Companions of Jehu

The Companions of Jehu, from an illustration accompanying Alexandre Dumas' novel of the same name
Illustration by Gustav Dore to accompany Alexandre Dumas' novel 'Les compagnons de Jehu'

The Companions of Jehu were formed in the Lyon region of France in April 1795 to hunt down Jacobins implicated in the Reign of Terror.[1][2] It is possible that they were founded by the Marquis de Besignan,[3][4] who also founded royalist underground groups in Forez and Dauphiné with the Prince of Condé in 1796.[5] Their victims are believed to have numbered at least in the hundreds. They were made famous by the 1857 novel The Companions of Jehu by Alexandre Dumas which presented a highly romanticised account of them.[6]

  1. ^ Jean-Baptiste Monfalcon, Histoire de la ville de Lyon, Guilbert et Dorier, 1847 vol.II, page 1051
  2. ^ David Andress, The Terror, Abacus 2005 p.361
  3. ^ "NOTICE HISTORIQUE SUR LES VRAIS COMPAGNONS DE JÉHU ♣ PREMIERE PARTIE (1) - La Maraîchine Normande". 23 February 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  4. ^ (in French) Ernest Daudet (1901) "Conspirateurs du Midi sous la Révolution Française La Revue du Midi pp. 361-375
  5. ^ "Pierre Joseph DUCLAUX de BÉSIGNAN - "pierfit" - Geneanet". Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  6. ^ Dumas, Alexandre (1 December 2004). The Companions of Jehu. Retrieved 9 April 2017 – via Project Gutenberg.

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