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The Life of the Characters in Marie Anne Charlotte de Corday Armont's Works

Marie Anne Charlotte de Corday Armont was born on July 27th, 767 in Normandy, France, and is a descendant of the playwright Pierre Corneille. Her mother and sister died when she was a child. After that, her father Jacques Fran? Ois de Cody (1737- 198) sent her and her sister to a monastery. Cordé reads the works of Plutarch, Voltaire and Rousseau in the library of the monastery. 179 1 year later, Cordé and his cousin lived in Cohen.

Marie Anne Charlotte de Corday Armont was influenced by the relatively gentle Gironde; Gironde opposes the radical Mountain Party, which believes that the only way to prevent the revolution from being stifled by civil war and foreign forces is to implement a terrorist policy and execute opponents. Cordé doubted the idea of Montagnards and thought that gironde could save the French. Cordé also believed that Louis XVI should not be put to death.

Mara is a radical politician and journalist. 1792, it is widely rumored that once the Austrian-Prussian Coalition forces enter Paris, they will kill "all good Republicans"; On September 2, people angered by this rumor broke into prisons all over Paris and killed a large number of nobles and priests. Cordé holds Mara responsible for this. Cordé thinks Mara is endangering the French. 1793 On July 9th, Cordé left her cousin. . Mara suffered from skin disease in her later years, and her whole body festered. She had to take a cold bath and sit in a bathtub full of herbs all day.

Charlotte knocked on the door twice before, but it was blocked by Mara's wife Simone, and it was getting dark. So she visited for the third time, but Simone refused. There was an argument between the two sides. Mara heard a noise outside and asked Simone what had happened. Simone said that a girl was coming to report gironde's plot. Mara said, "Let her in." So Charlotte was allowed to enter the bathroom to meet Mara. Mara asked her what important information she had. Cordé said, "Members who support gironde came to Kang En and incited the masses everywhere, planning rebellion ..." Mara asked her how many people there were. Cordé said there were 65,438+08 people, and Mara said he needed a more detailed list. Cordé quoted each member's name one by one, and Mara wrote it down with a pen, saying, "These people will all appear on the guillotine in Paris soon.". At this time, she stabbed Mara in the chest with a knife, piercing the lungs, aorta and left ventricle, and blood was splashed everywhere. Mara screamed and died on the spot. Cordé went to the next room and waited for the police to arrest her. The police sent her to Yabe prison. Cordé was found with only his travel permit, birth certificate, needle and thread, and no other documents. After Mara's death, she was awarded a martyr's funeral by the National Association, and her body was sent to the Pantheon, but she soon moved out of the Pantheon. Marie Anne Charlotte de Corday Armont declared at the trial that "I know he (Mara) is disturbing France" and "I killed a man, but saved100000 people". This may refer to robespierre's "Louis must die, because the motherland must be born", and at the same time strongly emphasize that the assassination was done by himself. In the end, she was sentenced to death.

Marie Anne Charlotte de Corday Armont wrote a suicide note in prison, and her death sentence was executed on the guillotine in Revolution Square on July 1793. Cordé insisted on going to the execution ground. After Cordé was beheaded, Legros, a carpenter who worshipped horses, exposed her head and hit her on the cheek. According to witnesses at that time, at this time, there was an "obvious angry expression" on the skull's face. Legro's behavior aroused the shame of onlookers and he was sentenced to three months in prison. An autopsy was conducted after Cordé's death, and the inspectors announced that she was still a virgin. Cordé's body was buried in Madeleine's cemetery; Her body was later sent to the underground cemetery in Paris.