Adrienne de La Fayette
Adrienne de La Fayette | |
---|---|
Madame de La Fayette | |
Born |
Marie Adrienne Françoise de Noailles 2 November 1759 Hôtel de Noailles, Paris, Kingdom of France |
Died |
24 December 1807 48) Auvergne, France | (aged
Spouse(s) | Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette |
Parent(s) |
Jean de Noailles Henriette Anne Louise d'Aguesseau |
Relatives | Françoise Charlotte d'Aubigné (great-grandmother) |
Marie Adrienne Françoise de Noailles, Marquise de La Fayette (2 November 1759 – 24 December 1807), the daughter of Jean de Noailles, and Henriette Anne Louise d'Aguesseau,[1] married Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette.
They had four children: Henriette (1776–1778), Anastasie Louise Pauline du Motier (1777–1863), Georges Washington Louis Gilbert du Motier, (1779–1849), and Marie Antoinette Virginie du Motier (1782–1849). She was a great-granddaughter of Françoise Charlotte d'Aubigné, niece of Madame de Maintenon.
Early life
Adrienne was born, and grew up in the Hôtel de Noailles, the family residence in Paris,[2] where was also celebrated, on 11 April 1774, her arranged marriage with Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette. The orphan Lafayette had inherited large estates that yielded an annual income of 150,000 livres ($1.5 million).[3] Her mother, concerned with their youth, kept them apart for a year while she managed their courtship. In 1776, the young couple had a daughter, Henriette.
Lafayette went to visit his uncle, Emmanuel Marie Louis de Noailles, Ambassador to England. During a ball at Lord George Germain's, he met Lord Rawdon,[4] met Sir Henry Clinton at the Opera, and met Lord Shelburne at breakfast.[5] He left to return to France, and then America.
Adrienne was pregnant with Anastasie. The duc de Noailles got Lafayette orders to report to Italy. But, Lafayette left for Spain and America on 26 April 1777. In a letter to Adrienne, Lafayette wrote:
7 June You will admit, dear heart, that the occupation and the life I am to have are very different from those which were in store for me in the futile journey to Italy. Defender of that liberty that I idolize, coming myself freer than anyone else to offer the services of a friend to that interesting republic, I bear with me only my sincerity and my good will; no ambition, no personal interest. In laboring for my own glory, I labor for the prosperous issue of their efforts. I hope on my account you will become a good American. It is a sentiment suited to virtuous hearts. The welfare of America is bound closely to the welfare of all humanity. She is to become the honored and safe asylum of liberty! Adieu! Darkness does not suffer me to continue longer. But if my fingers were to follow my heart, I should need no daylight to tell you how I suffer far away from you, and how I love you.
Adrienne was to have four children in total, amongst whom (b. 1779) Georges Washington de La Fayette was eldest son. The eldest child, Henriette died aged 22 months.
In 1778, Adrienne is reported to have met Voltaire at the home of the duc de Choiseul:
I wish, to make my obeisance to the wife of the hero of the New World. May I live long enough to salute in him the liberator of the Old.[6]
From July 1779 to March 1780, Lafayette returned to France to present a plan for French support of the Americans. An army was dispatched under the comte de Rochambeau. Lafayette drew 120,000 livres, and gave Adrienne power of attorney. On 6 March 1780, Lafayette left for America.[7]
After the victory at the Siege of Yorktown, Lafayette returned to France. On 22 January 1782, he was received at Versailles.
French Revolution
In 1783, Lafayette bought a townhouse, at 183 rue de Bourbon, for 200,000 livres ($2 million).[8] He and Adrienne were active in their salon, at the Hôtel de La Fayette, the headquarters of Americans in Paris, such as Benjamin Franklin, Mr. and Mrs. John Jay, and Mr. and Mrs. John Adams[9] who met every Monday, and dined in company with family, and the liberal nobility, such as Clermont-Tonnerre, Madame de Staël, Morellet, and Marmontel.
