Extensive Definition
Lucie Simplice Camille Benoist Desmoulins
(March 2,
1760
– April 5, 1794) was a French journalist
and politician who played an important role in the French
Revolution. He was closely associated with Georges
Danton.
Early life
Desmoulins was born at Guise, Aisne, in Picardy. His father was lieutenant-general of the bailliage of Guise, and through the efforts of a friend obtained a scholarship for his son at the Collège Louis-le-Grand in Paris.Entering the school, which Maximilien Robespierre and Louis-Marie Stanislas Fréron also attended at the time, at fourteen, Desmoulins was an accomplished student. It is here that his love for the classics, such as Cicero, Tactitus and Livy would prosper. Destined by his father for the law, he was admitted as a lawyer of the parlement of Paris in 1785. However, he did not do well, as he had a violent manner and a serious stammer. This prompted him to turn towards writing. His interest in public affairs led him to a career in politics.In March 1789, Desmoulins was nominated deputy
from the bailliage of Guise. He came to Laon as a commissioner
for the election of deputies to the Estates-General.
As a spectator of the procession of the Three Estates on May 5,
1789, Camille wrote a response, an Ode aux Etats Generaux and later
Mirabeau enlisted him to write for his newspaper, although it was
ephemeral, for it was banned by royal decree on May 6, 1789.
July 1789
Because of his lack of success at the law, he was living in Paris in extreme poverty. However, he showed enthusiasm for the political changes announced by the meeting of the Estates-General. According to his letters to his father, he watched with excitement the procession of deputies at the Palace of Versailles, and with indignation the events following the closing of the Salle des Menus to the deputies who had named themselves the National Assembly - leading to the Tennis Court Oath.The sudden dismissal of Jacques
Necker by King
Louis
XVI brought fame to Desmoulins. On July 12, 1789 he leapt on a
table outside one of the cafés in the
garden of the Palais
Royal, and announced to the crowd the dismissal of the
reformer. Apparently losing his stammer due to the excitement, he
addressed the passions of the public, calling them to "...take up
arms and adopt cockades by which we may know each other," and
adding:
- "This dismissal is the tocsin of the St. Bartholomew of the patriots!" (meaning that a massacre of the partisans of reform was under preparation).
He adopted green as the color for rallying
liberty and the masses followed, for he had become their leader.
Finally, after drawing two pistols from under his coat, he
declared that he would not fall alive into the hands of the police
who were watching his movements. He descended, embraced by the
crowd.
Following Desmoulins, riots started throughout
Paris. The mob, procuring arms by force on July 13, was
partly organized as the Parisian militia, which was afterwards to
be the National
Guard. On July 14, the
storming
of the Bastille occurred.
The following day, Desmoulins began the most
publicised phase of his writing career. In May and June 1789 he had
written La France Libre, which his publisher had refused to print.
The taking of the Bastille, however, was a sign of changing times,
and, on July
18, Desmoulins's work was issued. Considerably in advance of
public opinion, it called explicitly for a republic, his sixth issue
stating, "...popular and democratic government is the only
constituition with suits France, and all those who are worthy of
the name of men." "La France Libre" also elaborately examined the
rights
of king, of nobles,
of Roman
Catholic clergy and
of the people, it became instantly popular, securing Desmoulins a
partnership with
Honoré Mirabeau. It was immediately followed by a slander campaign from Royalist
pamphleteers.
Through his support for a republic, even a
democratic one, he was also a member of the Cordeliers Club, who
were among the first revolutionaries to advocate republican
government, for it had been associated for preserving liberty,
which Camille always supported.
Journalism
Exhilarated, he appealed to the lower orders by printing his Discours de la lanterne aux Parisiens which began with a quotation from the Gospel of John, Qui male agit odit lucem ("He that does evil hates light" Bible verse |John|3:20). Consequently, Desmoulins was dubbed "Procureur-général de la lanterne" ("The Lanterne Prosecutor"). In this pamphlet, he argued that revolutionary violence was justified.In November 1789, he began a career as a
journalist with the first number of a weekly publication,
Histoire des Révolutions de France et de Brabant, which ceased
at the end of July 1791. The publication was extremely popular from
its first to its last number - Camille became famous and was no
longer poor. The Histoire des Révolutions is a measure of the ideas
in circulation in revolutionary Paris, but it has drawn criticism
for its extremely violent tone.
It was in "Revolutions de France et de Brabant"
that scholars begin noting Camille as a “volatile” writer. As the
Revolution progressed the French government suffered a great
shortage of money and the country entered inflation, Desmoulins did
not portray it in this light, however, and “painted a wholly
erroneous picture of the situation.” Because of his
inconsistencies, Camille’s friendship with important figures, such
as Mirabeau and Malouet, suffered. Both men, fed up with Camille’s
publishing and libels declared that Camille should be denounced and
Malouet, “went so far as to ask that Camille be certified insane.”
Robespierre came to Camille’s rescue, defending his childhood
friend and preventing his arrest.
Desmoulins was influenced by the theorists of the
Revolution - for some time before the death of Mirabeau in April
1791, he had begun his collaboration with Georges
Danton (his associate for the rest of their lives). In July
1791, he appeared before the
Paris Commune—the local government of Paris—as head of a group
petitioning to depose the king. At the time, under the constitutional
monarchy, such a request was dangerous; the gesture enhanced
agitation in the city, and the frequent attacks to which Desmoulins
had often been subject were followed by a warrant for the arrest
of himself and Danton.
