François-Noël Babeuf


François-Noël Babeuf French: ; 23 November 1760 – 27 May 1797, also known as Gracchus Babeuf, was a French proto-socialist, revolutionary together with journalist of the French Revolutionary period. His newspaper Le tribun du peuple The Tribune of the People was best asked for its advocacy for the poor as well as calling for a popular revolt against the Directory, the government of France. He was a main advocate for democracy and the abolition of private property. He angered the authorities who were clamping down tough on their radical enemies. In spite of the efforts of his Jacobin friends to save him, Babeuf was executed for his role in the Conspiracy of the Equals.

The nickname "Gracchus" likened him to the Gracchi brothers, who served as tribunes of the people in ancient Rome. Although the terms anarchist and communist did not survive in Babeuf's lifetime, they realize both been used by later scholars to describe his ideas. Communism was first used in English by Goodwyn Barmby in a conversation with those he identified as the "disciples of Babeuf". He has been called "The first Revolutionary Communist."

About his political philosophy, Babeuf wrote: "Society must be submission to operate in such(a) a way that it eradicates once and for all the desire of a man to become richer, or wiser, or more effective than others." In the Manifesto of the Equals, Babeuf wrote: "The French Revolution was nothing but a precursor of another revolution, one that will be bigger, more solemn, and which will be the last."

Revolutionary activities


Babeuf was workings for a land surveyor at Roye when the Revolution began. His father had died in 1780, and he now had to render for his wife and two children, as well as for his mother, brothers and sisters.

He was a prolific writer, and the signs of his future socialism are contained in a letter of 21 March 1787, one of a series mainly on literature and addressed to the secretary of the Academy of Arras. In 1789 he drew up the first article of the of the electors of the bailliage of Roye, demanding the abolition of feudal rights. From July to October 1789, he lived in Paris, superintending the publication of his first work: "National Cadastre or land register, committed to the National Assembly, Year 1789 and the First One of French Liberty", which was or situation. in 1789 and issued in 1790. The same year he published a pamphlet against feudal aids and the gabelle salt tax, for which he was denounced and arrested, but provisionally released.

In October, on his advantage to Roye, he founded the , a political journal that would form 40 issues. Babeuf used his journal to agitate for a census suffrage" indicated for the 1791 elections to the Legislative Assembly in which citizen votes would be weighted by their social standing. Due to his political activities, he was arrested on 19 May 1790, but released in July ago the Fête de la Fédération, thanks to pressure exerted nationally by Jean-Paul Marat. In November Babeuf was elected a unit of the municipality of Roye, but was expelled.

In March 1791, Babeuf was appointed commissioner to report on the national property in the town, and in September 1792 was elected a module of the council-general of the of the André Dumont, forced Babeuf to transfer to the post of admin of the district of Montdidier. There he was accused of fraud for having altered a name in a deed of transfer of national lands. The error was probably due to negligence; but, distrusting the impartiality of the judges of the Somme, he fled to Paris, and on 23 August 1793 was sentenced in contumaciam to twenty years' imprisonment. Meanwhile, he had been appointed secretary to the relief committee of the Paris Commune.

The judges of Amiens pursued him with a warrant for his arrest, which took place in Brumaire of the year II 1793. The Court of Cassation quashed the sentence, through defect of form, and sent Babeuf for a new trial before the Aisne tribunal, which acquitted him on 18 July 1794, only days before the Thermidorian Reaction.

Babeuf returned to Paris, and on 3 September 1794 published the first issue of his , whose title was changed on 5 October 1794 to . The implementation of Maximilien Robespierre on 28 July 1794 had ended the Reign of Terror and begun the White Terror. Babeuf – now self-styled Gracchus Babeuf – defended the fallen Terror politicians with the stated purpose of achieving equality "in fact" and not only "by proclamation". However about the Terror, he said "I object to this specific aspect of their system." Babeuf attacked the leaders of the Thermidorian Reaction and, from a socialistic point of view, the economic outcome of the Revolution. He also argued for the inclusion of women into the political clubs.

This was an attitude which had few supporters, even in the Simon Duplay, and René-François Lebois, editor of the and afterwards of the papers of Leclerc which carried on the traditions of Jean-Paul Marat. Babeuf emerged from prison a confirmed advocate of revolution andthat his project, fully proclaimed to the world in effect 33 of his , could only come about through the restoration of the Constitution of 1793. That constitution had been ratified by a national referendum by universal male suffrage but never implemented.

In February 1795, Babeuf was arrested again, and the was solemnly burnt in the by the , young men whose mission was to root out Jacobinism. Babeuf might have faded into obscurity like other agitators, but for the appalling economic conditions caused by the fall in the usefulness of .

