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Toussaint Louverture

François-Dominique Toussaint Louverture (French: [fʁɑ̃swa dɔminik tusɛ̃ luvɛʁtyʁ], English: /ˌlvərˈtjʊər/)[2] also known as Toussaint L'Ouverture or Toussaint Bréda; 20 May 1743 – 7 April 1803) was a Haitian general and the most prominent leader of the Haitian Revolution. During his life, Louverture first fought and allied with Spanish forces against Saint-Domingue Royalists, then joined with Republican France, becoming Governor-General-for-life of Saint-Domingue, and lastly fought against Napoleon Bonaparte's Empire.[3][4] As a revolutionary leader, Louverture displayed military and political acumen that helped transform the fledgling slave rebellion into a revolutionary movement. Louverture is now known as the "Father of Haiti".[5]

Toussaint Louverture
Posthumous 1813 painting of Louverture
Governor-General of Saint-Domingue
In office
1797–1802
Appointed byÉtienne Maynaud
Preceded byLéger-Félicité Sonthonax
Succeeded byCharles Leclerc
Personal details
Born20 May 1743
Cap-Français, Saint-Domingue
Died7 April 1803(1803-04-07) (aged 59)
Fort de Joux, La Cluse-et-Mijoux First French Republic
Spouse(s)Cécile
Suzanne Simone Baptiste Louverture
Military career
Allegiance Spain
 France
 Haiti
Service/branchSpanish Army
French Army
French Revolutionary Army
Armée Indigène[1]
Years of service1791–1803
RankGeneral
Battles/warsHaitian Revolution

Toussaint Louverture was born as a slave in the French colony of Saint-Domingue, now known as Haiti. He was a devout Catholic, and was manumitted as an affranchi (ex-slave) before the French Revolution, identifying as a Creole for the greater part of his life. During his time as an affranchi, he became a salaried employee, an overseer of his former master's plantation, and later became a wealthy slave owner himself; Toussaint Louverture owned several coffee plantations at Petit Cormier, Grande Rivière, and Ennery.[6][7][8]

At the start of the Haitian revolution he was nearly 50 years old and began his military career as a lieutenant to Georges Biassou, an early leader of the 1791 War for Freedom in Saint-Domingue.[9] Initially allied with the Spaniards of neighboring Santo Domingo, Louverture switched his allegiance to the French when the new Republican government abolished slavery. Louverture gradually established control over the whole island and used his political and military influence to gain dominance over his rivals.[10]

Throughout his years in power, he worked to balance the economy and security of Saint-Domingue. Worried about the economy, which had stalled, he restored the plantation system using paid labor; negotiated trade agreements with the United Kingdom and the United States and maintained a large and well-trained army.[11] Louverture seized power in Saint-Domingue, established his own system of government, and promulgated his own colonial constitution in 1801 that named him as Governor-General for Life, which challenged Napoleon Bonaparte's authority.[12]

In 1802, he was invited to a parley by French Divisional General Jean-Baptiste Brunet, but was arrested upon his arrival. He was deported to France and jailed at the Fort de Joux. He died in 1803. Although Louverture died before the final and most violent stage of the Haitian Revolution, his achievements set the grounds for the Haitian army's final victory. Suffering massive losses in multiple battles at the hands of the Haitian army and losing thousands of men to yellow fever, the French capitulated and withdrew permanently from Saint-Domingue the very same year. The Haitian Revolution continued under Louverture's lieutenant, Jean-Jacques Dessalines, who declared independence on 1 January 1804, thereby establishing the sovereign state of Haiti.

Early life edit

Birth, parentage, and childhood edit

Louverture was born into slavery, the eldest son of Hyppolite, an Allada slave from the slave coast of West Africa, and his second wife Pauline, a slave from the Aja ethnic group, and given the name Toussaint at birth.[10] Louverture's son Issac would later name his great-grandfather, Hyppolite's father, as Gaou Guinou and a son of the King of Allada, although there is little extant evidence of this. The name Gaou possibly originated in the title Deguenon, meaning "old man" or "wise man" in the Allada kingdom, making Gaou Guinou and his son Hyppolite members of the bureaucracy or nobility, but not members of the royal family. In Africa, Hyppolite and his first wife, Catherine, were forced into enslavement due to a series of imperialist wars of expansion by the Kingdom of Dahomey into the Allada territory. In order to remove their political rivals and obtain European trade goods, Dahomean slavers separated the couple and sold them to the crew of the French slave ship Hermione, which then sailed to the French West Indies. The original names of Toussaint's parents are unknown, since the Code Noir mandated that slaves brought to their colonies be made into Catholics, stripped of their African names, and be given more European names in order to assimilate them into the French plantation system. Toussaint's father received the name Hyppolite upon his baptism on Saint-Domingue, as Latin and Greek names were the most fashionable for slaves at this time, followed by French, and Biblical Christian names.[10]

Louverture is thought to have been born on the plantation of Bréda at Haut-du-Cap in Saint-Domingue, where his parents were enslaved and where he would spend the majority of his life before the revolution.[13][14] His parents would go on to have several children after him, with five surviving infancy; Marie-Jean, Paul, Pierre, Jean, and Gaou, named for his grandfather. Louverture would grow closest to his younger brother Paul, who along with his other siblings were baptized into the Catholic Church by the local Jesuit Order. Pierre-Baptiste Simon, a carpenter and gatekeeper on the Bréda plantation, is considered to have been Louverture's godfather and went on to become a parental figure to Louverture's family, along with his foster mother Pelage, after the death of Toussaint's parents.[15] Growing up, Toussaint first learned to speak the African Fon language of the Allada slaves on the plantation, then the Creole French of the greater colony, and eventually the Standard French of the elite class (grands blancs) during the revolution.

Although he would later become known for his stamina and riding prowess, Louverture earned the nickname Fatras-Bâton ("sickly stick"), in reference to his small thin stature in his youth.[16][17]: 26–27  Toussaint and his siblings were trained to be domestic servants with Louverture being trained as an equestrian and coachmen after showing a talent for handling the horses and oxen on the plantation. This allowed the siblings to work in the manor house and stables, away from the grueling physical labor and deadly corporal punishment meted out in the sugar-cane fields. In spite of this relative privilege, there is evidence that even in his youth Louverture's pride pushed him to engage in fights with members of the Petits-blancs (white commoner) community, who worked on the plantation as hired help. There is a record that Louverture beat a young petit blanc named Ferere, but was able to escape punishment after being protected by the new plantation overseer, François Antoine Bayon de Libertat. De Libertat had become steward of the Bréda property after it was inherited by Pantaléon de Bréda Jr., a grand blanc (white nobleman), and managed by Bréda's nephew the Count of Noah.[18] In spite or perhaps because of this protection, Louverture went on to engage in other fights. On one occasion, he threw the plantation attorney Bergé off a horse belonging to the Bréda plantation, when he attempted to take it outside the bounds of the property without permission.[10]

First marriage and manumission edit

Until 1938, historians believed that Louverture had been a slave until the start of the revolution.[note 1][citation needed] In the later 20th century, discovery of a personal marriage certificate and baptismal record dated between 1776 and 1777 documented that Louverture was a freeman, meaning that he had been manumitted sometime between 1772 and 1776, the time de Libertat had become overseer. This finding retrospectively clarified a private letter that Louverture sent to the French government in 1797, in which he mentioned he had been free for more than twenty years.[19]: 62 

Upon being freed, Toussaint took up the name of Toussaint de Bréda (Toussaint of Bréda), or more simply Toussaint Bréda, in reference to the plantation where he grew up. Toussaint went from being a slave of the Bréda plantation to becoming a member of the greater community of gens de couleur libres (free people of color). This was a diverse group of Affranchis (freed slaves), free blacks of full or majority African ancestry, and Mulattos (mixed-race peoples), which included the children of French planters and their African slaves, as well as distinct multiracial families who had multi-generational mixed ancestries from the varying different populations on the island. The gens de couleur libres strongly identified with Saint-Domingue, with a popular slogan being that while the French felt at home in France, and the slaves felt at home in Africa, they felt at home on the island. Now enjoying a greater degree of relative freedom, Louverture dedicated himself to building wealth and gaining further social mobility through emulating the model of the grands blancs and rich gens de couleur libres by becoming a planter. He began by renting a small coffee plantation, along with its 13 slaves, from his future son-in-law.[20] One of the slaves Louverture owned at this time is believed to have been Jean-Jacques Dessalines, who would go onto become one of Louverture's most loyal lieutenants and a member of his personal guard during the Haitian Revolution.[21]

Between 1761 and 1777, Louverture met and married his first wife, Cécile, in a Catholic ceremony. The couple went on to have two sons, Toussaint Jr. and Gabrielle-Toussaint, and a daughter, Marie-Marthe. During this time, Louverture bought several slaves; although this was a means to grow a greater pool of exploitable labor, this was one of the few legal methods available to free the remaining members of a former slave's extended family and social circle. Louverture eventually bought the freedom of Cécile, their children, his sister Marie-Jean, his wife's siblings, and a slave named Jean-Baptist, freeing him so that he could legally marry. Louverture's own marriage, however, soon became strained and eventually broke down, as his coffee plantation failed to make adequate returns. A few years later, the newly freed Cécile left Louverture for a wealthy Creole planter, while Louverture had begun a relationship with a woman named Suzanne, who is believed to have gone on to become his second wife. There is little evidence that any formal divorce occurred, as that was illegal at the time. Louverture, in fact, would go on to completely excise his first marriage from his recollections of his pre-revolutionary life, to the extent that, until recent documents uncovered the marriage, few researchers were aware of the existence of Cécile and her children with Louverture.[10]

Second marriage edit

In 1782, Louverture married his second wife, Suzanne Simone-Baptiste, who is thought to have been his cousin or the daughter of his godfather Pierre-Baptiste.[19]: 263  Toward the end of his life, Louverture told General Caffarelli that he had fathered at least 16 children, of whom 11 had predeceased him, between his two wives and a series of mistresses.[19]: 264–267  In 1785, Louverture's eldest child, the 24-year-old Toussaint Jr., died from a fever and the family organized a formal Catholic funeral for him. This was officiated by a local priest as a favor for the devout Louverture. Gabrielle-Toussaint disappeared from the historical record at this time and is presumed to have also died, possibly from the same illness that took Toussaint Jr. Not all of Louverture's children can be identified with certainty, but the three children from his first marriage and his three sons from his second marriage are well known. Suzanne's eldest child, Placide, is generally thought to have been fathered by Seraphim Le Clerc, a Creole planter. In spite of this, Placide was adopted by Louverture and raised as his own. Louverture went on to have at least two sons with Suzanne: Isaac, born in 1784, and Saint-Jean, born in 1791. They would remain enslaved until the start of the revolution, as Louverture spent the 1780s attempting to regain the wealth he had lost with the failure of his coffee plantation in the 1770s.[19]: 264–267 

It appears that during this time Louverture returned to play an important role on the Bréda plantation to remain closer to old friends and his family. He remained there until the outbreak of the revolution as a salaried employee and contributed to the daily functions of the plantation.[22] He took up his old responsibilities of looking after the livestock and care of the horses.[23] By 1789, his responsibilities expanded to include acting as a muleteer, master miller, and possibly a slave-driver, charged with organizing the workforce. During this time the Bréda family attempted to divide the plantation and the slaves on it among a new series of four heirs. In an attempt to protect his foster mother, Pelage, Louverture bought a young 22-year-old female slave and traded her to the Brédas to prevent Pelage from being sold to a new owner. By the start of the revolution, Louverture began to accumulate a moderate fortune and was able to buy a small plot of land adjacent to the Bréda property to build a house for his family. He was nearly 48 years old at this time.[20]

 
Apocryphal print of Toussaint reading Abbé Raynal's Histoire des deux Indes before the revolution (1853)

Education edit

Louverture gained some education from his godfather Pierre-Baptiste on the Bréda plantation.[24] His extant letters demonstrate a moderate familiarity with Epictetus, the Stoic philosopher who had lived as a slave, while his public speeches showed a familiarity with Machiavelli.[25] Some cite Enlightenment thinker Abbé Raynal, a French critic of slavery, and his publication Histoire des deux Indes predicting a slave revolt in the West Indies as a possible influence.[25][17]: 30–36 [note 2]

Louverture received a degree of theological education from the Jesuit and Capuchin missionaries through his church attendance and devout Catholicism. His medical knowledge is attributed to a familiarity with the folk medicine of the African plantation slaves and Creole communities, as well as more formal techniques found in the hospitals founded by the Jesuits and the free people of color.[28] Legal documents signed on Louverture's behalf between 1778 and 1781 suggest that he could not yet write at that time.[29][19]: 61–67  Throughout his military and political career during the revolution, he was known to have verbally dictated his letters to his secretaries, who prepared most of his correspondences. A few surviving documents from the end of his life in his own hand confirm that he eventually learned to write, although his Standard French spelling was "strictly phonetic" and closer to the Creole French he spoke for the majority of his life.[25][30][31]

