- Anne Josephe Theroigne de Mericourt
Anne-Josèphe Théroigne de Méricourt (born "Anne-Josèphe Terwagne";
August 13 ,1762 –1817), a French woman who was a striking figure in theFrench Revolution , was born at Marcourt (from a corruption of which name she took her usual designation), a small town inLuxembourg , on the banks of theOurthe . She appears to have been well educated, having been brought up in theconvent ofRobermont . She was quick-witted, strikingly handsome in appearance and intensely passionate in temper; and she had a vigorous eloquence, which she used with great effect upon the mobs ofParis during that short space of her life (1789-1793) which alone is of historical interest.Early life
She was born under the name of Anne-Josèphe Terwagne in Marcourt to Pierre Terwagne (b. 1731) and Anne-Élisabeth Lahaye (1732-1767) and lived in an oak-built house. She got her name from her mother, Anne, and her father's brother's, Joseph Terwagne. Her brothers also inherited Joseph in Pierre-Joseph Terwagne (b. December 25, 1764) and Nicholas-Joseph Terwagne (b. September 28, 1767). After giving birth to her third child, Mme Lahaye died which left Anne-Josèphe alone with her father and two brothers. At that age, five years, an aunt who lived in Liège took her and sent her to a convent to learn dress-making.Roudinesco, Elisabeth. (1992) "Madness and Revolution: The Lives and Legnends of Theroigne de Mericourt", Verso. ISBN 0-86091-597-2.]
Fact and fiction in the French Revolution
The story of her having been betrayed by a young
seigneur , and having in consequence devoted her life to avenge her wrongs uponaristocrats , a story which is told byLamartine and others, is unfounded, the truth being that she left her home on account of a quarrel with her stepmother. In her career ascourtesan she visitedLondon in 1782 and was back inParis in 1785. After arriving in Paris, at the rue de Tournon, she ran a salon attended by such high class men asGeorges Danton ,Camille Desmoulins , Mirabeau,Gilbert Romme andEmmanuel Joseph Sieyès . She later went to visitGenoa in 1788, where she was aconcert singer before returning to Paris in 1789.On the outbreak of the Revolution, she was surrounded by a coterie of well-known men, chief of whom were
Pétion andDesmoulins ; but she did not play the role which legend has assigned her. She took no part in thestorming of the Bastille nor in the days of the 5th and 6th of October, when the women of Paris broughtKing Louis XVI andMarie Antoinette fromVersailles . In 1790 she had apolitical salon and spoke once at the club of theCordeliers .Austrian imprisonment
The same year she left Paris for
Mercourt , whence after a short stay she proceeded to Liege, in which town she was seized by warrant of theAustria n Government, and conveyed first toTirol and thereafter toVienna , accused of having been engaged in a plot against the life of the queen of France. After an interview, however, with theHoly Roman Emperor Leopold II of Austria , she was released; and she returned to Paris in January 1792, crowned of course with fresh laurels because of her captivity, and resumed her influence. In the clubs of Paris her voice was often heard, and even in theNational Assembly she would violently interrupt the expression of any moderatist views. Together with Sandrine Dejou she demanded women's right to arm themselves and to enlist in the army.Fury of the Gironde
Known henceforth as "la belle Liègeoise", she appeared in public dressed in a riding habit, a plume in her hat, a pistol in her belt and a sword dangling at her side, and excited the mob by violent harangues. Associated with the
Girondists and the enemies ofRobespierre , she became in fact the Fury of the Gironde. She commanded in person the 3rd corps of the so-called army of thefaubourgs on the20 June 1792 , and again won the gratitude of the people. She shares a heavy responsibility for her connexion with the riots ofAugust 10 . A certain contributor to the journal, the "Acts of the Apostles",Suleau by name, earned her savage hatred by associating her name, for the sake of the play upon the word, with a deputy named Populus, whom she had never seen. On the 10th of August, just after she had watched approvingly the massacre of certain of the national guard in thePlace Vendôme . Suleau was pointed out to her. She sprang at him, dragged him among the infuriated mob, and , he was stabbed to death in an instant. She took no part in the massacres of September, and, moderating her conduct, became less popular from 1793.Descent into madness
Towards the end of May the Jacobin women seized her, stripped her naked, and flogged her in the public garden of the
Tuileries . The following year she became insane, a fate not surprising when one considers her career. [Kennedy, Deborah. (2002) "Helen Maria Williams and the Age of Revolution", Bucknell University Press. ISBN 0-8387-5511-9.] She was whipped on the bare bottom on 31 May 1793. After humilation shameless and bloodthirsty in delirium she started to live naked - refused to wear any garments, in memory of the outrage she had suffered. [Roudinesco, Elisabeth. (1992) "Madness and Revolution: The Lives and Legends of Theroigne de Mericourt", Verso. ISBN 0-86091-597-2. p.198] She was removed to a private house, thence in 1800 to La Salpêtrière for a month, and thence to a place of confinement called thePetites Maisons , where she remained a raving maniac till 1807. She was then again removed to La Salpêtrière, where she died, never having recovered her reason, onJune 9 ,1817 .References
# M. Pellet, "Etude historique et biographique sur Theroigne de Mericourt" (1886)
# L. Lacour, Les Origines dufiminisme contemporain. Trois femmes de Ia Revolution (Paris, 1900);
# Vicomte de Reiset, La Vraie Throigne de Mricourt (Paris, 1903)
# E. and J. de Goncourt, Portraits intimes du XVIII. siècle (2 vols., 1857-58)
# "Throigne de Mericourt", a play by M. Paul Hervieu, produced at the TheatreSarah Bernhardt in 1902.*1911
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