Read Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution Online
Authors: Laurent Dubois
three days per week to the slaves,” and that they would feel betrayed if
they were not granted them. In another letter they noted their “obstinacy”
in expecting the favors they had been told they would receive from the
king. Three days of freedom a week was not complete liberty, but as a
change that carried the seeds of a more autonomous existence it would
have been an inspiration for many slaves. In some parts of the colony,
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meanwhile, insurgents passed on the news that the king had abolished slav-
ery completely. Not unlike the peasant rebels in France during the Great
Terror of 1789, the slave insurgents of Saint-Domingue invoked a powerful
and distant figure—who they rightly understood might have the power to
counteract the assemblies of the colony—against their all-too-local ene-
mies. As Garran-Coulon noted in his report, the evocation of the king was a
logical political strategy. Even if the royal government protected them very
little against their masters, it was the only protection they could “invoke
against the tyranny of their masters.” “Is it surprising that in such circum-
stances, the negroes tried to take advantage of the division of the whites,
and even to increase it as much as they could in order to diminish the
strength of their enemies, and gain the support of those they considered
their [the whites’] enemies?” The insurgents of Saint-Domingue evoked
the king in pursuit of concrete political goals that were, in the local context, quite revolutionary.31
Evocations of the king did not imply a rejection of the language of Re-
publicanism. By mid-1791, despite the increasing radicalization of events
in France, the country was still nominally a constitutional monarchy, not a
republic, and many did not see the Rights of Man and the authority of
the king as mutually exclusive. The rumored decree discussed at the meet-
ing of August 14, after all, was said to have been passed by the king
and
the National Assembly. Later in 1791, Biassou wrote of his readiness to “serve
his king, the nation, and its representatives.” Such ideological syncretism
continued in Saint-Domingue even after the break between the Republic
and the royalty was accomplished in France. In early 1793 one insurgent
leader named Joseph flew a tricolor flag decorated with three fleur-de-
lis, freely mixing Republican and royalist symbols. Later that year the
Republican commissioner Léger Félicité Sonthonax recalled that some in-
surgents who had been recruited to the Republican side had proposed
to make him “king in the name of the Republic” as a way of ending the
war against their enemies. But when the conflict between republicanism
and royalty finally became a clear conflict between slavery and freedom,
many—though not all—former slaves threw in their lot with the
Republic.32
Insurgents had a powerful incentive to take a “royalist” tone: the collab-
oration, and ultimately alliance, they developed with the Spanish across
the border in Santo Domingo. The Spanish had “an open market with the
brigands,” who arrived with money, but also with dishes, jewels, furniture,
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and animals taken from plantations to buy supplies, as well as weapons and
ammunition to supplement those they took on plantations or during bat-
tles. This trade, as well as some direct military aid given by the Spanish,
provided crucial support for the insurgent army, and indeed was probably
one reason it succeeded as well as it did. Insurgent leaders traveled to the
border, and Spanish officers visited their camps. The insurgents cultivated
such contacts, adopting an “extravagantly royalist rhetoric” and “posing as
defenders of church and king” at least in part to encourage the Spanish to
support them.33
Insurgents also often described their own leaders as kings. In the South-
ern Province in early 1792, a group of insurgents ultimately created
the “kingdom of the Platons” and chose a king to be their leader. Romaine
la Rivière had, according to one observer, the ambition to become the
“king of Saint-Domingue.” In the north, too, certain leaders were elected
as kings. On a Sunday two weeks after the revolt began, insurgents who
had taken over Acul celebrated two weddings in the town’s church with an
imprisoned Capuchin priest officiating. “On the occasion, they assumed ti-
tles, and the titled blacks were treated with great respect.” “Their colours
were consecrated, and a King was elected”—a free black named Jean-
Baptiste Cap. A few weeks later, after a clash between insurgents and
French troops, “a negro superbly dressed and decorated, with a crown on
his head, was found upon the field of battle.”34
For the majority of the population of the island who were African-born,
the form and content of kingship were probably defined by the traditions
of their homelands. Garran-Coulon attributed the royalism of the insur-
gents in part to their “ignorance,” since “in Africa as well as in Saint-
Domingue, they knew only royal government.” The Republican commis-
sioner Légér Félicité Sonthonax similarly wrote in late 1793 that “the most
stupid of Africans” could understand the “simple” idea of a king, while
“even the most sophisticated of them” could not “conceive of the idea of a
republic.” Such interpretations and oppositions were of course misleading.
