Aimée de Coigny

Aimée de Coigny
La Jeune Captive
Born Anne-Françoise-Aimée de Franquetot de Coigny
(1769-10-12)12 October 1769
Paris, France
Died 17 January 1820(1820-01-17) (aged 50)
Paris, France
Nationality French
Occupation Salonnière

Aimée de Coigny (12 October 1769 – 17 January 1820) was a French noblewoman who was known as a great beauty and was imprisoned during the French Revolution. André Chénier's elegy la Jeune Captive, published in 1795, was inspired by her ordeal. She married twice, and divorced both men. She had the relaxed sexual morals of the elite in France during that period.

Early years

Aimée de Coigny was the daughter of Auguste-Gabriel de Franquetot, comte de Coigny. He was born in 1740, joined the army, became colonel of dragoons in 1763, maréchal-de-camp in 1780, and on 1 January 1811 gained the rank of lieutenant general.[1] Her father married Anne Josèphe Michel de Roissy on 18 March 1767.[2] Anne-Françoise-Aimée de Coigny was born on 12 October 1769 and baptised in the church of Saint-Roch.[3] Her mother died on 23 October 1775, and her father confided her upbringing to his mistress, Victoire de Rohan, Princess of Guéménée.[3] Aimée became a famous beauty.[4] Madame de Genlis, an intimate friend, wrote of her in her memoirs,

I saw again with great pleasure; at Isle-Adam, the young Comtesse de Coigny, formerly Mademoiselle de Roissy, with whom I had been close at the Couvent du Précieux-Sang. She had originality, wit and good feelings; we renewed our acquaintance; she told me that she had a passion for anatomy, a very extraordinary taste in a young woman of eighteen. Since I had been somewhat occupied with surgery and medicine, and knew how to bleed, Madame de Coigny was very fond of chatting with me. I promised to do an anatomy class, but not like her, on corpses ..."[5]

Aimée married André-Hercule-Marie-Louis de Rosset de Rocozel (1770–1810), marquis and later duc de Fleury in 1784.[4][lower-alpha 1] Her husband was the grand-nephew of Cardinal André-Hercule de Fleury.[6] She married very young, as was common at the time.[6] She was 15 when she married the comte de Fleury, who was fourteen.[7] He became a duke in 1788. He was subject to nervous tics that were very disagreeable, and the marriage was not happy. Aimee became the mistress of the Armand Louis de Gontaut Duke of Lauzon (1747–1793), a well-known libertine, if past his prime. During a visit to Rome she became attached to Lord Malmesbury.[7]

French revolution

Aimée around 1797 by Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller

Aimée's husband Fleury emigrated during the French Revolution (1789–99), leaving France in 1791.[8] He joined Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé's army at Koblenz.[7] Aimée went to London, where she rejoined Malmesbury.[9] She gave birth to Malmesbury's child in London.[7] In January 1793 she left London for Paris with Lord Malmesbury. He was soon arrested, but was released almost immediately and returned to London, leaving his mistress. She retired to her personal estate at Mareuil-en-Brie, near Paris. On 7 May 1793 she obtained a divorce against her husband.[7] She then resumed the name of Coigny.[10]

On 4 March 1794, despite the care she had taken to dissociate herself from any emigrants, she was arrested and taken to the Prison Saint-Lazare.[7] Aimée was one of the last of the nobility to be arrested and incarcerated.[11] André Chénier was inspired by her to compose a well-known elegy, la Jeune Captive, published in 1895.[1][lower-alpha 2] He described her graceful figure and her easy and careless character.[13]

Casimir de Mouret, Comte de Morond,[lower-alpha 3] was also imprisoned in 1794 in the Prison Saint-Lazare, where he met Aimée de Coigny. He obtained her freedom and his own for a payment of 100 louis.[15] She was released on the day she was due to follow Chénier to the scaffold.[16] They married after the Thermidorian Reaction of 27 July 1794 and left together for England.[10] Their married life in London was not successful.[15]

