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* Bernard Ullmann, ''Lisette de Brinon, ma mère: Une Juive dans la tourmente de la Collaboration'' (Editions Complexe, Paris, 2004, ISBN 2-87027-997-3)
* Bernard Ullmann, ''Lisette de Brinon, ma mère: Une Juive dans la tourmente de la Collaboration'' (Editions Complexe, Paris, 2004, ISBN 2-87027-997-3)


[[Category:World War II politics]]
[[Category:1896 births|Brinon, Lisette de]]
[[Category:Holocaust]]
[[Category:1982 deaths|Brinon, Lisette de]]
[[Category:French history]]
[[Category:World War II politics|Brinon, Lisette de]]
[[Category:Jewish French history]]
[[Category:Holocaust|Brinon, Lisette de]]
[[Category:French history|Brinon, Lisette de]]
[[Category:Jewish French history|Brinon, Lisette de]]
[[Category:Vichy regime|Brinon, Lisette de]]



[[fr:Lisette de Brinon]]
[[fr:Lisette de Brinon]]

Revision as of 18:06, 19 February 2005

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Lisette de Brinon (189626 March 1982) was best known as the Jewish wife of the notorious pro-Nazi French collaborator, Marquis Fernand de Brinon.

File:LisettedeBrinon.jpg
Lisette de Brinon

Born Jeanne Louise Rachel Franck, she lived in an internal exile throughout the Second World War: declared an "honoray Aryan," she was not deported to her death, but neither was she welcome in Vichy or in Paris.

Born to a bourgeois family in Paris, Lisette Franck was an inveterate socialite, surrounding herself with notables of the left (Léon Blum) and of the right (Pierre Drieu la Rochelle). Emmanuel Berl, best known for writing some of Philippe Pétain's early speeches, was her first cousin.

Her second husband, Fernand de Brinon, distinguished himself with an early scoop interview with Adolf Hitler, and became one of the architects of French collaboration after France's catastrophic defeat at the hands of the Nazis in June 1940. As the war progressed, the couple were distanced partly by Lisette's inconvenient Jewishness, and also because of Brinon's long-term affair with his secretary Simone Mittre. Lisette attempted to follow Brinon when the Vichy government fled to exile in the castle of Sigmaringen following the Allied liberation. Although she managed to risk death by entering Germany, she never reached the castle.

She and her husband were captured by Allied Forces and brought back to stand trial in Toulouse. She was imprisoned briefly while her husband was found guilty of treason and executed in 1947. She continued to use the title of Marquise, and carried on an affair with another former collaborator, Jacques Benoist-Méchin.

She died in 1982 in a nursing home in the Paris suburb of Montmorency.

External link

References

  • Bernard Ullmann, Lisette de Brinon, ma mère: Une Juive dans la tourmente de la Collaboration (Editions Complexe, Paris, 2004, ISBN 2-87027-997-3)