Sophie Trébuchet

Sophie Françoise Trebuchet was a French painter and the mother of Victor Hugo. She was born on June 19, 1772 in Nantes[1] and died on June 27, 1821 in Paris, France.

Sophie Trébuchet
Born(1772-06-19)June 19, 1772
DiedJune 27, 1821(1821-06-27) (aged 49)
NationalityFrench
OccupationPainter, mother

Early life

Sophie Françoise Trébuchet was born on June 19, 1772, in Nantes, rue des Carmélites, the fourth of eight children. Her father, Jean-François Trébuchet, was captain of a ship and her mother Louise Le Normand (1748-1780), from Saint-Fiacre-sur-Maine, was the daughter of the seneschal Château-Thébaud.[2] Some time after her birth, Trébuchet was baptized in the church of Saint-Laurent.[3]

She became an orphan at the age of eight, when her mother died on August 14, 1780, three weeks after giving birth to her eighth child, who did not survive. Her father, in financial trouble, was forced to accept a mission in the Indian Ocean from shipowners in Brest. He auctioned off some of the couple's property in order to pay for the equipment of the ship "The Count of Grasse", and then embarked. He took care before his departure to place his seven surviving children in boarding school, while the two eldest went respectively to his nephew Louis Trébuchet and his sister-in-law Louise Mathurine Le Normand du Buisson.[2] After the death of their father, the children were divided between the remaining family, while Trébuchet left her guardian, Menant-Dugué, to meet her paternal aunt, Françoise-Louise Trébuchet.

The revolution

On July 18, 1789, Trébuchet attended the revolutionary riots in Nantes.[4] Her royalist conscience was born during the execution of two young girls and their mother, Madame de La Biliais, whom she knew during her childhood. This episode remained in her memory for the rest of her life. During the Terror, sparked in Nantes by Jean-Baptiste Carrier, Trébuchet returned to Châteaubriant.[5] But on February 11, 1796, she witnessed a battle in Grand-Auverné between Republicans and Chouans. The same year, she met Joseph Léopold Sigisbert Hugo in Châteaubriant, a Republican soldier with whom she fell in love. On November 15, 1797, they were married in Paris.[2]

Married life

The couple then moved to the Maison-Commune in Paris. Their first child, Abel Hugo, was born on November 15, 1798. While staying with the Hugo family, Trébuchet became pregnant a second time, and desired to return to Brittany, but her husband refused. Eugène Hugo was born on September 16, 1800, in Nancy, rue des Maréchaux. Léopold Hugo was appointed adjutant-general at Lunéville, where Trébuchet met Joseph Bonaparte. Later, the family went to Besançon. On February 26, 1802, Trébuchet's third child, Victor was born in Saint-Quentin.

Léopold was then sent to Marseilles, where the rest of his family joined him. Once there, he sought a promotion and sent Trébuchet to Victor Fanneau de Lahorie in Paris. She stayed in Paris, where she moved to the Hotel de Nantes, rue Neuve-des-Petits-Champs, where Victor Fanneau de Lahorie, who had been her lover for some time, was living. Some speculation indicates he may have been Victor's father.[6]

Later life

In the beginning of 1803, Léopold went to Bastia, Victor Fanneau de Lahorie moved to rue des Saussaies and bought the Château de Saint-Just. Trébuchet went to Livorno to rejoin her husband and children, and learnt that Leopold had a mistress named Catherine Thomas.[6] Trebuchet returned to Paris with her three sons.

Sophie moved to rue de Clichy and decided to hide Lahorie, who was suspected of going against the government. These cases were clarified, but Lahorie was forced to sell his properties (including Saint-Just) and to go into exile in America, which he refused. In 1806, Trébuchet and the children visited Leopold in Naples, where he was living with his mistress. He opposed the idea of his family joining him due to his fears that his wife would discover his affair.

Trébuchet and her children came to see Hugo anyway, but left the next day for Paris with the children. They arrived on February 7, 1809 and settled in an old convent, rue des Feuillantines.

