Almost nobody will know however that
the stories that inspired the often unbelievable, adventures The Three Musketeers or The Count of Monte Cristo was
the life of Alexandre Dumas' father, Alex.
Here for instance, is a near
contemporary account of the General who, at thirty-five, commanded
three armies and was the toast of Revolutionary France, yet five
years later was to die, ignored and dismissed by Napoleon's
post-revolutionary regime.
“During the conquest of Italy... he
went forward to observe enemy movements with about twenty dragoons
detached as scouts.... Seeing how few men stood in their way, the
Austrian cavalry charged vigorously; Dumas's escorting troops were
defeated before Dumas could reach them.... Seeing the danger, General
Dumas rushed alone to the bridgehead and held back a squadron of
enemy cavalry for several minutes, forcing them to retreat.
Surrounded by some twenty Austrians he killed three and wounded
eight.”
General Dumas was an expert swordsman,
an educated and clever man, brave and dedicated to his troops, who in
turn lionised him. However, what makes Dumas so interesting is that
he was black. The son of a French count who had gone to Haiti and
married a slave.
General Dumas arrived back in
pre-revolutionary France as a young man and as debts assailed him and
his family, he joined the army. Not as an officer as his social
position would have permitted, but as a private. His skills, loyalty
and politics soon led him to rise upwards.
General Dumas was, according to the
1797 report, “every but of deserving of admiration as those of a
native of the Old World. Indeed, who has a greater right to public
respect than the man of color fighting for freedom after having
experienced all the horrors of slavery? To equal the most celebrated
warriors he need only keep in mind all the evils he has suffered.”
This was not hyperbole. Dumas' was his
father's favourite son. His brothers and his mother were sold back into
slavery by his father when he returned to France to claim his estate.
But the General's rise in the ranks was
as much to do with the changing revolutionary world as his skills
with sword and men. As Reiss explains, it was Revolutionary France,
long before the Civil Rights movement, long before William
Wilberforce that granted equality and freedom to everyone within its
Empire. The abolition of slavery as part of the 1789 revolution
helped inspire revolution and revolt by slaves across France's
dominions, as well as inspire millions of other “slaves”. Within
France the equality was real. Black people were treated the same by
the revolutionary state in a way that would not be seen again until
the 20th century. Reiss points out that this is particularly
remarkable given that France's economy depended very much on the
wealth generated by the slave plantations of Saint-Domingue.
Sadly, it was this that helped led to
General Dumas' fall from grace. After leaving the Egyptian campaign,
Dumas was captured and spent two years in an Italian prison, nearly
dying from the deprivation. This story is the model for his son's
Count of Monte Cristo. But, Dumas arrived back to a very different
France. Napoleon's regime certainly wasn't concerned with equality.
Black people faced discrimination and the return of slavery. Dumas
however, never seems to have lost his ideals, those shared by
millions during the revolution.
What makes Tom Reiss' book such fascinating reading is not simply his rediscovery of a forgotten figure of history, but the way that General Dumas' life is linked to the wider world. The rise of the French Revolution lifts the General up. He shares its ideals and aspirations and is prepared to die for them. His fall from grace and his forgotten story is a reflection of the degeneration of the Revolution. This is a wonderful well told story that should be read widely to remember that once "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" was something that millions of people were ready to fight for.