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September Massacres

The September Massacres were a series of killings of prisoners and civilians in Paris that occurred in 1792, from Sunday, 2 September until Thursday, 6 September, during the French Revolution. Between 1,176 and 1,614 people[1] were killed by fédérés, guardsmen, and sans-culottes, with the support of gendarmes responsible for guarding the tribunals and prisons,[2] the Cordeliers, the Committee of Surveillance of the Commune, and the revolutionary sections of Paris.[3][4][5]

September Massacres
Part of the French Revolution
Massacres des 2 et 3 septembre 1792 by Auguste Raffet
Native name Massacres de Septembre
Date2–6 September 1792 (1792-09-02 – 1792-09-06)
LocationParis
TypeMassacres
CauseObsession with a prison conspiracy, desire for revenge, fear of advancing Prussians, ambiguity over who was in control
Organised byCordeliers
Participants235 fédérés, guardsmen and sans-culottes
OutcomeHalf the prison population of Paris summarily executed
Deaths1,100–1,600

With widespread fear that foreign and royalist armies would attack Paris, and that the imprisoned Swiss mercenaries would be freed to join them, on 1 September the Legislative Assembly called for volunteers to gather the next day on the Champs de Mars.[6] On 2 September, around 1:00 pm, Georges Danton delivered a speech in the assembly, stating: "We ask that anyone refusing to give personal service or to furnish arms shall be punished with death.[7] The bell we are about to ring... sounds the charge on the enemies of our country."[8][9][10] The massacres began around 2:30 PM in the middle of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, and within the first 20 hours more than 1,000 prisoners were killed.

The next morning, the surveillance committees of the commune published a circular that called on provincial patriots to defend Paris by eliminating counter-revolutionaries, and the secretary, Jean-Lambert Tallien, called on other cities to follow suit.[11] The massacres were repeated in a few other French cities; in total 65–75 incidents were reported.[12][13]

The exact number of victims is not known, as over 440 people had uncertain fates, including from 22 to 200 Swiss soldiers.[1][14] The identity of the perpetrators, called "septembriseurs", is poorly documented, but a large number were Parisian national guards and provincial federates who had remained in the city since their arrival in July.[15] 72% of those killed were non-political prisoners including forgers of assignats (galley convicts), common criminals, women, and children, while 17% were Catholic priests.[16][17]

The minister of the interior, Roland, accused the commune of the atrocities. Charlotte Corday held Jean-Paul Marat responsible, while Madame Roland blamed Georges Danton.[18][19] Danton was also accused by later French historians Adolphe Thiers, Alphonse de Lamartine, Jules Michelet, Louis Blanc and Edgar Quinet of doing nothing to stop them.[20]

According to modern historian Georges Lefebvre, the "collective mentality is a sufficient explanation for the killing".[21] Historian Timothy Tackett deflected specific blame from individuals, stating: "The obsession with a prison conspiracy, the desire for revenge, the fear of the advancing Prussians, the ambiguity over who was in control of a state that had always relied in the past on a centralized monarchy: all had come together in a volatile mixture of anger, fear, and uncertainty."[22]

Background edit

The Duke of Brunswick's manifesto edit

 
Anonymous caricature depicting the treatment given to the Brunswick Manifesto by the French population

In April 1792 France declared war on the Habsburg monarchy, prompting the War of the First Coalition. In July, an army under the Duke of Brunswick, and composed mostly of Prussians, joined the Austrian side and invaded France. As the army advanced, Paris went into a state of hysteria, especially after the Duke issued the "Brunswick Manifesto" on 25 July. His avowed aim was

to put an end to the anarchy in the interior of France, to check the attacks upon the throne and the altar, to reestablish the legal power, to restore to the king the security and the liberty of which he is now deprived and to place him in a position to exercise once more the legitimate authority which belongs to him.[23]

The manifesto threatened the French population with instant punishment should it resist the imperial and Prussian armies or the reinstatement of the monarchy. The manifesto was frequently described as unlawful and offensive to national sovereignty. Its authorship was frequently in doubt.[24]

Revolutionaries like Marat and Hébert preferred to concentrate on the internal enemy.[25] On 3 August Pétion and 47 sections demanded the deposition of the king.

The insurrection of the Paris Commune edit

On the evening of 9 August 1792, a Jacobin insurrection overthrew the leadership of the Paris municipality, proclaiming a new revolutionary commune headed by transitional authorities. The next day the insurrectionists stormed the Tuileries Palace. King Louis XVI was imprisoned with the royal family, and his authority as king was suspended by the Legislative Assembly. The following day the royalist press was silenced.[26][27]

A provisional executive (conseil exécutif) was named and busied itself with reorganizing or solving questions concerning the police, justice, the army, navy, and paper money, but actual power now rested with the new revolutionary commune, whose strength resided in the mobilized and armed sans-culottes, the lower classes of Paris, and fédérés, armed volunteers from the provinces that had arrived at the end of July. The 48 sections of Paris were equipped with munitions from the plundered arsenals in the days before the assault, substituting for the 60 national guard battalions.[citation needed]

Supported by a new armed force, the commune dominated the Legislative Assembly and its decisions.[28] The commune pushed through several measures: universal suffrage was adopted, the civilian population was armed, all remnants of noble privileges were abolished and the properties of the émigrés were sold. These events meant a change of direction from the political and constitutional perspective of the Girondists to a more social approach given by the commune as expressed by Pierre-Joseph Cambon: "To reject with more efficacy the defenders of despotism, we have to address the fortunes of the poor, we have to associate the Revolution with this multitude that possesses nothing, we have to convert the people to the cause."[29]

Besides these measures, the commune engaged in a policy of political repression of all suspected counter-revolutionary activities. Beginning on 11 August, every Paris section named surveillance committees (committees of vigilance) for conducting searches and making arrests.[5][dead link] It was mostly these decentralized committees, rather than the commune as a whole, which engaged in the repression of August and September 1792. Within a few days each section elected three commissioners to take seats in the insurrectionary commune; one of them was Maximilien Robespierre.[30]

To ensure that there was some appropriate legal process for dealing with suspects accused of political crimes and treason, rather than arbitrary killing by local committees, a revolutionary tribunal, with extraordinary powers to impose the death sentence without any appeal,[31] was installed on 17 August.[32] Robespierre, who had proposed this measure, refused to preside over the tribunal, arguing that the same man ought not to be a denouncer, an accuser, and a judge.[33]: 201 

Already, on 15 August, four sections called for all priests and imprisoned suspects to be put to death before the volunteers departed. Robespierre proposed to erect a pyramid on Place Vendôme to remember the victims of 10 August. On 19 August the nonjuring priests were ordered to leave the country within two weeks, which meant before 2 September 1792. In Paris, all monasteries were closed and would soon be in use as hospitals, etc. The remaining religious orders were banned by the law of 15 August.[34] Marat left nothing in doubt when he urged "good citizens to go to the Abbaye, to seize priests, and especially the officers of the Swiss guards and their accomplices and run a sword through them".[35] From 15 to 25 August, around 500 detentions were registered; some were sent to Orléans. Half the detentions were of nonjuring priests, but even priests who had sworn the required oath were caught in the wave.[citation needed]

Prussian advance and Paris reaction edit

Around 26 August, news reached Paris that the Prussian army had crossed the French border and occupied Longwy without a battle. Roland proposed that the government should leave Paris, whereas Robespierre suggested in a letter to the sections of the commune that they should defend liberty and equality and maintain their posts, and die if necessary.[36] The assembly decreed that all the non-juring priests had to leave Paris within eight days and the country within two weeks.[37] In the evening, in the presence of 350,000 people, a funeral ceremony was held in the gardens of the Tuileries for those killed while storming the Tuileries.[38]

On 28 August, the assembly ordered a curfew for around two days. [39] The city gates were closed; all communication with the country was stopped. At the behest of Justice Minister Danton, thirty commissioners from the sections were ordered to search in every (suspect) house for weapons, munition, swords, carriages and horses.[40][41] "They searched every drawer and every cupboard, sounded every panel, lifted every hearthstone, inquired into every correspondence in the capital. As a result of this inquisition, more than 1,000 "suspects" were added to the immense body of political prisoners already confined in the jails and convents of the city."[42]

On 29 August, the Prussians attacked Verdun. When this news arrived it escalated panic in the capital; the situation was highly critical.[43]

Throughout August, the Legislative Assembly, which had been greatly diminished as more than half of the deputies had fled since the storming of the Tuileries, had acquiesced to the activities of the commune and its sections. On 30 August, the Girondins Roland and Marguerite-Élie Guadet tried to suppress the influence of the commune, which they accused of exercising unlawful power. The assembly, tired of the pressures, declared the commune illegal and suggested the organization of communal elections and a doubling of the number of seats.[44][39] However, the assembly canceled the decree the next day at the request of Jacques-Alexis Thuriot. The balance of power was disrupted and the conflict between the Girondins and the Montagnards would influence the progress of the French Revolution.[44]

On 1 September the prisons were full.[45] The citizens of Paris were told to prepare themselves for the defense of the country and gather immediately upon the sound of the tocsin.[46] Their imminent departure from the capital provoked further concern about the crowded prisons, now full of counter-revolutionary suspects who might threaten a city deprived of so many of its defenders.[47]

Marat called for a "new blood-letting", larger than the one on 10 August. Marat and his Committee of Surveillance of the Commune organized the massacres, first voting to round up 4,000 mostly ordinary people, "suspects" of the committee, agreed to kill them in "whole groups," voting down a Marat proposal to murder them by setting them on fire, then finally agreeing to a proposal by Billaud-Varennes to "butcher them".[48] The bulk of the butchers were made up of "Marseilles," "hired assassins" from the prisons of Genoa and Sicily, paid twenty-four dollars, whose names were listed by "M. Granier de Cassagnac."[49] The rest were murderers and others previously imprisoned for violent crimes released ahead of time[50] from the prisons they would soon be returning to for the massacres.

The British ambassador reported:

A party at the instigation of someone or other declared they would not quit Paris, as long as the prisons were filled with Traitors (for they called those so, that were confined in the different Prisons and Churches), who might in the absence of such a number of Citizens rise and not only effect the release of His Majesty but make an entire counterrevolution.[51]

On 1 September, the gates of the city closed the days before, were opened on the orders of Pétion, providing an opportunity for suspects to flee the capital. According to Louis-Marie Prudhomme people still profited from the opportunity on Sunday morning 2 September.[52] (Verdun capitulated on 2 September gaining a clear westward path to Paris.[53]) The Assembly decreed arming the volunteers; a third would stay in Paris and defend the city with pikes, the others were meant for the frontier and the trenches. It further decreed that traitors who refused to participate in the defense or hand over their arms deserved death.[6] The sections, gathered in the town hall, decided to remain in Paris; Marat proposed to have Roland and his fellow Girondist Brissot arrested.[54] The commune ordered the gates closed and an alarm gun fired. After the tocsin was rung around 14:00, 50 or 60,000 men enrolled for the defense of the country on the Champs de Mars.[55]

On 2 September, around 13:00, Georges Danton, a member of the provisional government, delivered a speech in the assembly: "We ask that anyone refusing to give personal service or to furnish arms shall be punished with death."[56] "The bell we are about to ring is not an alarm signal; it sounds the charge on the enemies of our country." After the applause, he continued, "To conquer them we must dare, dare again, always dare, and France is saved."[57][9] His speech acted as a call for direct action among the citizens, as well as a strike against the external enemy.[58] Madame Roland and Hillary Mantel weren't the only ones who thought his speech was responsible for inciting the September Massacres, also Louis Mortimer−Ternaux.[59][60]

Madame de Staël edit

Around 4 in the afternoon Madame de Staël, as ambassadress of Sweden, who lived in Rue du Bac near Champ de Mars, tried to flee through crowded streets but her carriage was stopped and the crowd forced her to go to the Paris town hall, where Robespierre presided.[61][non-primary source needed] (However, according to Maximilien's sister Charlotte, he never presided over the insurrectionary commune.[62] According to Louvet de Couvrai he "governed" the Paris Conseil Général of the département.[63]) Late in the evening, she was conveyed home, escorted by the procurator Louis Pierre Manuel. The next day the secretary-general to the Commune of Paris, Tallien, arrived with a passport and accompanied her to the barrier.[64]

Massacres edit

 
Map of Paris and the Faubourgs (1797). The La Force prison was in Le Marais on Rue Pavée, near Place des Fédérés. The Conciergerie was located on the westside of the Île de la Cité, next to the Palais de Justice.
 
