PART ONE
In Guise:
Jean-Nicolas Desmoulins, a lawyer
Madeleine, his wife
Camille, his eldest son (b. 1760)
Elisabeth, his daughter
Henriette, his daughter (died aged nine)
Armand, his son
Anne-Clothilde, his daughter
Clement, his youngest son
The Prince de Condé, premier nobleman of the
district and a client of Jean-Nicolas Desmoulins
In Arcis-sur-Aube
:
Marie-Madeleine Danton, a widow, who marries
Jean Recordain, an inventor
Georges-Jacques, her son (b.1759)
Anne-Madeleine, her daughter
Pierrette, her daughter
Marie-Cécile, her daughter who becomes a nun
In Arras:
François de Robespierre, a lawyer
Maximilien, his son (b. 1758)
Charlotte, his daughter
Henriette, his daughter (died aged nineteen)
Augustin, his younger son
Jacqueline, his wife, née Carraut, who dies
after giving birth to a fifth child
Grandfather Carraut, a brewer
In Paris, at Louis-le-Grand:
Father Poignard, the principal—a liberal-minded man
Father Proyart, the deputy principal—not at all a liberal-minded man
Father Herivaux, a teacher of classical languages
Louis Suleau, a student
Stanislas Fréron, a very well-connected student, known as “Rabbit”
In Troyes:
Fabre d’Églantine, an unemployed genius
PART TWO
In Paris:
Maitre Vinot, a lawyer in whose chambers
Georges-Jacques Danton is a pupil
Maître Perrin, a lawyer in whose chambers
Camille Desmoulins is a pupil
Jean-Marie Hérault de Séchelles, a young
nobleman and legal dignitary
François-Jérôme Charpentier, a café owner and Inspector of Taxes
Angélique (Angelica), his Italian wife
Gabrielle, his daughter
Françoise-Julie Duhauttoir, George-Jacques Danton’s mistress
At the rue Condé:
Claude Duplessis, a senior civil servant
Annette, his wife
Abbé Laudréville, Annette’s confessor, a go-between
In Guise:
Rose-Fleur Godard, Camille Desmoulins’s fiancée
In Arras:
Joseph Fouché, a teacher, Charlotte de Robespierre’s beau
Lazare Carnot, a military engineer, a friend of
Maximilien de Robespierre
Anaïs Deshorties, a nice girl whose relatives want
her to marry Maximilien de Robespierre
Louise de Kéralio, a novelist, who goes to Paris, marries
François Robert and edits a newspaper
Hermann, a lawyer, a friend of Maximilien de Robespierre
The
Orléanists:
Philippe, Duke of Orléans, cousin of King Louis XVI
Félicité de Genlis, an author—his ex-mistress,
now Governor of his children
Charles-Alexis Brulard de Sillery, Comte de Genlis-Félicité’s
husband, a former naval officer, a gambler
Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, a novelist, the Duke’s secretary
Agnès de Buffon, the Duke’s mistress
Grace Elliot, the Duke’s mistress, a spy for
the British Foreign Office
Axel von Fersen, the Queen’s lover
At Danton’s chambers:
Jules Pare, his clerk
François Deforgues, his clerk
Billaud-Varennes, his part-time clerk, a man of sour temperament
At the Cour du Commerce:
Mme. Gély, who lives upstairs from Georges-Jacques and
Gabrielle Danton
Antoine, her husband
Louise, her daughter
Legendre, a master butcher, a neighbor of the Dantons
François Robert, a lecturer in law: marries Louise de Kéralio,
opens a delicatessen and later becomes a radical journalist
René Hébert, a theater box-office clerk
Anne Théroigne, a singer
In the National Assembly:
Antoine Bamave, a deputy: at first a radical, later a royalist
Jérôme Pétion, a radical deputy, later called a “Brissotin”
Dr. Guillotin, an expert on public health
Jean-Sylvain Bailly, an astronomer, later Mayor of Paris
Honoré Gabriel Riquetti, Comte de Mirabeau, a renegade
aristocrat sitting for the Commons, or Third Estate