Danton briefly left Paris, while Desmoulins chose
to remain and even to make occasional appearances at the Jacobin
Club. Upon the failure of this attempt to arrest him,
Desmoulins published a pamphlet, Jean
Pierre Brissot démasqué, which contained violent attacks. It
originated in a conflict between the two, and was followed in 1793
by a Fragment de l'histoire secrète de la Révolution (more usually
known by the name Histoire
des Brissotins), in which the Girondists, and
especially Brissot, were subjected to a populist
attack.
Camille published this in response to Brissot
calling for the dissolution of the Paris Commune and the Jacobins.
It violently attacked the Girondists and Brissot as enemies of the
Revolution, resulting in many being arrested and guillotined and in
the defacement of Brissot’s career. Camille later regretted writing
this. This pamphlet illustrates the constant shift in opinions and
friendship of those in the Revolution, because Brissot many times
had defended the journals of Camille when he was threatened, almost
acting “as a father guiding his son.” Brissot once warned Camille
and said, “’You are young Camille Desmoulins, candor is on your
lips…but you are often fooled by that very candor.’”
National Convention and clash with Robespierre
Desmoulins took an active part in the August 10 attack on the Tuileries Palace. Immediately afterwards, as the Legislative Assembly (France) crumbled and various factions and bodies contended for effective power over the country, he became secretary to Danton in the latter's role as the new Justice Minister. On September 8, he was elected a deputy for Paris to the new National Convention, where he remained largely in the background, remaining better known as a journalist. He was affiliated with The Mountain, and voted for the Republic and the execution of the king. Desmoulins became close to Robespierre, and the Fragment de l'histoire secrète de la Révolution was very likely inspired by the latter. The success of the pamphlet did much to install the Reign of Terror and condemn the Girondin leaders to the guillotine. This proved alarming to both Danton and its author.In December 1793 the first number of the Vieux Cordelier
was issued. At first it was directed against the Hébertists
and their mission for dechristianization (this was approved by
Robespierre), but the third number supported Danton's idea of a
Committee of clemency, which
earned them Robespierre's epithet les indulgents. This caused
Robespierre to turn against Desmoulins, who took advantage of the
popular indignation roused against the Hébertists to send them to
death. Robespierre and
Louis de Saint-Just then turned their attention to both the
enragés
(Jacques
Roux's faction) and the indulgents.
On January 7,
1794,
Robespierre, who on a former occasion had defended Danton and
Desmoulins in the National Convention, urged the burning of certain
numbers of the Vieux Cordelier in a speech at the Jacobin Club
(though he did not at this time condemn Desmoulins or Danton as
individuals). Desmoulins replied using a quote from Jean-Jacques
Rousseau (who was widely perceived as the intellectual
authority for all revolutionary gestures): "burning is not
answering". The implied insult led to a bitter conflict. By the end
of March, the Hébertists had been guillotined, while Danton,
Desmoulins and other leaders of the moderates were placed under
arrest.
Trial and execution
On March 31, the arrest warrant was signed and executed, and on the 3rd, 4th and 5th of April the trial took place before the Revolutionary Tribunal. On being asked his age, Desmoulins replied:- "I am thirty-three, the age of the "sans-culotte" Jesus, a critical age for every patriot" (this was false; he was in fact thirty-four).
The accused were prevented from defending
themselves by a decree of the Convention. This, together with the
false report of a spy (who charged Desmoulins' wife with conspiring
in her husband's escape and plotting the "ruin of the Republic"),
obtained for prosecutor
Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville a death sentence after
threatening the jury. The
verdict was passed in the accuseds' absence, and their execution
was scheduled for the same day.
Desmoulins struggled before his death, allegedly
tearing his clothes to shreds. Of the group of fifteen guillotined
together (also including
Marie Jean Hérault de Séchelles,
François Joseph Westermann and Pierre
Philippeaux), Desmoulins died third, and Danton last.
Family
On December 29 1790 Desmoulins married Lucile Duplessis, and among the witnesses were Brissot, Jérôme Pétion de Villeneuve and Robespierre. Their only child, Horace Camille, was born on July 6, 1792. Horace was pensioned by the French government, and died in Haiti in 1825.Lucile was arrested a few days after her husband,
and condemned to the guillotine on the basis of false charges. She
displayed coolness and courage on the day of her death (April 13,
1794).
Desmoulins in Popular Culture
Camille Desmoulins is one of the central characters in Hilary Mantel's A Place of Greater Safety.Desmoulins is the central character in Tanith
Lee's The Gods are Thristy.
Impacts
Camille’s lasting influence over the French
Revolution and the Terror was his denouncement of Brissot and the
Girondists, and his Vieux Cordelier that called for the earlier
held principles of the Revolution and the Cordeliers Club. Camille,
as a significant journalist, illustrated the power of the
newspapers during the Revolution and how easily they persuaded the
passions of the people, especially the Parisian mobs. He also
signifies the increasingly radical situation the Terror became, as
group after group became denounced and seen as a threat to the
goals of the Revolution.
See also
James Bartholomew Blackwell - Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-century revolutionary soldier.References
The Britannica gives the following references:- J. Charette, Œuvres de Camille Desmoulins avec une étude biographique ... etc. (Paris, 1874), and Camille Desmoulins, Lucile Desmoulins, étude sur les Dantonistes (Paris, 1875; Eng. trans., London, 1876)
- François Victor Alphonse Aulard, Les Orateurs de la Legislative et de la Convention (Paris, 1905, 2nd ed.)
- G. Lemâitre, "La Maison de Camille Desmoulins" (Le Temps'', March 25, 1899).
- H. Mantel, "A Place of Greater Safety" (London, 1993, ISBN-13: 978-0140171037)
- REDIRECT Active and passive Citizens
desmoulins in Afrikaans: Camille
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desmoulins in Latin: Camillus Desmoulins
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