First Empire

The marriage with Montrond went from bad to worse from 1800 onward. The divorce due to incompatibility between Aimée de Coigny and her husband was pronounced on 6 Germinal year X (28 March 1802).[17] Aimée again became known as Madame Aimée de Coigny.[4] At the age of 31 Aimée de Coigny, once more free, fell in love with the 37 year old Jacques Joseph Garat (known as Maillia-Garat). He was a member of the Tribunát and was known as an orator but was not known as a republican. They lived together for six years.[17]

In a sympathetic sketch, Victor du Bled says Aimée's second divorce gave her a freedom that she used or misused considerably. She had an ardent and eccentric imagination that exposed her to a thousand dangers to which she hastened to succumb. When someone remarked that divorce makes adultery useless, she said "we cannot marry them all, though."[12] Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun said that Aimée had an enchanting face, a burning gaze, and the figure of a Venus. One evening at the house of M. de Guéménée she removed the long tail of her dress in front of fifty people. The princess, laughing, invited her to remove the dress too, and she rose to the challenge and remained for four hours dressed in a short petticoat.[12] Napoleon disliked her loose morals and at reception at the Tuileries Palace asked her in public, "Well, Madame, are you still so fond of men?" Her riposte was "Yes, Sire, when they are polite."[18]

Around 1812 the 43 year old Aimée de Coigny formed a liaison with the 45 year old marquis Bruno-Gabriel de Boisgelin, and under his influence became an ardent royalist.[19] She believed that the monarchy must be restored, but it should be a progressive monarchy that would reconcile freedom and order.[20] In the summer of 1812 she often visited Talleyrand's house, where she would find him in his library surrounded by writers or lovers of literature. She now became a regular visitor to the houses of people who were dissatisfied with Napoleon's rule.[21] During the last days of the Empire in 1814, Aimee wrote to her grandfather, Marshal de Coigny, in London and told her of the conditions for Talleyrand to give his support to the king. The king instructed the marshal to accept the offer. Not long after the Russian army entered Paris.[22]

Death

Aimée de Coigny died on 17 January 1820 at the age of 50.[23] Madame de Genlis observed that the Comtesse de Coigny died very young, and it was said that her passion for anatomy contributed to her death by making her breathe bad air, since she never travelled without having a cadaver in the back of her carriage.[5] She had confided her memoirs to Talleyrand, Montrond's friend, and it was long thought that they had been lost.[10] They were later found and published as Mémoires de Aimée de Coigny (1902) with a lengthy introduction by Étienne Lamy.[16]

Publications

Publications by Aimée de Coigny included:[23]

  • Aimée de Coigny (1818), Alvare, Paris: impr. de Firmin Didot, p. 533
  • Armand-Louis de Gontaut Biron; Amélie de Boufflers; Aimée de Coigny (1928), Mémoires de Armand-Louis de Gontaut, duc de Lauzun, général Biron, suivis de lettres adressées à l'auteur par sa femme Amélie de Boufflers ; Aimée de Coigny, duchesse de Fleury (la "jeune captive", d'André Chénier), et par la marquise de Coigny, preface and notes by Edmond Pilon, Paris, p. 356
  • Aimée de Coigny (1933), Captives de l'amour, Paris: phototypies de A. Dantan : C. Gaillandre, p. 265
  • Aimée de Coigny (1943), Mémoires secrets du beau Lauzun, Paris: Editions Colbert ; (Coulommiers ; Paris : Impr. de Brodard et Taupin), p. 312
  • Aimée de Coigny (1981), Journal, Paris: Perrin, p. 276
  • Aimée de Coigny (1902), Mémoires de Aimée de Coigny, introduction and notes by Etienne Lamy, Paris: Calmann-Lévy, p. 295, retrieved 2017-11-08

