A portrait thought to be of Charles Ogier de Batz de Castelmore, comte d'Artagnan. |
Few
figures have entranced imaginations more
or longer than the young country bumpkin
swordsman d’Artagnan and his Musketeers pals Porthos, Athos, and Aramis who swashbuckled their way across the pages of Alexandre Dumas, père’s
adventure novels and almost
innumerable film and TV adaptions. D’Artagnan and his companions have become
so iconic—almost super heroes in plumed hats, high boots, livery emblazoned with a cross, that it comes as something of a surprise to learn that there
really was a man by that name and he really was the Captain of the elite company
of Musketeers that served Louis XIV and
his chief minister Cardinal Mazarin.
When
he arrived in Paris as a young man,
the son of a freshly minted minor
nobleman from the distant provinces in
the 1630s, Charles de Batz assumed
the name and identity of his much older and more influential mother’s family, d’Artagnan. It was fortunate that he did so because he
had an uncle, Henri de Montesquiou, Comte d’Artagnan and a cousin Field Marshal Pierre de Montesquiou d’Artagnan
whose influence bought him an appointment to the prestigious Musketeers. He entered the service under the name Charles
Ogier de Batz de Castelmore, Comte d’Artagnan.
The Musketeers of the Guard was a military
unit belonging to the personal household
of the French king. Although it
sometimes fought in battle alongside the professional national Army it was separate from that
establishment and under the direct orders of the King, who was officially their
Captain.
As we shall see, a second company
of Musketeers was formed and assigned duty to the personal service of the
King’s minister. The initial company was
formed by Louis XIII in 1622 when he
outfitted a company of his light cavalry
with muskets instead of lances.
The company was trained to operate as either cavalry or infantry and
indeed when assigned to war duty usually operated on foot.
The
Musketeers had special duty as the personal
guard to the King whenever he was away from the Royal Palace. At his
residences the King was guarded by the Garde
du corps and the Gardes suisses
(Swiss Guard). The Musketeers were an elite unit recruited
only among the nobility and recruits required the sponsorship of important members
of the Court or of the Royal Family. All members were required to serve as common soldiers for some years before
they were even eligible for an officer’s
commission. But such was the
prestige that competition was fierce for the limited number of slots that
became available in any year.
Shortly
after the first Company of Musketeers went into service of the king, a second
Company was formed and assigned to Cardinal
Richelieu, the powerful first minister.
This was the unit in which d’Artagnan enrolled. Serving with him in the Company were Armand d’Athos, Henri d’Aramitz, and Isaac
de Porthau who each inspired a similarly named character in Dumas’s tales.
After
Richelieu died his Company fell to his successor, Cardinal Mazarin who became d’Artagnan
special patron and for whom he often loyally performed certain secret and
delicate missions involving espionage
on rivals, secret communications, and occasionally blackmail. All were routine
parts of life in the intrigue that always swirled around the Royal Court as
rivals maneuvered for favor and position. Mazarin was an ally of Louis XIII and his son
who sought to limit the feudal liberties
of chartered towns and communes and of the nobility.
After two periods of civil
war known as the Fronde the King
consolidated his power and began to assert control over France as an absolute monarch. D’Artagnan was the loyal supporter of
Cardinal and King through all of this.
Three
years after Mazarin rose to power in 1443 he dissolved his unit of the
Musketeers, perhaps because he did not trust the loyalty of all of the nobles enrolled
in its ranks. But d’Artagnan remained in
personal service to the Cardinal and continued to be used for discrete
missions. He even followed Mazarin
during his brief exile in 1651 in the face of the hostility of the aristocracy.
Upon
Mazarin’s return in 1652 the King appointed d’Artagnan lieutenant in the Gardes
Françaises, then to captain in 1655.
The Gardes were the household infantry of the King. When in service in the line with the Army in
battle, a Gardes captain was the equivalent of a regular army colonel.
Still
the subject of much plotting and even possible assassination by disgruntled Nobles,
Mazarin re-constituted his Company of Musketeers in 1658. D’Artagnan received an appointment as
lieutenant, but because of the prestige of the Musketeers, this was actually a
promotion.
As Captain of the Musketeers d'Artagnan would have worn the livery at left. |
When
Mazarin died in 1661 his Musketeers and d’Artagnan passed into the personal
service of the young King who continued to use him for the most discrete missions.