115 priests were killed in the Carmes prison. Le massacre des Carmes by Marie–Marc–Antoine Bilcocq, (1820). Musée de la Révolution française
 
Prison de l'Abbaye where 160–220 people were killed in three days. It was located between Rue de Bussi and Rue du Four (E40), with the entrance on Rue Sainte-Marguerite, today 133, Boulevard Saint-Germain.

The first massacre began in the quartier Latin around 14:30 on Sunday afternoon when 24 non-juring priests were being transported to the prison de l'Abbaye near the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, after being interrogated by Billaud-Varenne in the town hall. One of the carriages, escorted by Fédérés, was attacked after an incident.[65] The fédérés killed three men in the middle of the street, before the procession arrived at the prison. Eighteen of the arrested were taken inside. They then mutilated the bodies, "with circumstances of barbarity too shocking to describe" according to the British diplomatic dispatch. One of their victims was the former minister of foreign affairs Armand Marc, comte de Montmorin. Roch-Ambroise Cucurron Sicard was recognized as a beneficent priest and released.[66]

Carmes prison edit

In the late afternoon 115 priests in the former convent of Carmelites, detained with the message they would be deported to French Guiana, were massacred in the courtyard with axes, spikes, swords and pistols by people with a strong patois accent. They forced the priests one by one to take the oath on the Civil Constitution of the Clergy and "swear to be faithful to the nation and to maintain liberty and equality or die defending it".[67]

Some priests hid in the choir and behind the altar. Several tried to get away by climbing in the trees and over the walls and making their escape through the Rue Cassette.[68][69]

At around 1700 hours, a group of 200 "Septembriseurs" came to the house of Roland on Place Dauphine to arrest him, but, as he was at the ministry, they went there.[70]

Prison de l'Abbaye edit

 
An Incident during the Massacre: Charles François de Virot de Sombreuil and his daughter leaving the prison. Painting by Walter William Ouless
 
Léon-Maxime Faivre (1908) Death of the Princess de Lamballe

Between 19:00 and 20:00, the group of fédérés, etc. was back at the Abbaye prison. The Abbaye prison was located in what is now the Boulevard Saint-Germain just west of the current Passage de la Petite Boucherie. The door was closed, but the killing was resumed after an intense discussion with Manuel, the procurator, on people's justice and failing judges.[71] Manuel and Jean Dussaulx belonged to a deputation sent by the "Conseil Général" of the commune to ask for compassion.[72] They were insulted and escaped with their lives.[73]

A tribunal composed of twelve people presided over by Stanislas-Marie Maillard, started the interrogation by asking the prisoner why he or she was arrested. A lie was fatal,[74] and the prisoners were summarily judged and either freed or executed.[75] Each prisoner was asked a handful of questions, after which the prisoner was either freed with the words "Vive la nation" and permitted to leave, or sentenced to death with the words "Conduct him to the Abbaye" or "Let him go", after which the condemned was taken to a yard and was immediately killed by a waiting mob consisting of men, women, and children.[75]

The massacres were opposed by the staff of the prison, who allowed many prisoners to escape, one example being Pauline de Tourzel. The Prison de l'Abbaye contained a number of prisoners formerly belonging to the royal household, as well as survivors of the Swiss Guards from the royal palace. Among them were the royal governesses Marie Angélique de Mackau and Louise-Élisabeth de Croÿ de Tourzel; the ladies-in-waiting the Princess de Tarente and the Princess de Lamballe; the queen's ladies-maids Marie-Élisabeth Thibault and Mme Bazile; the dauphin's nurse St Brice; the Princesse de Lamballe's lady's maid Navarre; and the valets of the king, Chamilly and Hue.[75] All ten former members of the royal household were placed before the tribunals and freed from charges, with the exception of the Princess de Lamballe,[76][77] whose death would become one of the most publicized of the September Massacres. Louise-Élisabeth de Croÿ de Tourzel was released on order of Manuel by the Commune.[78]

Of the Swiss Guard prisoners 135 were killed, 27 were transferred, 86 were set free, and 22 had uncertain fates.[79] According to George Long 122 died and 43 people were released.[80] The victims had to leave behind money, jewelry, silver, gold, assignats, but also an Aeneid which is widely regarded as Virgil's masterpiece. Most of the victims' clothes were pierced with spade marks and had bloodstains. According to Louvet four armed men came to the house of Roland to get paid.[81] On Monday morning nine o'clock, Billaud-Varenne came to the Abbaye prison and declared that the tribunal should stop stealing and would get paid by the Commune. At ten Maillard and his twelve judges resumed their work.[82] In three days 216 men, and only three women were massacred in the Abbey.[83] De Virot, responsible for the safeguarding of large stocks of weapons stored in the Hotel des Invalides, and his daughter survived.

Conciergerie, Saint Firmin and Bernardins edit

 
Saint-Bernard where 73 men (locked up in the past three months) were killed and three released.
 
Conciergerie where 250–300 people were killed
 
Saint Firmin in the Rue Saint Victor where 73 seminarians were killed

Late in the afternoon, they went to Tour Saint-Bernard (belonging to a confiscated monastery Collège des Bernardins, located in the Sansculotte district) where forgers of assignats were jailed. (Almost all of them were locked up in the previous three months.) The pattern of semi-formal executions followed by the popular tribunals was for condemned prisoners to be ordered "transferred" and then taken into the prison courtyard where they would be cut down. One man was released after he was recognized as a thief. The participants in the killing received bread, wine and cheese, and some money.[84]

In the early evening, groups broke into another Paris prison, the Conciergerie, via an open door in a side stair. The massacre was more uncontrolled in the Conciergerie than in the Prison de l'Abbaye. In the Conciergerie, the staff did not cooperate by turning the prisoners to the mob; instead, the mob broke into the cells themselves. The massacre continued from late evening through the night until morning. Of 488 prisoners in the Conciergerie, 378 were killed during the massacre.[85] One woman in the Conciergerie, Marie Gredeler, a bookseller who was accused of murder, was tied to a pole, killed, and mutilated.[85]

According to Prudhomme people sat on the stairs of the Palace of Justice watching the butchery in the courtyard.[86] Not far away Restif de la Bretonne saw bodies piled high on Pont au Change in front of the Châtelet, then thrown in the river. He recorded the atrocities he witnessed in Les Nuits de Paris (1794).[87]

Before midnight the seminary Saint Firmin was visited by just four men, who killed all the seminarians. All of them were detained in August according to Cassignac; the average age of the prisoners was 47. At 2.30 in the morning, the Assembly was informed that most of the prisons were empty. The next morning the Assembly was still involved with the defense of the city; Hérault de Séchelles presided. It decided the other prisoners had to wait for their trial because of a temporary lack of judges.[88]

Bicêtre and Salpêtrière edit

 
The Salpêtrière hospital where 35 women were killed
 
The royal hospital Bicêtre where 150–170 men were killed

Bicêtre, a hospital for men and boys that also served as a prison for beggars and the homeless, was visited twice that day after a rumor that there were thousands of rifles stored there. The commander brought seven cannons. According to Cassignac François Hanriot and his battalion were present; 56 prisoners were released. The average age of the 170 victims was 24–25 years, 41 were between 12 and 18 years old, and 58 were under 20.[89] Mayor Pétion did not have much influence discussing humanity with them.[90]

At dawn Salpêtrière, a hospice for women and girls to which a prison was attached, was visited.[91] The number of victims is exactly known: 35 women, including 23 underaged.[92] The average age of the 35 victims was 45 – only one of them, Marie Bertrand, a diocesan from Dyon, was 17 years old – and 52 were released according to Cassignac.[93]

The end edit

On Tuesday afternoon the killing in the Abbey finally stopped. Police commissioners Etienne-Jean Panis and Sergent-Marceau gave orders to wash away all the blood from the stairs and the courtyard, to spread straw, to count the corpses, and to dispose of them on carts to avoid infections.[94] A contract was signed with the gravedigger of the nearby Église Saint-Sulpice, Paris, who also had to purchase quicklime. On 5 September, the day of the election, it was perfectly quiet in Paris according to Le Moniteur Universel.[95] There were still 80 prisoners in "La Force".

On 6 September the massacres finally ended.[96][97] The next day the gates were opened, but it was impossible to travel to another department without a passport.[98]

Contemporary reports edit

 
The Grand Châtelet from the north where about 220 people were killed
 
Mass killing of more than 200 prisoners in the Châtelet on 3 September
 
La Force prison where about 165 people were killed in 48 hours.

In a letter from 25 January 1793 Helen Maria Williams accused Robespierre and Danton, saying that Marat was only their instrument.[99] Francois Buzot, a Girondin, mentions Camille Desmoulins and Fabre d'Eglantine.

According to Galart de Montjoie, a lawyer and royalist, in those days everyone believed the Fédérés from Marseille, Avignon and Brest were involved in the killing.[100][101][102] About 800–1000 were staying in barrack, but moved supposedly to where events would take place. It seems around 300 Fédérés from Brest and 500 from Marseille were then lodged in Cordeliers Convent.[103][104][105][106] Servan planned to give them military training before using them to supplement the army at the front.

The fact is that the reports of conspiracies in the prisons, however improbable, and the constant propaganda about the people's will and the people's anger, held everyone in a sort of stupor and gave the impression that this infamous performance was the work of the populace, whereas in reality there were not above 200 criminals.[107][108]

Though it is an ascertained fact that the perpetrators of the atrocious murders were but a few; yet it is not so clear that this work was not connived at, or consented to, by a much greater number, and those perhaps in authority; for otherwise, two or three companies of the town guard would have been sufficient to disperse those who were employed on the occasion.[109][page needed]

Perry describes the restoration of order after the events, giving the impression that the massacres may even have had a cathartic effect. He also suggests that France was plagued by fewer foreign enemies afterward. What emerges therefore from Perry's report is a view that, if massacres did take place, they occurred not out of spontaneous popular madness but because of comprehensible grievances.[110]

According to Robert Lindet,[111] Adolphe Thiers, George Long,[112] and Stanley Loomis not an outburst of passion, but coldly and carefully organized.[113]

Rather than being proof of the unprecedented depravity of an entire population, the prison massacres were the explicable result of both the "wrath and fury" of the victims of 10 August and the machinations of the Paris Commune, who gave their tacit consent to the killings.[114] Those targeted in the attacks had not been imprisoned unjustly but had been suspected of having aided the court in its negotiations with foreign princes. In a similar way to Perry, Williams emphasizes the understandable impatience of the people, who had been kept waiting too long for justice after the August Days, when husbands, brothers, and fathers had been killed.[115]

Numbers edit

 
A propaganda engraving of the September Massacres showing the killing of priests, nuns and Princess de Lamballe

According to Pierre Caron there were almost 2,800 prisoners in early September. Between 1,250 and 1,450 prisoners were condemned and executed. According to Caron and Bluche 70% of the victims were killed in a 20-hour interval.[116] Among the victims were 223 nonjuring Catholic priests and (arch)bishops who refused to submit to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, 81 Swiss guards, and 40–80 political suspects, mostly royalists, aristocrats, and some former judges and ministers[117] including the queen's best friend, the Princesse de Lamballe, the only political victim in "La petite Force".[118]