Teutch, Mirabeau’s valet
Jean-Pierre Brissot, a journalist
Momoro, a printer
Réveillon, owner of a wallpaper factory
Hanriot, owner of a saltpeter works
De Launay, Governor of the Bastille
PART THREE
M. Soulès, temporary Governor of the Bastille
The Marquis de Lafayette, Commander of the National Guard
Jean-Paul Marat, a journalist, editor of the
People’s Friend
Arthur Dillon, Governor of Tobago and a general in
the French army: a friend of Camille Desmoulins
Louis-Sébastien Mercier, a well-known author
Collot d’Herbois, a playwright
Father Pancemont, a truculent priest
Father Bérardier, a gullible priest
Caroline Rémy, an actress
Père Duchesne, a furnace maker: fictitious alter
ego
of René Hébert, box-office clerk turned journalist
Antoine Saint-Just, a disaffected poet, acquainted with or
related to Camille Desmoulins
Jean-Marie Roland, an elderly ex-civil servant
Manon Roland, his young wife, a writer
François-Léonard Buzot, a deputy, member of the
Jacobin Club and a friend of the Rolands
Jean-Baptiste Louvet, a novelist, Jacobin, friend of the Rolands
PART FOUR
Charles Dumouriez, a general, sometime Foreign Minister
Antoine Fouquier-Tinville, a lawyer; Camille Desmoulins’s cousin
Jeanette, the Desmoulins’s housekeeper
At the rue
Saint-Honoré:
Maurice Duplay, a master carpenter
Françoise, his wife
Eléonore, an art student, his eldest daughter
Victoire, his daughter
Elisabeth (Babette), his youngest daughter
PART FIVE
Politicans described as
“
Brissotins
” or “
Girondins
”:
Jean-Pierre Brissot, a journalist
Jean-Marie and Manon Roland
Pierre Vergniaud, member of the National Convention,
famous as an orator
Jérôme Pétion
François-Léonard Buzot
Jean-Baptiste Louvet
Charles Barbaroux, a lawyer from Marseille
and many others
Albertine Marat, Marat’s sister
Simone Evrard, Marat’s common-law wife
Defermon, a deputy, sometime President of the National Convention
Jean-François Lacroix, a moderate deputy: goes “on mission”
to Belgium with Danton in 1792 and 1793
David, painter
Charlotte Corday, an assassin
Claude Dupin, a young bureaucrat who proposes marriage
to Louise Gély, Danton’s neighbor
Souberbielle, Robespierre’s doctor
Renaudin, a violin maker, prone to violence
Father Kéravenen, an outlaw priest
Chaveau-Lagarde, a lawyer: defense council for Marie-Antoinette
Philippe Lebas, a left-wing deputy: later a member of the Committee
of General Security, or Police Committee: marries Babette Duplay
Vadier, known as “the Inquisitor,” a member of the Police Committee
Implicated
in the
East India
Company fraud
:
Chabot, a deputy, ex-Capuchin friar
Julien, a deputy, former Protestant pastor
Proli, secretary to Hérault de Séchelles,
and said to be an Austrian spy
Emmanuel Dobruska and Siegmund Gotleb, known as
Emmanuel and Junius Frei: speculators
Guzman, a minor politician, Spanish-born
Diedrichsen, a Danish “businessman”
Abbé d’Espanac, a crooked army contractor
Citizen de Sade, a writer, formerly a marquis
Pierre Philippeaux, a deputy: writes a pamphlet against the
government during the Terror
Some members of the Committee of Public Safety:
Saint-André
Barère
Couthon, a paraplegic, friend of Robespierre
Robert Lindet, a lawyer from Normany, a friend of Danton
Etienne Panis, a left-wing deputy, a friend of Danton
At the trial of the Dantonists:
Hermann (once of Arras), President of the Revolutionary
Tribunal
Dumas, his deputy
Fouquier-Tinville, now Public Prosecutor
Fabricius Paris, Clerk of the Court
Laflotte, a prison informer
Henri Sanson, public executioner