And
no mission required more discretion than his most famous one—the arrest of Nicolas Fouquet, Superintendent of Finances
on September 5, 1661. Fouquet may have been
the richest man in France, rivaling the personal wealth of the King. As Superintendent of Finance he co-mingled
his own assets and that of the State at first by personally guaranteeing large loans to the government. After that he became almost flagrant in his
tangled accounts and skimming of the Treasury. He also publicly hoped to inherit Mazarin’s
position as First Minister. But the
King, eager to consolidate his own power, announced that he would “be my own
First Minister,” although Fouquet’s bitter rival Jean-Baptiste Colbert assumed many of the duties in fact.
Fouquet
had become so powerful that he seemed oblivious to the rising resentment of the
King. In August of that year he hosted a
huge fête
inaugurating the new château on his estate Vaux-le-Vicomte. It was the grandest house in France. And the party celebrating it was so luxurious
that each guest was made the present of a horse
and Molière’s Les
Fâcheux was staged for the first time.
The King was sure that such extravagance was proof of Fouquet’s looting
of the treasury.
To
get Fouquet away from Paris, the King invited him and other members of the
Court to Nantes in Brittany.
There, as he emerged from a banquet, he was arrested by Lieutenant d’Artagnan. Fouquet was put under the Musketeer's personal
guard for more than three years as his lengthy trial dragged on. Fouquet was ultimately convicted and was
sentenced to life in prison. He was sent
to the infamous fortress/prison of Pignerol where the never-to-be-named Eustache Dauger, the man identified by
historical research as the Man in the
Iron Mask was held. In fact Dauger
was made one o Fouquet’s prison valets. Later the stories of the two men would become
entwined and even confabulated.
For
such conspicuous service to the King d’Artagnan was promoted in 1667 to Captain-lieutenant of the Musketeers,
the commander of both Companies. The
same year he was also made Governor of
Lille, which had just been captured and made a French city. He was profoundly unpopular as a governor of
an unwilling people and yearned for a return to more active military duty.
That
opportunity arose when he was called to lead the Musketeers during the Franco-Dutch War. While serving in the front lines during the Siege of Maastricht on June 27, 1673 d’Artagnan
was struck in the throat by a musket ball and killed. In death at age 62 he was hailed again as a
national hero.
In
1700 Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras
published a novel in the guise of a memoir called, Mémoires de M. d’Artagnan. He probably gathered tales of the
Musketeer’s adventures from a former comrade-in-arms, Besmaux, who was Warden of
the Bastille while the writer was imprisoned
there. Historians are still trying to
sort out the fact from the fiction in this account.
The Three Musketeers and d'Artagnan as imagined by Dumas. |
Enter
Alexandre Dumas who in 1844 published The Three Musketeers, the first of
three D’Artagnan Romances which
included Twenty Years After, and The Vicomte de Bragelonne. The later book was often broken into
three parts each published separately, the last of which was The
Man in the Iron Mask. In the
introduction of the first book, Dumas referenced his discovery of de Sandras’s
novel which he treats as if it was a factual memoir. But the books not only elaborated from the
original story, but often diverted from it, combining or creating characters, and
even dramatically altering the relationships of some characters.
We
know now that many of d’Artagnan’s characteristics and some of his experiences
and adventures were drawn from Duma’s father, General Thomas-Alexandre Dumas who was born in French Saint-Domingue, now Haiti, to an aristocratic French officer
and a Creole slave woman. Raised in France, his father became the first
mulatto to achieve the rank of
general in the French army and served with notable distinction during the Napoleonic Wars before falling out of
favor with the Emperor.
We
also know that Dumas collaborated with a writer named Auguste Maquet who often provided him with plot outlines and ideas.
Dumas was a prolific and popular writer. In contrast to his best known contemporary, Victor Hugo, he was an unabashed monarchist and ached for the return of
French glory. His romanticism struck an
international chord and his books were widely translated and popular around the
world. His conservatism and romanticism
caused him to go out of favor in French literary circles in the early and mid-20th Century. That reputation has been somewhat restored
with honors and recognition by French
President Jacques Chirac in 2002 at ceremony where his ashes re-interred at
the mausoleum of the Panthéon of Paris, where many French
luminaries were buried.
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