subject. After watching the film of Alan Bennet&#8217;s <em>The Madness of King George</em>, which graphically depicted George III&#8217;s torments whilst suffering with porphyria, Princess Margaret is said to have wondered aloud, &#8216;Isn&#8217;t it hereditary?&#8217;.</p>
<p>She was of course right. Acute porphyria is now often attributed as the cause of George&#8217;s &#8216;madness&#8217;, triggering the famous discoloured urine, flatulence, constipation, colic, itchy skin, seizures and anxiety. This diagnosis suggests that the king may not have been mad at all; rather the incessant discomfort, severe pain and nervous exhaustion caused by porphyria may have literally driven him to distraction, creating the impression of a man who had lost his mind and all connection to reality. It is extremely rare for men to exhibit such extreme symptoms of porphyria, leading some <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/3889903.stm" target="_blank">researchers to speculate</a> that it may have been caused by exposure to arsenic. An examination of a sample of George&#8217;s hair found traces of arsenic at 300 times the toxic level, likely as a result of the arsenic-laden James&#8217; powders medicine the king is known to have been given.</p>
<p>It may well be that George inherited the disease from Mary Queen of Scots and her son James I, both of whom are recorded as suffering from complaints that tally well with the symptoms of porphyria. From this point on, porphyria seems to have been prevalent amongst the royals, with George only its most high profile sufferer. Prevalent, that is, until Victoria, after whom the disease mysteriously vanished from the royal family.</p>
<p>So goes the theory. Although it is often stated that after Victoria there is no evidence of porphyria in the line, at least two of her descendants seem to have shown signs of the condition. The remains of her granddaughter, Charlotte, Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen, have recently been examined and revealed a high likelihood that she suffered from porphyria, together with her daughter, who committed suicide in 1945, after a lifetime of health problems. Prince William of Gloucester, who died in a plane crash in the 1970s, was reliably diagnosed with the disease by three separate specialists, though he was also descended from Victoria&#8217;s uncle, the Duke of Cambridge, and might have inherited it from him.</p>
<p>This evidence is not enough to entirely quash the idea that the run of porphyria in the the royal family ended with Victoria, but it certainly introduces enough doubt to stop anyone getting too carried away with the idea that Victoria was illegitimate. There is, however, another genetic mystery which is harder to dismiss.</p>
<p>While porphyria is said to have stopped with Victoria, another disease is said to have started. Victoria was a known carrier of haemophilia, and certainly passed it on to two of her daughters and her son, Prince Leopold. What&#8217;s strange is that there is no known incidence of haemophilia in the royal family before this time, and, unlike porphyria, male carriers always suffer the disease, which would at the time have been very difficult to conceal. Research conducted at the Royal Society of Medicine through seventeen generations of ancestors on Victoria&#8217;s mother&#8217;s side has revealed no evidence of the disease.</p>
<p>This leaves only two options: either Victoria acquired haemophilia through a spontaneous genetic mutation, or the Duke of Kent was not her father. Although genetic mutation accounts for around 33% of all cases of haemophilia, the chances of it occurring in any one generation are between 1 in 25,000 and 1 in 100,000. And it must be admitted that the alternative explanation has several points in its favour. The marriage between Edward, Duke of Kent, and Victoria&#8217;s mother Victoire, Princess of Leiningen, was by no stretch of the imagination a happy one. Neither spoke each other&#8217;s language for a start, and by the time of the marriage, when Edward was in his 50s, he was, to put it politely, past his physical prime. There were also persistent and widespread rumours about Victoire and her secretary Sir John Conroy. Victoria seems to have openly loathed Conroy, which many (including the august Duke of Wellington) supposed was the result of her certain knowledge of his affair with her mother. Some went so far as to suggest that Victoria had inadvertantly stumbled across the couple in what would now be called a compromising situation.</p>
<p>There are problems with this theory &#8211; Conroy was a soldier, a career which would surely have been made next to impossible by haemophilia, and none of his descendants showed signs of the disease. But the tantalising possibility remains that Victoire&#8217;s infidelity may not have stopped with Conroy, and Victoria was the result. The implications of this are far-reaching &#8211; not only did this furtive coupling create one of our most iconic monarchs, but in successive generations it spread the disease throughout the royal houses of Europe; to Alfonso, Prince of Asturias and Infante Gonzalo of Spain, and to Alexei, Tsarevich of Russia. His mother&#8217;s desperate search for a cure, of course, brought the profoundly unpopular Rasputin to a position of royal influence, adding fuel to the revolutionary fires.</p>
<p>All this, of course, is speculation, and highly controversial speculation at that. The evidence from porphyria is at best questionable, and far more unlikely events have happened in history than spontaneous genetic mutation. On the balance of the evidence available, it has to be said there&#8217;s no reason to abandon the official line that the Duke of Kent was indeed the true father of Victoria. But the alternative remains appealing, partly because deep down everyone loves a good bit of gossip, and partly because of the light it sheds on the true nature of royalty and the vicissitudes of history. Could it be that Victoire got bored one afternoon, summoned some unknown haemophiliac lover to her bedchamber and engaged in a little nookie that changed the course of history forever? Probably not. But the mystery remains, and there&#8217;s something gloriously, wickedly subversive in it that serves as a refreshing antidote to all the grand history we so often have shoved down our throats.</p>