Kingship meant something quite different in Africa—for instance, in the
Kongo, whence many slaves had come in the decades before the revolu-
tion—than it did in Europe. In Kongolese political culture, there was a
long-standing conflict over the nature of kingship, between traditions that
emphasized a more authoritarian form of rule and others that limited the
power of kings and provided for more democratic forms of rule. Such tra-
ditions drove conflicts in which many of those enslaved in Saint-Domingue
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would have participated. Indeed, the Kongo might even “be seen as a
fount of revolutionary ideas as much as France was.” As with so much of
the insurrection of 1791, the only evidence we have of the transcultural de-
velopment of insurgent political ideologies is extremely fragmented, but
the naming of “kings” among the insurgents likely involved a transcultural
dialogue between European and African visions of leadership and govern-
ment.35
African slaves from the Kongo arrived with another kind of experience
that they made useful in Saint-Domingue. Many of them had been soldiers
fighting in the civil wars that ripped apart the kingdom of Kongo before
they had been captured and sold into slavery. They were “African veter-
ans,” who had knowledge and experience of warfare and knew how to use
firearms. The warfare practiced in the Kongo was quite different from that
of European armies, involving organization in small, relatively autonomous
groups, repeated attacks and retreats aimed at confusing the enemy, and
firing from a prone position and, when possible, from behind shelter. Sol-
diers in Saint-Domingue consistently described similar tactics among the
insurgents. One contemporary wrote that instead of exposing themselves
as a group like “fanatics,” they fought “spread out and dispersed,” and posi-
tioned themselves in places that made them seem ready “to envelop and
crush their enemies by their numbers.” They were careful in their obser-
vations of the enemy. “If they encounter resistance, they don’t waste their
energy; but if they see hesitation in the defense, they become extremely
audacious.” A report from 1793 described how a group of insurgents, sur-
prised by an attack, took refuge behind rocks and, “following their cow-
ardly custom,
hidden,
fired on us.” As the French troops charged the insurgents, they retreated “from ambush to ambush until they had reached
some inaccessible rocks.” These tactics were successful; the “inaccessible”
rocks were clearly accessible to the insurgents, who escaped the attack,
though they left behind their dead and paths of blood. The insurgent lead-
ers Jean-François and Biassou made the importance of African military
tactics clear in a letter they wrote late in 1791, in which they asserted that most of their followers were “a multitude of
nègres
from the coast”—that is, from Africa—“most of whom can barely say two words of French but
who in their country were accustomed to fighting wars.”36
African veterans were not the only ones who brought military experi-
ence to the insurgents. Although they were a minority, there were also free
people of African descent in the insurgent camps, some of whom had expe-
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rience of serving in the French colonial militia or the
maréchaussée
. Many of them brought more than just experience. In late September a group of
“mulattoes and free negroes” who had been serving against the insurgents
deserted “with arms, baggage, and military stores” and “joined the rebels.”
The towns of Fort-Dauphin and Ounaminthe, near the Spanish border,
were taken over by the insurgents thanks to the desertion of Jean-Baptiste
Marc and Cézar, two “free blacks” who had fought for several months
against the “brigands” before joining them, bringing ammunition and can-
non. Slaves who had been employed hunting for their masters had experi-
ence with firearms. One visitor to the colony in the late 1790s described
some hunters, who seem to have developed their skills as slaves before
emancipation, who each week were given enough powder for seven shots.
With this they were to provide enough food for a week. They hunted birds
by crawling through the lagoons with their rifles over their heads, until
they found several birds “living in society,” killing several with a single shot.
Such skills could be put to use in other kinds of ambushes as well.37
When they lacked weapons, as they often did, the insurgents used star-
tling “ruse and ingenuity.” “They camouflaged traps, fabricated poisoned
arrows, feigned cease-fires to lure the enemy into ambush, disguised tree-
trunks as cannons, and threw obstructions of one kind or another into the
roads to hamper advancing troops.” Some insurgents advancing on Le Cap
stood firmly up to three volleys of shot, each of them “wearing a kind of
light mattress stuffed with cotton as a vest to prevent the bullets from pen-
etrating.” Some demonstrated a suicidal courage when they “suffocated
the cannon of the enemy with their arms and bodies, and so routed them.”
Although at first many insurgents did not know how to use the cannon they
captured, loading them improperly, they soon learned. One group took
control of a battery along the coast, and when a French ship fired on the
battery to dislodge them, they braved a barrage of 250 cannon shots. They
then used the cannon balls that had landed around them to fire back at
the ship, which was seriously damaged before its crew managed to sail it
away.38
Violence, in the form of military engagements with French troops and
the massacre of white planters and their families, was a central part of
the insurrection. Many of the accounts of the event that were soon pro-
duced and disseminated throughout the Americas and Europe presented
tales of savage and unthinkable atrocities committed by the slaves. One
well-known account—presented to the National Assembly in France in
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November 1791 and quickly published in English translation in 1792—in-
cluded a description of the attack on the Gallifet plantations that claimed
that the insurgents carried as their “standard the body of a white child im-
paled upon a stake.” This detail was not mentioned in the descriptions of
the attack on Gallifet by Pierre Mossut or Antoine Dalmas, neither of
whom would have been likely to suppress so memorable an image had they
been aware of it. But it was accepted as true by many readers, and often re-
peated as a symbol, and condemnation, of the insurrection. In Paris the
famed revolutionary Camille Desmoulins used the potent image when he
declared that his political enemy, the abolitionist Brissot, was to blame “if so many plantations have been reduced to ashes, if pregnant women have
been eviscerated, if a child carried on the end of a pike served as standard
of the blacks.”39
The same account described many other horrors—a carpenter named
Robert tied between two boards and sawed in half, husbands and fathers
killed and their wives and daughters taken by the insurgents and “reserved
for their pleasures,” one woman raped on the body of her dead husband.
Drawing on this text, and on what he heard during his stay in Saint-
Domingue in 1791, Bryan Edwards embellished some of these horrors
(the carpenter Robert was sawed in half because his assassins declared that
“he should die in the way of his occupation”) and provided descriptions of
others (a policeman was nailed to the gate of his plantation and his limbs
chopped off “one by one with an ax”) when he wrote what would become a