The lives of about 1,250–1,600 prisoners brought before the people's courts were saved.[119] In a few cases people were acclaimed as "patriots" by Robespierre, Tallien, Desmoulins, and Danton.[120][121] Several prisoners for debts or alimony were released by Louis Pierre Manuel or by the police before 2 September.[55]

A total of nine prisons were violently entered during the five days of the massacres before the killings concluded on the night of 6–7 September; four were not visited (Sainte-Pélagie Prison, Prison Saint-Lazare, Tour du Temple and palais Bourbon). About 700 surviving Swiss soldiers, locked up in Palais Bourbon, marched to the town hall to take the oath and joined the volunteers.[96][122] After initially indiscriminate slayings, ad hoc popular tribunals were set up to distinguish between "enemies of the people" and those who were innocent, or at least were not perceived as counter-revolutionary threats. In spite of this attempted sifting, estimated three-quarters of the 1,250–1,450 killed were not counter-revolutionaries or "villains", but included all the galley convicts, forgers of assignats, 37 women (including the Princess de Lamballe and Marie Gredeler) and 66 children.[123] Some priests and women were of age, about prostitutes or insane not much is known.[17]

Killings outside Paris edit

On 3 September the surveillance committees of the Commune, on which Marat now served, published a circular that called on provincial Patriots to defend Paris and asked that, before leaving their homes, they eliminate counter-revolutionaries. Marat advised the entire nation "to adopt this necessary measure".[124]

A circular letter was sent to regional authorities by Deforgues, an assistant of Danton, and Tallien, the secretary of the Paris Commune, advising that "ferocious conspirators detained in the prisons had been put to death by the people".[125][126][127]

The Girondins afterward made much of this circular, but there is no evidence that it had any influence. As before, murders in the provinces continued: the blood-letting did not cease until the countryside was purged. Smaller-scale executions took place in Reims, Meaux, and Lyon on 2, 4 and 9 September. Most notable was the killing of 44 political prisoners near Château de Versailles transported from the High Court in Orléans back to Paris, the 9 September massacres.[13] The next day Brissot wrote in "Le Patriote français", his newspaper: "No doubt you will be told that it is a vengeance of the people; it will be a slander. The people were not involved in this event."[128]

Official role edit

 
On 2 September Stanislas-Marie Maillard and his gang were present at the Abbaye and Carmes. As the president of the tribunal he signed the death sentences.

According to Timothy Tackett: "For a period of some 48 hours between the 29th and 31 August, the whole of Paris was systematically searched by the national guard for lurking conspirators and hidden arms.[129] By that time section assemblies were already passing motions demanding "the death of conspirators before the departure of citizens".[130]

On 31 August the Committee of Vigilance was created with Panis and Sergent-Marceau. According to Madame de Staël on 31 August "it was already known, that only those who were destined to be massacred were sent to that prison [of the Abbey]."[131]

On 1 September the Commune declared a state of emergency by decreeing that on the following day the tocsin should be rung, all able-bodied citizens convened in the Champ de Mars.[6]

On Sunday 2 September the 1792 French National Convention election started. Robespierre publicly accused Brissot and the Brissotins of plotting with the Duke of Brunswick.[132] Marat was appointed as one of the six additional members of the Committee of Vigilance, but without the approval of the Executive Council.[133]

According to Adolphe Thiers on Sunday morning 2 September: "The keeper of the Abbaye sent away his children in the morning. Dinner was served to the prisoners two hours before the accustomed time, and the knives were taken from their plates."[134][55]

Such municipal and central government as existed in Paris in September 1792 was preoccupied with organizing volunteers, supplies, and equipment for the armies on the threatened frontiers. Accordingly, there was no attempt to assuage popular fears that the understaffed and easily accessed prisons were full of royalists who would break out and seize the city when the national guards and other citizen volunteers had left for the war. According to Madame Roland Danton responded to an appeal to protect the prisoners with the comment: "To hell with the prisoners! They must look after themselves."[135][136][137] On 3 September Roland said: "Yesterday was a day that we should perhaps throw a veil on." The other members of the provisional government – Clavière, Lebrun-Tondu, Monge and Servan, involved in organizing the country did not do much to stop the killing, or could not foresee or prevent these excesses. Mayor Pétion de Villeneuve turned a blind eye when he visited Bicêtre.[138] Olympe de Gouges and Brissot's newspaper were the only ones condemning the September murders.

Debate in the Convention edit

 
Imaginary meeting between Robespierre, Danton and Marat (illustrating Victor Hugo's novel Ninety-Three ) by Alfred Loudet

The Brissotins in the Convention first attacked Danton; he was asked to resign as minister on the 25th but forced to step down on 9 October. He kept his seat in the Convention as deputy. Then the Brissotins decided to attack Robespierre and Marat.[139]

On 29 October 1792, the Convention reviewed these recent events. Jean-Baptiste Louvet de Couvray accused Robespierre of creating a personality cult, governing the Paris "Conseil General" and paying the "Septembriseurs".[140][141] Marat was accused of being asocial and establishing a dictatorship. He was taken by surprise and had to be defended by Danton.[142][page needed] Robespierre was given eight days to reply. On 5 November Robespierre stated that Marat had visited him only once since January.[143] He insisted that most of the victims were aristocrats, which wasn't the case.[144] He admitted the arrests at the end of August were illegal, as illegal as the revolution, the fall of the monarchy and the Bastille.[145] He asked the convention: "Citizens, did you want a revolution without revolution?" Robespierre, Danton, and Marat insisted that the "new bloodletting" had been a spontaneous popular movement. Their opponents, the Girondins, spoke of a systematically planned conspiracy.[146] Louvet de Couvrai who published his speech was no longer admitted to the Jacobin Club.[147]

Political repercussions edit

The massacres first damaged the political position of the Girondins, who seemed too moderate, and later the Jacobins, who seemed too bloodthirsty.[148] A new mayor Nicolas Chambon was installed on 1 December 1792. On 4 February 1793 Robespierre defended the September massacres as necessary.[149] On 13 February Pierre Gaspard Chaumette received a list of victims in the La Force Prison.

It was Servan's proposal to bring armed volunteers from the provinces. He was arrested during the Terror, but released in February 1795. In 1796 24 or 39 craftsmen and small businessmen were accused;[150] although only three were condemned.[151] The vinegar maker Damiens was sentenced to twenty years of imprisonment.

Martyrs edit

 
The abbey chapel in 1793.

One hundred and fifteen churchmen killed in the Carmes Prison were beatified by Pope Pius XI on 17 October 1926. Among the martyrs were Pierre-Louis de la Rochefoucauld, bishop of Saintes; Jean-Marie du Lau d'Alleman, archbishop of Arles; François-Joseph de la Rochefoucauld, bishop of Beauvais; and Ambroise Chevreux, the last superior-general of the monastic Congregation of Saint Maur.[152]