Haitian Revolution edit

Beginnings of a rebellion: 1789–1793 edit

 
Louverture, as depicted in an 1802 French engraving

Beginning in 1789, the black and mulatto population of Saint-Domingue became inspired by a multitude of factors that converged on the island in the late 1780s and early 1790s leading to them organize a series of rebellions against the central white colonial assembly in Le Cap. In 1789 two mix-race Creole merchants, Vincent Ogé and Julien Raimond, happened to be in France during the early stages of the French Revolution. Here they began lobbying the French National Assembly to expand voting rights and legal protections from the grands blancs to the wealthy slave-owning gens de couleur, such as themselves. Being of majority white descent and with Ogé having been educated in France, the two were incensed that their black African ancestry prevented them from having the same legal rights as their fathers, who were both grand blanc planters. Rebuffed by the assembly they return to the colony where Ogé met up with Jean-Baptiste Chavannes, a wealthy mixed-race veteran of the American Revolution and an abolitionist. Here the two organized a small scale revolt in 1790 composed of a few hundred gens de couleur, who engaged in several battles against the colonial militias on the island. However, after the movement failed to gain traction Ogé and Chavannes were quickly captured and publicly broken on the wheel in the public square in Le Cap in February 1791. For the slaves on the island worsening conditions due to the neglect of legal protections afforded them by the Code Noir stirred animosities and made a revolt more attractive compared to the continued exploitation by the grands and petits blancs. Then the political and social disability caused by the French Revolution's attempt to expand the rights to all men, inspired a series of revolts across several neighboring French possessions in the Caribbean, which upset much of the established trade between the colonies. Many of the devout Catholic slaves and freedmen, including Toussaint, identified as free Frenchmen and royalists, who desired to protect a series of progressive legal protections afforded to the black citizenry by King Louis XVI and his predecessors.[10]

On 14 August 1791, two hundred members of the black and mixed-race population made up of slave foremen, Creoles, and freed slaves gathered in secret at a plantation in Morne-Rouge in the north of Saint-Domingue to plan their revolt. Here prominent early figures of the revolution such as Dutty François Boukman, Jean-François Papillon, Georges Biassou, Jeannot Bullet, and Toussaint gathered to nominate a single leader to guide the revolt. Toussaint, wary of the dangers of taking on such a public role, especially after hearing about what happened to Ogé and Chavannes, went on to nominate Georges Biassou as leader. He would later join his forces as a secretary and lieutenant, and be in command of a small detachment of soldiers.[32][33] During this time Toussaint took up the name of Monsieur Toussaint, a title that was once been reserved for the white population of Saint-Domingue. Surviving documents show him participating in the leadership of the rebellion, discussing strategy, and negotiating with the Spanish supporters of the rebellion for supplies. Wanting to identify with the royalist cause Louverture and other rebels wore white cockades upon their sleeves and crosses of St. Louis.[22]

A few days after this gathering, a Vodou ceremony at Bois Caïman marked the public start of the major slave rebellion in the north, which had the largest plantations and enslaved population. Louverture did not openly take part in the earliest stages of the rebellion, as he spent the next few weeks sending his family to safety in Santo Domingo and helping his old overseer Bayon de Libertat. Louverture hid him and his family in a nearby wood, and brought them food from a nearby rebel camp. He eventually helped Bayon de Libertat's family escape the island and in the coming years supported them financially as they resettled in the United States and mainland France.[10]

In 1791, Louverture was involved in negotiations between rebel leaders and the French Governor, Blanchelande, for the release of their white prisoners and a return to work, in exchange for a ban on the use of whips, an extra non-working day per week, and the freedom of imprisoned leaders.[34] When the offer was rejected, he was instrumental in preventing the massacre of Biassou's white prisoners.[35] The prisoners were released after further negotiations and escorted to Le Cap by Louverture. He hoped to use the occasion to present the rebellion's demands to the colonial assembly, but they refused to meet.[36]

Throughout 1792, as a leader in an increasingly formal alliance between the black rebellion and the Spanish, Louverture ran the fortified post of La Tannerie and maintained the Cordon de l'Ouest, a line of posts between rebel and colonial territory.[37] He gained a reputation for his discipline, training his men in guerrilla tactics and "the European style of war".[38] After hard fighting, he lost La Tannerie in January 1793 to the French General Étienne Maynaud de Bizefranc de Laveaux, but it was in these battles that the French first recognized him as a significant military leader.[39]

Some time in 1792–1793, Toussaint adopted the surname Louverture, from the French word for "opening" or "the one who opened the way".[40] Although some modern writers spell his adopted surname with an apostrophe, as in "L'Ouverture", he did not. The most common explanation is that it refers to his ability to create openings in battle. The name is sometimes attributed to French commissioner Polverel's exclamation: "That man makes an opening everywhere". Some writers think the name referred to a gap between his front teeth.[41]

Alliance with the Spanish: 1793–1794 edit

Despite adhering to royalist views, Louverture began to use the language of freedom and equality associated with the French Revolution.[42] From being willing to bargain for better conditions of slavery late in 1791, he had become committed to its complete abolition.[43][44] After an offer of land, privileges, and recognizing the freedom of slave soldiers and their families, Jean-François and Biassou formally allied with the Spanish in May 1793; Louverture likely did so in early June. He had made covert overtures to General Laveaux prior but was rebuffed as Louverture's conditions for alliance were deemed unacceptable. At this time the republicans were yet to make any formal offer to the slaves in arms and conditions for the blacks under the Spanish looked better than that of the French.[45] In response to the civil commissioners' radical 20 June proclamation (not a general emancipation, but an offer of freedom to male slaves who agreed to fight for them) Louverture stated that "the blacks wanted to serve under a king and the Spanish king offered his protection."[46]

On 29 August 1793, he made his famous declaration of Camp Turel to the black population of St. Domingue:

Brothers and friends, I am Toussaint Louverture; perhaps my name has made itself known to you. I have undertaken vengeance. I want Liberty and Equality to reign in St. Domingue. I am working to make that happen. Unite yourselves to us, brothers and fight with us for the same cause.[26]

On the same day, the beleaguered French commissioner, Léger-Félicité Sonthonax, proclaimed emancipation for all slaves in French Saint-Domingue,[47] hoping to bring the black troops over to his side.[48] Initially, this failed, perhaps because Louverture and the other leaders knew that Sonthonax was exceeding his authority.[49]

However, on 4 February 1794, the French revolutionary government in France proclaimed the abolition of slavery.[50] For months, Louverture had been in diplomatic contact with the French general Étienne Maynaud de Bizefranc de Laveaux. During this time, his competition with the other rebel leaders was growing, and the Spanish had started to look with disfavor on his near-autonomous control of a large and strategically important region.[51]

Louverture's auxiliary force was employed to great success, with his army responsible for half of all Spanish gains north of the Artibonite in the West in addition to capturing the port town of Gonaïves in December 1793.[52] However, tensions had emerged between Louverture and the Spanish higher-ups. His superior with whom he enjoyed good relations, Matías de Armona, was replaced with Juan de Lleonart – who was disliked by the black auxiliaries. Lleonart failed to support Louverture in March 1794 during his feud with Biassou, who had been stealing supplies for Louverture's men and selling their families as slaves. Unlike Jean-François and Bissaou, Louverture refused to round up enslaved women and children to sell to the Spanish. This feud also emphasized Louverture's inferior position in the trio of black generals in the minds of the Spanish – a check upon any ambitions for further promotion.[53]

On 29 April 1794, the Spanish garrison at Gonaïves was suddenly attacked by black troops fighting in the name of "the King of the French", who demanded that the garrison surrender. Approximately 150 men were killed and much of the populace forced to flee. White guardsmen in the surrounding area had been murdered, and Spanish patrols sent into the area never returned.[54] Louverture is suspected to have been behind this attack, although was not present. He wrote to the Spanish 5 May protesting his innocence – supported by the Spanish commander of the Gonaïves garrison, who noted that his signature was absent from the rebels' ultimatum. It was not until 18 May that Louverture would claim responsibility for the attack, when he was fighting under the banner of the French.[55]

The events at Gonaïves made Lleonart increasingly suspicious of Louverture. When they had met at his camp 23 April, the black general had shown up with 150 armed and mounted men, as opposed to the usual 25, choosing not to announce his arrival or waiting for permission to enter. Lleonart found him lacking his usual modesty or submission, and after accepting an invitation to dinner 29 April, Louverture afterward failed to show. The limp that had confined him to his bed during the Gonaïves attack was thought to be feigned and Lleonart suspected him of treachery.[56] Remaining distrustful of the black commander, Lleonart housed his wife and children whilst Louverture led an attack on Dondon in early May, an act which Lleonart later believed confirmed Louverture's decision to turn against the Spanish.[57]

Alliance with the French: 1794–1796 edit

 
Louverture surveying his troops

The timing of and motivation behind Louverture's volte-face against Spain remains debated among historians. C. L. R. James claimed that upon learning of the emancipation decree in May 1794, Louverture decided to join the French in June.[58] It is argued by Beaubrun Ardouin that Toussaint was indifferent toward black freedom, concerned primarily for his own safety and resentful over his treatment by the Spanish – leading him to officially join the French on 4 May 1794 when he raised the republican flag over Gonaïves.[59] Thomas Ott sees Louverture as "both a power-seeker and sincere abolitionist" who was working with Laveaux since January 1794 and switched sides on 6 May.[60]

Louverture claimed to have switched sides after emancipation was proclaimed and the commissioners Sonthonax and Polverel had returned to France in June 1794. However, a letter from Toussaint to General Laveaux confirms that he was already fighting officially on the behalf of the French by 18 May 1794.[61]

In the first weeks, Louverture eradicated all Spanish supporters from the Cordon de l'Ouest, which he had held on their behalf.[62] He faced attack from multiple sides. His former colleagues in the slave rebellion were now fighting against him for the Spanish. As a French commander, he was faced with British troops who had landed on Saint-Domingue in September, as the British hoped to take advantage of the ongoing instability to capture the prosperous island.[63] Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville, who was Secretary of State for War for British prime minister William Pitt the Younger, instructed Sir Adam Williamson, the lieutenant-governor of Jamaica, to sign an agreement with representatives of the French colonists that promised to restore the ancien regime, slavery and discrimination against mixed-race colonists, a move that drew criticism from abolitionists William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson.[64][65]

On the other hand, Louverture was able to pool his 4,000 men with Laveaux's troops in joint actions.[66] By now his officers included men who were to remain important throughout the revolution: his brother Paul, his nephew Moïse Hyacinthe, Jean-Jacques Dessalines, and Henri Christophe.[67]

Before long, Louverture had put an end to the Spanish threat to French Saint-Domingue. In any case, the Treaty of Basel of July 1795 marked a formal end to hostilities between the two countries. Black leaders Jean-François and Biassou continued to fight against Louverture until November, when they left for Spain and Florida, respectively. At that point, most of their men joined Louverture's forces.[68] Louverture also made inroads against the British presence, but was unable to oust them from Saint-Marc. He contained them by resorting to guerilla tactics.[69]

Throughout 1795 and 1796, Louverture was also concerned with re-establishing agriculture and exports, and keeping the peace in areas under his control. In speeches and policy he revealed his belief that the long-term freedom of the people of Saint-Domingue depended on the economic viability of the colony.[70] He was held in general respect, and resorted to a mixture of diplomacy and force to return the field hands to the plantations as emancipated and paid workers.[71] Workers regularly staged small rebellions, protesting poor working conditions, their lack of real freedom, or their fear of a return to slavery. They wanted to establish their own small holdings and work for themselves, rather than on plantations.[72]

Another of Louverture's concerns was to manage potential rivals for power within the French part of the colony. The most serious of these was the mulatto commander Jean-Louis Villatte, based in Cap-Français. Louverture and Villate had competed over the command of some sections of troops and territory since 1794. Villatte was thought to be somewhat racist toward black soldiers such as Louverture and planned to ally with André Rigaud, a free man of color, after overthrowing French General Étienne Laveaux.[73] In 1796 Villate drummed up popular support by accusing the French authorities of plotting a return to slavery.

On 20 March, he succeeded in capturing the French Governor Laveaux, and appointed himself Governor. Louverture's troops soon arrived at Cap-Français to rescue the captured governor and to drive Villatte out of town. Louverture was noted for opening the warehouses to the public, proving that they were empty of the chains that residents feared had been imported to prepare for a return to slavery. He was promoted to commander of the West Province two months later, and in 1797 was appointed as Saint-Domingue's top-ranking officer.[74] Laveaux proclaimed Louverture as Lieutenant Governor, announcing at the same time that he would do nothing without his approval, to which Louverture replied: "After God, Laveaux."[75]

Third Commission: 1796–1797 edit

A few weeks after Louverture's triumph over the Villate insurrection, France's representatives of the third commission arrived in Saint-Domingue. Among them was Sonthonax, the commissioner who had previously declared abolition of slavery on the same day as Louverture's proclamation of Camp Turel.[76] At first the relationship between the two men was positive. Sonthonax promoted Louverture to general and arranged for his sons, Placide and Isaac, who were eleven and fourteen respectively to attend a school in mainland France for the children of colonial officials .[77] This was done to provide them with a formal education in the French language and culture, one that Louverture highly desired for his children, but to also use them as political hostages against Louverture should he act against the will of the central French authority in Paris. In spite of this Placide and Isaac ran away enough times from the school that they were moved to the Collège de la Marche, a division of the old University of Paris. Here in Paris they would regularly dine with members of the French nobility such as Joséphine de Beauharnais, who would go on to become Empress of France as the wife of Napoleon Bonaparte.

