Abstract During the ‘reaction’ of 1795, Lyon and its region suffered a spate of political murders and prison massacres. Republican officials blamed these murders on elusive murder gangs, dubbed compagnies de Jésus, that were supposedly directed and funded by local aristocrats with ties to international counter-revolution. Despite notable uncertainty among historians, the idea became an enduring feature of the period, a political and cultural cliché of the Directorial regime. Why? The explanation lies in two potent sources that are best summarized as faction and fiction. First came two massive judicial prosecutions in 1797–99. These astonishingly large, protracted and expensive prosecutions resulted from an effort to weaponize the justice system on behalf of local Jacobins. However, the resulting trials yielded few convictions for politicized murder and no evidence of counter-revolutionary conspiracy. Thus, these prosecutions reveal the limits of justice in the late 1790s. Secondly, and much later, came a compelling connection made by Romantic Era authors between these failed prosecutions and a much smaller, successful, but unrelated, trial in 1800. A local ‘historical’ plaque reflects how powerful this fusion of faction and fiction remains.
Howard G. Brown (Thu,) studied this question.