The chapel there was used as a hiding place for Victor Fanneau de Lahorie. The children, at first, did not know of his presence, but soon discovered it. As a precaution, Trébuchet had him renamed M. de La Courland, and he became a new father for the three sons. On December 29, 1810 Victor Fanneau de Lahorie was betrayed and arrested at the Feuillantines, under the eyes of the Trébuchet-Hugo family.

In March 1811, the family went to Spain to visit Léopold, who had become Count of Siguenza. But he was not aware of the visit; thus, after a frightful journey through a hostile country at war, the family was welcomed in Madrid by his brother. Irritated by the actions of his wife, Léopold, living in Guadalajara with his mistress, sought divorce and the custody of his children, whom he placed at the College of Nobles in Madrid. Trébuchet refused her husband's instructions and asked for help from Joseph Bonaparte, who became king of Spain; the spouses were quickly reconciled. But after some time, Léopold learnt from an unknown source the connection between Victor Fanneau de Lahorie and Trébuchet. She hoped to return to Paris as soon as possible for news of her lover.

One day she received an amount of 4,750 francs from Paris (she suspected Lahorie of having sent it) and decided to leave at once; she took advantage of the escort of Marshal Bellune to cross Spain without trouble. In Paris, she regularly visited her lover, incarcerated in Vincennes.

She paid attention to the plot of General Malet, who announced the death of Napoleon Bonaparte in Russia. Victor Fanneau de Lahorie, once released, was to become Minister of Police. But the plot was unveiled and the conspirators, of whom he was part, were imprisoned in the prison of the Abbey; they were all shot in the plain of Grenelle on October 29, 1812.[7] Sophie follows the funeral convoy to the Vaugirard cemetery.

On December 31, 1813, the family moved to rue des Vieilles Thuileries (now rue du Cherche-Midi). Leopold arrived at Thionville where he presented Catherine Thomas as "General Hugo". Trébuchet decided to locate her husband, after he stopped paying their rent. She entrusted Eugene and Victor to the Foucher family and left with Abel. Leopold again asked for divorce, on grounds of adultery, and placed his sons in boarding school.

When Sophie returned to Paris, she discovered her apartment under seal and therefore asked the Fouchers for hospitality. Later, Leopold arrived in Paris with Catherine Thomas, whom he presented in the Salons; he returned to Thionville during the Hundred Days. Sophie regularly visited her sons at their college.

Death

After finding her apartment, Trébuchet, impoverished, was forced to move to rue des Petits-Augustins, now rue Bonaparte. She recovered the custody of her children in 1818, when the civil court of the Seine pronounced the separation of the bodies and property of the Hugo couple. Abel was 20 years old, Eugène 18, and Victor 16. The eldest became a half-pay lieutenant and the younger two joined the Faculty of Law, while their father thought they were going to the Polytechnique. Discovering that Victor had extraordinary talents in poetry, she sought to develop her own artistic talents. Victor dedicated his first poems to his mother.

The family was very close to Foucher, meeting regularly since the early years of his sons and Mrs. Foucher received them for evenings at his home in Toulouse. One day, Trébuchet discovered that Victor and Adèle Foucher were in love. Not thinking much of the girl, she opposed their relationship.

In the spring of 1820, Sophie Trébuchet tended the garden, but suffered from the cold. She fell ill and died in bed in the afternoon of June 27, 1821.[6] She was buried on June 28 at the Vaugirard Cemetery; much later, Victor had her remains transferred to Père-Lachaise, where Trébuchet lies as "Countess Hugo".[8]

References

  1. Baptism of Sophie Françoise Trébuchet, June 19, 1772, Saint-Laurent parish, Nantes. Dormann (1982) p.13
  2. Biography of Jean-François Trébuchet
  3. (de Berranger 1975, pp. 96–97)
  4. Pérennès', Ronan (11 March 2016). "Sophie Trébuchet: the life of Victor Hugo's mother". www.patrimoine-local. Diveo Media SARL. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  5. "Sophie Trébuchet". www.chateaubriant.org. Châteaubriant, History and Resistance. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
  6. Robb, Graham (1997). "Victor Hugo". New York Times. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
  7. Behr, Edward (1993). The Complete Book of Les Misérables. Arcade Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 9781559701563.
  8. Sophie Trebuchet's grave site
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.