In September 1796, elections were held to choose colonial representatives for the French national assembly. Louverture's letters show that he encouraged Laveaux to stand, and historians have speculated as to whether he was seeking to place a firm supporter in France or to remove a rival in power.[78] Sonthonax was also elected, either at Louverture's instigation or on his own initiative. While Laveaux left Saint-Domingue in October, Sonthonax remained.[79][80]Sonthonax, a fervent revolutionary and fierce supporter of racial equality, soon rivaled Louverture in popularity. Although their goals were similar, they had several points of conflict.[81][82] While Louverture was quoted as saying that "I am black, but I have the soul of a white man" in reference to his self-identification as a Frenchman, loyalty to the French nation, and Catholicism. Sonthonax, who had married a free black woman by this time, countered with "I am white, but I have the soul of a black man" in reference to his strong abolitionist and secular republican sentiments.[10] They strongly disagreed about accepting the return of the white planters who had fled Saint-Domingue at the start of the revolution. To the ideologically motivated Sonthonax, they were potential counter-revolutionaries who had fled the liberating force of the French Revolution and were forbidden from returning to the colony under pain of death. Louverture on the other hand saw them as wealth generators who could restore the commercial viability of the colony. The planters political and familial connections to Metropolitan France could also foster better diplomatic and economic ties to Europe.[83][10]

In summer 1797, Louverture authorized the return of Bayon de Libertat, the former overseer of the Bréda plantation, with whom he had shared a close relationship with ever since he was enslaved. Sonthonax wrote to Louverture threatening him with prosecution and ordering him to get de Libertat off the island. Louverture went over his head and wrote to the French Directoire directly for permission for de Libertat to stay.[84] Only a few weeks later, he began arranging for Sonthonax's return to France that summer.[74] Louverture had several reasons to want to get rid of Sonthonax; officially he said that Sonthonax had tried to involve him in a plot to make Saint-Domingue independent, starting with a massacre of the whites of the island.[85] The accusation played on Sonthonax's political radicalism and known hatred of the aristocratic grands blancs, but historians have varied as to how credible they consider it.[86][87]

On reaching France, Sonthonax countered by accusing Louverture of royalist, counter-revolutionary, and pro-independence tendencies.[88] Louverture knew that he had asserted his authority to such an extent that the French government might well suspect him of seeking independence.[89] At the same time, the French Directoire government was considerably less revolutionary than it had been. Suspicions began to brew that it might reconsider the abolition of slavery.[90] In November 1797, Louverture wrote again to the Directoire, assuring them of his loyalty, but reminding them firmly that abolition must be maintained.[91]

Treaties with Britain and the United States: 1798 edit

 
British officer Thomas Maitland meeting with Louverture to negotiate

For months, Louverture was in sole command of French Saint-Domingue, except for a semi-autonomous state in the south, where general André Rigaud had rejected the authority of the third commission.[92] Both generals continued harassing the British, whose position on Saint-Domingue was increasingly weak.[93] Louverture was negotiating their withdrawal when France's latest commissioner, Gabriel Hédouville, arrived in March 1798, with orders to undermine his authority.[94] Nearing the end of the revolution Louverture grew substantially wealthy; owning numerous slaves at Ennery, obtaining thirty-one properties, and earning almost 300,000 colonial livre per year from these properties.[95] As leader of the revolution, this accumulated wealth made Louverture the richest person on Saint-Domingue. Louverture's actions evoked a collective sense of worry among the European powers and the US, who feared that the success of the revolution would inspire slave revolts across the Caribbean, the South American colonies, and the southern United States.[96]

On 30 April 1798, Louverture signed a treaty with the British general Thomas Maitland, exchanging the withdrawal of British troops from western Saint-Domingue in return for a general amnesty for the French counter-revolutionaries in those areas. In May, Port-au-Prince was returned to French rule in an atmosphere of order and celebration.[97]

In July, Louverture and Rigaud met commissioner Hédouville together. Hoping to create a rivalry that would diminish Louverture's power, Hédouville displayed a strong preference for Rigaud, and an aversion to Louverture.[98] However, General Maitland was also playing on French rivalries and evaded Hédouville's authority to deal with Louverture directly.[99] In August, Louverture and Maitland signed treaties for the evacuation of the remaining British troops. On 31 August, they signed a secret treaty that lifted the British blockade on Saint-Domingue in exchange for a promise that Louverture would not attempt to cause unrest in British colonies in the West Indies.[100]

As Louverture's relationship with Hédouville reached the breaking point, an uprising began among the troops of his adopted nephew, Hyacinthe Moïse. Attempts by Hédouville to manage the situation made matters worse and Louverture declined to help him. As the rebellion grew to a full-scale insurrection, Hédouville prepared to leave the island, while Louverture and Dessalines threatened to arrest him as a troublemaker.[101] Hédouville sailed for France in October 1798, nominally transferring his authority to Rigaud. Louverture decided instead to work with Phillipe Roume, a member of the third commission who had been posted to the Spanish parts of the colony.[102] Although Louverture continued to protest his loyalty to the French government, he had expelled a second government representative from the territory and was about to negotiate another autonomous agreement with one of France's enemies.[103]

The United States had suspended trade with France in 1798 because of increasing tensions between the American and French governments over the issue of privateering. The two countries entered into the so-called "Quasi"-War, but trade between Saint-Domingue and the United States was desirable to both Louverture and the United States. With Hédouville gone, Louverture sent diplomat Joseph Bunel, a grand blanc former planter married to a Black Haitian wife, to negotiate with the administration of John Adams. Adams as a New Englander who was openly hostile to slavery was much more sympathetic to the Haitian cause than the Washington administration before and Jefferson after, both of whom came from Southern slave-owning planter backgrounds. The terms of the treaty were similar to those already established with the British, but Louverture continually rebuffed suggestions from either power that he should declare independence.[104] As long as France maintained the abolition of slavery, he appeared to be content to have the colony remain French, at least in name.[105]

Expansion of territory: 1799–1801 edit

 
Louverture accused André Rigaud (pictured) of trying to assassinate him.

In 1799, the tensions between Louverture and Rigaud came to a head. Louverture accused Rigaud of trying to assassinate him to gain power over Saint-Domingue. Rigaud claimed Louverture was conspiring with the British to restore slavery.[106] The conflict was complicated by racial overtones that escalated tensions between full blacks and mulattoes.[107][108] Louverture had other political reasons for eliminating Rigaud; only by controlling every port could he hope to prevent a landing of French troops if necessary.[109]

After Rigaud sent troops to seize the border towns of Petit-Goave and Grand-Goave in June 1799, Louverture persuaded Roume to declare Rigaud a traitor and attacked the southern state.[110] The resulting civil war, known as the War of Knives, lasted more than a year, with the defeated Rigaud fleeing to Guadeloupe, then France, in August 1800.[111] Louverture delegated most of the campaign to his lieutenant, Jean-Jacques Dessalines, who became infamous, during and after the war, for massacring mulatto captives and civilians.[112] The number of deaths is contested: the contemporary French general François Joseph Pamphile de Lacroix suggested 10,000 deaths, while the 20th-century Trinidadian historian C. L. R. James claimed there were only a few hundred deaths.[25][113]

In November 1799, during the civil war, Napoleon Bonaparte gained power in France and passed a new constitution declaring that the colonies would be subject to special laws.[114] Although the colonies suspected this meant the re-introduction of slavery, Napoleon began by confirming Louverture's position and promising to maintain abolition.[115] But he also forbade Louverture to invade Spanish Santo Domingo, an action that would put Louverture in a powerful defensive position.[116] Louverture was determined to proceed anyway and coerced Roume into supplying the necessary permission.[117] At the same time, in order to improve the political relationships with the other European powers, Louverture looked to further stabilize the political landscape of the Caribbean.[10] When Isaac Yeshurun Sasportas, a member of a prominent Sephardic Jewish family from Saint-Domingue, attempted to foment another slave revolt in neighboring British Jamaica, Louverture leaked the plot to the British. As a result Sasportas was captured and executed by the colonial authorities on December 23, 1799.[10][118][119]

In January 1801, Louverture and his nephew, General Hyacinthe Moïse invaded the Spanish territory, taking possession of it from the governor, Don Garcia, with few difficulties. The area had been less developed and populated than the French section. Louverture brought it under French law, abolishing slavery and embarking on a program of modernization. He now controlled the entire island.[120]

Constitution of 1801 edit

 
An engraving of Louverture

Napoleon had informed the inhabitants of Saint-Domingue that France would draw up a new constitution for its colonies, in which they would be subjected to special laws.[121] Despite his protestations to the contrary, the former slaves feared that he might restore slavery. In March 1801, Louverture appointed a constitutional assembly, composed chiefly of white planters, to draft a constitution for Saint-Domingue. He promulgated the Constitution on 7 July 1801, officially establishing his authority over the entire island of Hispaniola. It made him governor-general for life with near absolute powers and the possibility of choosing his successor. However, Louverture had not explicitly declared Saint-Domingue's independence, acknowledging in Article 1 that it was a single colony of the French Empire.[122] Article 3 of the constitution states: "There cannot exist slaves [in Saint-Domingue], servitude is therein forever abolished. All men are born, live and die free and French."[123] The constitution guaranteed equal opportunity and equal treatment under the law for all races, but confirmed Louverture's policies of forced labor and the importation of workers through the slave trade.[124] Identifying as a loyal Christian Frenchman, Louverture was not willing to compromise Catholicism for Vodou, the dominant faith among former slaves. Article 6 states that "the Catholic, Apostolic, Roman faith shall be the only publicly professed faith."[125] This strong preference for Catholicism went hand in hand with Louverture's self-identification of being a Frenchman, and his movement away from associating with Vodou and its origins in the practices of the plantation slaves from Africa.[126]

Louverture charged Colonel Charles Humbert Marie Vincent, who personally opposed the drafted constitution, with the task of delivering it to Napoleon. Several aspects of the constitution were damaging to France: the absence of provision for French government officials, the lack of trade advantages, and Louverture's breach of protocol in publishing the constitution before submitting it to the French government. Despite his disapproval, Vincent attempted to submit the constitution to Napoleon but was briefly exiled to the Mediterranean island of Elba for his pains.[127][note 3]

Louverture identified as a Frenchman and strove to convince Bonaparte of his loyalty. He wrote to Napoleon, but received no reply.[129] Napoleon eventually decided to send an expedition of 20,000 men to Saint-Domingue to restore French authority, and possibly, to restore slavery as well.[130] Given the fact that France had signed a temporary truce with Great Britain in the Treaty of Amiens, Napoleon was able to plan this operation without the risk of his ships being intercepted by the Royal Navy.

Leclerc's campaign: 1801–1802 edit

 
Napoleon dispatched General Charles Emmanuel Leclerc (pictured) to seize control of the island.

Napoleon's troops, under the command of his brother-in-law, General Charles Emmanuel Leclerc, were directed to seize control of the island by diplomatic means, proclaiming peaceful intentions, and keep secret his orders to deport all black officers.[131] Meanwhile, Louverture was preparing for defense and ensuring discipline. This may have contributed to a rebellion against forced labor led by his nephew and top general, Moïse, in October 1801. Because the activism was violently repressed, when the French ships arrived, not all of Saint-Domingue supported Louverture.[132] In late January 1802, while Leclerc sought permission to land at Cap-Français and Christophe held him off, the Vicomte de Rochambeau suddenly attacked Fort-Liberté, effectively quashing the diplomatic option.[133] Christophe had written to Leclerc: "you will only enter the city of Cap, after having watched it reduced to ashes. And even upon these ashes, I will fight you."

Louverture's plan in case of war was to burn the coastal cities and as much of the plains as possible, retreat with his troops into the inaccessible mountains, and wait for yellow fever to decimate the French.[134] The biggest impediment to this plan proved to be difficulty in internal communications. Christophe burned Cap-Français and retreated, but Paul Louverture was tricked by a false letter into allowing the French to occupy Santo Domingo. Other officers believed Napoleon's diplomatic proclamation, while some attempted resistance instead of burning and retreating.[135]

With both sides shocked by the violence of the initial fighting, Leclerc tried belatedly to revert to the diplomatic solution. Louverture's sons and their tutor had been sent from France to accompany the expedition with this end in mind and were now sent to present Napoleon's proclamation to Louverture.[136] When these talks broke down, months of inconclusive fighting followed.

This ended when Christophe, ostensibly convinced that Leclerc would not re-institute slavery, switched sides in return for retaining his generalship in the French military. General Jean-Jacques Dessalines did the same shortly later. On 6 May 1802, Louverture rode into Cap-Français and negotiated an acknowledgement of Leclerc's authority in return for an amnesty for him and his remaining generals. Louverture was then forced to capitulate and placed under house arrest on his property in Ennery.[137]

Arrest, imprisonment, and death: 1802–1803 edit

 
Illustration of Louverture imprisoned at the Fort-de-Joux in France, where he died in 1803

Jean-Jacques Dessalines was at least partially responsible for Louverture's arrest, as asserted by several authors, including Louverture's son, Isaac. On 22 May 1802, after Dessalines learned that Louverture had failed to instruct a local rebel leader to lay down his arms per the recent ceasefire agreement, he immediately wrote to Leclerc to denounce Louverture's conduct as "extraordinary". For this action, Dessalines and his spouse received gifts from Jean Baptiste Brunet.[138]

Leclerc originally asked Dessalines to arrest Louverture, but he declined. Jean Baptiste Brunet was ordered to do so, but accounts differ as to how he accomplished this. One version said that Brunet pretended that he planned to settle in Saint-Domingue and was asking Louverture's advice about plantation management. Louverture's memoirs, however, suggest that Brunet's troops had been provocative, leading Louverture to seek a discussion with him. Either way, Louverture had a letter, in which Brunet described himself as a "sincere friend", to take with him to France. Embarrassed about his trickery, Brunet absented himself during the arrest.[139][140]

Finally on June 7, 1802, despite the promises made in exchange for his surrender, Toussaint Louverture – as well as a hundred members of his inner circle – were captured and deported to France. Brunet transported Louverture and his companions on the frigate Créole and the 74-gun Héros, claiming that he suspected the former leader of plotting another uprising. Upon boarding the Créole, Toussaint Louverture warned his captors that the rebels would not repeat his mistake, saying that, "In overthrowing me you have cut down in Saint Domingue only the trunk of the tree of liberty; it will spring up again from the roots, for they are numerous and they are deep."[141]

