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French etching from 1789 depicting the storming of the Bastille, during which Bernard René Jourdan died.
Bernard René Jourdan, marquis de Launay (1740-1789) was a French governor of the Bastille, the son of a previous governor, and commander of its garrison when it was stormed on 14 July 1789 (see Storming of the Bastille). Unlike Sombreuil, the governor of Hôtel des Invalides, who had accepted the revolutionaries' demands earlier that way, de Launay refused to surrender the prison and hand over the arms and the gunpowder in it.[1] He promised that he would not shoot unless attacked and tried to negotiate with revolutionary representatives, but the negotiations drew out. As parts of the crowd, impatient, started entering the courtyard of the fortress (on some accounts, this had been made possible by de Launay's lowering the drawbridge[2]), the garrison opened fire[1][2][3][4][5][6] - according to some accounts, on de Launay's orders[3][4][5][6], resulting in about 100 casualties among the crowd and one killed defender. The besiegers interpreted this as treachery on the part of de Launay. Eventually de Launay decided to capitulate on the condition that nobody from within the fortress would be killed, and threatened that he would blow up the entire fortress and the surrounding district if these conditions were rejected.[7] His conditions were rejected, but he nevertheless capitulated. De Launay was then seized and was supposed to be escorted to the Hôtel de Ville by one of the leaders of the insurrection, soldier Pierre-Augustin Hulin, but on the way there, the furious crowd assaulted him, beat him and eventually lynched him by stabbing him repeatedly with their bayonets and shooting him once. The actual killing was reported to have been unleashed by the fact that de Launay, desperate and abused by the crowd, kicked an unemployed cook named Desnot in the groin. After the killing, his head was sawn off by Mathieu Jouve Jourdan, a butcher. It was fixed on a pike to be carried through the streets. Several other defenders of the Bastille were also lynched.[5] Lieutenant Deflue, a subordinate of de Launay who was besieged together with him, later commented on the events and accused his late superior of military incompetence, inexperience, irresoluteness and outright cowardice, which he had allegedly displayed long before the siege.[8] De Launay had three daughthers by two wives. Some of de Launay's descendants settled in Russia, see Boris Delaunay and Vadim Delaunay for details. QuotesThe event inspired several literary accounts, notably Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities (where fictional detail is added to fit into the plot):
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