Adrienne took a dislike to the pessimistic Gouverneur Morris, calling him an 'aristocrat'.[10]
Lafayette joined the French abolitionist group Society of the Friends of the Blacks (Société des amis des Noirs), which advocated the end of the slave trade and equal rights for free Blacks. In 1783, in correspondence with Washington, he urged the emancipation of slaves; and to establish them as farmer tenants.[11] Although Washington demurred, Lafayette purchased land in the French colony of Cayenne to "experiment" with education, and emancipation, at his plantation La Belle Gabrielle.[11][12][13]
On 15 July 1789, he was acclaimed commander-in-chief of the National Guard (Garde nationale). His moderate (Constitutional Monarchist) views were rejected by the Royalists (Legitimists or Orléanist), and he became marginalized, with the rise of the Girondists, and then Jacobin radicals, and the increasing polarisation of politics. Adrienne went with Lafayette to Chavaniac, in October 1791, after he lost the mayoral election.
After war was declared on Austria on 20 April 1792, Lafayette left for command of the army at Metz. After returning to Paris to defend the King, he was then accused of treason, and sought to escape to the Dutch Republic, but was arrested on 19 August by the Prussians at Rochefort, Belgium, and imprisoned at Wesel, and Magdeburg, Prussia.[14] He was later transferred to the Austrians, and held at Olmutz. An escape attempt was unsuccessful.[15]
Imprisonment
On 10 September 1792, she was held under house arrest at Chavaniac. On 12 September 1792, she wrote M. Jacques Pierre Brissot:
Monsieur: I believe you to be sincerely fanatic for liberty. It is a compliment I pay to very few people at this moment. I shall not examine whether that fanaticism, like religious fanaticism, does not generally defeat its own object, but I cannot persuade myself that one who has done so much for the emancipation of the negroes can be an agent of tyranny. I believe that if you are impassioned by the ends which your party seeks, at least you will abhor the means it employs. I am sure that you esteem, I might almost say that you respect, M. de Lafayette as a sincere and courageous friend of liberty, even when you persecute him because his opinions are different from your own as to the means of establishing freedom in France, and supported by courage like his and by faithful adherence to his oaths, are contrary to the party in which you have enlisted and to your new revolution. I believe all this, and therefore apply to you, although disdaining addressing all others; if I am mistaken tell me so, and I shall have troubled you for the last time....
But if I am to be kept as a hostage, my captivity would be less hard to bear were I to choose Chavaniac as my prison on parole, and on the responsibility of the municipality of my village. If you wish to serve me, you will have the satisfaction of doing a good action by mitigating the fate of one who is unjustly persecuted and who, you well know, has neither the means nor the wish to injure. I consent to owe you that service.[16]
After March 1793, Adrienne met Jean-Baptiste Lacoste fr:Jean-Baptiste Lacoste, a representative of the National Convention, at Brioude to whom she wrote:
I am informed, Monsieur, that there is a movement afoot to imprison all former nobles, in connection with the treacherous behaviour of Dumouriez. I come now to tell you that though I declared my readiness at all times to stand surety for Monsieur de La Fayette, I most certainly have no intention of doing so for his enemies. Furthermore, whether I live or die is a matter of supreme indifference to Monsieur Dumouriez. You would do far better to leave me undisturbed in my retirement. When I was dragged from it, the only result was to awaken sympathy for me and to revive the memory of a great many injustices. I ask to be left with my children in the only situation I can find tolerable so long as my husband is a prisoner of the enemies of France.[17]
Reign of Terror
In May 1794, during the Reign of Terror, she was transferred to La Force Prison in Paris. Her grandmother, Catherine de Cossé-Brissac duchesse de Noailles, her mother, Henriette-Anne-Louise d'Aguesseau, duchesse d'Ayen, and sister, Anne Jeanne Baptiste Louise vicomtesse d'Ayen, were guillotined on 22 July 1794.[18] She was transferred to the Collège du Plessis prison,[19] then to a house on rue des Amandiers, then to the Desnos house, rue Notre-Dame des Champs.[20] She was released on 22 January 1795, due to the efforts of Gouverneur Morris, James Monroe,[21] and Elizabeth Monroe, who visited Adrienne in jail.[22][23] In April 1795, Georges was sent to America, studied at Harvard, and stayed with George Washington.