 
Death of General Toussaint Louverture in the prison of Fort de Joux in France, on 7 April 1803

The ships reached France on 2 July 1802 and, on 25 August, Louverture was imprisoned at Fort-de-Joux in Doubs.[citation needed] During this time, Louverture wrote a memoir.[142] He died in prison on 7 April 1803 at the age of 59. Suggested causes of death include exhaustion, malnutrition, apoplexy, pneumonia, and possibly tuberculosis.[143][144]

Views and stances edit

Religion and spirituality edit

Throughout his life, Louverture was known as a devout Roman Catholic.[145] Having been baptized into the church as a slave by the Jesuits, Louverture would go on to be one of the few slaves on the Bréda plantation to be labeled devout. He celebrated Mass every day when possible, regularly served as godfather at multiple slave baptisms, and constantly quizzed others on the catechism of the church. In 1763 the Jesuits were expelled for spreading Catholicism among the slaves and undermining planter propaganda that slaves were mentally inferior. Toussaint would grow closer to the Capuchin Order that succeeded them in 1768, especially as they did not own plantations like the Jesuits. Louverture would also go on to have two formal Catholic weddings to both of his wives once freed. In his memoirs he fondly recounted the weekly ritual his family had on Sundays of going to church and enjoying a communal meal.[10]

After defeating forces led by André Rigaud in the War of the Knives, Louverture consolidated his power by decreeing a new constitution for the colony in 1801. It established Catholicism as the official religion.[125] Although Vodou was generally practiced on Saint-Domingue in combination with Catholicism, little is known for certain if Louverture had any connection with it. Officially as ruler of Saint-Domingue, he discouraged its practice and eventually persecuted its followers.[146]

Historians have suggested that he was a member of high degree of the Masonic Lodge of Saint-Domingue, mostly based on a Masonic symbol he used in his signature. The membership of several free blacks and white men close to him have been confirmed.[147]

Legacy edit

 
19th-century depiction of Louverture

In his absence, Jean-Jacques Dessalines led the Haitian rebellion until its completion, finally defeating the French forces in 1803, two-thirds of the men had died when Napoleon withdrew his forces.[citation needed]

John Brown claimed influence by Louverture in his plans to invade Harpers Ferry. During the 19th century, African Americans referred to Louverture as an example of how to reach freedom.[148]

On 29 August 1954, the Haitian ambassador to France, Léon Thébaud, inaugurated a stone cross memorial for Toussaint Louverture at the foot of Fort de Joux.[149] Years afterward, the French government ceremoniously presented a shovelful of soil from the grounds of Fort de Joux to the Haitian government as a symbolic transfer of Louverture's remains.[citation needed] An inscription in his memory was installed in 1998 on the wall of the Panthéon in Paris.[150]

Literature edit

  • Nouvelle arrivée par un courier extraordinaire. Arrestation et renvoi en France de Toussaint-Louverture et de toute sa famille (1802)
  • Dubroca. The Life of Toussaint Louverture, Chief of the French Rebels in St. Domingo (1802)
  • Buonaparte in the West Indies; or, The history of Toussaint Louverture (1803)
  • Antwoord door of op naam van Toussaint l'Ouverture aan den Generaal Buonaparte, Eersten Consul der Fransche Republicq, geschreeven, en te vinden in de Binnenlandsche Bataafsche Courant van 27 Januarij 1803, No. 12 (1803)
  • James Stephen. The History of Toussaint Louverture (1814)
  • John Relly Beard. The Life of Toussaint L'Ouverture, The Negro Patriot of Hayti (1853)
  • Histoire des relations internationales de Toussaint Louverture, avec des documents inédits (1945)

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Up to, for example, C. L. R. James, writing in 1938.
  2. ^ The wording of the proclamation issued by then rebel slave leader Louverture in August 1793, which may have been the first time he publicly used the name "Louverture", possibly refer to an anti-slavery passage in Abbé Raynal's A Philosophical and Political History of the Settlements and Trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies.[26][27]
  3. ^ Napoleon himself would later be exiled to Elba after his 1814 abdication.[128]

References and citations edit

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  131. ^ James, pp. 292–294; Bell, pp. 223–224
  132. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], pp. 206–209, 226–229, 250
  133. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], pp. 232–234.
  134. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], pp. 234–236.
  135. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], pp. 234, 236–237.
  136. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], pp. 237–241.
  137. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], pp. 261–262.
  138. ^ Girard, Philippe R. (July 2012). (PDF). The William and Mary Quarterly. Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. 69 (3): 559. doi:10.5309/willmaryquar.69.3.0549. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 10 December 2014. a list of "extraordinary expenses incurred by General Brunet in regards to [the arrest of] Toussaint" started with "gifts in wine and liquor, gifts to Dessalines and his spouse, money to his officers: 4000 francs."
  139. ^ Girard, Philippe R. (2011). The Slaves who Defeated Napoléon: Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian War of Independence, 1801–1804. University of Alabama Press.
  140. ^ Oruno D. Lara, «Toussaint Louverture François Dominique Toussaint dit 1743–1803 », Encyclopædia Universalis, 7 avril 2021
  141. ^ Abbott, Elizabeth (1988). Haiti: An Insider's History of the Rise and Fall of the Duvaliers, Simon & Schuster. p. viii ISBN 0671686208.
  142. ^ Forsdick & Høgsbjerg (2017), p. 19.
  143. ^ "John Bigelow: The last days of Toussaint Louverture". faculty.webster.edu.
  144. ^ Pike, Tim. "Toussaint Louverture: helping Bordeaux come to terms with its slave trade past" (part 1) ~ Invisible Bordeaux website
  145. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], p. 194.
  146. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], pp. 56, 196.
  147. ^ Bell (2008) [2007], p. 63.
  148. ^ Clavin, Matthew (2008). "A Second Haitian Revolution". Civil War History. liv (2).
  149. ^ Yacou, Alain, ed. (2007). "Vie et mort du général Toussaint-Louverture selon les dossiers conservés au Service Historique de la Défense, Château de Vincennes". Saint-Domingue espagnol et la révolution nègre d'Haïti (in French). Karthala Editions. p. 346. ISBN 978-2811141516. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  150. ^ le Cadet, Nicolas (21 October 2010). "Le portrait du juge idéal selon Noël du Fail dans les Contes et Discours d'Eutrapel". Centre d’Études et de Recherche Éditer/Interpréter (in French). University of Rouen. Retrieved 5 April 2018.

Works cited edit

External links edit

  • Toussaint L'Ouverture: A Biography and Autobiography by J. R. Beard, 1863
  • Toussaint L'Ouverture, a Santana Latin rock song from their first album, Santana.
  • A section of Bob Corbett's on-line course on the history of Haïti that deals with Toussaint's rise to power.
  • The Louverture Project
  • Toussaint at IMDb  
  • "Égalité for All: Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian Revolution" 30 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Noland Walker. PBS documentary. 2009.
  • Spencer Napoleonica Collection Archived 5 December 2012 at archive.today at Newberry Library
  • Black Spartacus 3 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine by Anthony Maddalena (Thee Black Swan Theatre Company); a radio play in four parts which tells the story of Toussaint L'Ouverture and the Haitian Slave Uprising of 1791–1803
  • Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian Revolution by Paul Foot (Redwords, 2021) (publication of two lectures from 1978 and 1991)
  • "Toussaint, Dominique François" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 1889.
  • Elliott, Charles Wyllys. St. Domingo, its revolution and its hero, Toussaint Louverture, New York, J. A. Dix, 1855. Manioc
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Toussaint l'Ouverture, Pierre-Dominique" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Toussaint L'Ouverture by Wendell Phillips (hardcover edition, published in English, French and Kreyòl Ayisyen).

