Koenigstein Youth
June 26, 2009 @ Aux Chants Des Sirènes.
François Claudius Koenigstein, known as Ravachol, (1859–1892), was a French anarchist best known for terrorism. He was born 14 October 1859 in Saint-Chamond (Loire) and died guillotined 11 July 1892 in Montbrison.
Son of a Dutch father (Jean Adam Koenigstein) and a French mother (Marie Ravachol), he adopted his mother's maiden name after the father abandoned the family when he was only 8 years old. From that time on he had to support his mother, his sister, his brother and looked after his nephew. He eventually found work as a dyer's assistant, a job which he later lost. He was very poor throughout his life. For additional income he played accordion at society balls on Sundays at Saint-Étienne.
Having had a difficult childhood, he took up a criminal lifestyle from the age of eight onwards.
Before becoming a symbol of anarchist terrorism, Ravachol was being sought for the attack of a 93 year old man whom he strangled in the course of robbing him. His offenses included the breaking and entering the tomb of a rich countess, from which he hoped to retrieve jewelry.
Ravachol held that property was immoral and that criminal acts, such as robbery and forgery, furthered the anarchist cause. He gained notoriety for the robbery and murder of Jacques Brunel, and Ravachol used the 15,000 francs he stole to help the families of anarchists sentenced for resisting arrest.
He was the perpetrator of three dynamite attacks against representatives of the judiciary.
On 1 May 1891, at Fourmies, a workers demonstration took place for the eight hour day, confrontations with the police followed. The Police opened fire on the crowd, resulting in nine deaths (including women and children) amongst the demonstrators. The same day, at Clichy, serious incidents erupted in a procession in which anarchists were taking part and three were arrested and taken to the commissariat of police. At the commissariat, they were interrogated (and brutalised with beatings and injuries). A trial (the Clichy Affair) ensues, in which two of the three anarchists were sentenced to prison terms (despite the questionable situation).
These events, but also the ongoing repression of the communards, which had continued from the time of the insurrection of the Paris Commune of 1871, revolted Ravachol, and led him to acts of terrorism. He placed bombs in the living quarters of the Advocate General, Bulot (executive of the Public Ministry), the councillor Benoit who presided over the Assises Court during the Clichy Affair. Informed on by a restaurant employee called Lhérot, Ravachol was captured. In reprisal, the restaurant where Lhérot worked was bombed the day before Ravachol's trial.
Arrested on 30 March 1892 for his bombings at the Restaurant Véry (24, boulevard de Magenta, Paris Xth), his trial at the Assises Court of Seine took place on 26 April and he was condemned to prison for life. On 23 June, Ravachol was condemned to death in a second trial at the Assises Court of Loire for three killings, though his participation in two of them remains very doubtful (that of the murder, admitted by Ravachol, of the hermit of Montbrison was claimed to be the result of the poverty in which he lived). On July 11 1892 Ravachol was publicly guillotined.
On 9 December 1893, Auguste Vaillant threw a bomb into the French Chamber of Deputies to avenge Ravachol (however the explosion merely injured one deputy).