Madame du Barry

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Jeanne Bécu
Du Barry.jpg
Portrait by Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, 1782.
Background information
Born as: Jeanne Bécu
Born Aug 19, 1743
Vaucouleurs, Early Modern France
Died Dec 8, 1793 - age  49
Paris, French First Republic
 
Buried: Madeleine Cemetery
Spouse(s): Comte Guillaume du Barry
(1768 - )
Footnotes: Though du Barry never wore rouge, another artist added it to her cheeks.

Jeanne Bécu, Comtesse du Barry (✦19 August 1743 – 8 December 1793) was the last maîtresse-en-titre of King Louis XV of France. She was executed by guillotine during the French Revolution on accusations of treason—particularly being suspected of assisting émigrés to flee from the Revolution.

In 1768, when the king wished to make Jeanne maîtresse-en-titre, etiquette required her to be the wife of a high courtier, so she was hastily married on 1 September 1768 to Comte Guillaume du Barry. The wedding ceremony was accompanied by a false birth certificate created by Jean-Baptiste du Barry, the comte's older brother. The certificate made Jeanne appear younger by three years and obscured her poor background. Henceforth, she was recognized as the king's official paramour.

Her arrival at the French royal court scandalized some, as she had been a prostitute and of low birth. Many shunned her, including Marie Antoinette, whose contempt for Jeanne caused alarm and dissension in court. On New Year's Day 1772, Marie Antoinette deigned to speak to Jeanne: her remark, "There are many people at Versailles today", was enough to take the edge off the dispute, though many still disapproved of Jeanne.

Decades later, during the Reign of Terror in the French Revolution, Jeanne was imprisoned over accusations of treason by her page Zamor. She was executed by guillotine on 8 December 1793. Her body was buried in the Madeleine cemetery. The fabulous gems which she had smuggled to London were sold at auction in 1795.

Early years

Jeanne Bécu was the illegitimate daughter of Anne Bécu, a 30-year-old seamstress. Jeanne's father remains unidentified; however, it is possible that her father was Jean Jacques Gomard, a friar known as frère Ange. One of her mother's acquaintances, and presumed brief lover, Monsieur Billiard-Dumonceaux, took 3-year-old Jeanne and her mother into his care when they traveled from Vaucouleurs to Paris. There, Anne worked as a cook to Dumonceaux's current mistress Francesca, who pampered Jeanne. Her education began at the Convent of Saint Aurea.

When she came of age at fifteen, Jeanne left the convent. Around that time, she and her mother, Anne, were evicted from Monsieur Dumonceaux's household and returned to Anne's husband, Nicolas Rançon.

Needing an income, Jeanne first hawked trinkets for sale on the streets of Paris. According to some rumors, She found a job assisting a young hairdresser named Lametz, with whom she had a brief relationship and a daughter. She was soon employed as a companion (dame de compagnie) to an elderly widow, Madame de la Garde, but was sent away when she drew the attention of her two married sons. Later, Jeanne worked as a milliner's assistant and grisette in the haberdashery shop of Madame Labille and her husband. Labille's daughter, Adélaïde Labille-Guiard, became a good friend of Jeanne.

As painted at the time, Jeanne was a beautiful blonde with thick ringlets and almond-shaped blue eyes. In 1763, when she was entertaining in the brothel-casino of Madame Quisnoy, her beauty attracted the notice of Jean-Baptiste du Barry. His brother Comte Guillaume du Barry, also the casino owner, installed Jeanne in his household as his mistress, calling her Mademoiselle Lange. Guillaume helped establish Jeanne's career as a courtesan in the highest circles of Parisian society, including the aristocracy.

Mistress of Louis XV: 1768–1774

Jeanne quickly became a sensation in Paris, building up a large aristocratic clientele. She had many lovers, including government ministers and royal courtiers, particularly Maréchal de Richelieu. Though the Duc de Choiseul found her rather ordinary, in 1768, he took her to Versailles, where King Louis XV saw her. The king took a great interest and sent for her through his valet and procure, Dominique Lebel. The popular Queen Marie Leczinska was dying, and Jeanne was escorted to the king's boudoir so frequently as to cause Lebel concern for his position. After weeks of sincerely mourning the Queen's death in June 1768, Louis XV was ready to resume his affairs. As a woman of low birth as well as a prostitute, Jeanne could not qualify as maîtresse-en-titer; but the king ordered she be married to a man of good lineage and brought to court. On 1 September 1768, she married her former lover Comte Guillaume du Barry. The marriage ceremony included a false birth certificate created by Jean-Baptiste du Barry, making Jeanne appear younger by three years and of fictitious noble descent.