Gouverneur Morris advanced her 100,000 livres of his own money.[24] On 1 September 1795, Monroe issued Adrienne American passports for her and the Lafayette family, (since they had been granted Citizenship), and she traveled to Lafayette's place of imprisonment.[25]
Prisoners of Olmütz
Adrienne travelled to Vienna where, on 10 October 1795, she met with the Emperor. She obtained permission to join her husband, "I grant it to you, but as for his liberty, that would be impossible – my hands are tied, it is a complicated affair."[26][27]
On 15 October 1795, she joined her husband, along with Anastasie, and Virginie, in the prison fortress of Olmütz. All of their money and baggage were confiscated.[28] Their confinement became a cause célèbre. A play about them was written: The Prisoners of Olmütz, or Conjugal Devotion. John Parish, the United States consul in Hamburg, provided aid, but was unable to negotiate a release. (The United States did not have diplomatic relations with either Prussia or Austria).
On 18 September 1797, the family was released, under the terms of the Treaty of Campo Formio (18 October 1797).
Recovery
They recuperated at Lhemkuln, Holstein near her sister Madame de Montagu, and aunt Madame de Tessé. At Mme de Tessé's Witmold, Anastasie married, Juste-Charles de la Tour-Maubourg, younger brother of another Olmütz detainee Charles César de Fay de La Tour-Maubourg, and Marie Victor de Fay, marquis de Latour-Maubourg. In 1798, Georges returned from America. Adrienne helped Mme de Montagu in her financial scheme to help the émigrés. In 1799, they moved to Vianen, near Utrecht.[29] Lafayette remained exiled, but Adrienne returned to France.
Adrienne was active recovering properties in France, including from her mother's estate, La Grange. Her sister, Mme de Montagu, settled at Fontenay fr:Château de Fontenay. In 1799, with the fall of the Directory, she secured a passport for her husband's return to France. After Napoleon's plebiscite, on 1 March 1800, he restored Lafayette's citizenship, and removed his name from the émigrés list, along with the members of the Assemblée Nationale.[30] Many of the returned exiles, and Charles James Fox came to visit at La Grange.
They were about 200,000 livres in debt. Adrienne negotiated an indemnity for the seized Cayenne property. She recovered 500,000 francs in compensation of the confiscated Noailles property.[31] She negotiated the sale of Brittany properties for 61,200 livres, and monthly rents of 4,800 livres.[30] James Monroe brought Congress's grant of 11,500 acres (47 km2) in the Ohio territory, and secured a loan from Baring Brothers & Co to repay creditors, including Morris.[32]
In 1802, Georges de Lafayette married Emilie de Tracy, daughter of the Comte de Tracy.[33] Georges entered the army, was wounded at the battle of Mincio, in 1800, and later was aide-de-camp to General Grouchy, and was with him at the Battle of Eylau, 1807, where he gave up his horse, after Grouchy's had been killed, at the risk of his own life.[34][35] After that, he resigned his commission.
On 20 April 1803, Virginie married Louis de Lasteyrie at La Grange.[36] Their son, Jules de Lasteyrie (1810–1883) married Olivia de Rohan-Chabot (1813–1899), and lived at the château de la Grange-Bléneau for fifty-four years.[37]
Adrienne found out from a lacemaker, Mlle Paris, the burial place of her relatives and other victims of the Terror.[38] She was active with Mme de Montagu in raising funds to build memorials at the Picpus Cemetery.
Illness and death
She was chronically ill after her incarcerations, suffering from stomach pains, blisters, sores, and abscesses. A Dr. Sautereau stayed at La Grange, and Dr. Lobinhes was on call from Paris. In 1807, during a trip to the Auvergne region, Adrienne became ill; she was delirious but recovered enough on Christmas Eve to gather the family around her bed; her last words to Lafayette were: "Je suis toute à vous" ("I am all yours").[39]
Given the purchase of saturne (lead), Burton concludes that lead poisoning was the cause of death.[40] She was buried at the Picpus cemetery, after her death on 24 December 1807.