See also edit

Notes and citations edit

  1. ^ a b L. Madelin, Chapter XXI, p. 256
  2. ^ "Collection Complète des Lois, Décrets, Ordonnances, Réglements, et Avis du Conseil-d'État". A. Guyot. 5 July 1824.
  3. ^ P. Caron (1935), p. 107, 114
  4. ^ S. Schama, p. 611
  5. ^ a b "F. Furet & M. Ozouf (1989) A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution, p. 139" (PDF).
  6. ^ a b c "Collection Complète des Lois, Décrets, Ordonnances, Réglements, et Avis du Conseil-d'État". A. Guyot. 5 July 1824.
  7. ^ "Danton (2 septembre 1792) – Histoire – Grands discours parlementaires – Assemblée nationale". www2.assemblee-nationale.fr.
  8. ^ "I. "Dare, Dare Again, Always Dare" by Georges Jacques Danton. Continental Europe (380–1906). Vol. VII. Bryan, William Jennings, ed. 1906. The World's Famous Orations". www.bartleby.com. 10 October 2022.
  9. ^ a b Danton, Georges-Jacques (1759–1794) Auteur du texte (5 July 1910). Discours de Danton / édition critique par André Fribourg – via gallica.bnf.fr.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Mantel, Hilary (6 August 2009). "Hilary Mantel · He Roared: Danton · LRB 6 August 2009". London Review of Books. 31 (15).
  11. ^ F. Furet and M. Ozouf, eds. A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution (1989), pp. 521–22
  12. ^ P. Caron (1935) Les massacres de Septembre, p. 363-394. Part IV covers comparable events in provincial cities that transpired from July to October 1792.
  13. ^ a b P. McPhee (2016) Liberty or Death, p. 162
  14. ^ Bluche, Frédéric (1 January 1986). Septembre 1792 : logiques d'un massacre. Robert Laffont (réédition numérique FeniXX). ISBN 9782221178560.
  15. ^ "Septembre 1792 : de la rumeur au massacre". www.lhistoire.fr.
  16. ^ Gwynne Lewis (2002). The French Revolution: Rethinking the Debate. Routledge. p. 38. ISBN 9780203409916.
  17. ^ a b Frédéric Bluche (1986) Septembre 1792 : logiques d'un massacre, p. 235
  18. ^ Hauck, Carolin; Mommertz, Monika; Schlüter, Andreas; Seedorf, Thomas (9 October 2018). Tracing the Heroic Through Gender. Ergon Verlag. ISBN 9783956504037.
  19. ^ Lawday, David (6 July 2010). The Giant of the French Revolution: Danton, A Life. Open Road + Grove/Atlantic. ISBN 9780802197023.
  20. ^ "Georges Danton – Danton's Committee of Public Safety". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  21. ^ Georges Lefebvre, The French Revolution: From its Origins to 1793 (2001) p. 236
  22. ^ "Tackett, Timothy (2011) "Rumor and Revolution: The Case of the September Massacres", French History and Civilization Vol. 4, pp. 54–64" (PDF).
  23. ^ Arno J. Mayer (2000). The Furies: Violence and Terror in the French and Russian Revolutions. Princeton U.P. p. 554. ISBN 0691090157.
  24. ^ "The Myth of the Foreign Enemy? The Brunswick Manifesto and the Radicalization of the French Revolution", French History 25, no. 2 (2011): 188–213 by Elisabeth Cross
  25. ^ Cross, E. (2011). "The Myth of the Foreign Enemy? The Brunswick Manifesto and the Radicalization of the French Revolution". French History. 25 (2): 188–213. doi:10.1093/fh/crr030 – via www.academia.edu.
  26. ^ fr:Presse sous la Révolution française
  27. ^ Jeremy D. Popkin, Revolutionary News : The Press in France, 1789–1799, Durham (Caroline du Nord) / Londres, Duke University Press, coll. « Bicentennial Reflections on the French Revolution », 1990, pp. 133–134 ISBN 082230984X
  28. ^ Bergeron, Louis, Le Monde et son Histoire, Paris, 1970, Volume VII, Chapter VII, p. 324
  29. ^ L. Bergeron (1970), p. 325.
  30. ^ Mathiez, A. (1934) Le dix août. Hachette
  31. ^ In 1815, a secretary of the convention, writing under the pseudonym "Proussinale", published some remarkable details about the procedure, Histoire secrète du tribunal révolutionnaire, par M. de Proussinalle, Band 1, pp. 2–6
  32. ^ Gilchrist, John Thomas (5 July 1971). "Press in the French Revolution". Ardent Media.
  33. ^ Ruth Scurr (2007). Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-0805082616.
  34. ^ L. Bergeron, p. 326
  35. ^ S. Schama, p. 630; L'Amie du peuple, no 680
  36. ^ Jean Massin (1959) Robespierre, pp. 133–134
  37. ^ Le Moniteur universel, t. XIII, n° 241, du 28 aôut, p. 540
  38. ^ Le Moniteur universel, t. XIII, n° 244, du 31 aôut, p. 572
  39. ^ a b J. Massin (1959), Robespierre, p. 132.
  40. ^ S. Schama, p. 626
  41. ^ "Collection Complète des Lois, Décrets, Ordonnances, Réglements, et Avis du Conseil-d'État". A. Guyot. 5 July 1824.
  42. ^ Mary Duclaux (1918) A short history of France, p. 227
  43. ^ L. Madelin, Chapter XXI, p. 252
  44. ^ a b J. Israel (2014), Revolutionary Ideas, pp. 267–268.
  45. ^ Cassignac, p. 111
  46. ^ Le Moniteur universel, t. XIII, n° 248, du 5 septembre, p. 590
  47. ^ Cobb, R. & C. Jones (1988) The French Revolution. Voices from a momentous epoch 1789–1795, p. 159
  48. ^ Loomis pp. 76–77
  49. ^ Loomis p. 75
  50. ^ Loomis p. 76
  51. ^ Oscar Browning, ed., The Despatches of Earl Gower (Cambridge University Press, 1885), 213–216, 219–221, 223–228.
  52. ^ L. Bluche, p. 258
  53. ^ Parker, Geoffrey (2008). The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-0521738064.
  54. ^ Bluche, Frédéric (1986). Septembre 1792 : logiques d'un massacre. Robert Laffont (réédition numérique FeniXX). ISBN 978-2221178560.
  55. ^ a b c Granier de Cassagnac, A. (Adolphe) (5 July 1860). "Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d'après les documents officiels et inédits, accompagnée de plusieurs fac-similé". Paris : E. Dentu, p. 26 – via Internet Archive.
  56. ^ "Danton (2 Septembre 1792) – Histoire – Grands discours parlementaires – Assemblée nationale". www2.assemblee-nationale.fr.
  57. ^ "I. "Dare, Dare Again, Always Dare" by Georges Jacques Danton. Continental Europe (380–1906). Vol. VII. Bryan, William Jennings, ed. 1906. The World's Famous Orations". www.bartleby.com. 10 October 2022.
  58. ^ Mantel, Hilary (6 August 2009). "Hilary Mantel – He Roared: Danton". London Review of Books. 31 (15).
  59. ^ Simien, C. (2016). 4. Un ministre face aux massacres de septembre 1792. Dans : Michel Biard éd., Danton: Le mythe et l'Histoire (pp. 55–69). Paris: Armand Colin. doi:10.3917/arco.biard.2016.02.0055
  60. ^ Mortimer−Ternaux, L. (1863) Histoire de la Terreur, 1792–1794, d'après des documents authentiques et inédits, Tome III, pp. 188–189
  61. ^ Staël (Anne-Louise-Germaine), Madame de (5 July 1818). "Considerations on the Principal Events of the French Revolution". Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, p.74.
  62. ^ "Charlotte Robespierre's Memoirs". 6 September 2021.
  63. ^ A Maximilien Robespierre et à ses royalistes (accusation). (November 1792)
  64. ^ Ballard, Richard (14 October 2011). A New Dictionary of the French Revolution. I.B.Tauris. p. 78. ISBN 9780857720900.
  65. ^ The history of the French revolution, tr. with notes by Marie Joseph L. Adolphe Thiers, p. 144
  66. ^ Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d'après les documents officiels et inédits, accompagnée de plusieurs fac-similé, p. 43
  67. ^ F. Bluche, p. 219
  68. ^ Lapize de La Pannonie, Pierre de Auteur du texte (5 July 1913). Les Massacres du 2 septembre 1792 à la prison des Carmes à Paris / Abbé Pierre de Lapize de La Pannonie – via gallica.bnf.fr.
  69. ^ S. Loomis, p. 79
  70. ^ Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d'après les documents officiels et inédits, accompagnée de plusieurs fac-similé, p. 81
  71. ^ F. Bluche, p. 56-60
  72. ^ L. Blanc (1855) Histoire de la Révolution Française, vol VII, p. 163
  73. ^ Oscar Browning, ed., The Despatches of Earl Gower (Cambridge University Press, 1885), 213–16, 219–21, 223–28.
  74. ^ Blanc, Louis (5 July 1855). "Histoire de la révolution française". Langlois et Leclerq, p. 165.
  75. ^ a b c Hardy, B. C. (Blanche Christabel), The Princesse de Lamballe; a biography, p. 261, 284–285 (1908), Project Gutenberg
  76. ^ Biographical Memoirs of the French Revolution, Volume 1, p. 109
  77. ^ The Eclectic Review, p. 173
  78. ^ Lever, Evelyne; Catherine Temerson (2001). Marie Antoinette: The Last Queen of France. Macmillan. pp. 282–283. ISBN 0-312-28333-4.
  79. ^ Leborgne, Dominique, Saint-Germain-des-Prés et son faubourg, p. 40, Éditions Parigramme, Paris, 2005, ISBN 2-84096-189-X
  80. ^ France and Its Revolutions: A Pictorial History 1789–1848 by George Long, p. 199-202
  81. ^ Mémoires de Louvet de Couvray, p. 59
  82. ^ Cassignac p. 211
  83. ^ Cassignac p. 216, 280
  84. ^ Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d'après les documents officiels et inédits, accompagnée de plusieurs fac-similé, p. 474
  85. ^ a b The Tribunal of the terror; a study of Paris in 1793–1795, p. 37 (1909)
  86. ^ F. Bluche, p. 260
  87. ^ "The September Massacres witnessed by Restif de la Bretonne". 3 September 1792.
  88. ^ Le Moniteur universel, t. XIII, n° 248, du 5 septembre, p. 607
  89. ^ Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d'après les documents officiels et inédits, accompagnée de plusieurs fac-similé, p. 436-449
  90. ^ "Mémoires sur les journées de septembre, 1792". Baudouin frères. 5 July 1823.
  91. ^ F. Bluche, p. 193
  92. ^ F. Bluche, p. 454
  93. ^ Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d'après les documents officiels et inédits, accompagnée de plusieurs fac-similé, p. 455-463
  94. ^ L. Blanc, p. 182
  95. ^ Le Moniteur universel, t. XIII, n° 248, du 5 septembre, p. 613
  96. ^ a b Le Moniteur universel, t. XIII, n° 251, du 7 septembre, p. 621
  97. ^ F. Bluche, p. 72, 193
  98. ^ Le Moniteur universel, t. XIII, n° 248, du 7 septembre, p. 629
  99. ^ Letters Written in France By Helen Maria Williams, p. 160
  100. ^ Histoire de la conjuration de Robespierre, p. 81. Paris, les marchands de nouveautés, 1795 ; Chez Maret, an IV(1796).
  101. ^ F. Bluche, p. 233
  102. ^ "L.M. Ternaux (1863) Histoire de la Terreur, 1792–1794, Tome III, p. 126, 224" (PDF).
  103. ^ Hampson, Norman (1978) Danton (New York: Basil Blackwell), pp. 71–72.
  104. ^ S. Schama, p. 605, 611
  105. ^ Blanc, Jean Joseph Louis (5 July 1855). "Histoire de la révolution Française". Langlois et Leclercq, p. 29.
  106. ^ Mémoires de Charles Barbaroux, député à la convention nationale ..., Volume 5 p. 63
  107. ^ The memoirs of Madame Roland, p. ? (London: Barrie & Jenkins, translated by Evelyn Shuckburgh (1989))
  108. ^ Histoire de la conjugation de Maximilien Robespierre, p. 81
  109. ^ Perry, Sampson (5 July 1796). "An Historical Sketch of the French Revolution: Commencing with Its Predisposing Causes, and Carried on to the Acceptation of the Constitution, in 1795". H. D. Symonds.[page needed]
  110. ^ "Rachel Rogers (2012) Vectors of Revolution: The British Radical Community in Early Republican Paris, 1792–1794, p. 376. Université Toulouse le Mirail".
  111. ^ L. Madelin, p. 260
  112. ^ "France and Its Revolutions: A Pictorial History 1789–1848". Charles Knight, p. 206. 5 July 1850 – via Internet Archive.
  113. ^ S. Loomis, p. 74, 81, 96, 143, 207
  114. ^ Helen Maria Williams' Letters from France (1792–93), Letter IV, p. 191
  115. ^ "Rachel Rogers (2012) Vectors of Revolution: The British Radical Community in Early Republican Paris, 1792–1794, p. 402. Université Toulouse le Mirail".
  116. ^ F. Bluche, p. 192
  117. ^ P. Caron (1935) Les Massacres de Septembre, p. 94-99; 101–102
  118. ^ Boussemart, Charles (17–18 ? ; révolutionnaire) Auteur du texte (5 July 1792). Grande trahison de Louis Capet : complot découvert, pour assassiner, dans la nuit du 2 au 3 de ce mois, tous les bons citoyens de la capitale, par les aristocrates et les prêtres réfractaires, aidé des brignads et des scélérats, détenus dans les prisons de Paris ([Reprod.]) / [par Charles Boussemart,...] – via gallica.bnf.fr.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  119. ^ P. Caron, p. 99
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  121. ^ L. Michelet, tome IV, p. 121
  122. ^ "L.M. Ternaux (1863) Histoire de la Terreur, 1792–1794, d'après des documents authentiques et inédits. Tome III, p. 10, 298" (PDF).
  123. ^ P. Caron (1935) Les Massacres de Septembre, p. 95
  124. ^ M. J. Sydenham (1966) The French Revolution, p. 123. Capricorn Books.
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  128. ^ F. Bluche, p. 256
  129. ^ "T. Tackett, p. 63
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  131. ^ Staël (Anne-Louise-Germaine), Madame de (5 July 1818). "Considerations on the Principal Events of the French Revolution". Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, p. 68.
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  133. ^ Jacques, De Cock (1 December 2013). Action politique de Marat pendant la Révolution: (1789–1793). fantasques éditions. ISBN 9782913846319.
  134. ^ Thiers, Marie Joseph L. Adolphe (5 July 1845). "The history of the French revolution, tr. with notes".
  135. ^ Biard, Michel; Leuwers, Hervé (18 May 2016). Danton: Le mythe et l'histoire. Armand Colin. ISBN 9782200615277.
  136. ^ M. J. Sydenham The French Revolution, B. T. Batsford Ltd, 1965, p. 121
  137. ^ R. Scurr (2006) Fatal Purity. Robespierre and the French Revolution, p. 243?
  138. ^ "Mémoires sur les journées de septembre, 1792". Baudouin frères. 5 July 1823.
  139. ^ Dart, Gregory (26 September 2005). Rousseau, Robespierre and English Romanticism. Cambridge University Press. pp. 43–46. ISBN 9780521020398 – via Google Books.
  140. ^ A Maximilien Robespierre et à ses royalistes (accusation).
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  142. ^ R. Scurr (2006) Fatal Purity. Robespierre and the French Revolution, p. ?[page needed]
  143. ^ Robespierre, Maximilien (5 July 1840). "Oeuvres". Worms.
  144. ^ Dart, Gregory (26 September 2005). Rousseau, Robespierre and English Romanticism. Cambridge University Press. p. 45. ISBN 9780521020398 – via Google Books.
  145. ^ "The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art". Leavitt, Trow, & Company. 5 July 1844.
  146. ^ J. Israel (2014) Revolutionary ideas, p. 271, 273
  147. ^ Bouloiseau, Marc (17 November 1983). The Jacobin Republic 1792–1794. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521289184.
  148. ^ Georges Lefebvre, The French Revolution: From its Origins to 1793 (1962), pp. 241–44, 269
  149. ^ Oeuvres de Maximilien Robespierre, Band 9 by Maximilien Robespierre,p. 263-264
  150. ^ P. Caron (1935), p. 107
  151. ^ F. Bluche, p. 187, 210
  152. ^ "Bienheureux Martyrs des Carmes". Nominis (in French). Catholic Church in France. Retrieved 31 August 2018.

