Here is a translation/ summary of Hervé Leuwers's article, "Danton et Robespierre: le duel réinventé", published in Biard & Leuwers (ed): Danton: le mythe et l'Histoire (2016). A close reading of the evidence suggests that there was no profound conflict between the two men and that Robespierre moved against Danton only reluctantly, when he felt that the elimination of factions was "necessary to the Revolution."
"Before the Spring of 1794, there was no Danton-Robespierre duel"
The image of two irreconcilable figures arose only after the death of the two protagonists. In reality relations between Robespierre and Danton were complex. They were not without disagreements and rivalry but they were never enemies. Following the September Massacres, Danton, Marat and Robespierre were elected for the capital. On 25th September when the representative Lasource launched the first offensive against the "despotism of Paris", they stood together and answered in turn in the name of the Mountain.
EARLY RELATIONS BETWEEN ROBESPIERRE AND DANTON
The two Revolutionaries engaged in common struggles, particularly against Lafayette in 1791 and 1792:
On 21st June 1791 Danton improvised a diatribe against Lafayette in the Jacobins. He condemned his support for a bicameral legislature, his hostility towards the clubs, his hindrance of freedom of the press, his failure to prevent the King's attempt at flight. [Aulard, Société des Jacobins, vol.2 (1891) p.534-36. Internet Archive]
The hostility toward Lafayette increased after the "massacre of the Champ-de-Mars" (17th July 1791) and culminated in the Spring of 1792. On 18th June 1792 Danton denounced him as a traitor in the Jacobins. [Aulard, vol. 4 (1892) p.11-12. Internet Archive]
Robespierre reacted in the same way. Lafayette represented all he detested - personal ambition; a man who ordered his men to fire on the crowd; an enemy of the patriots in the Assembly and the clubs. Like Danton, Robespierre demanded his arrest.
"Disagreements might separate them, but never placed them in real conflict"
"The two men stood side by side and appreciated each other"
At the beginning of the Convention, then, the two men stood shoulder-to-shoulder politically. They also respected each other personally. Although they did not live in the same quarter or see each other socially, their mutual regard is testified by two letters. The first is written by Danton as minister shortly after 10th August. He invites Robespierre to participate in the conseil de justice which he intends to constitute. He assures him it will not be too great a time commitment. This invitation is a mark of confidence. (In the event, Robespierre declined as he has already committed himself to serve the Commune of Paris)
[Oeuvres de Maximilien Robespierre, vol.III-2, p.36-37]
According to Hervé Leuwers, "These words are more than marks of esteem; they are marks of friendship... But a measured friendship, conscious of the differences which separated the two men" (p.144).
"Before he accused Danton, the Conventionnel Robespierre supported him for a long time, even defended him"
On his return from Belgium, in the Spring of 1793, Danton found himself under attack from the Brissotins, and tainted by his association with the traitor Dumouriez. He defended himself only with difficulty. On 1st April 1793 Robespierre recentred the debate in the Jacobins on Dumouriez and his accomplices, whilst praising Danton: "You know the superiority with which this patriot has crushed his enemies. You know with what energy he has inspired every spirit". [Aulard, vol.5 (1895), p.120-21. Internet Archive]
Later, after the fall of the Girondins and his entry into the Committee of Public Safety, Robespierre found in Danton a precious ally in the fight against dechristianisation. [Leuwers Robespierre (2014), p.305-310]
At the Jacobins on 3rd December 1793 (13 Frimaire II), Robespierre again successfully defended Danton against attack when his probity was questioned.
Danton had criticised the popular society of Le Havre's request to the Committee of Public Safety for an official meeting place: in his view, citizens had a natural right of assembly and had no need to refer to any external authority. He warned against those who sought to impose "ultra-revolutionary measures" on the people. The fact that the petitioners had also demanded a detachment of the Revolutionary Army and a portable guillotine, seemed to place a question mark over Danton's allegiance. He complained that he found himself under suspicion and demanded that the accusations against him be made public.
