Conspiration des poignards


The Conspiration des poignards or Complot de l'Opéra was an alleged assassination attempt against First Consul of France Napoleon Bonaparte. The members of the plot were not clearly established. Authorities at the time presented it as an assassination attempt on Napoleon at the exit of the Paris opera house on 18 vendémiaire year IX, which was prevented by the police force of Joseph Fouché. However, this version was questioned very early on.
In his Mémoires, Fouché affirmed that, towards mid-September 1800, a plot arose aiming at assassinating Napoleon at the operahouse. Someone named Harel, presented as one of the accomplices, worked in liaison with the war commissioner Lefebvre, to bring the revelations to Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne, Napoleon's secretary, indicating the plotters were Giuseppe Ceracchi, Joseph Diana, Joseph Antoine Aréna ; the painter and patriotic fanatic François Topino-Lebrun, and Dominique Demerville, former clerk of the Committee of Public Safety, closely associated with Bertrand Barère de Vieuzac. Harel was charged with drawing up a trap for the plotters; four armed men, laid out for the assassination of Napoleon, on the evening of 10 October, after a performance of Les Horaces. The day of the attack, the men stationed by the police force stopped Diana, Ceracchi and their two accomplices. All the others presumably retreated and were apprehended at their residences.
For modern historians this was a manipulation by the police force, made possible by an agent provocateur, Harel, who had infiltrated the group. After Plot of the Rue Saint-Nicaise, the members of the "daggers conspiracy", presented as a Jacobin plot, were judged in front of the criminal court of The Seine. Four of them were condemned to death 19 nivôse year IX, at eleven o'clock in the evening, after three days of debates and the sentence was carried out on 30 January after rejection of the appeal.

Conspirators

The members of the plot were:

Primary sources

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Secondary sources

  • , Ils voulaient tuer Napoléon : Complots et conspirations contre l'Empereur, Tallandier, 2022.
  • Pierre Marie Desmarest Quinze ans de haute police sous Napoléon, Editions A. Levavasseur, 1833, p. 37-44.
  • Henri Gaubert, Conspirateurs au temps de Napoléon Ier, Flammarion, coll. « L'Histoire », 1962, p. 354
  • Gustave Hue, Un Complot de police sous le Consulat, Editions Hachette, 1909