Jeanne was installed above the king's quarters in Lebel's former rooms. She lived a lonely life, unable to be seen with the king since no formal presentation had occurred. Very few, if any, of the nobility deigned to acknowledge her, a woman of the street who presumed above her station. Her husband constantly urged Jeanne to persuade the king to have her presented at court, but Louis XV required her to find a proper sponsor. For this, Richelieu eventually found Madame de Béarn, who was bribed by the settlement of her huge gambling debts.

On the first attempt at the presentation, Madame de Béarn panicked and feigned a sprained ankle. The second occasion was canceled when the king fell off his hunting horse and broke his arm. Finally, Jeanne was presented at court on 22 April 1769 amid a cacophony of gossip among the crowds outside the palace and the courtiers in the Hall of Mirrors. She wore a silvery white gown brocaded with gold, adorned in jewels sent by the king the night before, and with huge side panniers, whose like had never been seen. Her spectacular coiffure was worked up even as she kept the court waiting.

Jeanne first befriended her husband's sister Claire Françoise, who was brought from Languedoc to instruct her in etiquette. Later, she befriended the Maréchale de Mirepoix, and other noblewomen were bribed into her entourage.

Jeanne quickly accustomed herself to living in luxury. Louis XV gave her a young Bengali slave named Zamor, whom she dressed in elegant clothing. Jeanne developed a liking for Zamor and began to educate him. In his trial testimony in 1793, Zamor gave Chittagong as his birthplace; he was probably of Siddi origin.

According to Stanley Loomis' biography Du Barry, Jeanne's everyday routine began at 9 am when Zamor brought her a cup of chocolate. She would select a gown and jewelry and be dressed, then her hairdresser Berline (or Nokelle for special occasions) would come to do her powder and curls. She would then receive friends and tradesmen such as dressmakers, jewelers, and artists offering her their finest stock. She was extravagant but good-natured. When the old Comte and Comtesse de Lousene were forcibly evicted from their château for heavy debts, they were sentenced to death because they had shot dead a bailiff and a police officer while resisting. When Madame de Béarn told Jeanne of their situation, she begged the king to pardon them, refusing to rise from her knees until he agreed. Louis XV was moved: "Madame, I am delighted that the first favor you should ask of me should be an act of mercy!" Jeanne was visited by Monsieur Mandeville, who asked a pardon for a young girl condemned to the gallows for infanticide after concealing the birth of a stillborn child. Jeanne's letter to the Chancellor of France saved the girl.

As the king's maîtresse déclarée, Jeanne was the center of all eyes at court. She wore costly, extravagant gowns and diamonds covering her neck and ears, straining the treasury. She made both friends and enemies. Her most bitter rival was Béatrix, Duchesse de Gramont, who had tried her vain to acquire the place of the king's previous mistress, the late Marquise de Pompadour. Since the beginning, Béatrix had plotted with her brother for Jeanne's removal, even writing libelous pamphlets against her and the king.

In time Jeanne became acquainted with the Duc d’Aiguillon, who sided with her against the Duc de Choiseul. As Jeanne's power in court grew stronger, Choiseul began feeling his was waning. Though the king believed his country was exhausted after the Seven Years' War, Choiseul decided that France could fight again and supported Spain against Britain in their struggle to possess the Falkland Islands. Du Barry exposed his plot to the king on Christmas Eve 1771, and Choiseul was dismissed from his ministry and exiled from court.

Despite this intrigue, Jeanne, unlike her predecessor Madame de Pompadour, had little interest in politics, reserving her passion for new gowns and jewelry. However, the king went so far as to let her participate in state councils. An anecdote recounts that the king told the Duc de Noailles that Madame du Barry introduced him to new pleasures; "Sire," – answered the duke – "that's because your Majesty has never been in a brothel." While Jeanne was known for her good nature and support of artists, she grew increasingly unpopular because of the king's financial extravagance towards her. She was forever in debt despite her huge monthly income—at one point up to three hundred thousand livres.

She retained her position until the death of Louis XV, despite the attempt to depose her by the Duc de Choiseul and the Duc d'Aiguillon, who tried to arrange a secret marriage between the king and Madame Pater.

Diamond necklace affair

Fleur-12.jpg Main article: Affair of the Diamond Necklace
The diamond necklace was commissioned by Louis XV of France for his mistress, Madame du Barry. At the death of the King, the necklace was unpaid for, which almost bankrupted the jewelers and then led to various unsuccessful schemes to secure a sale to Queen Marie Antoinette.

