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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: COM-COR |
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CORDAY D'ARMONT, MARIE ANNE CHARLOTTE (1768-1793), French revolutionary heroine, the murderess of Marat, born at St Saturnin des Lignerets, near Seez in Normandy, was descended from a noble but poor family, and numbered among her ancestors the dramatist Corneille. Charlotte Corday was educated in the convent of the Holy Trinity at Caen, and then sent to live with an aunt. Here she saw hardly any one but her relative, and passed her lonely hours in reading the works of the pkilosophes, especially Voltaire and the Abbe Raynal. Another of her favourite authors was Plutarch, from whose pages she doubtless imbibed the idea of classic heroism and civic virtue which prompted the act that has made her name famous. On the outbreak of the Revolution she began to study current politics, chiefly in the papers issued by the party afterwards known as the Girondins. On the downfall of this party, on May 31, 1793, many of the leaders took refuge
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Wimpffen , w.no commanded the army assembled for 'the defence of the coasts et Cherbourg, was to have marched upon Paris. Charlotte attended their meetings, and heard them speak; but we have no reason to believe that she saw any of them privately, till the day when she went to ask for introductions to friends of theirs in Paris. She saw that their 'efforts in Normandy were doomed to fail. She had heard of Marat as a tyrant and the chief
Apparently she had thought of going to Paris in April, before the fall of the Girondins, for she had then procured a passport which she used in July. It contained the usual description of the bearer, and ran thus: Laissez passer la citoyenne Marie, &c., Corday, dgee de 24 ans, faille de 5 pieds r pouce, cheveux et sourcils chdtains, yeux gris, front eleve, nez long, bouche moyenne, menton rond fourchu, visage ovale. Arrived in Paris she first attended to some business for a friend at Caen, and then she wrote to Marat: " Citizen, I have just arrived from Caen. Your love for your native place doubtless makes you desirous of learning the events which have occurred in that part of the republic. I shall call at your residence in about an hour; have the goodness to receive me and to give me a brief interview. I will put you in a condition to render great service to France." On calling she was refused admittance, and wrote again, promising to reveal important secrets, and appealing to Marat's sympathy on the ground that she herself was persecuted by the enemies of the republic. She was again refused an audience, and it was only when she called a third time (July 13) that Marat, hearing her voice in the ante-chamber, consented to see her. He lay in a bathing tub, wrapped in towels, for he was suffering from a horrible disease which had almost reduced him to a state of putrefaction. Our only source of information as to what followed is Charlotte's own confession . She spoke to Marat of what was passing at Caen, and his only comment on her narrative was that all the men she had mentioned should be guillotined in a few days. As he spoke she drew from her bosom a dinner-knife (which she had bought the day before for two francs) and plunged it into his left side. It pierced the lung and the aorta. He cried out, "A moi, ma chore amie 1 " and expired. Two women rushed in, and prevented Charlotte from escaping. A crowd collected round the house
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range de l'assassinat, and Vergniaud said, "Elie nous perd, mais elle nous apprend d mourir." See (Euvres politiques de Charlotte Corday (Caen, r863 ; some letters and an Adresse aux Francais antis des lois et de in paix), with a supplement printed in the same year; Louvet de Couvrai, Memoires (ed. Aulard, Paris, 1889); Alphonse Esquiros, Charlotte Corday (2nd ed., 2 vols., Paris, 1841); Cheron de Villiers, Marie Anne Charlotte Corday (Paris, 1865) ; Casimir Perier, " La Jeunesse de Charlotte Corday " (Revue des deux mondes, 1862) ; C. Vatel, Dossiers du proces criminel de Charlotte de Corday . . . extraits des archives impericles (Paris, 1861), and Dossier historique de Charlotte Corday (Paris, 1872) ; Austin Dobson , Four Frenchwomen (London, 1890) A. Ducos, Les Trois Girondines, Mme Roland, Charlotte Corday .. . (Paris, 1896) ; Dr Cabanes, " La vraie Charlotte Corday," in Le Cabinet secret de l'histoire (4 vols., 18971900). Her tragic history was the subject of two anonymous tragedies, Charlotte Corday (1795), said to be by the Conventional F. J. Gamon, and Charlotte Corday (Caen, 1797), neither of which have any merit; another by J. B. Salles is published by C. Vatel in Charlotte de Corday et les Girondins (1864-1872). See further bibliographical articles in M. Tourneux, Bibl. de l'hist. de Paris . (vol. iv., 1906), and in the Bibliographic des femmes celebres (3 vols., Turin and Rome, 18921905) ; and also E. Defrance, Charlotte Corday et la mort de Marat (1909).End of Article: CORDAY If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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