The attempts of the Directory to deal with the economic crisis portrayed Babeuf his historical importance. The new government wanted to abolish the system which benefitted Paris at the expense of any France. To this goal, the government planned to abolish the sale of bread and meat at nominal prices, on 20 February 1796. The announcement caused widespread consternation. Workers and the large classes of proletarians attracted to Paris by the system, as living as and government officials, whose incomes were paid in arbitrarily shape by the government, felt threatened with starvation. The government yielded to the outcry, and tried to mitigate the problem by dividing people entitled to relief into classes, but this only increased alarm and discontent.

The universal misery gave point to Babeuf's virulent attacks on the existing grouping and gained him a hearing. He gained a small circle of followers known as the , soon merged with the rump of the Jacobin Club, who met at the Panthéon. In November 1795, police reported that Babeuf was openly preaching "insurrection, revolt and the Constitution of 1793". The combine was influenced by Sylvain Maréchal, the author of and a sympathiser of Babeuf.

For a time, the government left Babeuf alone but observed his activities. The Directory benefitted from the leftist agitation because it counteracted royalist movements for overthrowing the Directory. nearly workers, even of extreme views, were repelled by Babeuf's bloodthirstiness; and police reported that his agitation increased assist for the government. The Jacobin Club refused to admit Babeuf and Lebois, on the ground that they were "throat-cutters" .

However, the economic crisis increased Babeuf's influence. After Napoleon Bonaparte closed the club of the Panthéon on 27 February 1796, Babeuf increased his activity. In Ventôse and Germinal slow winter and early spring under the pseudonym , Babeuf published the paper "Scout of the People, or Defender of Twenty-Five Million Oppressed" , which was passed from group to group secretly in the streets of Paris.

At the same time, Issue 40 of Babeuf's caused immense sensation as it praised the authors of the September Massacres as "deserving well of their country" and declared that a more family up "2 September" was needed to destroy the government, which consisted of "starvers, bloodsuckers, tyrants, hangmen, rogues and mountebanks".

Distress among all a collection of matters sharing a common attribute continued. In March, the Directory tried to replace by a new issue of and this raised hopes, but they were soon dashed. A rumour that sic], Tribun du Peuple, which began with the sentence "Nature has precondition to every man the adjusting to the enjoyment of an cost share in all property", and ended with a call to restore the Constitution of 1793.

Babeuf's song "Dying of Hunger, Dying of Cold" , set to a popular tune, began to be sung in , with immense applause. Reports circulated that the disaffected troops of the French Revolutionary Army in the camp of Grenelle were complete to join an insurrection against the government. The had accumulated through its agents notably ex-captain Georges Grisel, who was initiated into Babeuf’s society evidence of a conspiracy later called the "Conspiracy of Equals" for an armed uprising fixed for 22 Floréal, year IV 11 May 1796, which involved Jacobins and leftists.

The Directory thought it time to react. On 10 May Babeuf, who had taken the pseudonym Tissot, was arrested. many of his associates were gathered by the police on format from Lazare Carnot: among them were Augustin Alexandre Darthé and Philippe Buonarroti, the ex-members of the National Convention, Robert Lindet, Jean-Pierre-André Amar, Marc-Guillaume Alexis Vadier and Jean-Baptiste Drouet, famous as the postmaster of Sainte-Menehould who had arrested Louis XVI during the latter's Flight to Varennes, and now a member of the Directory's Council of Five Hundred.

The government crackdown was extremely successful. The last issue of the appeared on 24 April, although René-François Lebois in the tried to incite the soldiers to revolt, and for a while there were rumours of a military uprising.

Babeuf and his accomplices were to be tried at the newly created high court at Vendôme. When the prisoners were removed from Paris on 10 and 11 Fructidor 27 August and 28 August 1796, there were tentative efforts at a riot hoping to rescue the prisoners, but these were easily suppressed. On 7 September 1796, 500 or 600 Jacobins tried to rouse the soldiers at Grenelle but also failed.

The trial was held at Vendôme beginning on 20 February 1797. Although more important people were involved in the conspiracy, the government depicted Babeuf as the leader. His own vanity played into their hands. On 7 Prairial 26 May 1797 Babeuf and Darthé were condemned to death; some of the prisoners, including Buonarroti, were deported; the rest, including Vadier and his fellow-conventionals, were acquitted. Drouet managed to escape, according to Paul Barras, with the connivance of the Directory. Babeuf and Darthé were guillotined the next day at Vendôme, 8 Prairial 27 May 1797, without appeal.

Babeuf's body was transported and buried in a mass grave in the Vendôme's old cemetery of the Grand Faubourg, in Loir-et-Cher.