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Henrietta Lucy Dillon de La Tour du Pin (1770–1853)

Autor(a) de Memoirs of Madame de La Tour du Pin

5+ Works 136 Membros 3 Reviews

About the Author

Obras de Henrietta Lucy Dillon de La Tour du Pin

Associated Works

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
La Tour du Pin, Henrietta Lucy Dillon de
Outros nomes
La Tour du Pin, Madame de
La Tour du Pin, Marquise de
Madame de La Tour du Pin
La Tour du Pin-Gouvernet, Marquise de
Data de nascimento
1770-02-25
Data de falecimento
1853-04-02
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
France
Local de nascimento
Paris, France
Local de falecimento
Pisa, Italy
Locais de residência
Paris, France
Ocupação
memoirist
aristocrat
farmer
Pequena biografia
Henriette-Lucy Dillon, known as Lucie, was born into a prominent Irish Jacobite military family in exile in France. Her parents were Arthur Dillon, born in England to an ancient family of Irish and Norman descent, and his wife Thérèse-Lucy de Rothe.
Following her mother's death and her father's subsequent posting abroad, Lucie lived with her French grandmother. She was considered witty and beautiful. In 1787, at age 17, she was married to Frédéric-Séraphin, comte de Gouvernet, later marquis de La Tour du Pin, an army officer and diplomat. Following her marriage, she was given her late mother's former place at court as a maid of honor to Queen Marie Antoinette. Lucie was present at Versailles during the meeting of the Estates-General of May 1789 and witnessed the Women's March on Versailles in October of that year after the outbreak of the French

Revolution.
Her husband served from October 1791 to March 1792 as ambassador to the Dutch Republic in The Hague, where Lucie joined him, returning to France only in December 1792.

During the Reign of Terror in 1793, many of her friends and family were executed, and she fled Paris for the family estate of Le Bouilh in the Gironde region. That summer, their estate was seized by the government, her father-in-law was imprisoned, and her husband went into hiding separate from her. With the help of Thérésa Cabarrus, in 1794 she managed to secure a passport for herself and her husband from Thérésa's lover, Jean-Lambert Tallien, a member of the revolutionary National Convention.
The La Tour du Pins went into exile for a new life on a dairy farm near Albany in upstate New York. Lucie considered this the happiest time of her life.

She and her husband returned to France after the establishment of the Directoire in 1796 and a few years later, he was able to resume his diplomatic career. They had to go into exile again after their son Aymar became involved in the plot of Marie-Caroline de Bourbon-Sicile, duchesse de Berry, to place her son on the throne in 1831-1832. After her husband's death in 1837, Lucie moved to Italy, where she died in Pisa.
Her legacy to history is her now-famous memoirs, written at age 50 for her son. They are a unique first-hand account of daily life through a turbulent period of history, much of it unchronicled. The manuscript remained in the family unpublished until 1906. An edition published in 1999 was entitled Laughing and Dancing Our Way to the Precipice.

Membros

Resenhas

Wonderful memoirs of a woman who lived through some of the most turbulent, frightening, fascinating, and fantastic times in world history. Going from the Queen's lady in waiting, to hiding from the revolutionaries and sewing peasant clothes, immigrating to America, and then all the rest of her topsy turvy life ... it's a book I thought about when I wasn't reading it. I wanted to stop whatever I was doing and go back to reading it. I went without sleep to finish it - and wanted more more more.
 
Marcado
camelama | outras 2 resenhas | Dec 30, 2016 |
Excellent, amusing first-hand account of life during the late-eighteenth, early nineteenth centuries. Lucy de la Tour du Pin, nee Dillon, is a wry, witty, courageous and observant woman, leading the reader through the events of her life as she remembers it - the translator occasionally corrects Mme de la Tour's memory in footnotes, but the errors are mostly due to the distance of years and not the adulteration of fact. That said, the false modesty of the writing does tend to jar with the writer's healthy ego, but the result is endearing and not offputting. Recommended to anybody with a taste for historical fiction, as her memoirs are entertaining and the language accessible. This woman lived an incredible life - from Lady in Waiting to poor Marie Antoinette to an ardent supporter of Napoleon, through half of Europe with her husband and via a pioneer homestead in America, all the while suffering many personal tragedies. Fact is truly more thrilling than fiction!… (mais)
 
Marcado
AdonisGuilfoyle | outras 2 resenhas | May 18, 2008 |
Madame de la Tour Du Pin was a prominent strong woman in the midst of the French revolution and her story is a powerful one. She survived and saved her family and was highly respected at the time for her intelligence. I highly recommend this book. Her memoirs have been published many times previously but this one is readily available.
 
Marcado
bhowell | outras 2 resenhas | Feb 16, 2008 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
5
Also by
1
Membros
136
Popularidade
#149,926
Avaliação
4.0
Resenhas
3
ISBNs
9
Idiomas
2

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