The Place de Grève was a place for public parades,
officially ordered and given for state purposes, and it was
a place for public executions, where nobles, rebels, traitors,
famous brigands, assassins, heretics, and ordinary criminals
met their end. Claude le Petit wrote in his Chronique scandaleuse
ou Paris ridicule that the Place de Grève was an “unhappy piece of ground
consecrated to the public where they have massacred a hundred
times more than
in war.” He himself was executed at the Place de Grève in 1662
for lèse majesté and écrits séditieux. His
right hand was amputated, his property confiscated, and his
ashes thrown to the wind after he was burned alive. Executions
in the Place de Grève were public
for a reason: Justice was to be exemplary. Jacques-Louis Ménétra
wrote, in the aftermath of the 1750 Children's Riot, that “These
poor fellows were hanged in the Place de Grève for
the sake of the Parisian state of mind.” It was in the Place
de Grève that Damiens was
executed on 28
March 1757, before an immense crowd. Naked, Damiens lay strapped
down as
slow torture was applied that began with placing
his right hand in burning sulfur, proceeded to the pouring
of boiling liquid in holes cut in his flesh, was followed by
the removal of entrails, and ended with his being drawn and
quartered. The horses that were to pull his body apart found
it unusually resistant, and to facilitate that stage hangmen
loosened his joints with knives. It was only in the last stages
of a prolonged execution that Damiens finally
expired. Spies reported street mutterings after Damiens' execution,
and police were obliged to remove seditious placards that were
posted surreptitiously in the aftermath of the public event.
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The
physical space within which Prieur's The Hanging of Foulon [Image
25] takes place was heavy with historical
memory for the crowd that administered popular justice to a hated
official. In
Prieur's illustration
of the event the lamppost from which Foulon hangs,
and around which the crowd in the Place de Grève gathers,
is of central importance. Someone sits on the lamppost above
Foulon, who holds the rope with one hand, trying to ward off
the inevitable,
and below him there is a circle formed by the crowd, with the
hanging figure of Foulon at its center. By focusing attention
on the lamppost in this way, Prieur was embedding
the event he depicted in the history it helped define.
As an instrument of popular justice, the lamppost
belonged to a particular stage of the French Revolution. Its
use came out of the popular revolution in the summer of 1789,
and as such it was an expression of the power exercised by
the people. As the political leadership
strove to stabilize the Revolution, and to bring it to closure,
proper forms of justice were imposed that emphasized rational,
impartial justice, administered by legally constituted authorities. Lynching was incompatible with this type of
justice. With the Terror another form of justice was introduced,
and the guillotine was its instrument. Prieur's tableaus
discussed in this essay illuminate a stage of the Revolution
that began in July 1789 when crowds dispensed popular justice
to their enemies by hanging them from lampposts. As for Prieur,
he left the Tableaux historiques after
the fall of the monarchy, and as a political activist and
a member of the Revolutionary Tribunal, whose authority came
from the Convention, he helped dispense
its type of justice to its victims. For this, he himself
went to the guillotine, along with Fouquier-Tinville,
on 7 May 1795.
Jean-Louis
Prieur's two illustrations depicting popular
violence on July 22, The Hanging of Foulon [Image
25] and The Intendant Bertier de Sauvigny [Image
31], help the historian to understand crowds
that in the summer of 1789 acted out anger that was integral
to their experience,
and punished enemies in their particular way. Placed in context,
these images show that crowds had historical memory; that humor,
including gallows humor, was part of their culture; that humor
found its way into scenes of popular violence; that Parisians
responded furiously to reports that passed with lightning speed
through the city; that the violence they carried out had a
ritualistic component, also part of their experience; and that
the violence that was at the core of popular justice threw
up a wall, a barrier, between revolutionary crowds and the
bourgeois of Paris. Prieur's illustrations, and those of other
artists, are a body of evidence that can be of real value to
historians of
the French Revolution. This evidence can help historians to
reconstruct and understand more fully the role of crowds in
the Revolution, the acting out and choreography of popular
violence, the ritualized forms of popular justice, and how
popular violence threatened to dissolve the Revolution in “an
acid wash of blood, vengeance, and anarchic disorder.”
Notes