Difference between revisions of "Edmond de Saint-Léger"

From TLP
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Reverted edits by 209.222.238.205 (Talk); changed back to last version by Doe)
m (added See also)
 
Line 3: Line 3:
 
Alarmed about the growing counter-revolution, Saint-Léger fled Saint-Domingue for France after a talk with the [[mulatto]] leader [[Pierre Pinchinat]]. ([[James]] p. 110) Pinchinat had used the [[royalist]] threat to gain momentum for the mulatto cause. Commissioner [[Roume]], who had arrived with Saint-Léger in 1791, was scheduled to leave as well, but postponed his departure in order to deter the royalists (Roume was expelled later by Toussaint Louverture).
 
Alarmed about the growing counter-revolution, Saint-Léger fled Saint-Domingue for France after a talk with the [[mulatto]] leader [[Pierre Pinchinat]]. ([[James]] p. 110) Pinchinat had used the [[royalist]] threat to gain momentum for the mulatto cause. Commissioner [[Roume]], who had arrived with Saint-Léger in 1791, was scheduled to leave as well, but postponed his departure in order to deter the royalists (Roume was expelled later by Toussaint Louverture).
  
 +
==See also==
 +
* [[Hyacinthe]] - a [[houngan]] active in battles during the [[1791]] upraising in Haiti.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 17:58, 25 March 2009

Edmond de Saint-Léger - French Commissioner who arrived in Saint-Domingue on November 29, 1791 (with Frédéric de Mirbeck and Roume). His previous post had been Tobago, "where he was a doctor and an interpreter of English." (Parkinson, p. 60) He must have had great courage, for he diffused a potentially explosive situation at the St. Michel plantation when he walked calmly into the middle of a crowd of rebels and greeted Jean François "with respect. He spoke graciously and quietly to all the rebels and with his Irish charm [...] placated them. Jean François showed an emotional reaction after the scene of unpleasantness and responded to such warm and unprecedented behaviour by falling on one knee before him." (Parkinson, p. 63)

Alarmed about the growing counter-revolution, Saint-Léger fled Saint-Domingue for France after a talk with the mulatto leader Pierre Pinchinat. (James p. 110) Pinchinat had used the royalist threat to gain momentum for the mulatto cause. Commissioner Roume, who had arrived with Saint-Léger in 1791, was scheduled to leave as well, but postponed his departure in order to deter the royalists (Roume was expelled later by Toussaint Louverture).

See also

References

  • James, C.L.R. (1989). The Black Jacobins. Toussaint L'Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution. (2nd Ed., Revised) New York: Vintage Press. ISBN 0-679-72467-2.
  • Parkinson, Wenda (1978). This Gilded African. London: Quartet Books. ISBN 0-7043-2187-4