In 1772, the infatuated Louis XV requested that Parisian jewelers Boehmer and Bassenge create a necklace for Jeanne of unprecedented extravagance at an estimated cost of two million livres. The chain, still unfinished and unpaid when Louis XV died, would eventually trigger a scandal involving Jeanne de la Motte-Valois, in which Queen Marie Antoinette was accused of bribing Cardinal de Rohan to purchase it for her, accusations which would figure prominently in the onset of the French Revolution.

Exile: 1774–1792

In time, King Louis XV started to think of death and repentance and began missing appointments in Jeanne's boudoir. During a stay at the Petit Trianon with her, Louis felt the first symptoms of smallpox. He was brought back to the palace at night and put to bed, where his daughters and Jeanne stayed beside him. On 4 May 1774, the king suggested to Madame du Barry that she leave Versailles, both to protect her from infection and so that he could prepare for confession and last rites. She retired to the Duc d'Aiguillon's estate near Rueil. Following the king's death and his grandson's ascension to the throne as Louis XVI, the new Queen Marie Antoinette had Jeanne exiled to the Abbey du Pont-aux-Dames near Meaux-en-Brie. At first, the nuns met her coldly, but soon enough, they softened to her timid ways and opened up to her, most of all the abbess Madame de la Roche-Fontenelle.

After a year at the convent, Jeanne was granted permission to visit the surrounding countryside, provided she returned by sundown. A month later, she was allowed out further, but not to venture within ten miles of Versailles, including to her beloved Château de Louveciennes. Two years later, she was allowed to move to Louveciennes.

In the following years, she liaised with Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac. She later also fell in love with Henry Seymour of Redland, whom she met when he moved with his family to the neighborhood of the Château. Seymour became fed up with his secret love affair and sent a painting to Jeanne with the words 'leave me alone' written in English at the bottom, which the painter Lemoyne copied in 1796. The Duc de Brissac proved the more faithful in this ménage-a-Trois, keeping Jeanne in his heart despite Seymour.

During the French Revolution, Brissac was captured while visiting Paris and lynched by the mob. Late that night, Jeanne heard a drunken crowd approaching the Château, and through the opened window where she looked came a blood-stained cloth with Brissac's head, at which sight she fainted.

Imprisonment, trial and execution: 1792–93

Madame du Barry being taken away to the scaffold, by Tighe Hopkins: The Dungeons of Old Paris, 1897

Jeanne's Bengali slave Zamor and another member of du Barry's domestic staff had joined the Jacobin club. He became a follower of the revolutionary George Grieve and then an office-bearer in the Committee of Public Safety. Jeanne learned about this in 1792 and questioned Zamor about his connections with Grieve. Upon realizing the depth of his involvement, she gave him three days' notice to quit her service. Zamor promptly denounced his mistress to the committee.

Based mainly on Zamor's testimony, Madame du Barry was suspected of financially assisting émigrés, who fled the revolution and was arrested in 1793. When the Revolutionary Tribunal of Paris accused her of treason and condemned her to death, she vainly attempted to save herself by revealing the location of the gemstones she had hidden.

On 8 December 1793, Madame du Barry was beheaded by the guillotine on the Place de la Révolution. On the way to the guillotine, she collapsed in the tumbrel and cried, "You are going to hurt me! Why?!" Terrified, she screamed for mercy and begged the watching crowd for help. Her last words to the executioner are said to have been: «De grâce, monsieur le bourreau, encore un petit moment!» – "One more moment, Mr. Executioner, I beg you!" She was buried in the Madeleine Cemetery with many other victims, including Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.

Although her French estate went to the Tribunal de Paris, the jewels she had smuggled out of France to England were sold at an auction at Christie's in London in 1795. Colonel Johann Keglevich took part in the Battle of Mainz with Hessian mercenaries paid by the British with money from this sale.

Relationship with Marie Antoinette

Jeanne's relationship with Marie Antoinette was contentious. They first met at a family supper at the Château of La Muette on 15 May 1770—the day before Marie Antoinette's wedding with the Dauphin Louis-Auguste. Jeanne had been the king's mistress for little over a year, and many thought she would not be included at the occasion. It ended up being otherwise, to the disgust of most of those present. Marie Antoinette noticed Jeanne, who stood out from the crowd with her extravagant appearance and high voice. The Comtesse de Noailles informed Marie Antoinette that Jeanne pleased the king and the 14-year-old archduchess innocently said that she would rival her. The Comte de Provence soon disillusioned the new princess, who was outraged at such open immorality. Their rivalry continued, mainly since the Dauphine supported Choiseul in favor of the alliance with Austria.