Assessment
Her husband wrote to M. de La Tour-Maubourg:
There was also a refinement in the way she expressed herself, a loftiness of thought which astonished everyone. But what was admirable above all, was that tenderness of heart which she was constantly showing to her six children, to her sister, to her aunt, to M. de Tessé, she thought she was with them at Memphis, for by a miracle of feeling, her mind was never invariable fixed but where I was concerned.[41]
Descendants of Adrienne de La Fayette
Georges de Lafayette married Emilie de Tracy, daughter of the Comte de Tracy, in 1802; they had three daughters and two sons: Natalie, who married Adolphe Perrier, Malthilde, who married Maurice de Pusy (1799–1864), (son of Jean-Xavier Bureau de Pusy), Clémentine, who married "Gustave" Auguste Bonnin de La Bonninière de Beaumont, Oscar Thomas Gilbert, marquis de La Fayette (1815–1881), liberal politician, and Edmond.[42]
Virginie married Louis de Lasteyrie on 20 April 1803.[36] They had four children: Pauline, who married Charles de Rémusat, Mélanie, who married Francisque de Corcelle (a friend of de Tocqueville), in 1831,[43][44] Octavie, and their son, Adrien Jules de Lasteyrie (1810–1883) married Olivia de Rohan-Chabot (1813–1899), the daughter of the émigré Louis de Rohan, Vicomte de Chabot, and Lady Charlotte Fitzgerald, daughter of the second Duke of Leinster.
Mélanie and Francisque had a daughter Marie Henriette Hélène Marthe Tircuy de Corcelle (6 June 1832, Paris – 17 November 1902, Paris), who married Charles Adolphe Pineton de Chambrun (10 August 1831, Marjevols – 13 September 1891, New York), a lawyer from New York, at the Église de la Madeleine on 8 June 1859.[45]
Adrien Jules and Olivia had a son, Louis de Lasteyrie who married Olivia Mills Goodlake; they had two children, Gui de Lasteyrie (born 1878), and Louis de Lasteyrie (1881–1955). Louis married Louise Chodron Courcel, in 1908.[46]
Anastasie de Lafayette married Juste-Charles de Fay de La Tour-Maubourg (Motte-Galaure, Drôme 8 June 1744, 28 May 1824); they had two children: Célestine Louise Henriette de Fay de La Tour-Maubourg (1799 – 16 July 1893), and Jenny de Fay de La Tour-Maubourg (6 September 1812 – 15 April 1897). His father was Claude Florimond de Faÿ (1712–1790), and his mother was Marie Françoise Vacheron Bermont (born 1712). His brother, Marie Victor de Fay, marquis de Latour-Maubourg, was a Cavalry Corps commander, survived the Russian Campaign and was wounded at the battle of Leipzig. His other brother, Charles César de Fay de La Tour-Maubourg was a prisoner at Olmutz. Their descendants include: Queen Donna Paola Ruffo di Calabria (11 September 1937 -21 July 2013), who married HRH Prince Albert, Prince of Liège, in Brussels, Belgium, on 2 July 1959, later King Albert II of Belgium.
References and notes
- ↑ Guilhou, Marguerite, Life of Adrienne d'Ayen, Marquise de Lafayette, p.11
- ↑ Now The Saint James Albany Hotel-Spa, 202 Rue de Rivoli
- ↑ Unger, p.22
- ↑ Nelson, Francis Rawdon-Hastings, Marquess of Hastings, p.55
- ↑ Unger, p.24
- ↑ Maurois, André, Adrienne: The Life of the Marquise de La Fayette, (1961), translated from the French by Gerard Hopkins, p.66
- ↑ Unger, p.110
- ↑ Unger, p.169
- ↑ ib. Maurois, André, p.113
- ↑ Melanie Randolph Miller, Envoy to the Terror, p.18
- 1 2 Kaminsky, pp. 34, 35
- ↑ La Belle Gabrielle, Lafayette and Slavery, Lafayette College
- ↑ Unger, p.216
- ↑ Martha Joanna Lamb, The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries, pp. 353–376
- ↑ James Wesley Baker, The Imprisonment of Lafayette, American Heritage
- ↑ Crawford, M. Macdermot, Madame de Lafayette and Her Family, p. 165-6
- ↑ ib. Maurois, André, p.235
- ↑ Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer, Thomas Waters Griffith, My Scrap-book of the French Revolution, p.393
- ↑ The Collège du Plessis, where her husband had been educated, was turned into a prison during the Reign of Terror.
