Hugues-Bernard Maret, 1st Duc de Bassano, was a French statesman, diplomat and journalist. Take a look below for 24 more awesome and interesting facts about Hugues-Bernard Maret, duc de Bassano.
1. Born at Dijon in Bourgogne, he received a solid education, and then entered the legal profession – becoming a lawyer at the King’s Council in Paris.
2. The ideas of the French Revolution profoundly influenced him, wholly altering his career.
3. The interest aroused by the debates of the first National Assembly suggested to him the idea of publishing them in the Bulletin de l’Assemblee.
4. The journalist Charles-Joseph Panckoucke (1736–1798), owner of the Mercure de France and publisher of the famous Encyclopédie (1785), persuaded him to merge this in a larger paper, the Moniteur Universel, which gained a wide repute for correctness and impartiality.
5. He was a member of the moderate club, the Feuillants, but, with the overthrow of the monarchy and the Insurrection of 10 August, 1792 he accepted a post in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where he sometimes exercised a steadying influence.
6. After a space in which he held no diplomatic post, he became Ambassador of the French Republic to the Kingdom of Naples; but, while negotiating with Charles de Simonville he was captured by the Austrian Empire and was kept for some thirty months, until, at the close of 1795, the two were set free in return for the liberation of Princess Marie-Thérèse-Charlotte, the daughter of ex-King Louis XVI.
7. For a time Maret returned to journalism, but he played a useful part in the negotiations for a peace with Britain which went on at Lille during the summer of 1797, until the victory of the Jacobin Club in Paris in the coup d’état of 18 Fructidor (September 1797) frustrated the hopes of Pitt for peace and inflicted on Maret another reverse of fortune.
8. On Napoleon Bonaparte‘s return from Egypt in 1799, Maret joined the general’s party which came to power with the 18 Brumaire Coup (9 November–10).
9. Maret now became one of Napoleon’s secretaries and shortly afterwards Secretary of State.
10. An experienced politician, he rendered services of major value to the French Consulate and First French Empire.
11. The Moniteur, which became the official State Journal in 1800, was placed under his control.
12. He sometimes succeeded in toning down the hard, abrupt language of Napoleon’s communications, and in every way proved a useful intermediary.
13. It is known that he had a share in the drawing up of the new constitutions for the Batavian and Italian Republics.
14. In 1804, he became Minister; in 1807, he was created Count; and in 1809, he was granted the title of Duc de Bassano, one of the titles with the status of duché grand-fief in Napoleon’s Kingdom of Italy.
15. This was a rare hereditary honor (extinct in 1906), which gives an insight into how well respected his work was by the Emperor.
16. He was extremely devoted to Napoleon, as shown by his work to pass into law the artifices adopted by the latter in April–May 1808 in order to make himself master of the destinies of Spain.
17. Maret also assisted in drawing up the Spanish Constitution of 1808, which was rejected by almost all Spanish subjects.
18. He accompanied Napoleon through most of his campaigns, including that of 1809 against the Fifth Coalition, and he expressed himself in favor of the marriage alliance with the Archduchess Marie-Louise of Austria, which took place in 1810.
19. In the spring of 1811, the Duc de Bassano replaced Jean-Baptiste de Champagny, as Minister of Foreign Affairs. In this capacity he showed his usual ability and devotion, concluding the treaties between France and Austria and France and Prussia, which preceded the French invasion of Russia in 1812.
20. He was with Napoleon through the greater part of that campaign, and after the major defeat, helped to prepare the new forces with which Napoleon waged the equally unsuccessful campaign of 1813 against the Sixth Coalition.
21. In November 1813 Napoleon replaced Maret with Armand, Marquis of Caulaincourt, who was known to be devoted to the cause of peace and had a personal connection to the Tsar Alexander I of Russia. Maret, however, as private secretary of Napoleon, remained with him through the campaign of 1814, as well as during that of 1815 and the Hundred Days.
22. After the restoration of the Bourbons, Maret was exiled.
23. He retired to Graz, where he occupied himself with literary work.
24. After the July Revolution of 1830, the new king Louis-Philippe elevated him as a Peer of France.