toussaint, louverture, this, article, about, haitian, revolution, leader, other, uses, disambiguation, overture, ouverture, louverture, redirect, here, other, uses, ouverture, disambiguation, overture, disambiguation, françois, dominique, french, fʁɑ, dɔminik,. This article is about the Haitian Revolution leader For other uses see Toussaint Louverture disambiguation L overture l Ouverture and Louverture redirect here For other uses see Ouverture disambiguation and Overture disambiguation Francois Dominique Toussaint Louverture French fʁɑ swa dɔminik tusɛ luvɛʁtyʁ English ˌ l uː v er ˈ tj ʊer 2 also known as Toussaint L Ouverture or Toussaint Breda 20 May 1743 7 April 1803 was a Haitian general and the most prominent leader of the Haitian Revolution During his life Louverture first fought and allied with Spanish forces against Saint Domingue Royalists then joined with Republican France becoming Governor General for life of Saint Domingue and lastly fought against Napoleon Bonaparte s Empire 3 4 As a revolutionary leader Louverture displayed military and political acumen that helped transform the fledgling slave rebellion into a revolutionary movement Louverture is now known as the Father of Haiti 5 Toussaint LouverturePosthumous 1813 painting of LouvertureGovernor General of Saint DomingueIn office 1797 1802Appointed byEtienne MaynaudPreceded byLeger Felicite SonthonaxSucceeded byCharles LeclercPersonal detailsBorn20 May 1743Cap Francais Saint DomingueDied7 April 1803 1803 04 07 aged 59 Fort de Joux La Cluse et Mijoux First French RepublicSpouse s Cecile Suzanne Simone Baptiste LouvertureMilitary careerAllegiance Spain France HaitiService wbr branchSpanish ArmyFrench ArmyFrench Revolutionary ArmyArmee Indigene 1 Years of service1791 1803RankGeneralBattles warsHaitian RevolutionToussaint Louverture was born as a slave in the French colony of Saint Domingue now known as Haiti He was a devout Catholic and was manumitted as an affranchi ex slave before the French Revolution identifying as a Creole for the greater part of his life During his time as an affranchi he became a salaried employee an overseer of his former master s plantation and later became a wealthy slave owner himself Toussaint Louverture owned several coffee plantations at Petit Cormier Grande Riviere and Ennery 6 7 8 At the start of the Haitian revolution he was nearly 50 years old and began his military career as a lieutenant to Georges Biassou an early leader of the 1791 War for Freedom in Saint Domingue 9 Initially allied with the Spaniards of neighboring Santo Domingo Louverture switched his allegiance to the French when the new Republican government abolished slavery Louverture gradually established control over the whole island and used his political and military influence to gain dominance over his rivals 10 Throughout his years in power he worked to balance the economy and security of Saint Domingue Worried about the economy which had stalled he restored the plantation system using paid labor negotiated trade agreements with the United Kingdom and the United States and maintained a large and well trained army 11 Louverture seized power in Saint Domingue established his own system of government and promulgated his own colonial constitution in 1801 that named him as Governor General for Life which challenged Napoleon Bonaparte s authority 12 In 1802 he was invited to a parley by French Divisional General Jean Baptiste Brunet but was arrested upon his arrival He was deported to France and jailed at the Fort de Joux He died in 1803 Although Louverture died before the final and most violent stage of the Haitian Revolution his achievements set the grounds for the Haitian army s final victory Suffering massive losses in multiple battles at the hands of the Haitian army and losing thousands of men to yellow fever the French capitulated and withdrew permanently from Saint Domingue the very same year The Haitian Revolution continued under Louverture s lieutenant Jean Jacques Dessalines who declared independence on 1 January 1804 thereby establishing the sovereign state of Haiti Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Birth parentage and childhood 1 2 First marriage and manumission 1 3 Second marriage 1 4 Education 2 Haitian Revolution 2 1 Beginnings of a rebellion 1789 1793 2 2 Alliance with the Spanish 1793 1794 2 3 Alliance with the French 1794 1796 2 4 Third Commission 1796 1797 2 5 Treaties with Britain and the United States 1798 2 6 Expansion of territory 1799 1801 2 7 Constitution of 1801 2 8 Leclerc s campaign 1801 1802 2 9 Arrest imprisonment and death 1802 1803 3 Views and stances 3 1 Religion and spirituality 4 Legacy 5 Literature 6 Notes and references 6 1 Notes 6 2 References and citations 6 3 Works cited 7 External linksEarly life editBirth parentage and childhood edit Louverture was born into slavery the eldest son of Hyppolite an Allada slave from the slave coast of West Africa and his second wife Pauline a slave from the Aja ethnic group and given the name Toussaint at birth 10 Louverture s son Issac would later name his great grandfather Hyppolite s father as Gaou Guinou and a son of the King of Allada although there is little extant evidence of this The name Gaou possibly originated in the title Deguenon meaning old man or wise man in the Allada kingdom making Gaou Guinou and his son Hyppolite members of the bureaucracy or nobility but not members of the royal family In Africa Hyppolite and his first wife Catherine were forced into enslavement due to a series of imperialist wars of expansion by the Kingdom of Dahomey into the Allada territory In order to remove their political rivals and obtain European trade goods Dahomean slavers separated the couple and sold them to the crew of the French slave ship Hermione which then sailed to the French West Indies The original names of Toussaint s parents are unknown since the Code Noir mandated that slaves brought to their colonies be made into Catholics stripped of their African names and be given more European names in order to assimilate them into the French plantation system Toussaint s father received the name Hyppolite upon his baptism on Saint Domingue as Latin and Greek names were the most fashionable for slaves at this time followed by French and Biblical Christian names 10 Louverture is thought to have been born on the plantation of Breda at Haut du Cap in Saint Domingue where his parents were enslaved and where he would spend the majority of his life before the revolution 13 14 His parents would go on to have several children after him with five surviving infancy Marie Jean Paul Pierre Jean and Gaou named for his grandfather Louverture would grow closest to his younger brother Paul who along with his other siblings were baptized into the Catholic Church by the local Jesuit Order Pierre Baptiste Simon a carpenter and gatekeeper on the Breda plantation is considered to have been Louverture s godfather and went on to become a parental figure to Louverture s family along with his foster mother Pelage after the death of Toussaint s parents 15 Growing up Toussaint first learned to speak the African Fon language of the Allada slaves on the plantation then the Creole French of the greater colony and eventually the Standard French of the elite class grands blancs during the revolution Although he would later become known for his stamina and riding prowess Louverture earned the nickname Fatras Baton sickly stick in reference to his small thin stature in his youth 16 17 26 27 Toussaint and his siblings were trained to be domestic servants with Louverture being trained as an equestrian and coachmen after showing a talent for handling the horses and oxen on the plantation This allowed the siblings to work in the manor house and stables away from the grueling physical labor and deadly corporal punishment meted out in the sugar cane fields In spite of this relative privilege there is evidence that even in his youth Louverture s pride pushed him to engage in fights with members of the Petits blancs white commoner community who worked on the plantation as hired help There is a record that Louverture beat a young petit blanc named Ferere but was able to escape punishment after being protected by the new plantation overseer Francois Antoine Bayon de Libertat De Libertat had become steward of the Breda property after it was inherited by Pantaleon de Breda Jr a grand blanc white nobleman and managed by Breda s nephew the Count of Noah 18 In spite or perhaps because of this protection Louverture went on to engage in other fights On one occasion he threw the plantation attorney Berge off a horse belonging to the Breda plantation when he attempted to take it outside the bounds of the property without permission 10 First marriage and manumission edit Until 1938 historians believed that Louverture had been a slave until the start of the revolution note 1 citation needed In the later 20th century discovery of a personal marriage certificate and baptismal record dated between 1776 and 1777 documented that Louverture was a freeman meaning that he had been manumitted sometime between 1772 and 1776 the time de Libertat had become overseer This finding retrospectively clarified a private letter that Louverture sent to the French government in 1797 in which he mentioned he had been free for more than twenty years 19 62 Upon being freed Toussaint took up the name of Toussaint de Breda Toussaint of Breda or more simply Toussaint Breda in reference to the plantation where he grew up Toussaint went from being a slave of the Breda plantation to becoming a member of the greater community of gens de couleur libres free people of color This was a diverse group of Affranchis freed slaves free blacks of full or majority African ancestry and Mulattos mixed race peoples which included the children of French planters and their African slaves as well as distinct multiracial families who had multi generational mixed ancestries from the varying different populations on the island The gens de couleur libres strongly identified with Saint Domingue with a popular slogan being that while the French felt at home in France and the slaves felt at home in Africa they felt at home on the island Now enjoying a greater degree of relative freedom Louverture dedicated himself to building wealth and gaining further social mobility through emulating the model of the grands blancs and rich gens de couleur libres by becoming a planter He began by renting a small coffee plantation along with its 13 slaves from his future son in law 20 One of the slaves Louverture owned at this time is believed to have been Jean Jacques Dessalines who would go onto become one of Louverture s most loyal lieutenants and a member of his personal guard during the Haitian Revolution 21 Between 1761 and 1777 Louverture met and married his first wife Cecile in a Catholic ceremony The couple went on to have two sons Toussaint Jr and Gabrielle Toussaint and a daughter Marie Marthe During this time Louverture bought several slaves although this was a means to grow a greater pool of exploitable labor this was one of the few legal methods available to free the remaining members of a former slave s extended family and social circle Louverture eventually bought the freedom of Cecile their children his sister Marie Jean his wife s siblings and a slave named Jean Baptist freeing him so that he could legally marry Louverture s own marriage however soon became strained and eventually broke down as his coffee plantation failed to make adequate returns A few years later the newly freed Cecile left Louverture for a wealthy Creole planter while Louverture had begun a relationship with a woman named Suzanne who is believed to have gone on to become his second wife There is little evidence that any formal divorce occurred as that was illegal at the time Louverture in fact would go on to completely excise his first marriage from his recollections of his pre revolutionary life to the extent that until recent documents uncovered the marriage few researchers were aware of the existence of Cecile and her children with Louverture 10 Second marriage edit In 1782 Louverture married his second wife Suzanne Simone Baptiste who is thought to have been his cousin or the daughter of his godfather Pierre Baptiste 19 263 Toward the end of his life Louverture told General Caffarelli that he had fathered at least 16 children of whom 11 had predeceased him between his two wives and a series of mistresses 19 264 267 In 1785 Louverture s eldest child the 24 year old Toussaint Jr died from a fever and the family organized a formal Catholic funeral for him This was officiated by a local priest as a favor for the devout Louverture Gabrielle Toussaint disappeared from the historical record at this time and is presumed to have also died possibly from the same illness that took Toussaint Jr Not all of Louverture s children can be identified with certainty but the three children from his first marriage and his three sons from his second marriage are well known Suzanne s eldest child Placide is generally thought to have been fathered by Seraphim Le Clerc a Creole planter In spite of this Placide was adopted by Louverture and raised as his own Louverture went on to have at least two sons with Suzanne Isaac born in 1784 and Saint Jean born in 1791 They would remain enslaved until the start of the revolution as Louverture spent the 1780s attempting to regain the wealth he had lost with the failure of his coffee plantation in the 1770s 19 264 267 It appears that during this time Louverture returned to play an important role on the Breda plantation to remain closer to old friends and his family He remained there until the outbreak of the revolution as a salaried employee and contributed to the daily functions of the plantation 22 He took up his old responsibilities of looking after the livestock and care of the horses 23 By 1789 his responsibilities expanded to include acting as a muleteer master miller and possibly a slave driver charged with organizing the workforce During this time the Breda family attempted to divide the plantation and the slaves on it among a new series of four heirs In an attempt to protect his foster mother Pelage Louverture bought a young 22 year old female slave and traded her to the Bredas to prevent Pelage from being sold to a new owner By the start of the revolution Louverture began to accumulate a moderate fortune and was able to buy a small plot of land adjacent to the Breda property to build a house for his family He was nearly 48 years old at this time 20 nbsp Apocryphal print of Toussaint reading Abbe Raynal s Histoire des deux Indes before the revolution 1853 Education edit Louverture gained some education from his godfather Pierre Baptiste on the Breda plantation 24 His extant letters demonstrate a moderate familiarity with Epictetus the Stoic philosopher who had lived as a slave while his public speeches showed a familiarity with Machiavelli 25 Some cite Enlightenment thinker Abbe Raynal a French critic of slavery and his publication Histoire des deux Indes predicting a slave revolt in the West Indies as a possible influence 25 17 30 36 note 2 Louverture received a degree of theological education from the Jesuit and Capuchin missionaries through his church attendance and devout Catholicism His medical knowledge is attributed to a familiarity with the folk medicine of the African plantation slaves and Creole communities as well as more formal techniques found in the hospitals founded by the Jesuits and the free people of color 28 Legal documents signed on Louverture s behalf between 1778 and 1781 suggest that he could not yet write at that time 29 19 61 67 Throughout his military and political career during the revolution he was known to have verbally dictated his letters to his secretaries who prepared most of his correspondences A few surviving documents from the end of his life in his own hand confirm that he eventually learned to write although his Standard French spelling was strictly phonetic and closer to the Creole French he spoke for the majority of his life 25 30 31 Haitian Revolution editMain article Haitian Revolution Beginnings of a rebellion 1789 1793 edit nbsp Louverture as depicted in an 1802 French engravingBeginning in 1789 the black and mulatto population of Saint Domingue became inspired by a multitude of factors that converged on the island in the late 1780s and early 1790s leading to them organize a series of rebellions against the central white colonial assembly in Le Cap In 1789 two mix race Creole merchants Vincent Oge and Julien Raimond happened to be in France during the early stages of the French Revolution Here they began lobbying the French National Assembly to expand voting rights and legal protections from the grands blancs to the wealthy slave owning gens de couleur such as themselves Being of majority white descent and with Oge having been educated in France the two were incensed that their black African ancestry prevented them from having the same legal rights as their fathers who were both grand blanc planters Rebuffed by the assembly they return to the colony where Oge met up with Jean Baptiste Chavannes a wealthy mixed race veteran of the American Revolution and an abolitionist Here the two organized a small scale revolt in 1790 composed of a few hundred gens de couleur who engaged in several battles against the colonial militias on the island However after the movement failed to gain traction Oge and Chavannes were quickly captured