Charles de Batz de Castelmore d'Artagnan explained

Charles de Batz de Castelmore d'Artagnan
Birth Date: 1611
Birth Place:Lupiac, Kingdom of France
Death Date:25 June
Death Place:Maastricht, Dutch Republic
Branch:French Army
Serviceyears:1632–1673
Rank:Capitaine
Unit:Gardes Françaises
Commands:Musketeers of the Guard
Governor of Lille
Battles:Fronde
Franco-Dutch War

Charles de Batz de Castelmore (in French pronounced as /ʃaʁl də bats də kastɛlmɔʁ/), also known as d'Artagnan and later Count d'Artagnan (1611 – 25 June 1673), was a French Musketeer who served Louis XIV as captain of the Musketeers of the Guard. He died at the siege of Maastricht in the Franco-Dutch War. A fictionalised account of his life by Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras formed the basis for the d'Artagnan Romances of Alexandre Dumas père, most famously including The Three Musketeers (1844). The heavily fictionalised version of d'Artagnan featured in Dumas' works and their subsequent screen adaptations is now far more widely known than the real historical figure.

Early life

D'Artagnan was born at the Château de Castelmore near Lupiac in south-western France. His father, Bertrand de Batz lord of Castelmore, was the son of a newly ennobled merchant, Arnaud de Batz, who purchased the Château de Castelmore. Charles de Batz went to Paris in the 1630s, using the name of his mother Françoise de Montesquiou d'Artagnan. D'Artagnan found a way to enter into the Musketeers in 1632 through the support of his uncle, Henri de Montesquiou d'Artagnan or perhaps thanks to the influence of Henri's friend, Monsieur de Tréville.[1] D’Artagnan joined the guards in the mid-1630s and served under Captain des Essarts. The regiment saw much action in the early 1640s, taking part in sieges at Arras, Aire-sur-la-Lys, la Bassée and Bapaume in 1640–41 and Collioure and Perpignan in 1642. Whether or not d’Artagnan was personally involved is unclear, but it is likely he took part in some, if not all, of these sieges.[2] While in the Musketeers, d'Artagnan sought the protection of the influential Cardinal Mazarin, France's principal minister from 1643. In 1646, the Musketeers company was dissolved, but d'Artagnan continued to serve his protector Mazarin.

Career

D'Artagnan had a career in espionage for Cardinal Mazarin, in the years after the first Fronde. Owing to d'Artagnan's faithful service during this period, Louis XIV entrusted him with many secret and delicate situations that required complete discretion. He followed Mazarin during his exile in 1651 in the face of the hostility of the aristocracy. In 1652, d'Artagnan was promoted to lieutenant in the Gardes Françaises, and fought at the Battle of Stenay in 1654, as well as in sieges at Landrecies and Saint-Ghislaine, then to captain in 1655. In 1658, he became a second lieutenant in the newly reformed Musketeers. This was a promotion, as the Musketeers were far more prestigious than the Gardes-Françaises.

D'Artagnan was famous for his connection with the arrest of Nicolas Fouquet. Fouquet was Louis XIV's finance commissioner and aspired to take the place of Mazarin as the king's advisor. Fouquet was also a lover of grand architecture and employed the greatest architects and artisans in the building of his Chateau Vaux-le-Vicomte. On 17 August 1661, he celebrated the completion with a most extravagant feast, at which every guest was given a horse. The king, however, felt upstaged by the grandeur of the home and event and, suspecting that such magnificence could only be explained through Fouquet's pilfering the royal treasury, three weeks later had d'Artagnan arrest Fouquet. To prevent his escape by bribery, d'Artagnan was assigned to guard him for four years until Fouquet was sentenced to life imprisonment.

In 1667, d'Artagnan was promoted to captain-lieutenant of the Musketeers, the effective commander as the nominal captain was the king. As befitted his rank and position, he could be identified by his striking burgundy, white, and black livery—the colours of the commanding officer of the Musketeers. Another of d'Artagnan's assignments was the governorship of Lille, which was won in battle by France in 1667. D'Artagnan was an unpopular governor and longed to return to battle. He found his chance when Louis XIV went to war with the Dutch Republic in the Franco-Dutch War. After being recalled to service, d'Artagnan was killed in battle on 25 June 1673, when a musket ball tore into his throat at the siege of Maastricht.