Bibliography edit

  • Blanc, L. (1855) Histoire de la Révolution Française, vol. VII. FUREURS DE LA GIRONDE
  • Bluche, F. (1986) Septembre 1792 : logiques d'un massacre.
  • Caron, P. (1935) Les Massacres de Septembre
  • Israel, J. (2014) Revolutionary Ideas, p. 267-277
  • Loomis, S. (1964) Paris in the Terror. New York: Dorset Press. ISBN 0-88029-401-9 online
  • Scott, S.F. & B. Rothaus, eds. (1985) Historical Dictionary of the French Revolution 1789–1799. Vol. 2 pp. 891–97.
  • Tulard, J. & J-F. Fayard and A. Fierro (1998) Histoire et Dictionnaire de la Révolution Française. ISBN 2-221-08850-6

Further reading edit

  • F. Furet (1989) Terror. In: A critical dictionary of the French Revolution
  • Hibbert, Christopher (1980) The Days of the French Revolution. William Morrow, New York.
  • Schama, Simon (1992) Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution pp. 629–39.
  • Tackett, Timothy (2011) "Rumor and Revolution: The Case of the September Massacres", French History and Civilization Vol. 4, pp. 54–64.

Eyewitnesses edit

  • Madame de Staël (1818) Considerations on the Principal Events of the French Revolution, Band 2, p. 68
  • La Vérité toute entière sur les vrais acteurs de 2. Septembre 1792 par Jean Claude Hippolyte Méhée de la Touche
  • Histoire de la conjugation de Maximilien Robespierre
  • Nicolas-Edme Restif de la Bretonne (1793) Les nuits de Paris, ou Le spectateur nocturne, p. 371-394
  • The September Massacres witnessed by Earl Gower, a British diplomat

Fictional accounts edit

External links edit

  • (archived link)
  • Thomas Carlyle on the September Massacres
  • Massacre de 2, 3, 4, 5 et 6 septembre (print)
  • Les massacres de Septembre (1910) by Lenotre, G

