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The Death of Napoleon

Portrait of the Murderer

In October 1840 after King Louis-Phillipe had bowed to pressure from Napoleonists who were agitating for the return of their heros remains from St. Helena, a delegation of Napoleons companions in exile was sent to accompany his body back to Paris.   All who were alive and mobile accepted the invitation.  One who could not was Charles de Montholon.

Bertrand, now 67 years old, made the trip.   His wife, Fanny, had died in 1836.  LasCases, old and blind, was represented by his son, Emmanuel, who had lived at Longwood with his father when he was a boy.  None of the doctors, particularly the two of longest tenure on the island, OMeara and Antommarchi, were there, since they both had died some years before.  The faithful Louis Marchand, middle-aged and prosperous, was there.

DeMontholon was not there because he was in jail.

After Napoleons death, deMontholon carried on with his career as a political confidence man, a career that had begun well before joining Napoleon on St. Helena.   Of the inheritance due him from Napoleons will, he collected 1.5 million francs.  By 1829, he had squandered the entire amount.  He connected once more with Charles X, from whom Forshufvud and Weider suggest he had received his orders to murder Napoleon, but the connection was of little use, since, by 1830, the devious Charles had been ousted.

Portrait of Louis Phillipe of France
Portrait of Louis Phillipe of France
 

Early in 1840, while King Louis-Phillipe was trying to decide whether to bring Napoleons body back to Paris, deMontholon, attached to Louis Bonaparte (who would become Napoleon III), attempted an invasion of France from his base in England.   It was a grandiose, ill-conceived venture and, as with most aspects of deMontholons life, unsuccessful.  He was captured by French loyal to the government of King Louis-Phillipe, sentenced to 20 years imprisonment, and by the time of the reunion in October on St. Helena he was beginning to serve his sentence.

Portrait of Louis Bonaparte
Portrait of Louis Bonaparte
 

In 1850, Louis Bonaparte, son of Napoleons brother, became Napoleon III.   (Of course, the famous Napoleons son was Napoleon II, but he had died in 1832 at the age of 21.)  Despite deMontholons on-again-off-again allegiance to the Bonaparte family, there was no place for deMontholon in Napoleon IIIs government.  After having served six years of his 20-year sentence, deMontholon died in obscurity in 1853.

Portrait of Count de Montholon
Portrait of Count de Montholon

If Napoleon was murdered, and if deMontholon was the murderer, he never told.   His memoir is self-serving and reveals nothing that would implicate him.  His wifes reminiscences suggest that she knew nothing of her husbands plot.  No other memoirist of the era mentions deMontholon as a potential murderer. If deMontholon has any legacy, it is, at best, one of villainy and opportunism, or, at worst, as the murderer of the most important figure of the 19th century, or, in the eyes of some, the most important figure in European history.

DeMontholon may be forgotten, except by those who are captivated by the circumstances of Napoleons death.   Not so Emperor Napoleon I.  He is as close to eternal fascination as we can get when it comes to the study of history and political science.  No year will pass -- indeed, no month -- without a new consideration of Napoleons life, career, influence and place in history.

Only a genius like Shakespeare could find the words to do Napoleon justice.   Shakespeare has Cassius describe Julius Caesar.  The words could apply to Napoleon.

Why, man, he doth bestride the narrow world

Like a Colossus, and we petty men

Walk under his huge legs, and peep about

To find ourselves dishonorable graves.

                         -- Julius Caesar, Act I, scene ii

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