<blockquote><p>Further Reading</p></blockquote>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0099451867?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=0099451867">The Victorians</a><img style="border: none !important; margin: 0px !important;" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=cultstuf-21&amp;l=as2&amp;o=2&amp;a=0099451867" border="0" alt="" width="1" height="1" /> by A.N. Wilson <em>A masterly overview of the Victorian period, which includes Wilson&#8217;s controversial claims about Victoria herself.</em></li>
</ul>
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		<title>A King of Beasts in Revolutionary Paris</title>
		<link>http://cultureandstuff.com/2010/01/22/a-king-of-beasts-in-revolutionary-paris/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=a-king-of-beasts-in-revolutionary-paris</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Jan 2010 16:28:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Culture&#38; Stuff</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[18th Century]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Animals]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve just started reading the eclectic and lively Georgian London blog, and came across this piece about the menagerie at the Tower of London, which existed in various forms from 1252 until its closure in 1835, at which point its collection of animal inhabitants formed the basis for London Zoo. The story of the menagerie [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wide"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-117" title="The story of an old lion in revolutionary Paris" src="http://cultureandstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/liontop.jpg" alt="" width="751" height="220" /></div>
<p><!-- 		@page { margin: 2cm } 		P { margin-bottom: 0.21cm } -->I&#8217;ve just started reading the eclectic and lively <a href="http://www.georgianlondon.com/" target="_blank">Georgian London</a> blog, and came across <a href="http://www.georgianlondon.com/crowly-who-is-now-grown-a-great-lion-and-very" target="_blank">this piece</a> about the menagerie at the Tower of London, which existed in various forms from 1252 until its closure in 1835, at which point its collection of animal inhabitants formed the basis for London Zoo.</p>
<p>The story of the menagerie (once you&#8217;ve managed to disable those parts of your brain sensitive to modern notions of health and safety, animal cruelty and basic common sense) is a dizzying carnival of unlikely experiences, which range from the sublimely ridiculous to the ridculously sublime. Picture, for example, the first resident of the menagerie; a polar bear, given as a gift from the King of Norway to the King of England. Although presumably fluffy, small and adorable to begin with (perhaps wrapped in a little bow), the gift soon grew into an almighty, boulder-pawed beast (as polar bears are so wont to do). Too large now for his strolls around the Tower, he was sent with his keeper to swim and catch fish in the river Thames.</p>
<p>This curious incident of the bear and his swim time seems to have set the tone for the menagerie, and as the delightful stories keep coming, the greater a tragedy it seems that there was no historical equivalent of Ben Fogle and Kate Humble to record them all in a sort of proto-<em>Animal Park</em>. Other residents of the Tower menagerie included Old Martin, the bear who put the grizzly back into grizzly bear, a lonely mongoose, monkeys bedecked in fine costumes, a plague of kangaroos (which apparently spread to other parts of England, until it was not at all uncommon to see kangaroos roaming around in parks) an elephant with a penchant for wine and a belligerent, beer-swilling zebra, who by all accounts was a much friendlier drunk.</p>
<p>There were also many Lions in the menagerie, whose chorus of roars at dawn came incongruously to mark the start of the day at the Tower of London. This put me in mind of another lion from another menagerie, whose wretched story is painfully revealing of the tensions and ironies that practically hummed in the air of revolutionary Paris.</p>
<p>This story is told in <em>The Journal of a Spy in Paris During the Reign of Terror</em>, a fascinating document which purports to have been recorded by one Raoul Hesdin (no doubt an assumed name), an English spy working for the French Government during the first half of 1794. No record can be found of anyone of this name in the employ of the government at the time, but the work rings with truth, and it seems safe to say that whoever he was, he was in Paris at the time, and in some position that gave him close access to the Committee of Public Safety, and all the important goings-on in this tumultuous period.</p>
<p>But despite this elevated position, it is the personal perspective offered by the journal that makes it such a fascinating and valuable source. The study of the revolution can so easily get bogged down in valiant attempts to chart and explain the ever-changing, immensely complicated shifts in the political tides, at the expense of an understanding of what it actually felt like to be an individual living through the vast impersonal processes of the Terror, of people&#8217;s perceptions of what was happening and where it was all leading, and ultimately what the point of it all was.</p>
<p>It seems that Hesdin once had some enthusiasm for the revolution, and was perhaps even swept up in its very early phases. In the time since then, however, this enthusiasm has clearly softened, waned and ultimately reversed upon itself. By early February 1794, he writes,</p>