september, massacres, were, series, killings, prisoners, civilians, paris, that, occurred, 1792, from, sunday, september, until, thursday, september, during, french, revolution, between, people, were, killed, fédérés, guardsmen, sans, culottes, with, support, . The September Massacres were a series of killings of prisoners and civilians in Paris that occurred in 1792 from Sunday 2 September until Thursday 6 September during the French Revolution Between 1 176 and 1 614 people 1 were killed by federes guardsmen and sans culottes with the support of gendarmes responsible for guarding the tribunals and prisons 2 the Cordeliers the Committee of Surveillance of the Commune and the revolutionary sections of Paris 3 4 5 September MassacresPart of the French RevolutionMassacres des 2 et 3 septembre 1792 by Auguste RaffetNative nameMassacres de SeptembreDate2 6 September 1792 1792 09 02 1792 09 06 LocationParisTypeMassacresCauseObsession with a prison conspiracy desire for revenge fear of advancing Prussians ambiguity over who was in controlOrganised byCordeliersParticipants235 federes guardsmen and sans culottesOutcomeHalf the prison population of Paris summarily executedDeaths1 100 1 600With widespread fear that foreign and royalist armies would attack Paris and that the imprisoned Swiss mercenaries would be freed to join them on 1 September the Legislative Assembly called for volunteers to gather the next day on the Champs de Mars 6 On 2 September around 1 00 pm Georges Danton delivered a speech in the assembly stating We ask that anyone refusing to give personal service or to furnish arms shall be punished with death 7 The bell we are about to ring sounds the charge on the enemies of our country 8 9 10 The massacres began around 2 30 PM in the middle of Saint Germain des Pres and within the first 20 hours more than 1 000 prisoners were killed The next morning the surveillance committees of the commune published a circular that called on provincial patriots to defend Paris by eliminating counter revolutionaries and the secretary Jean Lambert Tallien called on other cities to follow suit 11 The massacres were repeated in a few other French cities in total 65 75 incidents were reported 12 13 The exact number of victims is not known as over 440 people had uncertain fates including from 22 to 200 Swiss soldiers 1 14 The identity of the perpetrators called septembriseurs is poorly documented but a large number were Parisian national guards and provincial federates who had remained in the city since their arrival in July 15 72 of those killed were non political prisoners including forgers of assignats galley convicts common criminals women and children while 17 were Catholic priests 16 17 The minister of the interior Roland accused the commune of the atrocities Charlotte Corday held Jean Paul Marat responsible while Madame Roland blamed Georges Danton 18 19 Danton was also accused by later French historians Adolphe Thiers Alphonse de Lamartine Jules Michelet Louis Blanc and Edgar Quinet of doing nothing to stop them 20 According to modern historian Georges Lefebvre the collective mentality is a sufficient explanation for the killing 21 Historian Timothy Tackett deflected specific blame from individuals stating The obsession with a prison conspiracy the desire for revenge the fear of the advancing Prussians the ambiguity over who was in control of a state that had always relied in the past on a centralized monarchy all had come together in a volatile mixture of anger fear and uncertainty 22 Contents 1 Background 1 1 The Duke of Brunswick s manifesto 1 2 The insurrection of the Paris Commune 1 3 Prussian advance and Paris reaction 2 Madame de Stael 3 Massacres 3 1 Carmes prison 3 2 Prison de l Abbaye 3 3 Conciergerie Saint Firmin and Bernardins 3 4 Bicetre and Salpetriere 3 5 The end 3 6 Contemporary reports 3 7 Numbers 4 Killings outside Paris 5 Official role 6 Debate in the Convention 7 Political repercussions 8 Martyrs 9 See also 10 Notes and citations 10 1 Bibliography 10 2 Further reading 10 3 Eyewitnesses 10 4 Fictional accounts 11 External linksBackground editThe Duke of Brunswick s manifesto edit nbsp Anonymous caricature depicting the treatment given to the Brunswick Manifesto by the French populationIn April 1792 France declared war on the Habsburg monarchy prompting the War of the First Coalition In July an army under the Duke of Brunswick and composed mostly of Prussians joined the Austrian side and invaded France As the army advanced Paris went into a state of hysteria especially after the Duke issued the Brunswick Manifesto on 25 July His avowed aim was to put an end to the anarchy in the interior of France to check the attacks upon the throne and the altar to reestablish the legal power to restore to the king the security and the liberty of which he is now deprived and to place him in a position to exercise once more the legitimate authority which belongs to him 23 The manifesto threatened the French population with instant punishment should it resist the imperial and Prussian armies or the reinstatement of the monarchy The manifesto was frequently described as unlawful and offensive to national sovereignty Its authorship was frequently in doubt 24 Revolutionaries like Marat and Hebert preferred to concentrate on the internal enemy 25 On 3 August Petion and 47 sections demanded the deposition of the king The insurrection of the Paris Commune edit On the evening of 9 August 1792 a Jacobin insurrection overthrew the leadership of the Paris municipality proclaiming a new revolutionary commune headed by transitional authorities The next day the insurrectionists stormed the Tuileries Palace King Louis XVI was imprisoned with the royal family and his authority as king was suspended by the Legislative Assembly The following day the royalist press was silenced 26 27 A provisional executive conseil executif was named and busied itself with reorganizing or solving questions concerning the police justice the army navy and paper money but actual power now rested with the new revolutionary commune whose strength resided in the mobilized and armed sans culottes the lower classes of Paris and federes armed volunteers from the provinces that had arrived at the end of July The 48 sections of Paris were equipped with munitions from the plundered arsenals in the days before the assault substituting for the 60 national guard battalions citation needed Supported by a new armed force the commune dominated the Legislative Assembly and its decisions 28 The commune pushed through several measures universal suffrage was adopted the civilian population was armed all remnants of noble privileges were abolished and the properties of the emigres were sold These events meant a change of direction from the political and constitutional perspective of the Girondists to a more social approach given by the commune as expressed by Pierre Joseph Cambon To reject with more efficacy the defenders of despotism we have to address the fortunes of the poor we have to associate the Revolution with this multitude that possesses nothing we have to convert the people to the cause 29 Besides these measures the commune engaged in a policy of political repression of all suspected counter revolutionary activities Beginning on 11 August every Paris section named surveillance committees committees of vigilance for conducting searches and making arrests 5 dead link It was mostly these decentralized committees rather than the commune as a whole which engaged in the repression of August and September 1792 Within a few days each section elected three commissioners to take seats in the insurrectionary commune one of them was Maximilien Robespierre 30 To ensure that there was some appropriate legal process for dealing with suspects accused of political crimes and treason rather than arbitrary killing by local committees a revolutionary tribunal with extraordinary powers to impose the death sentence without any appeal 31 was installed on 17 August 32 Robespierre who had proposed this measure refused to preside over the tribunal arguing that the same man ought not to be a denouncer an accuser and a judge 33 201 Already on 15 August four sections called for all priests and imprisoned suspects to be put to death before the volunteers departed Robespierre proposed to erect a pyramid on Place Vendome to remember the victims of 10 August On 19 August the nonjuring priests were ordered to leave the country within two weeks which meant before 2 September 1792 In Paris all monasteries were closed and would soon be in use as hospitals etc The remaining religious orders were banned by the law of 15 August 34 Marat left nothing in doubt when he urged good citizens to go to the Abbaye to seize priests and especially the officers of the Swiss guards and their accomplices and run a sword through them 35 From 15 to 25 August around 500 detentions were registered some were sent to Orleans Half the detentions were of nonjuring priests but even priests who had sworn the required oath were caught in the wave citation needed Prussian advance and Paris reaction edit Around 26 August news reached Paris that the Prussian army had crossed the French border and occupied Longwy without a battle Roland proposed that the government should leave Paris whereas Robespierre suggested in a letter to the sections of the commune that they should defend liberty and equality and maintain their posts and die if necessary 36 The assembly decreed that all the non juring priests had to leave Paris within eight days and the country within two weeks 37 In the evening in the presence of 350 000 people a funeral ceremony was held in the gardens of the Tuileries for those killed while storming the Tuileries 38 On 28 August the assembly ordered a curfew for around two days 39 The city gates were closed all communication with the country was stopped At the behest of Justice Minister Danton thirty commissioners from the sections were ordered to search in every suspect house for weapons munition swords carriages and horses 40 41 They searched every drawer and every cupboard sounded every panel lifted every hearthstone inquired into every correspondence in the capital As a result of this inquisition more than 1 000 suspects were added to the immense body of political prisoners already confined in the jails and convents of the city 42 On 29 August the Prussians attacked Verdun When this news arrived it escalated panic in the capital the situation was highly critical 43 Throughout August the Legislative Assembly which had been greatly diminished as more than half of the deputies had fled since the storming of the Tuileries had acquiesced to the activities of the commune and its sections On 30 August the Girondins Roland and Marguerite Elie Guadet tried to suppress the influence of the commune which they accused of exercising unlawful power The assembly tired of the pressures declared the commune illegal and suggested the organization of communal elections and a doubling of the number of seats 44 39 However the assembly canceled the decree the next day at the request of Jacques Alexis Thuriot The balance of power was disrupted and the conflict between the Girondins and the Montagnards would influence the progress of the French Revolution 44 On 1 September the prisons were full 45 The citizens of Paris were told to prepare themselves for the defense of the country and gather immediately upon the sound of the tocsin 46 Their imminent departure from the capital provoked further concern about the crowded prisons now full of counter revolutionary suspects who might threaten a city deprived of so many of its defenders 47 Marat called for a new blood letting larger than the one on 10 August Marat and his Committee of Surveillance of the Commune organized the massacres first voting to round up 4 000 mostly ordinary people suspects of the committee agreed to kill them in whole groups voting down a Marat proposal to murder them by setting them on fire then finally agreeing to a proposal by Billaud Varennes to butcher them 48 The bulk of the butchers were made up of Marseilles hired assassins from the prisons of Genoa and Sicily paid twenty four dollars whose names were listed by M Granier de Cassagnac 49 The rest were murderers and others previously imprisoned for violent crimes released ahead of time 50 from the prisons they would soon be returning to for the massacres The British ambassador reported A party at the instigation of someone or other declared they would not quit Paris as long as the prisons were filled with Traitors for they called those so that were confined in the different Prisons and Churches who might in the absence of such a number of Citizens rise and not only effect the release of His Majesty but make an entire counterrevolution 51 On 1 September the gates of the city closed the days before were opened on the orders of Petion providing an opportunity for suspects to flee the capital According to Louis Marie Prudhomme people still profited from the opportunity on Sunday morning 2 September 52 Verdun capitulated on 2 September gaining a clear westward path to Paris 53 The Assembly decreed arming the volunteers a third would stay in Paris and defend the city with pikes the others were meant for the frontier and the trenches It further decreed that traitors who refused to participate in the defense or hand over their arms deserved death 6 The sections gathered in the town hall decided to remain in Paris Marat proposed to have Roland and his fellow Girondist Brissot arrested 54 The commune ordered the gates closed and an alarm gun fired After the tocsin was rung around 14 00 50 or 60 000 men enrolled for the defense of the country on the Champs de Mars 55 On 2 September around 13 00 Georges Danton a member of the provisional government delivered a speech in the assembly We ask that anyone refusing to give personal service or to furnish arms shall be punished with death 56 The bell we are about to ring is not an alarm signal it sounds the charge on the enemies of our country After the applause he continued To conquer them we must dare dare again always dare and France is saved 57 9 His speech acted as a call for direct action among the citizens as well as a strike against the external enemy 58 Madame Roland and Hillary Mantel weren t the only ones who thought his speech was responsible for inciting the September Massacres also Louis Mortimer Ternaux 59 60 Madame de Stael editAround 4 in the afternoon Madame de Stael as ambassadress of Sweden who lived in Rue du Bac near Champ de Mars tried to flee through crowded streets but her carriage was stopped and the crowd forced her to go to the Paris town hall where Robespierre presided 61 non primary source needed However according to Maximilien s sister Charlotte he never presided over the insurrectionary commune 62 According to Louvet de Couvrai he governed the Paris Conseil General of the departement 63 Late in the evening she was conveyed home escorted by the procurator Louis Pierre Manuel The next day the secretary general to the Commune of Paris Tallien arrived with a passport and accompanied her to the barrier 64 Massacres edit nbsp Map of Paris and the Faubourgs 1797 The La Force prison was in Le Marais on Rue Pavee near Place des Federes The Conciergerie was located on the westside of the Ile de la Cite next to the Palais de Justice nbsp 115 priests were killed in the Carmes prison Le massacre des Carmes by Marie Marc Antoine Bilcocq 1820 Musee de la Revolution francaise nbsp Prison de l Abbaye where 160 220 people were killed in three days It was located between Rue de Bussi and Rue du Four E40 with the entrance on Rue Sainte Marguerite today 133 Boulevard Saint Germain The first massacre began in the quartier Latin around 14 30 on Sunday afternoon when 24 non juring priests were being transported to the prison de l Abbaye near the Abbey of Saint Germain des Pres after being interrogated by Billaud Varenne in the town hall One of the carriages escorted by Federes was attacked after an incident 65 The federes killed three men in the middle of the street before the procession arrived at the prison Eighteen of the arrested were taken inside They then mutilated the bodies with circumstances of barbarity too shocking to describe according to the British diplomatic dispatch One of their victims was the former minister of foreign affairs Armand Marc comte de Montmorin Roch Ambroise Cucurron Sicard was recognized as a beneficent priest and released 66 Carmes prison edit In the late afternoon 115 priests in the former convent of Carmelites detained with the message they would be deported to French Guiana were massacred in the courtyard with axes spikes