The French historian Odile Bordaz believes that he was buried in Saint Peter and Paul Church in Wolder, a district of Maastricht, the Netherlands. Wolder was Louis XIV's headquarters during the Maastricht siege and he attended mass in the local church every day.[3] In contrast, the archaeologist Wim Dijkman, curator of the historical collections of the city of Maastricht at Centre Céramique, says that there is no historical or archaeological evidence for the claim.[4]

Marriage and descendants

On 5 March 1659, D'Artagnan married Anne-Charlotte Boyer de Chanlecy (1624-1683), lady of Sainte-Croix, and widow of Jean-Elenor de Damas. She was the daughter of Charles Boyer, lord of Chanlecy and Sainte-Croix, and Claude de Rymon, lady of la Rochette. The couple soon separated, D'Artagnan pursuing his military career while his wife left Paris to live on her lands at Sainte-Croix, where she died on 31 December, 1683.

They had two sons, both of whom entered the military:

Portrayals in fiction

The real d'Artagnan's life was used as the basis for Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras' novel Les mémoires de M. d'Artagnan. Alexandre Dumas in turn used Sandras' novel as the main source for his d'Artagnan Romances (The Three Musketeers, Twenty Years After and The Vicomte de Bragelonne), which cover d'Artagnan's career from his humble beginnings in Gascony to his death at Maastricht. Although Dumas knew that Sandras's version was heavily fictionalised, in the preface to The Three Musketeers he affected to believe that the memoirs were real, in order to make his novel more believable.

D'Artagnan is initially portrayed by Dumas as a hotheaded youth, who tries to engage the Comte de Rochefort and the three musketeers, Athos, Porthos, and Aramis in single combat. He quickly becomes friends with the musketeers, and has a series of adventures which put him at odds with Cardinal Richelieu, then First Minister of France. In the end, Richelieu is impressed by d'Artagnan, and makes him a lieutenant of the musketeers. This begins his long career of military service, as detailed in the sequels.

D'Artagnan's role among the musketeers is one of leadership (his skills and brains impress the musketeers greatly), but he is also regarded as a sort of protégé given his youth and inexperience. Athos sees him not only as a best friend and fellow musketeer but nearly as a son. At the end of the series, his death at the siege of Maastricht is given an extra tragic twist – he is mortally wounded while reading the notice of his promotion to the highest military rank.

Some scholars believe aspects of D'Artagnan are drawn from the life and character of Dumas's mixed-race father, General Thomas-Alexandre Dumas. The incident when D'Artagnan challenges Porthos, Athos, and Aramis to duels on the same afternoon might be based on an incident in General Dumas's youth when he was insulted; and their subsequent friendship on General Dumas's youthful companionship with fellow soldiers in the Queen's Dragoons.[19]

In other works

Film and television

Actors who have played d'Artagnan on screen include:

