Fencing match between St.-Georges and
cross-dressing French diplomat and spy La Chevalière d'Éon on April 9,
1787, by Abbé Alexandre-Auguste Robineau. (Public Domain)
March 15, 2019
By Gary Waleik
Joseph Bologne was born in 1745 in the French West Indies on a plantation on the island of Guadeloupe.
"Black
slaves in Saint-Domingue in Haiti and, presumably, also in Guadeloupe
were forced to wear masks when they were picking sugar cane in the
fields," journalist Andrea Valentino says.
"Because if they didn’t wear
the masks, they were so hungry that they would try and eat the sugar
cane. I mean, it was just unbelievable."
That might have been Joseph’s lot. But thanks in part to his mastery of a sport, it wasn’t.
Life Under The 'Code Noir'
"His father was a rich plantation owner, and his mother was Nanon, a black slave," Valentino says.
Nanon was said to be the most beautiful woman in the French West Indies.
"He owes a lot to Mama," researcher and historian Mario Valdes says. "Both her color and his damn good looks."
Joseph’s
father was a minor nobleman named George Bologne de Saint-Georges. Most
plantation owners would have disavowed their mistresses and
illegitimate children. But Bologne did not.
France’s
Code Noir, or "Black Code," imposed harsh restrictions on freedom of
religion, marriage and commerce for black slaves and nonslaves living in
the colonies. So when Joseph was 7 years old, his father took Nanon and
their son to France.
"He
enjoyed many of the privileges that a white, upper-class French person
would have enjoyed in the 18th century," Valentino says. "He had a good
education. He was well-off. They lived in St. Germain, which was — and
still is — a nice part of Paris."
"I’m
sure people would have gawked at him, because he was so good-looking,"
Valdes says. "He was well-dressed and very gentlemanly, and I’m sure
everyone was quite delighted with him."
"But, at the same time, there’s this undercurrent of racism everywhere he went," Valentino says.
When Joseph and his family arrived in France, they found that the Code Noir wasn’t limited to the French colonies.
"That required every black person in Paris to register with the police," Valentino says.
Joseph
and Nanon did that. George Bologne’s money and title helped shield them
from some of the other effects of the Code Noir. But it wasn’t until
Joseph took up a sport that things began looking up.
Swordsman and Athlete
At school, Joseph Bologne studied math and history in the morning. "And in the afternoons, he fenced," Valentino says.
At
the age of 13, Joseph enrolled in the Royal Polytechnic Academy of
Weapons and Riding. His teacher was Nicolas Texier de la Boëssière, a master swordsman and a huge figure in the development of modern fencing.
"Fencing was really a way in which people could make their way in society," Valentino says.
"The sword was everything," Valdes says. "If you were not a good swordsman, you need not come to dinner."
In just a year or two, Joseph Bologne became an expert fencer. He began to compete against the best swordsmen of Europe.
One
of his most celebrated contests was against fencing master Alexandre
Picard, who had publicly called Joseph "La Boëssière’s mulatto." That
was a heavily loaded term, even in the 18th century. With pro-slavery
and abolitionist spectators looking on and wagering, Joseph won the
match.
"And his father
was so pleased with him for having won this fencing match that he gifted
him with a horse and a carriage that he used to drive around Paris —
like the crème de la crème of Parisian society," Valentino says.
But Joseph excelled at more than fencing.
"Boxing. There’s an image of him boxing," Valdes says. "He was a good runner. He was a good ice skater."
"He
famously could swim across the Seine with one arm tied behind his
back," Valentino says. "Shooting — one account says that he was the best
marksman in Europe."
The United States’ ambassador to France — and future US president — John Adams wrote in his diary:
He will hit the Button, any Button on the Coat or Waistcoat of the greatest Masters. He will hit a Crown Piece in the Air with a Pistoll [sic] Ball.
Joseph's dancing ability, along with his good looks and charm, made him a hit in the sophisticated salons of Paris.
"And,
I suppose, because he was unusual as a black person in Paris, people
were curious about him," Valentino says. "And women, in particular, were
keen to dance with him."
Joseph
Bologne danced and fenced his way into the hearts of French nobility. He
graduated from the Royal Academy in 1766 and was made an officer in the
court of King Louis XV. He was henceforth known as "Le Chevalier de
Saint-Georges."
Darling of French Society
That
title brought new connections and patronage, which the Chevalier used
to pursue a career in music. In 1769, he began playing violin in the
Concert des Amateurs. Despite what its name might suggest, the group was
made up of the finest musicians from the region.
"His playing must have been very, very good," says Jeanne Lamon, a concert violinist and the Director Emerita of Tafelmusik, a Baroque orchestra based in Toronto.
"There’s
something about bow technique and fencing that have something in common
that he obviously had an amazing skill for," Lamon says.
By
1773, the Chevalier was Director of the Concert des Amateurs. Parisians
flocked to concert halls to hear the virtuoso soloist and the music he
composed.
"Those are pieces that feature the violin, and the parts he wrote for the violin are very difficult," Lamon says.
"Sometimes
you find with composers who are also performers or players that they
write virtuosic things to show off and that, when they try to write slow
movements of music, there seems to be no depth," Lamon says. "What I
love about Saint-Georges’ music is that, as difficult and virtuosic as
his fast pieces are, the slow ones are very, very tender and intimate.
There’s a very touching sadness to the slow parts that I find show that
there was some depth to this guy.
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