and publicly broken on the wheel in the public square in Le Cap in February 1791 For the slaves on the island worsening conditions due to the neglect of legal protections afforded them by the Code Noir stirred animosities and made a revolt more attractive compared to the continued exploitation by the grands and petits blancs Then the political and social disability caused by the French Revolution s attempt to expand the rights to all men inspired a series of revolts across several neighboring French possessions in the Caribbean which upset much of the established trade between the colonies Many of the devout Catholic slaves and freedmen including Toussaint identified as free Frenchmen and royalists who desired to protect a series of progressive legal protections afforded to the black citizenry by King Louis XVI and his predecessors 10 On 14 August 1791 two hundred members of the black and mixed race population made up of slave foremen Creoles and freed slaves gathered in secret at a plantation in Morne Rouge in the north of Saint Domingue to plan their revolt Here prominent early figures of the revolution such as Dutty Francois Boukman Jean Francois Papillon Georges Biassou Jeannot Bullet and Toussaint gathered to nominate a single leader to guide the revolt Toussaint wary of the dangers of taking on such a public role especially after hearing about what happened to Oge and Chavannes went on to nominate Georges Biassou as leader He would later join his forces as a secretary and lieutenant and be in command of a small detachment of soldiers 32 33 During this time Toussaint took up the name of Monsieur Toussaint a title that was once been reserved for the white population of Saint Domingue Surviving documents show him participating in the leadership of the rebellion discussing strategy and negotiating with the Spanish supporters of the rebellion for supplies Wanting to identify with the royalist cause Louverture and other rebels wore white cockades upon their sleeves and crosses of St Louis 22 A few days after this gathering a Vodou ceremony at Bois Caiman marked the public start of the major slave rebellion in the north which had the largest plantations and enslaved population Louverture did not openly take part in the earliest stages of the rebellion as he spent the next few weeks sending his family to safety in Santo Domingo and helping his old overseer Bayon de Libertat Louverture hid him and his family in a nearby wood and brought them food from a nearby rebel camp He eventually helped Bayon de Libertat s family escape the island and in the coming years supported them financially as they resettled in the United States and mainland France 10 In 1791 Louverture was involved in negotiations between rebel leaders and the French Governor Blanchelande for the release of their white prisoners and a return to work in exchange for a ban on the use of whips an extra non working day per week and the freedom of imprisoned leaders 34 When the offer was rejected he was instrumental in preventing the massacre of Biassou s white prisoners 35 The prisoners were released after further negotiations and escorted to Le Cap by Louverture He hoped to use the occasion to present the rebellion s demands to the colonial assembly but they refused to meet 36 Throughout 1792 as a leader in an increasingly formal alliance between the black rebellion and the Spanish Louverture ran the fortified post of La Tannerie and maintained the Cordon de l Ouest a line of posts between rebel and colonial territory 37 He gained a reputation for his discipline training his men in guerrilla tactics and the European style of war 38 After hard fighting he lost La Tannerie in January 1793 to the French General Etienne Maynaud de Bizefranc de Laveaux but it was in these battles that the French first recognized him as a significant military leader 39 Some time in 1792 1793 Toussaint adopted the surname Louverture from the French word for opening or the one who opened the way 40 Although some modern writers spell his adopted surname with an apostrophe as in L Ouverture he did not The most common explanation is that it refers to his ability to create openings in battle The name is sometimes attributed to French commissioner Polverel s exclamation That man makes an opening everywhere Some writers think the name referred to a gap between his front teeth 41 Alliance with the Spanish 1793 1794 edit Despite adhering to royalist views Louverture began to use the language of freedom and equality associated with the French Revolution 42 From being willing to bargain for better conditions of slavery late in 1791 he had become committed to its complete abolition 43 44 After an offer of land privileges and recognizing the freedom of slave soldiers and their families Jean Francois and Biassou formally allied with the Spanish in May 1793 Louverture likely did so in early June He had made covert overtures to General Laveaux prior but was rebuffed as Louverture s conditions for alliance were deemed unacceptable At this time the republicans were yet to make any formal offer to the slaves in arms and conditions for the blacks under the Spanish looked better than that of the French 45 In response to the civil commissioners radical 20 June proclamation not a general emancipation but an offer of freedom to male slaves who agreed to fight for them Louverture stated that the blacks wanted to serve under a king and the Spanish king offered his protection 46 On 29 August 1793 he made his famous declaration of Camp Turel to the black population of St Domingue Brothers and friends I am Toussaint Louverture perhaps my name has made itself known to you I have undertaken vengeance I want Liberty and Equality to reign in St Domingue I am working to make that happen Unite yourselves to us brothers and fight with us for the same cause 26 On the same day the beleaguered French commissioner Leger Felicite Sonthonax proclaimed emancipation for all slaves in French Saint Domingue 47 hoping to bring the black troops over to his side 48 Initially this failed perhaps because Louverture and the other leaders knew that Sonthonax was exceeding his authority 49 However on 4 February 1794 the French revolutionary government in France proclaimed the abolition of slavery 50 For months Louverture had been in diplomatic contact with the French general Etienne Maynaud de Bizefranc de Laveaux During this time his competition with the other rebel leaders was growing and the Spanish had started to look with disfavor on his near autonomous control of a large and strategically important region 51 Louverture s auxiliary force was employed to great success with his army responsible for half of all Spanish gains north of the Artibonite in the West in addition to capturing the port town of Gonaives in December 1793 52 However tensions had emerged between Louverture and the Spanish higher ups His superior with whom he enjoyed good relations Matias de Armona was replaced with Juan de Lleonart who was disliked by the black auxiliaries Lleonart failed to support Louverture in March 1794 during his feud with Biassou who had been stealing supplies for Louverture s men and selling their families as slaves Unlike Jean Francois and Bissaou Louverture refused to round up enslaved women and children to sell to the Spanish This feud also emphasized Louverture s inferior position in the trio of black generals in the minds of the Spanish a check upon any ambitions for further promotion 53 On 29 April 1794 the Spanish garrison at Gonaives was suddenly attacked by black troops fighting in the name of the King of the French who demanded that the garrison surrender Approximately 150 men were killed and much of the populace forced to flee White guardsmen in the surrounding area had been murdered and Spanish patrols sent into the area never returned 54 Louverture is suspected to have been behind this attack although was not present He wrote to the Spanish 5 May protesting his innocence supported by the Spanish commander of the Gonaives garrison who noted that his signature was absent from the rebels ultimatum It was not until 18 May that Louverture would claim responsibility for the attack when he was fighting under the banner of the French 55 The events at Gonaives made Lleonart increasingly suspicious of Louverture When they had met at his camp 23 April the black general had shown up with 150 armed and mounted men as opposed to the usual 25 choosing not to announce his arrival or waiting for permission to enter Lleonart found him lacking his usual modesty or submission and after accepting an invitation to dinner 29 April Louverture afterward failed to show The limp that had confined him to his bed during the Gonaives attack was thought to be feigned and Lleonart suspected him of treachery 56 Remaining distrustful of the black commander Lleonart housed his wife and children whilst Louverture led an attack on Dondon in early May an act which Lleonart later believed confirmed Louverture s decision to turn against the Spanish 57 Alliance with the French 1794 1796 edit nbsp Louverture surveying his troopsThe timing of and motivation behind Louverture s volte face against Spain remains debated among historians C L R James claimed that upon learning of the emancipation decree in May 1794 Louverture decided to join the French in June 58 It is argued by Beaubrun Ardouin that Toussaint was indifferent toward black freedom concerned primarily for his own safety and resentful over his treatment by the Spanish leading him to officially join the French on 4 May 1794 when he raised the republican flag over Gonaives 59 Thomas Ott sees Louverture as both a power seeker and sincere abolitionist who was working with Laveaux since January 1794 and switched sides on 6 May 60 Louverture claimed to have switched sides after emancipation was proclaimed and the commissioners Sonthonax and Polverel had returned to France in June 1794 However a letter from Toussaint to General Laveaux confirms that he was already fighting officially on the behalf of the French by 18 May 1794 61 In the first weeks Louverture eradicated all Spanish supporters from the Cordon de l Ouest which he had held on their behalf 62 He faced attack from multiple sides His former colleagues in the slave rebellion were now fighting against him for the Spanish As a French commander he was faced with British troops who had landed on Saint Domingue in September as the British hoped to take advantage of the ongoing instability to capture the prosperous island 63 Henry Dundas 1st Viscount Melville who was Secretary of State for War for British prime minister William Pitt the Younger instructed Sir Adam Williamson the lieutenant governor of Jamaica to sign an agreement with representatives of the French colonists that promised to restore the ancien regime slavery and discrimination against mixed race colonists a move that drew criticism from abolitionists William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson 64 65 On the other hand Louverture was able to pool his 4 000 men with Laveaux s troops in joint actions 66 By now his officers included men who were to remain important throughout the revolution his brother Paul his nephew Moise Hyacinthe Jean Jacques Dessalines and Henri Christophe 67 Before long Louverture had put an end to the Spanish threat to French Saint Domingue In any case the Treaty of Basel of July 1795 marked a formal end to hostilities between the two countries Black leaders Jean Francois and Biassou continued to fight against Louverture until November when they left for Spain and Florida respectively At that point most of their men joined Louverture s forces 68 Louverture also made inroads against the British presence but was unable to oust them from Saint Marc He contained them by resorting to guerilla tactics 69 Throughout 1795 and 1796 Louverture was also concerned with re establishing agriculture and exports and keeping the peace in areas under his control In speeches and policy he revealed his belief that the long term freedom of the people of Saint Domingue depended on the economic viability of the colony 70 He was held in general respect and resorted to a mixture of diplomacy and force to return the field hands to the plantations as emancipated and paid workers 71 Workers regularly staged small rebellions protesting poor working conditions their lack of real freedom or their fear of a return to slavery They wanted to establish their own small holdings and work for themselves rather than on plantations 72 Another of Louverture s concerns was to manage potential rivals for power within the French part of the colony The most serious of these was the mulatto commander Jean Louis Villatte based in Cap Francais Louverture and Villate had competed over the command of some sections of troops and territory since 1794 Villatte was thought to be somewhat racist toward black soldiers such as Louverture and planned to ally with Andre Rigaud a free man of color after overthrowing French General Etienne Laveaux 73 In 1796 Villate drummed up popular support by accusing the French authorities of plotting a return to slavery On 20 March he succeeded in capturing the French Governor Laveaux and appointed himself Governor Louverture s troops soon arrived at Cap Francais to rescue the captured governor and to drive Villatte out of town Louverture was noted for opening the warehouses to the public proving that they were empty of the chains that residents feared had been imported to prepare for a return to slavery He was promoted to commander of the West Province two months later and in 1797 was appointed as Saint Domingue s top ranking officer 74 Laveaux proclaimed Louverture as Lieutenant Governor announcing at the same time that he would do nothing without his approval to which Louverture replied After God Laveaux 75 Third Commission 1796 1797 edit A few weeks after Louverture s triumph over the Villate insurrection France s representatives of the third commission arrived in Saint Domingue Among them was Sonthonax the commissioner who had previously declared abolition of slavery on the same day as Louverture s proclamation of Camp Turel 76 At first the relationship between the two men was positive Sonthonax promoted Louverture to general and arranged for his sons Placide and Isaac who were eleven and fourteen respectively to attend a school in mainland France for the children of colonial officials 77 This was done to provide them with a formal education in the French language and culture one that Louverture highly desired for his children but to also use them as political hostages against Louverture should he act against the will of the central French authority in Paris In spite of this Placide and Isaac ran away enough times from the school that they were moved to the College de la Marche a division of the old University of Paris Here in Paris they would regularly dine with members of the French nobility such as Josephine de Beauharnais who would go on to become Empress of France as the wife of Napoleon Bonaparte In September 1796 elections were held to choose colonial representatives for the French national assembly Louverture s letters show that he encouraged Laveaux to stand and historians have speculated as to whether he was seeking to place a firm supporter in France or to remove a rival in power 78 Sonthonax was also elected either at Louverture s instigation or on his own initiative While Laveaux left Saint Domingue in October Sonthonax remained 79 80 Sonthonax a fervent revolutionary and fierce supporter of racial equality soon rivaled Louverture in popularity Although their goals were similar they had several points of conflict 81 82 While Louverture was quoted as saying that I am black but I have the soul of a white man in reference to his self identification as a Frenchman loyalty to the French nation and Catholicism Sonthonax who had married a free black woman by this time countered with I am white but I have the soul of a black man in reference to his strong abolitionist and secular republican sentiments 10 They strongly disagreed about accepting the return of the white planters who had fled Saint Domingue at the start of the revolution To the ideologically motivated Sonthonax they were potential counter revolutionaries who had fled the liberating force of the French Revolution and were forbidden from returning to the colony under pain of death Louverture on the other hand saw them as wealth generators who could restore the commercial viability of the colony The planters political and familial connections to Metropolitan France could also foster better diplomatic and economic ties to Europe 83 10 In summer 1797 Louverture authorized the return of Bayon de Libertat the former overseer of the Breda plantation with whom he had shared a close relationship with ever since he was enslaved Sonthonax wrote to Louverture threatening him with prosecution and ordering him to get de Libertat off the island Louverture went over his head and wrote to the French Directoire directly for permission for de Libertat to stay 84 Only a few weeks later he began arranging for Sonthonax s return to France that summer 74 Louverture had several reasons to want to get rid of Sonthonax officially he said that Sonthonax had tried to involve him in a plot to make Saint Domingue independent starting with a massacre of the whites of the island 85 The accusation played on Sonthonax s political radicalism and known hatred of the aristocratic grands blancs but historians have varied as to how