Note: Cornel Wilde, in addition to his role listed above, played the same-named son of d'Artagnan as the main hero in At Sword's Point (1952); Tobias Mehler was similarly cast in the Young Blades series, while the indicated performance there by Shaughnessy was a single guest appearance as his famous father. Andrew Rannells voiced d'Artagnan in the Japanese manga series Dinosaur King.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: France – Land of the_Musketeers – Dominique's Villas. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20081204124802/http://www.dominiquesvillas.co.uk/index.cfm/pcms/site.France_by_Area.Articles_on_France.Land_of_the_Musketeers/. 2008-12-04.
  2. Web site: The Real D'Artagnan. 30 December 2016.
  3. Web site: En garde! Historian claims to have found d'Artagnan. The Times. The Times. November 2008. 19 April 2010.
  4. https://www.lemonde.fr/culture/article/2008/11/20/la-fin-du-mystere-du-lieu-de-sepulture-de-d-artagnan_1120779_3246.html Le Monde Culture du 20 11 2008
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=d9s7AAAAMAAJ&q=%22Louis-Gabriel+de+Batz-Castelmore%22 Bulletin de la Société archéologique, historique, littéraire & scientifique du Gers,, Impr. Th. Bouquet, 1983, page 147.
  6. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6577470j/f63.item.r=%22Constantin%20De%20Batz%22.zoom Bulletin de la Société archéologique, historique littéraire & scientifique du Gers, 1973, : extrait de baptême de M. le comte de Castelmor. Reconstitution des actes d’État-civil. Dépôt central palais de la Bourse. Entrée le 21 septembre 1872, No. 75e341. Pour copie conforme, Paris le 6 mai 1968. Direction des Archives de Paris.
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=MNY7AQAAMAAJ&dq=Louis-Constantin+de+Batz+de+Castelmore&pg=PA70 Amédée Sevène, Notice sur Villemur: chef-lieu de canton de l'arrondissement de Toulouse (Haute-Garonne), 1898, .
  8. http://archives.haute-saone.fr/ark:/77977/vtac5618e23f5e43e86/daogrp/0/idsearch:RECH_1c3aab8fe264a878f702865d6b906825/ctx:1#id:1737574873?gallery=true&brightness=100.00&contrast=100.00&center=2699.377509625556,-982.6359615374205&zoom=7 Archives départementales de la Haute-Saône, État-civil de la commune de Scey sur Saône et Saint-Albin, acte de décès le 14 décembre 1827 de Louis Constantin de Batz de Castelmore; fils de Louis Gabriel de Batz marquis de Castelmore et de Constance Gabrielle Dumoncel
  9. René Batz, Études sur la contre-Révolution : la vie et les conspirations de Jean, baron de Batz, 1908, page 45.
  10. https://books.google.com/books?id=XbUWAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Constantin%22 Henri Castex, La descendance des Mérovingiens ? : les d'Artagnan toujours dans l'histoire, Éditions L.P.F., 1985, .
  11. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6577470j/f61.item.r=%22Constantin%20De%20Batz%22.zoom Société archéologique, historique, littéraire et scientifique du Gers, docteur Maurice Bats « La postérité de d’Artagnan », Impr. F. Cocharaux, Auch, 1973, pages 55 à 60.
  12. https://books.google.com/books?id=KRU5AAAAMAAJ&dq=Louis+Constantin+de+Batz+de+Castelmore&pg=PA152 Louis Grasset-Morel, Les Bonnier, ou, Une Famille de financiers au XVIIIe siècle, E. Dentu, 1886, .
  13. Bulletin de la Société archéologique, historique, littéraire & scientifique du Gers,, 1973.
  14. https://books.google.com/books?id=bQ8sAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Louis+Constantin%22 Odile Brel-Bordaz, D'Artagnan, mousquetaire du roi : sa vie, son époque, ses contemporains, Éditions du Griot, 1995, .
  15. https://books.google.com/books?id=Cc0wAQAAIAAJ&q=changement+nom Bulletin de la Société archéologique, historique, littéraire & scientifique du Gers,, .
  16. http://www.artagnan.net/archives/1997/1997_texte.htm Sur la descendance contemporaine en ligne féminine de d'Artagan
  17. http://madamedartagnan.free.fr/archives/1997/1997_texte.htm Saône et Loire Newspaper
  18. https://books.google.com/books?id=Cc0wAQAAIAAJ&q=Agla%C3%A9 Bulletin de la Société archéologique, historique, littéraire & scientifique du Gers,, .
  19. Tom Reiss, The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo (New York: Crown Publishers, 2012), 8, 77, 86; Claude Ribbe, Le diable noir (Monaco: Alphée, 2008), 17–18.
  20. Web site: Le beau d'Artagnan et son époque. 2022-01-09. www.pastichesdumas.com.
  21. Web site: Dogtanian . 2023-03-20 . Behind the voice actors.
  22. Web site: Russian animation in letters and figures. Movies. Dog in Boots. Российская анимация в буквах и фигурах. Фильмы. "Пес в сапогах". . ru . 2 May 2010.