- ↑ Letter from Adrienne Lafayette to her children, 17 Brumaire, November 1794
- ↑ Morris, Vol. II, p.64
- ↑ Betty Boyd Caroli, First Ladies, p.28
- ↑ Cokie Roberts (2008). Ladies of Liberty. William Morrow. p. 327. ISBN 978-0-06-078234-4.
- ↑ Melanie Randolph Miller, Envoy to the Terror, p.211
- ↑ Unger, p.308
- ↑ i. Crawford, M. Macdermot, p.308
- ↑ Adrienne de La Fayette, Letter to Mme la Comtesse de Tesse, Lafayette Collection, Library of Congress, Reel 1
- ↑ Unger, p.309
- ↑ Edith Helen Sichel, The Household of the Lafayettes, p. 260
- 1 2 Unger, p.329
- ↑ Unger, p.332
- ↑ Unger, p.334
- ↑ ib. Crawford, M. Macdermot, p.304
- ↑ Encyclopædia Britannica, 1911
- ↑ Grouchy correspondence with his wife, Emmanuel Grouchy à Eylau
- 1 2 ib. Crawford, M. Macdermot, p.307
- ↑ de Chambrun, René, Introduction to Maurois, André, Adrienne, p. viii
- ↑ ib. Crawford, M. Macdermot, p.309
- ↑ Crawford, p. 318
- ↑ June K. Burton, Two “Better Halves” in the Worst of Times – Adrienne Noailles Lafayette (1759–1807) and Fanny Burney d’Arblay (1752–1840) as Medical and Surgical Patients under the First Empire, p.13
- ↑ ib. Crawford, M. Macdermot, p.319
- ↑ Jules Cloquet, Isaiah Townsend, Recollections of the Private Life of General Lafayette, p.227
- ↑ His friends, Francisque de Corcelle, www.toqueville.culture.fr
- ↑ Nassau William Senior, Conversations with Distinguished Persons During the Second Empire, p.21
- ↑ Arnaud Chaffanjon La Fayette et sa descendance Berger Levraud 1976
- ↑ Olivia de Rohan-Chabot, thePeerage.com
External links
- M. MacDermot Crawford, Madame Lafayette and her Family, James Pott & Company
- Mary MacDermot Crawford, The Wife of Lafayette
- Louis Gottschlk, Lafayette Comes to America
- Kaminsky, John (2005). A Necessary Evil?: Slavery and the Debate of the Constitution. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-945612-33-8.
- Jason Lane, General and Madame de Lafayette: Partners in Liberty's Cause in the American and French Revolutions, Taylor Trade Publishing, 25 December 2003
- Adrienne, The Life of the Marquise de La Fayette, André Maurois, McGraw Hill Book Company
- Morris, Gouverneur (1888). The Diary and Letters of Gouverneur Morris. Volume I. Anne Cary Morris. C. Scribner's Sons.
- Morris, Gouverneur (1888). The Diary and Letters of Gouverneur Morris. Volume II. Anne Cary Morris. C. Scribner's Sons.
- Marguerite Guilhou, Ralph Fletcher Seymour, Life of Adrienne d'Ayen, Marquise de Lafayette
- Edith Helen Sichel, The Household of the Lafayettes
- Unger, Harlow Giles (2002). Lafayette. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-39432-7.
Collections
- June K. Burton, Ph.D., LL.D., Two “Better Halves” in the Worst of Times – Adrienne Noailles Lafayette (1759–1807) and Fanny Burney d’Arblay (1752–1840) as Medical and Surgical Patients under the First Empire, January 26, 2001
- Letter from Adrienne de Lafayette to her Children, The 17th Brumaire, November 1794
- John Jay letter to Adrienne Lafayette, 13 August 1785
- Gouverneur Morris letter to Adrienne Lafayette, 19 December 1796
- Lafayette Family Papers, University of Maryland
- National Museum of Women in the Arts
- Généalogie de Carné, Alain de Carné en novembre 2006
- Neil Jeffares, Dictionary of pastellists before 1800, Noailles Iconographical Genealogy
- Find A Grave, Adrienne de Lafayette
- The Marquis de Lafayette collection, Cleveland State University
- Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette Collection, Library of Congress
- Martha Joanna Lamb, The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries, pp. 353–376
See also
- "Books: An 18th Century Marriage", Time, May. 26, 1961