Marie Antoinette defied court protocol by refusing to speak to Madame du Barry. She not only disapproved of Jeanne's background but felt insulted when she heard from the Comte de Provence of Jeanne's laughter at a salacious story told by the Cardinal de Rohan about Marie Antoinette's mother, Empress Maria Theresa. Jeanne furiously complained to the king, who then complained to the Austrian ambassador Mercy, who in turn did his best to appease Marie Antoinette. Eventually, during a ball on New Year's Day 1772, Marie Antoinette spoke indirectly to Jeanne, casually observing, "There are many people at Versailles today," giving her the option to respond or not.

In popular culture

Food

  • Many dishes, such as Soup du Barry, are named after Jeanne. All dishes "du Barry" have a creamy white sauce.
  • Many have cauliflower, perhaps an allusion to her powdered wigs with curls piled like cauliflower florets.

Film

Madame du Barry was portrayed in film by:

  • Mrs. Leslie Carter in the 1915 film DuBarry, directed by Edoardo Bencivenga
  • Theda Bara in the 1917 film Madame Du Barry, directed by J. Gordon Edwards
  • Pola Negri in the 1919 film Madame DuBarry, directed by Ernst Lubitsch
  • Norma Talmadge in the 1930 film Du Barry, Woman of Passion
  • Dolores del Río in the 1934 film Madame Du Barry, directed by William Dieterle
  • Gladys George in the 1938 MGM film Marie Antoinette, which starred Norma Shearer in the title role
  • Lucille Ball in the 1943 movie version of DuBarry Was a Lady
  • Margot Grahame in the 1949 film Black Magic, also starring Orson Welles in the lead role of Count Cagliostro
  • Martine Carol in the 1954 film Madame du Barry, directed by Christian-Jaque
  • Asia Argento in the 2006 film Marie Antoinette, directed by Sofia Coppola
  • Maïwenn in the 2023 film Jeanne du Barry, also starring Johnny Depp as Louis XV, directed by Maïwenn

Literature

  • In The Idiot, by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, the character Lebedev tells the story of du Barry's life and execution and prays for her soul.
  • Du Barry is one of the central characters in Sally Christie's The Enemies of Versailles (2017).

Television

  • Du Barry is portrayed by French actress Gaia Weiss in the BBC/CANAL+ 8 part, television series: "Marie Antoinette". Her relationship with Marie Antoinette is a core theme of the first four episodes, at the end of which Antoinette (now queen) persuades her husband Louis XVI to have her exiled after the death of his grandfather, Louis XV, who had intended to marry Du Barry but died before that could take place.
  • Du Barry was also portrayed by Japanese voice actress Ryoko Kinomiya in the anime The Rose of Versailles, as a criminal, scheming enemy of Marie Antoinette; her struggles with the young princess are a major concern of the story in its early stages.

Opera

  • Gräfin Dubarry is an operetta in three acts by Carl Millöcker to a German libretto by F. Zell and Richard Genée.
  • La Du Barry is an opera (1912) in three acts by Giannino Antona Traversi and Ernrico Golisciani, with music by Ezio Camussi.

Bibliography

  • Antoine, Michel (1989). Louis XV (in French). Paris: Librairie Arthème Fayard. ISBN 9782010178184.
  • Bernier, Oliver (1984). Louis the Beloved: The Life of Louis XV. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company. ISBN 0-385-18402-6.
  • Castelot, André. (1989). Madame du Barry. Paris: Perrin. ISBN 9782262006914.
  • Fleury, comte Maurice (1909). Louis XV intime et les petites maitresses (in French). Paris: Plon.
  • Haslip, Joan (1992). Madame du Barry: The Wages of Beauty. New York: Grove Weidenfeld. ISBN 978-0-8021-1256-9.
  • Herman, Eleanor (2004). Sex with Kings: 500 Years of Adultery, Power, Rivalry, and Revenge. New York: Morrow. ISBN 0-06-058544-7.
  • La Croix de Castries, René de (1967). Madame du Barry (in French). Paris: Hachette.
  • Loomis, Stanley (1959). Du Barry: A Biography. Philadelphia: Lippincott.
  • Palache, John Garber (2005). Marie Antoinette The Player Queen. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 9781417902507.
  • Saint-André, Claude (1915). A King's Favourite, Madame du Barry, and her times from hitherto unpublished documents. New York: McBride, Nast. translated from the French Madame du Barry, published by Tallandier, Paris, 1909.
  • Saint-Victor, Jacques de (2002). Madame du Barry: un nom de scandale (in French). Paris: Perrin. ISBN 9782262016616.
  • Stoeckl, Agnes, (Baroness de) (1966). Mistress of Versailles: The Life of Madame du Barry. London: John Murray.
  • Vatel, Charles (1883). Histoire de madame du Barry (in French). Paris: L. Bernard.

External links

See also [ Madame du Barry (film) ]

More information is available at [ Wikipedia:Madame_du_Barry ]
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