There followed an intervention by Robespierre, which has been subject to widely different interpretations. In Hervé Leuwers's view, he was clearly speaking in support of Danton. He set out the charges against Danton - beginning with the idea that he intended to emigrate to Switzerland, or that he wanted to become regent - but only immediately to contradict them. His "only reproaches" against Danton concerned his misplaced loyalty to Dumouriez and his hesitations over the Brissotins.
Robespierre went on to praise Danton's courage and fidelity; despite their disagreements, he had always found him a true patriot. With characteristic hyperbole, he demanded to share his fate:
"The difference between us is only one of temperament, of our manner of seeing and judging; we both share the same goal, that of saving the patrie. If you have judged him, I demand that you judge me also - as though there can be any doubt that I am the enemy of tyrants and have fought all my life for liberty. Let me be persecuted by those who believe themselves worthy to judge us; who today can show themselves to be more patriotic than us"?
[Oeuvres de Maximilien Robespierre, vol.X, p.219-225. Internet Archive
Aulard Société des Jacobins (1895) vol.V, p.541-45. Internet Archive]
THE FALL OF THE FACTIONS
At first Robespierre did not want to abandon Danton and Desmoulins, an irresolution accentuated by his illness of plûviose-ventôse.
[Aulard Société des Jacobins (1895) vol.V, p.595-604. Internet Archive
Oeuvres de Maximilien Robespierre, vol.X, p.306-317. Internet Archive]
For a long time Robespierre refused for to confront Danton directly, whether because he feared his popularity, or simply because he did not consider it necessary. However, the conflict between "citras" and "ultras" intensified around him and began to invade the Committee of Public Safety. The crisis was far from resolved when he fell ill in February 1794. He did not return to political life for a whole month and, when he reappeared, the context had changed: Hébert and the Cordeliers now directly attacked the Committees for pursuing too timid a policy.
The move against the Factions suggests "a degree of improvisation".
The Committee of Public Safety probably did not have a concerted plan of action. Its members opposed the leadership of the Cordeliers who now held over them the threat of popular insurrection. In the end a campaign that lasted three weeks, culminating, at the last moment, in the fall of Danton, took observers by surprise, suggesting a degree of improvisation. Robespierre finished by taking a stance against Danton, but others led this move.
There were three phases in the fall of the Factions:
- The arrest and execution of the Hébertists in Ventôse
- The denunciation by Amar of the Committee of General Security of "the foreign faction", followed by the arrest of Chabot, Basire, Delaunay d’Angers, Jullien de Toulouse et Fabre d’Églantine
- Finally, the arrest of Danton, Philippeaux, Delacroix and Desmoulins in the night of 30th/31st March 1794.
The first developments took place on 13th March 1794 (23 Ventôse), the day of Robespierre's return to public life. The Committee had waited for his recovery, also that of Couthon, and for the end of Billaud-Varenne's spell on mission. Saint-Just presented to the Convention a report on "the conspiracy being laid abroad". He invited the Revolutionary Tribunal to arrest and judge "the authors and accomplices of the plot against the French people and its liberty". That night the leaders of the Cordeliers, Hébert, Momoro, Vincent and Ronsin, were arrested. The Sections and popular opinion reacted with disbelief but rallied to the Revolutionary government. Ten days later, the accused were sent to the scaffold.
The day after the arrest of the Cordeliers, Robespierre launched an appeal for unity in the Convention; all factions must now perish. It is not clear whether he was directing this at Danton. He may rather have had in mind the "foreign plot" denounced by Amar the following day (16th March/ 26 Ventôse).
Would it have been possible for the Convention to call a halt at this point? On 20th March (30 Ventôse) Robespierre dismissed this possibility: the destruction of one faction would only rebounds to the advantage of another. Couthon then promised that the Committee of Public Safety would name the moderates who sought to profit from the current situation. At the Jacobins next day, Robespierre confirmed the continued existence of a "faction" and claimed the identity of its members would soon be revealed.
THE ARREST AND EXECUTION OF DANTON
"There is every indication that Robespierre hesitated for a long time before moving against Danton, but also against Desmoulins, his old schoolfriend".
[Réimpression du Moniteur universel, no.311 (1794), p.3272.
References
Available on Academia.
https://www.amis-robespierre.org/Robespierre-et-Danton-l-eternel
No comments:
Post a Comment