Difference between revisions of "Pierre Pinchinat"

From TLP
Jump to: navigation, search
m (spelling)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''Pierre Pinchinat''' - one of the leaders of the free coloreds, a metropolitan lawyer educated in France; light-skinned, with but one negro grandparent.  ([[Haitian Revolutionary Studies|Geggus, 2002]], p. 106)  Pinchinat was one of [[André Rigaud]]'s most trusted agents.  ([[Written In Blood|Heinl, et al]], p. 69)
 
'''Pierre Pinchinat''' - one of the leaders of the free coloreds, a metropolitan lawyer educated in France; light-skinned, with but one negro grandparent.  ([[Haitian Revolutionary Studies|Geggus, 2002]], p. 106)  Pinchinat was one of [[André Rigaud]]'s most trusted agents.  ([[Written In Blood|Heinl, et al]], p. 69)
  
"The political leader of the [[mulatto]] movement... a very different type from his colleagues, an unprincipled but brilliant man who combined the aspirations of power with sexual licence.  His vicious personal life in no way prevented him from being a near genius, it skimply created animosities and lack of faith among those who would otherwise have admired him wholeheartedly for his quick grasp and control of the situation and for his adept diplomacy."  ([[This Gilded African|Parkinson]], p. 58)  Pinchinat conspired with [[Jean Baptiste Villatte]] and [[André Rigaud]] to seize and imprison [[Comte de Laveaux|Laveaux]]. ([[This Gilded African|Parkinson]], p. 100)
+
"The political leader of the [[mulatto]] movement... a very different type from his colleagues, an unprincipled but brilliant man who combined the aspirations of power with sexual licence.  His vicious personal life in no way prevented him from being a near genius, it simply created animosities and lack of faith among those who would otherwise have admired him wholeheartedly for his quick grasp and control of the situation and for his adept diplomacy."  ([[This Gilded African|Parkinson]], p. 58)  Pinchinat conspired with [[Jean Baptiste Villatte]] and [[André Rigaud]] to seize and imprison [[Comte de Laveaux|Laveaux]]. ([[This Gilded African|Parkinson]], p. 100)
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 14:47, 12 September 2006

Pierre Pinchinat - one of the leaders of the free coloreds, a metropolitan lawyer educated in France; light-skinned, with but one negro grandparent. (Geggus, 2002, p. 106) Pinchinat was one of André Rigaud's most trusted agents. (Heinl, et al, p. 69)

"The political leader of the mulatto movement... a very different type from his colleagues, an unprincipled but brilliant man who combined the aspirations of power with sexual licence. His vicious personal life in no way prevented him from being a near genius, it simply created animosities and lack of faith among those who would otherwise have admired him wholeheartedly for his quick grasp and control of the situation and for his adept diplomacy." (Parkinson, p. 58) Pinchinat conspired with Jean Baptiste Villatte and André Rigaud to seize and imprison Laveaux. (Parkinson, p. 100)

References

  • Geggus, David Patrick (2002). Haitian Revolutionary Studies (Blacks in the Diaspora). Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34104-3.
  • Heinl, Robert Debs, Jr; Heinl, Nancy Gordon; & Heinl, Michael (Rev. & Exp) (1996). Written In Blood: The Story of the Haitian People, 1492–1995 (Revised edition). Lanham, MD: University Press of America. ISBN 0-7618-0230-4.
  • Parkinson, Wenda (1978). This Gilded African. London: Quartet Books. ISBN 0-7043-2187-4