Notes

  1. André Hercule Marie Louis de Rosset de Rocozels, duc de Fleury (1767–1810), was an officer in the French army, then in the Armée des Émigrés. In 1806 he was allowed to return to Paris, where he died.
  2. It was not known who was the subject of Chenier's poem until years later, when the subject came up in the salon of Ms Gabriel Delessert, wife of the chief of police. The Comte de Montrond was there, and revealed that it was Aimee de Coigny. He knew because he had married her.[12]
  3. Claude Philibert de Mouret, Seigneur de Montrond, had three sons: Edouard, Casimir and Hippolyte, all born in Besançon.[14] Some sources give the name of Aimée's second husband as Claude-Philibert-Hippolyte de Mouret, Comte de Montrond.[4] In fact it was Philippe-François-Casimir de Mouret, the second son, born in 1769.[15][10]

References

Sources

  • Aimée de Coigny (1769-1820) (in French), BnF: Bibliotheque nationale de France, retrieved 2017-11-07
  • Arrigon, Louis-Jules (1921), La jeune captive; Aimée de Coigny, duchesse de Fleury, et la société de son temps (1769-1820) d'après des documents nouveaux et inédits (in French), Paris: A. Lemerre, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Bled, Victor du (1889), "Un Amour Platonique au XVIIIe Siecle: Madame de Coigny et Lauzon", Revue des deux mondes (in French), Revue des deux mondes, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), "Montrond, Casimir, Comte de", Encyclopædia Britannica, 18, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Duff Cooper, Alfred, 1st Viscount Norwich (2015-11-06), Talleyrand, Wagram Press, ISBN 978-1-78625-723-9, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Falk, Avner (2015-08-01), Napoleon Against Himself: A Psychobiography, Pitchstone Publishing (US&CA), ISBN 978-1-939578-72-3, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Favre, Jean Hervé, "Anne Josèphe MICHEL de ROISSY", geneanet (in French), retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Lamy, Etienne (1902), "Introduction", Mémoires de Aimée de Coigny, Paris: Calmann-Lévy, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Lescure, Mathurin (1882), La société française pendant la révolution: L'amour sous la terreur (in French), E. Dentu, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • "M. de Montrond", The Nation, 60 (1552), J.H. Richards, 1895, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Melbourne, Viscountess Elizabeth Milbanke Lamb (1998), Byron's "Corbeau Blanc": The Life and Letters of Lady Melbourne, Texas A&M University Press, ISBN 978-0-89096-672-3, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Michaud, Joseph Fr.; Michaud, Louis Gabriel (1836), Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne; ou, Histoire, par ordre alphabétique: de la vie publique et privée de tous les hommes qui se sont fait remarquer par leurs écrits, leurs actions, leurs talents, leurs vertus ou leurs crimes (in French), Michaud frères, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Sainte-Beuve, Charles Augustin (1862), Galerie de femmes célèbres: tirée des Causeries de lundi (in French), Garnier, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Sainte-Marie, Anselme de (1879), Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la Maison de France (in French), Firmin-Didot, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Savary, Anne-Jean-Marie-René (duc de Rovigo) (1828), Memoirs of the Duke of Rovigo, (M.Savary) (in French), H. Colburn, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Stewart, H. F.; Desjardins, Paul (2016-09-15), French Patriotism in the Nineteenth Century (1814–1833), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1-316-62006-9, retrieved 2017-11-08
  • Vermale, François (July–September 1947), "Les Dames de Bellegarde", Annales historiques de la Révolution française, Armand Colin, 19e Année (107), JSTOR 41925440
  • Vittorini, D. (Summer 1939), "Review:: La Restaurazione Francese del 1814 by Aimée de Coigny", Books Abroad, Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, 13 (3), doi:10.2307/40081232, JSTOR 40081232
  • Waroquier de Combles, Comte de (1787), Tableau genealogique, historique, chronologique, heraldique et geographique de la noblesse, enrichi de gravures (etc.) (in French), Nyon l'aine, retrieved 2017-11-08
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