credible they consider it 86 87 On reaching France Sonthonax countered by accusing Louverture of royalist counter revolutionary and pro independence tendencies 88 Louverture knew that he had asserted his authority to such an extent that the French government might well suspect him of seeking independence 89 At the same time the French Directoire government was considerably less revolutionary than it had been Suspicions began to brew that it might reconsider the abolition of slavery 90 In November 1797 Louverture wrote again to the Directoire assuring them of his loyalty but reminding them firmly that abolition must be maintained 91 Treaties with Britain and the United States 1798 edit nbsp British officer Thomas Maitland meeting with Louverture to negotiateFor months Louverture was in sole command of French Saint Domingue except for a semi autonomous state in the south where general Andre Rigaud had rejected the authority of the third commission 92 Both generals continued harassing the British whose position on Saint Domingue was increasingly weak 93 Louverture was negotiating their withdrawal when France s latest commissioner Gabriel Hedouville arrived in March 1798 with orders to undermine his authority 94 Nearing the end of the revolution Louverture grew substantially wealthy owning numerous slaves at Ennery obtaining thirty one properties and earning almost 300 000 colonial livre per year from these properties 95 As leader of the revolution this accumulated wealth made Louverture the richest person on Saint Domingue Louverture s actions evoked a collective sense of worry among the European powers and the US who feared that the success of the revolution would inspire slave revolts across the Caribbean the South American colonies and the southern United States 96 On 30 April 1798 Louverture signed a treaty with the British general Thomas Maitland exchanging the withdrawal of British troops from western Saint Domingue in return for a general amnesty for the French counter revolutionaries in those areas In May Port au Prince was returned to French rule in an atmosphere of order and celebration 97 In July Louverture and Rigaud met commissioner Hedouville together Hoping to create a rivalry that would diminish Louverture s power Hedouville displayed a strong preference for Rigaud and an aversion to Louverture 98 However General Maitland was also playing on French rivalries and evaded Hedouville s authority to deal with Louverture directly 99 In August Louverture and Maitland signed treaties for the evacuation of the remaining British troops On 31 August they signed a secret treaty that lifted the British blockade on Saint Domingue in exchange for a promise that Louverture would not attempt to cause unrest in British colonies in the West Indies 100 As Louverture s relationship with Hedouville reached the breaking point an uprising began among the troops of his adopted nephew Hyacinthe Moise Attempts by Hedouville to manage the situation made matters worse and Louverture declined to help him As the rebellion grew to a full scale insurrection Hedouville prepared to leave the island while Louverture and Dessalines threatened to arrest him as a troublemaker 101 Hedouville sailed for France in October 1798 nominally transferring his authority to Rigaud Louverture decided instead to work with Phillipe Roume a member of the third commission who had been posted to the Spanish parts of the colony 102 Although Louverture continued to protest his loyalty to the French government he had expelled a second government representative from the territory and was about to negotiate another autonomous agreement with one of France s enemies 103 The United States had suspended trade with France in 1798 because of increasing tensions between the American and French governments over the issue of privateering The two countries entered into the so called Quasi War but trade between Saint Domingue and the United States was desirable to both Louverture and the United States With Hedouville gone Louverture sent diplomat Joseph Bunel a grand blanc former planter married to a Black Haitian wife to negotiate with the administration of John Adams Adams as a New Englander who was openly hostile to slavery was much more sympathetic to the Haitian cause than the Washington administration before and Jefferson after both of whom came from Southern slave owning planter backgrounds The terms of the treaty were similar to those already established with the British but Louverture continually rebuffed suggestions from either power that he should declare independence 104 As long as France maintained the abolition of slavery he appeared to be content to have the colony remain French at least in name 105 Expansion of territory 1799 1801 edit Further information War of Knives nbsp Louverture accused Andre Rigaud pictured of trying to assassinate him In 1799 the tensions between Louverture and Rigaud came to a head Louverture accused Rigaud of trying to assassinate him to gain power over Saint Domingue Rigaud claimed Louverture was conspiring with the British to restore slavery 106 The conflict was complicated by racial overtones that escalated tensions between full blacks and mulattoes 107 108 Louverture had other political reasons for eliminating Rigaud only by controlling every port could he hope to prevent a landing of French troops if necessary 109 After Rigaud sent troops to seize the border towns of Petit Goave and Grand Goave in June 1799 Louverture persuaded Roume to declare Rigaud a traitor and attacked the southern state 110 The resulting civil war known as the War of Knives lasted more than a year with the defeated Rigaud fleeing to Guadeloupe then France in August 1800 111 Louverture delegated most of the campaign to his lieutenant Jean Jacques Dessalines who became infamous during and after the war for massacring mulatto captives and civilians 112 The number of deaths is contested the contemporary French general Francois Joseph Pamphile de Lacroix suggested 10 000 deaths while the 20th century Trinidadian historian C L R James claimed there were only a few hundred deaths 25 113 In November 1799 during the civil war Napoleon Bonaparte gained power in France and passed a new constitution declaring that the colonies would be subject to special laws 114 Although the colonies suspected this meant the re introduction of slavery Napoleon began by confirming Louverture s position and promising to maintain abolition 115 But he also forbade Louverture to invade Spanish Santo Domingo an action that would put Louverture in a powerful defensive position 116 Louverture was determined to proceed anyway and coerced Roume into supplying the necessary permission 117 At the same time in order to improve the political relationships with the other European powers Louverture looked to further stabilize the political landscape of the Caribbean 10 When Isaac Yeshurun Sasportas a member of a prominent Sephardic Jewish family from Saint Domingue attempted to foment another slave revolt in neighboring British Jamaica Louverture leaked the plot to the British As a result Sasportas was captured and executed by the colonial authorities on December 23 1799 10 118 119 In January 1801 Louverture and his nephew General Hyacinthe Moise invaded the Spanish territory taking possession of it from the governor Don Garcia with few difficulties The area had been less developed and populated than the French section Louverture brought it under French law abolishing slavery and embarking on a program of modernization He now controlled the entire island 120 Constitution of 1801 edit nbsp An engraving of LouvertureNapoleon had informed the inhabitants of Saint Domingue that France would draw up a new constitution for its colonies in which they would be subjected to special laws 121 Despite his protestations to the contrary the former slaves feared that he might restore slavery In March 1801 Louverture appointed a constitutional assembly composed chiefly of white planters to draft a constitution for Saint Domingue He promulgated the Constitution on 7 July 1801 officially establishing his authority over the entire island of Hispaniola It made him governor general for life with near absolute powers and the possibility of choosing his successor However Louverture had not explicitly declared Saint Domingue s independence acknowledging in Article 1 that it was a single colony of the French Empire 122 Article 3 of the constitution states There cannot exist slaves in Saint Domingue servitude is therein forever abolished All men are born live and die free and French 123 The constitution guaranteed equal opportunity and equal treatment under the law for all races but confirmed Louverture s policies of forced labor and the importation of workers through the slave trade 124 Identifying as a loyal Christian Frenchman Louverture was not willing to compromise Catholicism for Vodou the dominant faith among former slaves Article 6 states that the Catholic Apostolic Roman faith shall be the only publicly professed faith 125 This strong preference for Catholicism went hand in hand with Louverture s self identification of being a Frenchman and his movement away from associating with Vodou and its origins in the practices of the plantation slaves from Africa 126 Louverture charged Colonel Charles Humbert Marie Vincent who personally opposed the drafted constitution with the task of delivering it to Napoleon Several aspects of the constitution were damaging to France the absence of provision for French government officials the lack of trade advantages and Louverture s breach of protocol in publishing the constitution before submitting it to the French government Despite his disapproval Vincent attempted to submit the constitution to Napoleon but was briefly exiled to the Mediterranean island of Elba for his pains 127 note 3 Louverture identified as a Frenchman and strove to convince Bonaparte of his loyalty He wrote to Napoleon but received no reply 129 Napoleon eventually decided to send an expedition of 20 000 men to Saint Domingue to restore French authority and possibly to restore slavery as well 130 Given the fact that France had signed a temporary truce with Great Britain in the Treaty of Amiens Napoleon was able to plan this operation without the risk of his ships being intercepted by the Royal Navy Leclerc s campaign 1801 1802 edit nbsp Napoleon dispatched General Charles Emmanuel Leclerc pictured to seize control of the island Napoleon s troops under the command of his brother in law General Charles Emmanuel Leclerc were directed to seize control of the island by diplomatic means proclaiming peaceful intentions and keep secret his orders to deport all black officers 131 Meanwhile Louverture was preparing for defense and ensuring discipline This may have contributed to a rebellion against forced labor led by his nephew and top general Moise in October 1801 Because the activism was violently repressed when the French ships arrived not all of Saint Domingue supported Louverture 132 In late January 1802 while Leclerc sought permission to land at Cap Francais and Christophe held him off the Vicomte de Rochambeau suddenly attacked Fort Liberte effectively quashing the diplomatic option 133 Christophe had written to Leclerc you will only enter the city of Cap after having watched it reduced to ashes And even upon these ashes I will fight you Louverture s plan in case of war was to burn the coastal cities and as much of the plains as possible retreat with his troops into the inaccessible mountains and wait for yellow fever to decimate the French 134 The biggest impediment to this plan proved to be difficulty in internal communications Christophe burned Cap Francais and retreated but Paul Louverture was tricked by a false letter into allowing the French to occupy Santo Domingo Other officers believed Napoleon s diplomatic proclamation while some attempted resistance instead of burning and retreating 135 With both sides shocked by the violence of the initial fighting Leclerc tried belatedly to revert to the diplomatic solution Louverture s sons and their tutor had been sent from France to accompany the expedition with this end in mind and were now sent to present Napoleon s proclamation to Louverture 136 When these talks broke down months of inconclusive fighting followed This ended when Christophe ostensibly convinced that Leclerc would not re institute slavery switched sides in return for retaining his generalship in the French military General Jean Jacques Dessalines did the same shortly later On 6 May 1802 Louverture rode into Cap Francais and negotiated an acknowledgement of Leclerc s authority in return for an amnesty for him and his remaining generals Louverture was then forced to capitulate and placed under house arrest on his property in Ennery 137 Arrest imprisonment and death 1802 1803 edit nbsp Illustration of Louverture imprisoned at the Fort de Joux in France where he died in 1803Jean Jacques Dessalines was at least partially responsible for Louverture s arrest as asserted by several authors including Louverture s son Isaac On 22 May 1802 after Dessalines learned that Louverture had failed to instruct a local rebel leader to lay down his arms per the recent ceasefire agreement he immediately wrote to Leclerc to denounce Louverture s conduct as extraordinary For this action Dessalines and his spouse received gifts from Jean Baptiste Brunet 138 Leclerc originally asked Dessalines to arrest Louverture but he declined Jean Baptiste Brunet was ordered to do so but accounts differ as to how he accomplished this One version said that Brunet pretended that he planned to settle in Saint Domingue and was asking Louverture s advice about plantation management Louverture s memoirs however suggest that Brunet s troops had been provocative leading Louverture to seek a discussion with him Either way Louverture had a letter in which Brunet described himself as a sincere friend to take with him to France Embarrassed about his trickery Brunet absented himself during the arrest 139 140 Finally on June 7 1802 despite the promises made in exchange for his surrender Toussaint Louverture as well as a hundred members of his inner circle were captured and deported to France Brunet transported Louverture and his companions on the frigate Creole and the 74 gun Heros claiming that he suspected the former leader of plotting another uprising Upon boarding the Creole Toussaint Louverture warned his captors that the rebels would not repeat his mistake saying that In overthrowing me you have cut down in Saint Domingue only the trunk of the tree of liberty it will spring up again from the roots for they are numerous and they are deep 141 nbsp Death of General Toussaint Louverture in the prison of Fort de Joux in France on 7 April 1803The ships reached France on 2 July 1802 and on 25 August Louverture was imprisoned at Fort de Joux in Doubs citation needed During this time Louverture wrote a memoir 142 He died in prison on 7 April 1803 at the age of 59 Suggested causes of death include exhaustion malnutrition apoplexy pneumonia and possibly tuberculosis 143 144 Views and stances editReligion and spirituality edit Throughout his life Louverture was known as a devout Roman Catholic 145 Having been baptized into the church as a slave by the Jesuits Louverture would go on to be one of the few slaves on the Breda plantation to be labeled devout He celebrated Mass every day when possible regularly served as godfather at multiple slave baptisms and constantly quizzed others on the catechism of the church In 1763 the Jesuits were expelled for spreading Catholicism among the slaves and undermining planter propaganda that slaves were mentally inferior Toussaint would grow closer to the Capuchin Order that succeeded them in 1768 especially as they did not own plantations like the Jesuits Louverture would also go on to have two formal Catholic weddings to both of his wives once freed In his memoirs he fondly recounted the weekly ritual his family had on Sundays of going to church and enjoying a communal meal 10 After defeating forces led by Andre Rigaud in the War of the Knives Louverture consolidated his power by decreeing a new constitution for the colony in 1801 It established Catholicism as the official religion 125 Although Vodou was generally practiced on Saint Domingue in combination with Catholicism little is known for certain if Louverture had any connection with it Officially as ruler of Saint Domingue he discouraged its practice and eventually persecuted its followers 146 Historians have suggested that he was a member of high degree of the Masonic Lodge of Saint Domingue mostly based on a Masonic symbol he used in his signature The membership of several free blacks and white men close to him have been confirmed 147 Legacy edit nbsp 19th century depiction of LouvertureIn his absence Jean Jacques Dessalines led the Haitian rebellion until its completion finally defeating the French forces in 1803 two thirds of the men had died when Napoleon withdrew his forces citation needed John Brown claimed influence by Louverture in his plans to invade Harpers Ferry During the 19th century African Americans referred to Louverture as an example of how to reach freedom 148 On 29 August 1954 the Haitian ambassador to France Leon Thebaud inaugurated a stone cross memorial for Toussaint Louverture at the foot of Fort de Joux 149 Years afterward the French government ceremoniously presented a shovelful of soil from the grounds of Fort de Joux to the