swords and pistols by people with a strong patois accent They forced the priests one by one to take the oath on the Civil Constitution of the Clergy and swear to be faithful to the nation and to maintain liberty and equality or die defending it 67 Some priests hid in the choir and behind the altar Several tried to get away by climbing in the trees and over the walls and making their escape through the Rue Cassette 68 69 At around 1700 hours a group of 200 Septembriseurs came to the house of Roland on Place Dauphine to arrest him but as he was at the ministry they went there 70 Prison de l Abbaye edit nbsp An Incident during the Massacre Charles Francois de Virot de Sombreuil and his daughter leaving the prison Painting by Walter William Ouless nbsp Leon Maxime Faivre 1908 Death of the Princess de LamballeBetween 19 00 and 20 00 the group of federes etc was back at the Abbaye prison The Abbaye prison was located in what is now the Boulevard Saint Germain just west of the current Passage de la Petite Boucherie The door was closed but the killing was resumed after an intense discussion with Manuel the procurator on people s justice and failing judges 71 Manuel and Jean Dussaulx belonged to a deputation sent by the Conseil General of the commune to ask for compassion 72 They were insulted and escaped with their lives 73 A tribunal composed of twelve people presided over by Stanislas Marie Maillard started the interrogation by asking the prisoner why he or she was arrested A lie was fatal 74 and the prisoners were summarily judged and either freed or executed 75 Each prisoner was asked a handful of questions after which the prisoner was either freed with the words Vive la nation and permitted to leave or sentenced to death with the words Conduct him to the Abbaye or Let him go after which the condemned was taken to a yard and was immediately killed by a waiting mob consisting of men women and children 75 The massacres were opposed by the staff of the prison who allowed many prisoners to escape one example being Pauline de Tourzel The Prison de l Abbaye contained a number of prisoners formerly belonging to the royal household as well as survivors of the Swiss Guards from the royal palace Among them were the royal governesses Marie Angelique de Mackau and Louise Elisabeth de Croy de Tourzel the ladies in waiting the Princess de Tarente and the Princess de Lamballe the queen s ladies maids Marie Elisabeth Thibault and Mme Bazile the dauphin s nurse St Brice the Princesse de Lamballe s lady s maid Navarre and the valets of the king Chamilly and Hue 75 All ten former members of the royal household were placed before the tribunals and freed from charges with the exception of the Princess de Lamballe 76 77 whose death would become one of the most publicized of the September Massacres Louise Elisabeth de Croy de Tourzel was released on order of Manuel by the Commune 78 Of the Swiss Guard prisoners 135 were killed 27 were transferred 86 were set free and 22 had uncertain fates 79 According to George Long 122 died and 43 people were released 80 The victims had to leave behind money jewelry silver gold assignats but also an Aeneid which is widely regarded as Virgil s masterpiece Most of the victims clothes were pierced with spade marks and had bloodstains According to Louvet four armed men came to the house of Roland to get paid 81 On Monday morning nine o clock Billaud Varenne came to the Abbaye prison and declared that the tribunal should stop stealing and would get paid by the Commune At ten Maillard and his twelve judges resumed their work 82 In three days 216 men and only three women were massacred in the Abbey 83 De Virot responsible for the safeguarding of large stocks of weapons stored in the Hotel des Invalides and his daughter survived Conciergerie Saint Firmin and Bernardins edit nbsp Saint Bernard where 73 men locked up in the past three months were killed and three released nbsp Conciergerie where 250 300 people were killed nbsp Saint Firmin in the Rue Saint Victor where 73 seminarians were killedLate in the afternoon they went to Tour Saint Bernard belonging to a confiscated monastery College des Bernardins located in the Sansculotte district where forgers of assignats were jailed Almost all of them were locked up in the previous three months The pattern of semi formal executions followed by the popular tribunals was for condemned prisoners to be ordered transferred and then taken into the prison courtyard where they would be cut down One man was released after he was recognized as a thief The participants in the killing received bread wine and cheese and some money 84 In the early evening groups broke into another Paris prison the Conciergerie via an open door in a side stair The massacre was more uncontrolled in the Conciergerie than in the Prison de l Abbaye In the Conciergerie the staff did not cooperate by turning the prisoners to the mob instead the mob broke into the cells themselves The massacre continued from late evening through the night until morning Of 488 prisoners in the Conciergerie 378 were killed during the massacre 85 One woman in the Conciergerie Marie Gredeler a bookseller who was accused of murder was tied to a pole killed and mutilated 85 According to Prudhomme people sat on the stairs of the Palace of Justice watching the butchery in the courtyard 86 Not far away Restif de la Bretonne saw bodies piled high on Pont au Change in front of the Chatelet then thrown in the river He recorded the atrocities he witnessed in Les Nuits de Paris 1794 87 Before midnight the seminary Saint Firmin was visited by just four men who killed all the seminarians All of them were detained in August according to Cassignac the average age of the prisoners was 47 At 2 30 in the morning the Assembly was informed that most of the prisons were empty The next morning the Assembly was still involved with the defense of the city Herault de Sechelles presided It decided the other prisoners had to wait for their trial because of a temporary lack of judges 88 Bicetre and Salpetriere edit nbsp The Salpetriere hospital where 35 women were killed nbsp The royal hospital Bicetre where 150 170 men were killedBicetre a hospital for men and boys that also served as a prison for beggars and the homeless was visited twice that day after a rumor that there were thousands of rifles stored there The commander brought seven cannons According to Cassignac Francois Hanriot and his battalion were present 56 prisoners were released The average age of the 170 victims was 24 25 years 41 were between 12 and 18 years old and 58 were under 20 89 Mayor Petion did not have much influence discussing humanity with them 90 At dawn Salpetriere a hospice for women and girls to which a prison was attached was visited 91 The number of victims is exactly known 35 women including 23 underaged 92 The average age of the 35 victims was 45 only one of them Marie Bertrand a diocesan from Dyon was 17 years old and 52 were released according to Cassignac 93 The end edit On Tuesday afternoon the killing in the Abbey finally stopped Police commissioners Etienne Jean Panis and Sergent Marceau gave orders to wash away all the blood from the stairs and the courtyard to spread straw to count the corpses and to dispose of them on carts to avoid infections 94 A contract was signed with the gravedigger of the nearby Eglise Saint Sulpice Paris who also had to purchase quicklime On 5 September the day of the election it was perfectly quiet in Paris according to Le Moniteur Universel 95 There were still 80 prisoners in La Force On 6 September the massacres finally ended 96 97 The next day the gates were opened but it was impossible to travel to another department without a passport 98 Contemporary reports edit nbsp The Grand Chatelet from the north where about 220 people were killed nbsp Mass killing of more than 200 prisoners in the Chatelet on 3 September nbsp La Force prison where about 165 people were killed in 48 hours In a letter from 25 January 1793 Helen Maria Williams accused Robespierre and Danton saying that Marat was only their instrument 99 Francois Buzot a Girondin mentions Camille Desmoulins and Fabre d Eglantine According to Galart de Montjoie a lawyer and royalist in those days everyone believed the Federes from Marseille Avignon and Brest were involved in the killing 100 101 102 About 800 1000 were staying in barrack but moved supposedly to where events would take place It seems around 300 Federes from Brest and 500 from Marseille were then lodged in Cordeliers Convent 103 104 105 106 Servan planned to give them military training before using them to supplement the army at the front The fact is that the reports of conspiracies in the prisons however improbable and the constant propaganda about the people s will and the people s anger held everyone in a sort of stupor and gave the impression that this infamous performance was the work of the populace whereas in reality there were not above 200 criminals 107 108 Though it is an ascertained fact that the perpetrators of the atrocious murders were but a few yet it is not so clear that this work was not connived at or consented to by a much greater number and those perhaps in authority for otherwise two or three companies of the town guard would have been sufficient to disperse those who were employed on the occasion 109 page needed Perry describes the restoration of order after the events giving the impression that the massacres may even have had a cathartic effect He also suggests that France was plagued by fewer foreign enemies afterward What emerges therefore from Perry s report is a view that if massacres did take place they occurred not out of spontaneous popular madness but because of comprehensible grievances 110 According to Robert Lindet 111 Adolphe Thiers George Long 112 and Stanley Loomis not an outburst of passion but coldly and carefully organized 113 Rather than being proof of the unprecedented depravity of an entire population the prison massacres were the explicable result of both the wrath and fury of the victims of 10 August and the machinations of the Paris Commune who gave their tacit consent to the killings 114 Those targeted in the attacks had not been imprisoned unjustly but had been suspected of having aided the court in its negotiations with foreign princes In a similar way to Perry Williams emphasizes the understandable impatience of the people who had been kept waiting too long for justice after the August Days when husbands brothers and fathers had been killed 115 Numbers edit nbsp A propaganda engraving of the September Massacres showing the killing of priests nuns and Princess de LamballeAccording to Pierre Caron there were almost 2 800 prisoners in early September Between 1 250 and 1 450 prisoners were condemned and executed According to Caron and Bluche 70 of the victims were killed in a 20 hour interval 116 Among the victims were 223 nonjuring Catholic priests and arch bishops who refused to submit to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy 81 Swiss guards and 40 80 political suspects mostly royalists aristocrats and some former judges and ministers 117 including the queen s best friend the Princesse de Lamballe the only political victim in La petite Force 118 The lives of about 1 250 1 600 prisoners brought before the people s courts were saved 119 In a few cases people were acclaimed as patriots by Robespierre Tallien Desmoulins and Danton 120 121 Several prisoners for debts or alimony were released by Louis Pierre Manuel or by the police before 2 September 55 A total of nine prisons were violently entered during the five days of the massacres before the killings concluded on the night of 6 7 September four were not visited Sainte Pelagie Prison Prison Saint Lazare Tour du Temple and palais Bourbon About 700 surviving Swiss soldiers locked up in Palais Bourbon marched to the town hall to take the oath and joined the volunteers 96 122 After initially indiscriminate slayings ad hoc popular tribunals were set up to distinguish between enemies of the people and those who were innocent or at least were not perceived as counter revolutionary threats In spite of this attempted sifting estimated three quarters of the 1 250 1 450 killed were not counter revolutionaries or villains but included all the galley convicts forgers of assignats 37 women including the Princess de Lamballe and Marie Gredeler and 66 children 123 Some priests and women were of age about prostitutes or insane not much is known 17 Killings outside Paris editOn 3 September the surveillance committees of the Commune on which Marat now served published a circular that called on provincial Patriots to defend Paris and asked that before leaving their homes they eliminate counter revolutionaries Marat advised the entire nation to adopt this necessary measure 124 A circular letter was sent to regional authorities by Deforgues an assistant of Danton and Tallien the secretary of the Paris Commune advising that ferocious conspirators detained in the prisons had been put to death by the people 125 126 127 The Girondins afterward made much of this circular but there is no evidence that it had any influence As before murders in the provinces continued the blood letting did not cease until the countryside was purged Smaller scale executions took place in Reims Meaux and Lyon on 2 4 and 9 September Most notable was the killing of 44 political prisoners near Chateau de Versailles transported from the High Court in Orleans back to Paris the 9 September massacres 13 The next day Brissot wrote in Le Patriote francais his newspaper No doubt you will be told that it is a vengeance of the people it will be a slander The people were not involved in this event 128 Official role edit nbsp On 2 September Stanislas Marie Maillard and his gang were present at the Abbaye and Carmes As the president of the tribunal he signed the death sentences According to Timothy Tackett For a period of some 48 hours between the 29th and 31 August the whole of Paris was systematically searched by the national guard for lurking conspirators and hidden arms 129 By that time section assemblies were already passing motions demanding the death of conspirators before the departure of citizens 130 On 31 August the Committee of Vigilance was created with Panis and Sergent Marceau According to Madame de Stael on 31 August it was already known that only those who were destined to be massacred were sent to that prison of the Abbey 131 On 1 September the Commune declared a state of emergency by decreeing that on the following day the tocsin should be rung all able bodied citizens convened in the Champ de Mars 6 On Sunday 2 September the 1792 French National Convention election started Robespierre publicly accused Brissot and the Brissotins of plotting with the Duke of Brunswick 132 Marat was appointed as one of the six additional members of the Committee of Vigilance but without the approval of the Executive Council 133 According to Adolphe Thiers on Sunday morning 2 September The keeper of the Abbaye sent away his children in the morning Dinner was served to the prisoners two hours before the accustomed time and the knives were taken from their plates 134 55 Such municipal and central government as existed in Paris in September 1792 was preoccupied with organizing volunteers supplies and equipment for the armies on the threatened frontiers Accordingly there was no attempt to assuage popular fears that the understaffed and easily accessed prisons were full of royalists who would break out and seize the city when the national guards and other citizen volunteers had left for the war According to Madame Roland Danton responded to an appeal to protect the prisoners with the comment To hell with the prisoners They must look after themselves 135 136 137 On 3 September Roland said Yesterday was a day that we should perhaps throw a veil on The other members of the provisional government Claviere Lebrun Tondu Monge and Servan involved in organizing the country did not do much to stop the killing or could not foresee or prevent these excesses Mayor Petion de Villeneuve turned a blind eye when he visited Bicetre 138 Olympe de Gouges and Brissot s newspaper were the only ones condemning the September murders Debate in the Convention edit nbsp Imaginary meeting between Robespierre Danton and Marat illustrating Victor Hugo s novel Ninety Three by Alfred LoudetThe Brissotins in the Convention first attacked Danton he was asked to resign as minister on the 25th but forced to step down on 9 October He kept his seat in the Convention as deputy Then the Brissotins decided to attack Robespierre and Marat 139 On 29 October 1792 the Convention reviewed