Orphans on the Earth

Girondin Fugitives from the Terror, 1793-94

By (author) Bette W. Oliver

Hardback - £82.00

Publication date:

16 July 2009

Length of book:

140 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

241x163mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780739127315

Just as it was not foreordained that the Terror of 1793–1794 should follow the early idealistic years of the French Revolution, neither could it have been imagined that some of those elected deputies who had helped to establish the new republic would become fugitives from their own government. Yet, in May to June 1793, twenty-nine deputies of the moderate Girondin faction were expelled from the National Convention by the radical Jacobin leadership and placed under house arrest. This action followed months of irreconcilable quarrels between the Girondin and Jacobin factions. Some of the proscribed deputies chose to remain in Paris and were subsequently executed in October 1793. Others escaped, fleeing first to Caen in Normandy, where they hoped to ignite a federalist revolt against the government in Paris. When their efforts failed, a small group of the former deputies fled to nearby Brittany and then down the western coast to the Bordeaux area, where they found refuge near St. Emilion. Hiding for several months in the home and attached stone quarry of the deputy Guadet's relatives, four of these fugitives wrote their memoirs before their presence was discovered by one of Robespierre's agents. The memoirs of François Buzot, Jerome Pétion, Charles Barbaroux, and Jean-Baptiste Louvet, in addition to correspondence between them and Jean and Manon Roland, provide the basis for this book. This is the first book to examine the lives of the fugitives during the period of the Terror (1793–94), after which only Louvet remained alive.
Based largely on the manuscript memoirs and correspondence of François Buzot, Jérôme Pétion, Charles Barbaroux, Jean-Baptiste Louvet, and Madame Roland, Bette Oliver's Orphans on the Earth narrates, from their perspective, the story of these members of the Girondin faction, their expulsion from the Convention, and their flight from Paris. By relating in evocative detail the previously untold account of their harrowing year of pursuit by the Jacobins, this book lays bare the tragic human cost of the French Revolution and allows the reader to experience the daily life of a fugitive during the Terror.