Éléonore Duplay

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File:Eleonore1.jpg
Pastel of Éléonore Duplay by Regnault from the Musée Carnavalet

Éléonore Duplay (1768–26 July 1832), called Cornélie, after Cornelia Africana of Ancient Rome, was the daughter of Maurice Duplay, a master carpenter, and Françoise-Éléonore Vaugeois. She was the eldest of five children (four girls and a boy) and was born in 1768, two years after her parents' marriage, in Paris, where she would live all her life.

According to her sister, Élisabeth, who married Philippe Le Bas of the Committee of General Security, she was "promised" to Maximilien Robespierre, whose political opinions she shared. He said of her, "âme virile, elle saurait mourir comme elle sait aimer" ("noble soul, she would know how to die as well as she knows how to love"). They often walked together in the Champs-Élysées or the woods of Versailles or Issy. Many contemporaries and historians have suggested that she may have been his mistress, including Vilate, a juror on the Revolutionary Tribunal, who said, that Robespierre "lived maritally with the eldest daughter of his hosts," a clear reference to Éléonore. After his death she wore black for the rest of her life, never marrying, and was known as la Veuve Robespierre (the Widow Robespierre).

It is an oft-repeated "proof" of Robespierre's vanity that he kept many portraits of himself in Duplay's house, where he lived. In fact, those images that were not gifts, were painted by Éléonore, a student of painting in the studio of Jean-Baptiste Regnault. It seems that these pictures were actually embarrassing to him and he disliked to enter the study in which they were kept.

Though guilty of no crime, she was imprisoned with her sister Élisabeth and her six week-old nephew, Philippe Le Bas le fils on 9 Thermidor. Élisabeth would later write in her memoires, "Oh! Je ne t'oublierai pas de ma vie! Car sans toi j'aurais succombé; mais par ton courage, tu as ranimé mes forces et tu m'a appris que j'avais une grande tâche à remplir que j'avais un fils, qu'il fallait vivre pour lui" and elsewhere, "non, bonne chère soeur Éléonore, je n'oublierai de ma vie tout ton dévouement pour moi et pour ton pauvre petit neveu; ma reconnaissance sera éternelle!" (Roughly translated: "Oh! I will not forget you in my lifetime! For without you I would have succumbed; but by your courage, you reanimated my force and taught me that I had a great task to fulfill in that I had a son and it was necessary to live for him" and "no, good, dear sister Éléonore, I will not forget in my lifetime all your devotion for me and for your poor little nephew!") They would not be released until 18 Frimaire Year III.

Éléonore Duplay died on 26 July 1832, at the age of sixty-four, and was buried in the cemetery of Père Lachaise, where her grave may still be seen in the 34th division.