Note: I have chosen to use gender pronouns in accordance with those the Chevalier d’Eon publicly identified with at various points in his/her life.
He was born in Burgundy in 1728, with a name that pretty much predestined him for a very, very multi-faceted future: Charles-Geneviève-Louis-Auguste-André-Timothée d’Éon de Beaumont. He came from your run-of-the-mill, noble but poor aristocrats, and debated joining the Church for a while. Instead, he snagged a cozy first job as a civil servant for the French government. But he was slated for something bigger. Something King-sized…
Louis XV was assembling a top secret society with a not-so-secrete name: le Secret du Roi, (the secret of the King) and quietly recruiting spies to strengthen France abroad. To this day, le Secret remains one of history’s most impressive feats, with the society outliving Louis himself and even playing a role in America’s independence.
The Chevalier D’Eon was exceptionally hard-working, and had become a Dragoon (a cavalry soldier on horseback) in order to earn his knight (or “chevalier”) title.
He also had the kind of dashing interpersonal skills necessary to become
a secret agent, so Louis deployed him to Russia as the “Secretary to
the French Ambassador to Russia” where he buttered up the Empress
Elizabeth disguised as a woman of her court. It was incredibly
dangerous, and could’ve cost him his life if anyone found out. They
didn’t — but they were suspect.
Such high-stakes service to the King wasn’t without its hiccups, and on
more than one occasion d’Eon got himself into a lot of trouble, and even
wound up exiled in Britain. When France let him back in, it was with a
fat pension plan but on certain conditions: to continue living as a woman to remain incognito.
Her everyday life was a breeding ground for gossip, especially when she continued to one-up every man around in the sport of fencing.
Here she is kicking the butt of Monsieur De Saint George in front of the Prince of Wales:
Thus, the chevalier was reborn a chevalière, and formally
presented at Versailles in 1777 after what would probably make for one
of those perfect Hollywood makeover scenes: four hours of hair curling,
nose powdering, and dress-fitting. She even shared a tailor with Marie
Antoinette.
D’Eon could have spent the rest of her days in tranquility, but she
begged the government to let her go to war as a dragoon and fight for
the country she loved; her country responded by throwing her in jail
until she stopped asking.
Time proved a little kinder to d’Eon, and Bram Stoker (the author of Dracula)
penned a sympathetic, and admirative essay on her in 1910 (although he
still recognised her as a man). “In all the range of doubtful
personalities,” he finished, “there is hardly any one whom convention
has treated worse than it has the individual known in his time — and
after — as The Chevalier d’Eon.”
Now, go make something beautiful!
¸.•´
¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)(¸.•´
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥
4 comments:
Fascinating history lesson! I thank you !
Would make a great movie.
YOU always come up with the BEST stuff. Thanks!
This is fascinating, Tristan. I had absolutely no idea. And yes, as someone above said, it would be a remarkable film! Thanks for introducing me to this.
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