<blockquote><p>I have little heart in such scenes for the compilation of a regular journal; if there were the least chance of my obtaining employment elsewhere or a passport to leave, I would leave this hideous shambles to-morrow. I am here to discover the secrets of a Government which has none, to unriddle mysteries when everything is but too patent, to assign causes to affects when <em>famine, hideous famine</em>, is the cause of everything. At times I console myself with the thought that I am taking part in a piece that will one day be read and re-read on History&#8217;s page &#8211; if, indeed, all History be not destroyed and the End of all things come.</p></blockquote>
<p>What seems to pain Hesdin most is the transformation that has taken hold of Paris, a city which once had clearly bewitched and entranced him, in a way that Paris through the ages seems to have had a unique capacity to do.</p>
<blockquote><p>I walked today under the chestnuts for an hour&#8230; The contrast to my youthful recollections of Paris moved me almost to tears. Nothing but the eternal white dust of the streets remains the same&#8230;</p>
<p>The ferment of minds in the salons, clubs, and coffee-houses, above all in the streets, was indescribable. People literally lived in the open air those two summers, and in &#8217;89 at every moment were seen horsemen dashing in with news from the Court or the Assembly at Versailles; orators declaiming on every chair and balustrade on the terrace. Now it is the silence of the grave</p></blockquote>
<p>He tells us of dance halls banned by the government, but which continued anyway in secret, shifting from place to place each night to avoid detection. He watches as great books and priceless pictures sell for nothing, all vestiges of the past having &#8216;become objects of derision&#8217;. Most chillingly, he one day observes that guillotinings have become so much a part of the day that guards have had to be posted at the scaffolds to stop children from playing on it.</p>
<p>In the middle of all this comes the tale of an old grey lion, once the pride of the menagerie at Versailles, and now caged in the Jardin des Plantes. This was a beautiful botanical garden, marred only, Hesdin tells us, by the presence of strolling flower girls paid by the government to keep a spying eye and keen ear trained on visitors. In this small zoo (which, along with the park, still exists today) lived the Lion, &#8216;covered with sores and infested with vermin&#8217;, a pitiful sight &#8211; more mange than mane. For a small fee visitors would be allowed in to see him, and consequently, says Hesdin, he was &#8216;tormented by the Parisian sans-cullotes <em>because he was king&#8217;. </em>This sad image seems to encapsulate both the deep fears and growing frustrations of the people of Paris at this time. The King and Queen were both dead and the revolution had brought immense change, but as people screamed at the lion and tugged his hair, it is tempting to believe they were expressing a powerful sense that the revolution was not yet complete, that it had not done what it was meant to. Its leaders had sought to stoke an ever-burning fear of enemies both within and without, and even the idea of royalty was something that had still to be not only ridiculed but also actively and continuously attacked.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s best not to get too romantic about the case of one old Lion, but I&#8217;m always searching for moments like this in history, where in one seemingly trivial anecdote everything seems to crystalise, and petty actions have the capacity to reveal what otherwise goes unspoken; ideas and emotions so powerful and complicated that perhaps only unconscious action <em>can</em> express them.</p>
<p>In the end you can interpret the story of the lion in the park in whichever way you like, but through the eyes of Raoul Hesdin, things seem bleakly clear. Shortly before his diary comes to an abrupt and unexplained end, he sums up the world he sees stretching out before him.</p>
<blockquote><p>Politics seem to be asleep, and all hope of resistance at an end; the yoke is to be eternal; the bloodshed perpetual, if men can be born fast enough to feed the fire.</p>
<p>Further Reading</p></blockquote>
<ul>
<li><em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0554415690?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=0554415690" target="_blank">The Journal of a Spy in Paris During the Reign of Terror, January-July, 1794 &#8230;</a><img style="border: none !important; margin: 0px !important;" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=cultstuf-21&amp;l=as2&amp;o=2&amp;a=0554415690" border="0" alt="" width="1" height="1" /> A reproduction of the 1895 edition of the journal.</em></li>
<li><em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0141017279?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=0141017279" target="_blank">Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution</a><img style="border: none !important; margin: 0px !important;" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=cultstuf-21&amp;l=as2&amp;o=2&amp;a=0141017279" border="0" alt="" width="1" height="1" />Simon Schama&#8217;s epic account, which complicates rather than simplifies the revolution (in a good way). Full of rich detail.</em></li>
<li><em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0349115885?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=cultstuf-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=6738&amp;creativeASIN=0349115885">The Terror</a></em><img style="border: none !important; margin: 0px !important;" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=cultstuf-21&amp;l=as2&amp;o=2&amp;a=0349115885" border="0" alt="" width="1" height="1" /> by David Andress<em> A probing and urgent account of the Terror, and an unusually lucid explanation of the fluctuations of revolutionary politics.</em></li>
</ul>
<p><em><em>The photograph used to illustrate this article is by Vincenzo Gianferrari Pini, and was sourced from <a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org">Wikimedia Commons</a>.</em></em></p>
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