these recent events Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvray accused Robespierre of creating a personality cult governing the Paris Conseil General and paying the Septembriseurs 140 141 Marat was accused of being asocial and establishing a dictatorship He was taken by surprise and had to be defended by Danton 142 page needed Robespierre was given eight days to reply On 5 November Robespierre stated that Marat had visited him only once since January 143 He insisted that most of the victims were aristocrats which wasn t the case 144 He admitted the arrests at the end of August were illegal as illegal as the revolution the fall of the monarchy and the Bastille 145 He asked the convention Citizens did you want a revolution without revolution Robespierre Danton and Marat insisted that the new bloodletting had been a spontaneous popular movement Their opponents the Girondins spoke of a systematically planned conspiracy 146 Louvet de Couvrai who published his speech was no longer admitted to the Jacobin Club 147 Political repercussions editThe massacres first damaged the political position of the Girondins who seemed too moderate and later the Jacobins who seemed too bloodthirsty 148 A new mayor Nicolas Chambon was installed on 1 December 1792 On 4 February 1793 Robespierre defended the September massacres as necessary 149 On 13 February Pierre Gaspard Chaumette received a list of victims in the La Force Prison It was Servan s proposal to bring armed volunteers from the provinces He was arrested during the Terror but released in February 1795 In 1796 24 or 39 craftsmen and small businessmen were accused 150 although only three were condemned 151 The vinegar maker Damiens was sentenced to twenty years of imprisonment Martyrs edit nbsp The abbey chapel in 1793 Main article Holy September Martyrs One hundred and fifteen churchmen killed in the Carmes Prison were beatified by Pope Pius XI on 17 October 1926 Among the martyrs were Pierre Louis de la Rochefoucauld bishop of Saintes Jean Marie du Lau d Alleman archbishop of Arles Francois Joseph de la Rochefoucauld bishop of Beauvais and Ambroise Chevreux the last superior general of the monastic Congregation of Saint Maur 152 See also editThe Legislative Assembly and the fall of the French monarchyNotes and citations edit a b L Madelin Chapter XXI p 256 Collection Complete des Lois Decrets Ordonnances Reglements et Avis du Conseil d Etat A Guyot 5 July 1824 P Caron 1935 p 107 114 S Schama p 611 a b F Furet amp M Ozouf 1989 A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution p 139 PDF a b c Collection Complete des Lois Decrets Ordonnances Reglements et Avis du Conseil d Etat A Guyot 5 July 1824 Danton 2 septembre 1792 Histoire Grands discours parlementaires Assemblee nationale www2 assemblee nationale fr I Dare Dare Again Always Dare by Georges Jacques Danton Continental Europe 380 1906 Vol VII Bryan William Jennings ed 1906 The World s Famous Orations www bartleby com 10 October 2022 a b Danton Georges Jacques 1759 1794 Auteur du texte 5 July 1910 Discours de Danton edition critique par Andre Fribourg via gallica bnf fr a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Mantel Hilary 6 August 2009 Hilary Mantel He Roared Danton LRB 6 August 2009 London Review of Books 31 15 F Furet and M Ozouf eds A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution 1989 pp 521 22 P Caron 1935 Les massacres de Septembre p 363 394 Part IV covers comparable events in provincial cities that transpired from July to October 1792 a b P McPhee 2016 Liberty or Death p 162 Bluche Frederic 1 January 1986 Septembre 1792 logiques d un massacre Robert Laffont reedition numerique FeniXX ISBN 9782221178560 Septembre 1792 de la rumeur au massacre www lhistoire fr Gwynne Lewis 2002 The French Revolution Rethinking the Debate Routledge p 38 ISBN 9780203409916 a b Frederic Bluche 1986 Septembre 1792 logiques d un massacre p 235 Hauck Carolin Mommertz Monika Schluter Andreas Seedorf Thomas 9 October 2018 Tracing the Heroic Through Gender Ergon Verlag ISBN 9783956504037 Lawday David 6 July 2010 The Giant of the French Revolution Danton A Life Open Road Grove Atlantic ISBN 9780802197023 Georges Danton Danton s Committee of Public Safety Encyclopedia Britannica Georges Lefebvre The French Revolution From its Origins to 1793 2001 p 236 Tackett Timothy 2011 Rumor and Revolution The Case of the September Massacres French History and Civilization Vol 4 pp 54 64 PDF Arno J Mayer 2000 The Furies Violence and Terror in the French and Russian Revolutions Princeton U P p 554 ISBN 0691090157 The Myth of the Foreign Enemy The Brunswick Manifesto and the Radicalization of the French Revolution French History 25 no 2 2011 188 213 by Elisabeth Cross Cross E 2011 The Myth of the Foreign Enemy The Brunswick Manifesto and the Radicalization of the French Revolution French History 25 2 188 213 doi 10 1093 fh crr030 via www academia edu fr Presse sous la Revolution francaise Jeremy D Popkin Revolutionary News The Press in France 1789 1799 Durham Caroline du Nord Londres Duke University Press coll Bicentennial Reflections on the French Revolution 1990 pp 133 134 ISBN 082230984X Bergeron Louis Le Monde et son Histoire Paris 1970 Volume VII Chapter VII p 324 L Bergeron 1970 p 325 Mathiez A 1934 Le dix aout Hachette In 1815 a secretary of the convention writing under the pseudonym Proussinale published some remarkable details about the procedure Histoire secrete du tribunal revolutionnaire par M de Proussinalle Band 1 pp 2 6 Gilchrist John Thomas 5 July 1971 Press in the French Revolution Ardent Media Ruth Scurr 2007 Fatal Purity Robespierre and the French Revolution Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0805082616 L Bergeron p 326 S Schama p 630 L Amie du peuple no 680 Jean Massin 1959 Robespierre pp 133 134 Le Moniteur universel t XIII n 241 du 28 aout p 540 Le Moniteur universel t XIII n 244 du 31 aout p 572 a b J Massin 1959 Robespierre p 132 S Schama p 626 Collection Complete des Lois Decrets Ordonnances Reglements et Avis du Conseil d Etat A Guyot 5 July 1824 Mary Duclaux 1918 A short history of France p 227 L Madelin Chapter XXI p 252 a b J Israel 2014 Revolutionary Ideas pp 267 268 Cassignac p 111 Le Moniteur universel t XIII n 248 du 5 septembre p 590 Cobb R amp C Jones 1988 The French Revolution Voices from a momentous epoch 1789 1795 p 159 Loomis pp 76 77 Loomis p 75 Loomis p 76 Oscar Browning ed The Despatches of Earl Gower Cambridge University Press 1885 213 216 219 221 223 228 L Bluche p 258 Parker Geoffrey 2008 The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare New York Cambridge University Press p 195 ISBN 978 0521738064 Bluche Frederic 1986 Septembre 1792 logiques d un massacre Robert Laffont reedition numerique FeniXX ISBN 978 2221178560 a b c Granier de Cassagnac A Adolphe 5 July 1860 Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d apres les documents officiels et inedits accompagnee de plusieurs fac simile Paris E Dentu p 26 via Internet Archive Danton 2 Septembre 1792 Histoire Grands discours parlementaires Assemblee nationale www2 assemblee nationale fr I Dare Dare Again Always Dare by Georges Jacques Danton Continental Europe 380 1906 Vol VII Bryan William Jennings ed 1906 The World s Famous Orations www bartleby com 10 October 2022 Mantel Hilary 6 August 2009 Hilary Mantel He Roared Danton London Review of Books 31 15 Simien C 2016 4 Un ministre face aux massacres de septembre 1792 Dans Michel Biard ed Danton Le mythe et l Histoire pp 55 69 Paris Armand Colin doi 10 3917 arco biard 2016 02 0055 Mortimer Ternaux L 1863 Histoire de la Terreur 1792 1794 d apres des documents authentiques et inedits Tome III pp 188 189 Stael Anne Louise Germaine Madame de 5 July 1818 Considerations on the Principal Events of the French Revolution Baldwin Cradock and Joy p 74 Charlotte Robespierre s Memoirs 6 September 2021 A Maximilien Robespierre et a ses royalistes accusation November 1792 Ballard Richard 14 October 2011 A New Dictionary of the French Revolution I B Tauris p 78 ISBN 9780857720900 The history of the French revolution tr with notes by Marie Joseph L Adolphe Thiers p 144 Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d apres les documents officiels et inedits accompagnee de plusieurs fac simile p 43 F Bluche p 219 Lapize de La Pannonie Pierre de Auteur du texte 5 July 1913 Les Massacres du 2 septembre 1792 a la prison des Carmes a Paris Abbe Pierre de Lapize de La Pannonie via gallica bnf fr S Loomis p 79 Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d apres les documents officiels et inedits accompagnee de plusieurs fac simile p 81 F Bluche p 56 60 L Blanc 1855 Histoire de la Revolution Francaise vol VII p 163 Oscar Browning ed The Despatches of Earl Gower Cambridge University Press 1885 213 16 219 21 223 28 Blanc Louis 5 July 1855 Histoire de la revolution francaise Langlois et Leclerq p 165 a b c Hardy B C Blanche Christabel The Princesse de Lamballe a biography p 261 284 285 1908 Project Gutenberg Biographical Memoirs of the French Revolution Volume 1 p 109 The Eclectic Review p 173 Lever Evelyne Catherine Temerson 2001 Marie Antoinette The Last Queen of France Macmillan pp 282 283 ISBN 0 312 28333 4 Leborgne Dominique Saint Germain des Pres et son faubourg p 40 Editions Parigramme Paris 2005 ISBN 2 84096 189 X France and Its Revolutions A Pictorial History 1789 1848 by George Long p 199 202 Memoires de Louvet de Couvray p 59 Cassignac p 211 Cassignac p 216 280 Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d apres les documents officiels et inedits accompagnee de plusieurs fac simile p 474 a b The Tribunal of the terror a study of Paris in 1793 1795 p 37 1909 F Bluche p 260 The September Massacres witnessed by Restif de la Bretonne 3 September 1792 Le Moniteur universel t XIII n 248 du 5 septembre p 607 Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d apres les documents officiels et inedits accompagnee de plusieurs fac simile p 436 449 Memoires sur les journees de septembre 1792 Baudouin freres 5 July 1823 F Bluche p 193 F Bluche p 454 Histoire des Girondins et des massacres de septembre d apres les documents officiels et inedits accompagnee de plusieurs fac simile p 455 463 L Blanc p 182 Le Moniteur universel t XIII n 248 du 5 septembre p 613 a b Le Moniteur universel t XIII n 251 du 7 septembre p 621 F Bluche p 72 193 Le Moniteur universel t XIII n 248 du 7 septembre p 629 Letters Written in France By Helen Maria Williams p 160 Histoire de la conjuration de Robespierre p 81 Paris les marchands de nouveautes 1795 Chez Maret an IV 1796 F Bluche p 233 L M Ternaux 1863 Histoire de la Terreur 1792 1794 Tome III p 126 224 PDF Hampson Norman 1978 Danton New York Basil Blackwell pp 71 72 S Schama p 605 611 Blanc Jean Joseph Louis 5 July 1855 Histoire de la revolution Francaise Langlois et Leclercq p 29 Memoires de Charles Barbaroux depute a la convention nationale Volume 5 p 63 The memoirs of Madame Roland p London Barrie amp Jenkins translated by Evelyn Shuckburgh 1989 Histoire de la conjugation de Maximilien Robespierre p 81 Perry Sampson 5 July 1796 An Historical Sketch of the French Revolution Commencing with Its Predisposing Causes and Carried on to the Acceptation of the Constitution in 1795 H D Symonds page needed Rachel Rogers 2012 Vectors of Revolution The British Radical Community in Early Republican Paris 1792 1794 p 376 Universite Toulouse le Mirail L Madelin p 260 France and Its Revolutions A Pictorial History 1789 1848 Charles Knight p 206 5 July 1850 via Internet Archive S Loomis p 74 81 96 143 207 Helen Maria Williams Letters from France 1792 93 Letter IV p 191 Rachel Rogers 2012 Vectors of Revolution The British Radical Community in Early Republican Paris 1792 1794 p 402 Universite Toulouse le Mirail F Bluche p 192 P Caron 1935 Les Massacres de Septembre p 94 99 101 102 Boussemart Charles 17 18 revolutionnaire Auteur du texte 5 July 1792 Grande trahison de Louis Capet complot decouvert pour assassiner dans la nuit du 2 au 3 de ce mois tous les bons citoyens de la capitale par les aristocrates et les pretres refractaires aide des brignads et des scelerats detenus dans les prisons de Paris Reprod par Charles Boussemart via gallica bnf fr a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link P Caron p 99 M J Sydenham The French Revolution B T Batsford Ltd 1965 p 121 L Michelet tome IV p 121 L M Ternaux 1863 Histoire de la Terreur 1792 1794 d apres des documents authentiques et inedits Tome III p 10 298 PDF P Caron 1935 Les Massacres de Septembre p 95 M J Sydenham 1966 The French Revolution p 123 Capricorn Books Beale Joseph H 1884 The French Revolution Charles Knight s Popular History of England p 725 in Beale Joseph H 1884 Gay s Standard History of the World s Great Nations Vol 1 W Gay and Company Gorton John 5 July 1828 A general biographical dictionary containing a summary account of the lives of eminent persons of all nations previous to the present generation Hunt and Clarke Jean Lambert Tallien www nndb com F Bluche p 256 T Tackett p 63 S Schama p 631 Stael Anne Louise Germaine Madame de 5 July 1818 Considerations on the Principal Events of the French Revolution Baldwin Cradock and Joy p 68 Hardman John 5 July 1999 Robespierre Longman ISBN 9780582437555 Jacques De Cock 1 December 2013 Action politique de Marat pendant la Revolution 1789 1793 fantasques editions ISBN 9782913846319 Thiers Marie Joseph L Adolphe 5 July 1845 The history of the French revolution tr with notes Biard Michel Leuwers Herve 18 May 2016 Danton Le mythe et l histoire Armand Colin ISBN 9782200615277 M J Sydenham The French Revolution B T Batsford Ltd 1965 p 121 R Scurr 2006 Fatal Purity Robespierre and the French Revolution p 243 Memoires sur les journees de septembre 1792 Baudouin freres 5 July 1823 Dart Gregory 26 September 2005 Rousseau Robespierre and English Romanticism Cambridge University Press pp 43 46 ISBN 9780521020398 via Google Books A Maximilien Robespierre et a ses royalistes accusation S Schama p 649 R Scurr 2006 Fatal Purity Robespierre and the French Revolution p page needed Robespierre Maximilien 5 July 1840 Oeuvres Worms Dart Gregory 26 September 2005 Rousseau Robespierre and English Romanticism Cambridge University Press p 45 ISBN 9780521020398 via Google Books The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature Science and Art Leavitt Trow amp Company 5 July 1844 J Israel 2014 Revolutionary ideas p 271 273 Bouloiseau Marc 17 November 1983 The Jacobin Republic 1792 1794 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521289184 Georges Lefebvre The French Revolution From its Origins to 1793 1962 pp 241 44 269 Oeuvres de Maximilien Robespierre Band 9 by Maximilien Robespierre p 263 264 P Caron 1935 p 107 F Bluche p 187 210 Bienheureux Martyrs des Carmes Nominis in French Catholic Church in France Retrieved 31 August 2018 Bibliography edit Blanc L 1855 Histoire de la Revolution Francaise vol VII FUREURS DE LA GIRONDE Bluche F 1986 Septembre 1792 logiques d un massacre Caron P 1935 Les Massacres de Septembre Israel J 2014 Revolutionary Ideas p 267 277 Loomis S 1964 Paris in the Terror New York Dorset Press ISBN 0 88029 401 9 online Scott S F amp B Rothaus eds 1985 Historical Dictionary of the French Revolution 1789 1799 Vol 2 pp 891 97 Tulard J amp J F Fayard and A Fierro 1998 Histoire et Dictionnaire de la Revolution Francaise ISBN 2 221 08850 6Further reading edit F Furet 1989 Terror In A critical dictionary of the French Revolution Hibbert Christopher 1980 The Days of the French Revolution William Morrow New York Schama Simon 1992 Citizens A Chronicle of the French Revolution pp 629 39 Tackett Timothy 2011 Rumor and Revolution The Case of the September Massacres French History and Civilization Vol 4 pp 54 64 Eyewitnesses edit Madame de Stael 1818 Considerations on the Principal Events of the French Revolution Band 2 p 68 La Verite toute entiere sur les vrais acteurs de 2 Septembre 1792 par Jean Claude Hippolyte Mehee de la Touche Histoire de la conjugation de Maximilien Robespierre Nicolas Edme Restif de la Bretonne 1793 Les nuits de Paris ou Le spectateur nocturne p 371 394 The September Massacres witnessed by Earl Gower a British diplomatFictional accounts edit Dickens Charles A Tale of Two Cities 1859 Henty George Alfred In the Reign of Terror Neville Katherine The Eight 1988 External links edit The September Massacres 2 7 Sept 1792 archived link Thomas Carlyle on the September Massacres Massacre de 2 3 4 5 et 6 septembre print Les massacres de Septembre 1910 by Lenotre G Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title September Massacres amp oldid 1203777912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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