Haitian government as a symbolic transfer of Louverture s remains citation needed An inscription in his memory was installed in 1998 on the wall of the Pantheon in Paris 150 Literature editNouvelle arrivee par un courier extraordinaire Arrestation et renvoi en France de Toussaint Louverture et de toute sa famille 1802 Dubroca The Life of Toussaint Louverture Chief of the French Rebels in St Domingo 1802 Buonaparte in the West Indies or The history of Toussaint Louverture 1803 Antwoord door of op naam van Toussaint l Ouverture aan den Generaal Buonaparte Eersten Consul der Fransche Republicq geschreeven en te vinden in de Binnenlandsche Bataafsche Courant van 27 Januarij 1803 No 12 1803 James Stephen The History of Toussaint Louverture 1814 John Relly Beard The Life of Toussaint L Ouverture The Negro Patriot of Hayti 1853 Histoire des relations internationales de Toussaint Louverture avec des documents inedits 1945 Notes and references editNotes edit Up to for example C L R James writing in 1938 The wording of the proclamation issued by then rebel slave leader Louverture in August 1793 which may have been the first time he publicly used the name Louverture possibly refer to an anti slavery passage in Abbe Raynal s A Philosophical and Political History of the Settlements and Trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies 26 27 Napoleon himself would later be exiled to Elba after his 1814 abdication 128 References and citations edit Fombrun Odette Roy ed 2009 History of The Haitian Flag of Independence PDF The Flag Heritage Foundation Monograph And Translation Series Publication No 3 p 13 Retrieved 24 December 2015 Toussaint l Ouverture Longman Pronunciation Dictionary Pearson 2023 Chartrand Rene 1996 Napoleon s Overseas Army 3rd ed Hong Kong Reed International Books Ltd ISBN 0 85045 900 1 permanent dead link White Ashli 2010 Encountering Revolution Haiti and the Making of the Early Republic Baltimore Maryland The Johns Hopkins University Press p 63 ISBN 978 0 8018 9415 2 Lamrani Salim 30 April 2021 Toussaint Louverture In the Name of Dignity A Look at the Trajectory of the Precursor of Independence of Haiti Etudes caribeennes 48 doi 10 4000 etudescaribeennes 22675 ISSN 1779 0980 S2CID 245041866 Marcus Rainsford 2013 An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti Duke University Press p 310 John P McKay Bennett D Hill John Buckler Clare Haru Crowston Merry E Wiesner Hanks Joe Perry 2011 Understanding Western Society Combined Volume A Brief History Macmillan p 608 Jeff Fleischer 2019 Rockin the Boat 50 Iconic Revolutionaries From Joan of Arc to Malcom X Zest Books p 224 Vulliamy Ed ed 28 August 2010 The 10 best revolutionaries The Guardian Retrieved 15 December 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l Girard Philippe 2016 Toussaint Louverture A Revolutionary Life Basic Books ISBN 978 0465094134 Cauna pp 7 8 Popkin Jeremy D 2012 A Concise History of the Haitian Revolution John Wiley amp Sons p 114 ISBN 978 1405198219 Bell 2008 2007 pp 59 60 62 Forsdick amp Hogsbjerg 2017 p 14 Korngold Ralph 1944 1979 Citizen Toussaint Greenwood Press ISBN 0313207941 page needed Bell 2008 2007 pp 60 62 a b Beard John Relly 1863 2001 Toussaint L Ouverture A Biography and Autobiography online ed Boston James Redpath Bell 2008 2007 pp 66 70 72 a b c d e de Cauna Jacques 2004 Toussaint L Ouverture et l independance d Haiti Temoignages pour une commemoration Paris Ed Karthala a b Cauna pp 63 65 Cauna Jacques de 2012 Dessalines esclave de Toussaint Outre Mers Revue d histoire 99 374 319 322 doi 10 3406 outre 2012 4936 a b Bell 2008 2007 pp 24 25 Bell 2008 2007 p 62 Lee Eunice Day November 1951 Toussaint Louverture Negro History Bulletin 15 2 40 39 JSTOR 44212502 a b c d Bell 2008 2007 p 61 a b Bell 2008 2007 p 18 Blackburn 2011 p 54 Bell 2007 pp 64 65 Bell 2008 2007 pp 60 80 James 1814 p 104 Richard J Callahan 2008 New Territories New Perspectives The Religious Impact of the Louisiana Purchase University of Missouri Press p 158 Bell 2008 2007 pp 23 24 James 1814 p 90 Bell 2008 2007 pp 32 33 Bell 2008 2007 p 33 Bell 2008 2007 pp 34 35 Bell 2008 2007 pp 42 50 Bell 2008 2007 p 46 Bell 2008 2007 p 50 Langley Lester 1996 The Americas in the Age of Revolution 1750 1850 New Haven Yale University Press p 111 ISBN 978 0300066135 Bell 2008 2007 p 56 James 1814 pp 125 126 Bell 2008 2007 pp 86 87 James 1814 p 107 David Geggus ed Haitian Revolutionary Studies Bloomington Indiana University Press 2002 pp 125 126 Bell 2008 2007 p 54 Bell 2008 2007 p 19 James pp 128 130 James 1814 p 137 James 1814 pp 141 142 Bell 2008 2007 pp 92 95 Charles Forsdick and Christian Hogsbjerg Toussaint Louverture A Black Jacobin in the Age of Revolutions London Pluto Press 2017 p 55 Geggus ed Haitian Revolutionary Studies pp 120 129 Geggus ed Haitian Revolutionary Studies p 122 Geggus ed Haitian Revolutionary Studies pp 122 123 Ada Ferrer Freedom s Mirror Cuba and Haiti in the Age of Revolutions Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2014 pp 117 118 Ferrer Freedom s Mirror p 119 James The Black Jacobins pp 143 144 Beaubrun Ardouin Etudes sur l Histoire d Haiti Port au PrinceL Dalencour 1958 pp 2 86 93 Thomas Ott The Haitian Revolution 1789 1804 Knoxville University of Tennessee Press 1973 pp 82 83 Geggus ed Haitian Revolutionary Studies pp 120 122 Bell 2008 2007 pp 104 108 Bell 2008 2007 p 109 C L R James Black Jacobins London Penguin 1938 p 109 David Geggus Slavery War and Revolution The British Occupation of Saint Domingue 1793 1798 New York Clarendon Press 1982 James p 143 James p 147 Bell 2008 2007 p 115 Bell 2008 2007 pp 110 114 Bell 2008 2007 pp 113 126 James pp 155 156 James pp 152 154 Laurent Dubois and John Garrigus Slave Revolution in the Caribbean 1789 1804 A Brief History with Documents Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan 2006 p 31 a b Dubois and Garrigus p 31 Bell pp 132 134 James pp 163 173 Bell 2008 2007 p 136 Bell 2008 2007 pp 137 140 141 Bell 2008 2007 pp 147 148 Bell 2008 2007 p 145 James 1814 p 180 Bell 2008 2007 pp 141 142 147 James 1814 pp 174 176 Bell 2008 2007 pp 145 146 Bell 2008 2007 p 150 Bell 2008 2007 pp 150 153 Bell 2008 2007 pp 153 154 James 1814 p 190 Bell 2008 2007 p 153 Bell 2008 2007 pp 153 155 James 1814 p 179 Bell 2008 2007 p 155 Bell 2008 2007 pp 142 143 James 1814 p 201 James 1814 pp 201 202 Bell 2008 2007 pp 72 73 Meade Teresa 2016 A History of Modern Latin America 1800 to the Present Chichester West Sussex John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 68 ISBN 978 1118772485 James 1814 pp 202 204 James 1814 pp 207 208 James 1814 pp 211 212 Bell 2008 2007 pp 159 160 James 1814 pp 219 220 Bell 2008 2007 pp 165 166 Bell 2008 2007 pp 166 167 Philippe Girard Black Talleyrand Toussaint L Ouverture s Secret Diplomacy with England and the United States William and Mary Quarterly 66 1 January 2009 87 124 Bell 2008 2007 pp 173 174 Bell 2008 2007 pp 174 175 Bell 2008 2007 pp 175 77 178 79 James 1814 pp 229 230 James 1814 pp 224 237 Bell 2008 2007 p 177 Bell 2008 2007 pp 182 185 Bell 2008 2007 pp 179 180 James 1814 pp 236 237 Bell 2008 2007 p 180 Bell 2008 2007 p 184 Bell 2008 2007 p 186 Bell 2008 2007 pp 180 182 187 LOKER ZVI 1981 An eighteenth century plan to invade Jamaica Isaac Yeshurun Sasportas French patriot or Jewish radical idealist Transactions amp Miscellanies Jewish Historical Society of England 28 132 1144 ISSN 0962 9688 JSTOR 29778924 Girard Philippe 1 July 2020 Isaac Sasportas the 1799 Slave Conspiracy in Jamaica and Sephardic Ties to the Haitian Revolution Jewish History 33 3 403 435 doi 10 1007 s10835 020 09358 z ISSN 1572 8579 S2CID 220510628 Bell 2008 2007 pp 189 191 Alexis Stephen Black Liberator London Ernest Benn Limited 1949 p 165 Constitution de la colonie francais de Saint Domingue Le Cap 1801 Oge Jean Louis Toussaint L Ouverture et l Independence d Haiti Brossard L Editeur de Vos Reves 2002 p 140 Bell pp 210 211 a b Haitian Constitution of 1801 English TLP thelouvertureproject org Retrieved 30 June 2022 Oge Jean Louis Toussaint L Ouverture et l Independence d Haiti Brossard L Editeur de Vos Reves 2002 p 141 Philippe Girard The Slaves Who Defeated Napoleon Toussaint L Ouverture and the Haitian War of Independence Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press November 2011 Latson Jennifer 26 February 2015 Why Napoleon Probably Should Have Just Stayed in Exile the First Time Time Retrieved 10 August 2020 James 1814 p 263 Philippe Girard Napoleon Bonaparte and the Emancipation Issue in Saint Domingue 1799 1803 French Historical Studies 32 4 Fall 2009 587 618 James pp 292 294 Bell pp 223 224 Bell 2008 2007 pp 206 209 226 229 250 Bell 2008 2007 pp 232 234 Bell 2008 2007 pp 234 236 Bell 2008 2007 pp 234 236 237 Bell 2008 2007 pp 237 241 Bell 2008 2007 pp 261 262 Girard Philippe R July 2012 Jean Jacques Dessalines and the Atlantic System A Reappraisal PDF The William and Mary Quarterly Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 69 3 559 doi 10 5309 willmaryquar 69 3 0549 Archived from the original PDF on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 10 December 2014 a list of extraordinary expenses incurred by General Brunet in regards to the arrest of Toussaint started with gifts in wine and liquor gifts to Dessalines and his spouse money to his officers 4000 francs Girard Philippe R 2011 The Slaves who Defeated Napoleon Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian War of Independence 1801 1804 University of Alabama Press Oruno D Lara Toussaint Louverture Francois Dominique Toussaint dit 1743 1803 Encyclopaedia Universalis 7 avril 2021 Abbott Elizabeth 1988 Haiti An Insider s History of the Rise and Fall of the Duvaliers Simon amp Schuster p viii ISBN 0671686208 Forsdick amp Hogsbjerg 2017 p 19 John Bigelow The last days of Toussaint Louverture faculty webster edu Pike Tim Toussaint Louverture helping Bordeaux come to terms with its slave trade past part 1 Invisible Bordeaux website Bell 2008 2007 p 194 Bell 2008 2007 pp 56 196 Bell 2008 2007 p 63 Clavin Matthew 2008 A Second Haitian Revolution Civil War History liv 2 Yacou Alain ed 2007 Vie et mort du general Toussaint Louverture selon les dossiers conserves au Service Historique de la Defense Chateau de Vincennes Saint Domingue espagnol et la revolution negre d Haiti in French Karthala Editions p 346 ISBN 978 2811141516 Retrieved 5 April 2018 le Cadet Nicolas 21 October 2010 Le portrait du juge ideal selon Noel du Fail dans les Contes et Discours d Eutrapel Centre d Etudes et de Recherche Editer Interpreter in French University of Rouen Retrieved 5 April 2018 Works cited edit Alexis Stephen 1949 Black Liberator The Life of Toussaint Louverture London Ernest Benn Ardouin Beaubrun 1958 Etudes sur l Histoire d Haiti Port au Prince Dalencour Beard John Relly 1853 The Life of Toussaint L Ouverture The Negro Patriot of Hayti ISBN 1587420104 1863 2001 Toussaint L Ouverture A Biography and Autobiography online ed Boston James Redpath Consists of the earlier Life supplemented by an autobiography of Toussaint written by himself Bell Madison Smartt 2008 2007 Toussaint L Ouverture A Biography New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 1400079353 Blackburn Robin 2011 The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery 1776 1848 Verso Books ISBN 978 1844674756 de Cauna Jacques 2004 Toussaint L Ouverture et l independance d Haiti Temoignages pour une commemoration Paris Ed Karthala Cesaire Aime 1981 Toussaint L Ouverture Paris Presence Africaine ISBN 2708703978 Davis David Brion 31 May 2007 He changed the New World The New York Review of Books pp 54 58 Review of M S Bell s Toussaint L Ouverture A Biography Dubois Laurent and John D Garrigus 2006 Slave Revolution in the Caribbean 1789 1804 A Brief History with Documents St Martin s Press ISBN 031241501X DuPuy Alex 1989 Haiti in the World Economy Class Race and Underdevelopment since 1700 Westview Press ISBN 0813373484 Ferrer Ada 2014 Freedom s Mirror Cuba and Haiti in the Age of Revolutions Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107697782 Foix Alain 2007 Toussaint L Ouverture Paris Editions Gallimard 2008 Noir de Toussaint L Ouverture a Barack Obama Paris Ed Galaade Forsdick Charles and Christian Hogsbjerg eds 2017 The Black Jacobins Reader Durham NC Duke University Press 2017 Toussaint Louverture A Black Jacobin in the Age of Revolutions London Pluto Press ISBN 978 0745335148 Geggus David ed 2002 Haitian Revolutionary Studies Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253341044 Girard Philippe 2009 Black Talleyrand Toussaint L Ouverture s Secret Diplomacy with England and the United States William and Mary Quarterly 66 1 87 124 2009 Napoleon Bonaparte and the Emancipation Issue in Saint Domingue 1799 1803 French Historical Studies 32 4 587 618 2011 The Slaves who Defeated Napoleon Toussaint L Ouverture and the Haitian War of Independence 1801 1804 University of Alabama Press ISBN 0817317325 2012 Jean Jacques Dessalines and the Atlantic System A Reappraisal William and Mary Quarterly 2016 Toussaint Louverture A Revolutionary Life New York Basic Books Graham Harry 1913 The Napoleon of San Domingo The Dublin Review 153 87 110 Heinl Robert and Nancy Heinl 1978 Written in Blood The story of the Haitian people 1492 1971 Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0395263050 Hunt Alfred N 1988 Haiti s Influence on Antebellum America Slumbering Volcano in the Caribbean Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0807131970 James C L R 1934 2013 Toussaint L Ouverture The story of the only successful slave revolt in history A Play in Three Acts Duke University Press 1963 2001 The Black Jacobins Toussaint L Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution Penguin Books ISBN 0140299815 Johnson Ronald Angelo 2014 Diplomacy in Black and White John Adams Toussaint Louverture and Their Atlantic World Alliance Athens GA University of Georgia Press Joseph Celucien L 2012 Race Religion and The Haitian Revolution Essays on Faith Freedom and Decolonization CreateSpace Independent Publishing 2013 From Toussaint to Price Mars Rhetoric Race and Religion in Haitian Thought CreateSpace Independent Publishing Korngold Ralph 1944 1979 Citizen Toussaint Greenwood Press ISBN 0313207941 de Lacroix F J Pamphile 1819 1995 La revolution d Haiti Norton Graham Gendall April 2003 Toussaint L Ouverture History Today Ott Thomas 1973 The Haitian Revolution 1789 1804 Knoxville University of Tennessee Press ISBN 0870495453 Parkinson Wenda 1978 This Gilded African Toussaint L Ouverture Quartet Books Rodriguez Junius P ed 2006 Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion Westport CT Greenwood ISBN 0313332711 Ros Martin 1991 1994 The Night of Fire The Black Napoleon and the Battle for Haiti in Dutch New York Sarpedon ISBN 0962761370 Schlesinger Jr Arthur M World leaders past amp present Toussaint L ouverture Schœlcher Victor 1889 Vie de Toussaint L Ouverture Stinchcombe Arthur L 1995 Sugar Island Slavery in the Age of Enlightenment The Political Economy of the Caribbean World Princeton University Press ISBN 1400807778 The Collective Works of Yves ISBN 1401083080 Book I explains Haiti s past to be recognized Book 2 culminates Haiti s scared present day epic history Thomson Ian 1992 Bonjour Blanc A Journey Through Haiti London ISBN 0099452154 L Ouverture Toussaint 2008 The Haitian Revolution with an introduction by J Aristide New York Verso A collection of L Ouverture s writings and speeches ISBN 1844672611 Tyson George F ed 1973 Great Lives Considered Toussaint L Ouverture Prentice Hall ISBN 013925529X A compilation includes some of Toussaint s writings James Stephen 1814 The History of Toussaint Louverture J Butterworth and Son Forsdick Charles Hogsbjerg Christian 2017 Toussaint Louverture A Black Jacobin in the Age of Revolutions Pluto Press ISBN 978 0745335148 JSTOR j ctt1pv89b9 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Toussaint Louverture nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Toussaint Louverture Toussaint L Ouverture A Biography and Autobiography by J R Beard 1863 Toussaint L Ouverture a Santana Latin rock song from their first album Santana A section of Bob Corbett s on line course on the history of Haiti that deals with Toussaint s rise to power The Louverture Project Toussaint at IMDb nbsp Egalite for All Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian Revolution Archived 30 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Noland Walker PBS documentary 2009 Spencer Napoleonica Collection Archived 5 December 2012 at archive today at Newberry Library Black Spartacus Archived 3 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine by Anthony Maddalena Thee Black Swan Theatre Company a radio play in four parts which tells the story of Toussaint L Ouverture and the Haitian Slave Uprising of 1791 1803 Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian Revolution by Paul Foot Redwords 2021 publication of two lectures from 1978 and 1991 Toussaint Dominique Francois Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1889 Elliott Charles Wyllys St Domingo its revolution and its hero Toussaint Louverture New York J A Dix 1855 Manioc Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Toussaint l Ouverture Pierre Dominique Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press Toussaint L Ouverture by Wendell Phillips hardcover edition published in English French and Kreyol Ayisyen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Toussaint Louverture amp oldid 1207856131, wikipedia, 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