In the spring of 1789, Danton found his revolutionary beginnings as one of the many people giving speeches to the crowds gathered in the
Palais Royal. His demanding voice and rhetorical skill quickly gained him fame, as well as his nickname of "The Thunderer". As the Cordeliers district Danton resided in grew more persistent in its revolutionary ideals, it eventually formed its own street militia that was involved in the
storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789. Danton himself was not present for the event, however, he soon after led the Cordeliers militia, as well as other revolutionaries, on a mission to retake the Bastille from its provisional governor, which gained him more popular support from the revolutionaries. He and his district opposed the
Marquis de LaFayette, the commander of the
National Guard, as well as
Jean Sylvain Bailly, the provisional mayor. In early October, he was elected president of his section (around the
Cordeliers Convent) and deputy to the Commune and wrote the poster for the
Cordeliers which called Parisians to arms. His house in the Rue des Cordeliers was open to many people from the neighborhood. Danton,
Desmoulins, and
Marat, who lived around the corner, all used the nearby
Cafe Procope as a meeting place. Danton protected Marat from legal proceedings, and in March 1790, LaFayette ordered Danton detained. Paris Commune was divided up into 48 sections and allowed to gather separately. Danton was removed from office by a redistricting of Paris, for which he was compensated. On 27 April 1790, he became president of the
Club de Cordeliers. On 2 August, Bailly became Paris' first elected mayor; Danton had 49 votes, Marat and Louis XVI only one each. In spring 1791, Danton suddenly began investing in property, in or near his birthplace, on a large scale.
Robespierre, Pétion, Danton, and Brissot dominated the Jacobin Club. On 17 July 1791, Danton initiated a petition. Robespierre went to the Jacobin club to cancel the draft of the petition, according to
Albert Mathiez. Robespierre persuaded the Jacobin clubs not to support the petition by Danton and Brissot. After the
Champ de Mars massacre, a series of repressive measures against the heads of popular societies forced him to take refuge in London for a few weeks. Since Jean-Paul Marat, Danton, and Robespierre were no longer delegates of the Assembly, politics often took place outside the meeting hall. After the amnesty voted in the Assembly on 13 September 1791, Danton returned to Paris. He sought election to the new
Legislative Assembly, but the opposition of the
moderates in the electoral assembly of Paris led to his defeat. In December 1791, during the partial renewal of the municipality, there was significant abstention. This led to the defeat of LaFayette and the resignation of Bailly, which revealed the decline of the "constitutional" party which had until then dominated the Hôtel de Ville. Danton was elected second deputy
procureur public of the Commune. The debate at the beginning of December 1791 on whether to go to war with neighboring powers opposing the Revolution, triggered conflict between Jacobins and led to the birth of the opposition between
Montagnards and
Girondins. Danton hesitated on the need for war. He leaned more towards Robespierre than the pro-war
Brissot, but, overall, limited his participation in the dispute.
1792 On 9 August 1792, Danton returned from Arcis. In the evening before the
storming of the Tuileries, he was visited by Desmoulins, his wife, and Fréron. After dinner, he went to the Cordeliers and preferred to go to bed early. It seems he went to the
Maison-Commune after midnight. Faced with the
insurrectionary Commune which relied on the insurgent sections and which held Paris, the Legislative Assembly had no choice but to suspend
Louis XVI and replace him with a provisional Executive Council of six members composed of former Girondin ministers (
Roland in the Interior,
Servan in the War,
Clavière in Finance,
Monge in the Navy and
Lebrun in Foreign Affairs). The Girondins, hostile to revolutionary Paris, needed a popular man committed to the insurgents to liaise with the insurrectional Commune and had Danton appointed to Minister of Justice the next day; he appointed
Fabre and Desmoulins as his secretaries. More than a hundred decisions left the department within eight days. On 14 August, Danton invited Robespierre to join the Council of Justice, which Robespierre declined to do. Danton seems to have dined almost every day at the Rolands'. On 28 August, the Assembly ordered a curfew for the next two days. At the behest of Danton, thirty commissioners from the sections were ordered to search in every suspect house for weapons, munition, swords, carriages and horses. By 2 September, between 520 and 1,000 people were taken into custody on the flimsiest of warrants. The exact number of those arrested will never be known. On Sunday 2 September, at about 13:00, Danton, as a member of the provisional government, delivered a speech in the assembly: "We ask that anyone refusing to give personal service or to furnish arms shall be punished with death". "The
tocsin we are about to ring is not an alarm signal; it sounds the charge on the enemies of our country." He continued after the applause: "To conquer them we must dare, dare again, always dare, and France is saved!". His speech acted as a call for direct action among the citizens, as well as a strike against the external enemy. Many believe this speech was responsible for inciting the
September Massacres. It is estimated that around 1,100–1,600 people were murdered.
Madame Roland held Danton responsible for their deaths. Danton was also accused by the
French historians Adolphe Thiers,
Alphonse de Lamartine,
Jules Michelet,
Louis Blanc and
Edgar Quinet. However, according to
Albert Soboul, there is no proof that the massacres were organized by Danton or by anyone else, though it is certain that he did nothing to stop them. He did intervene, however, in protecting Roland and Brissot from an arrest warrant from the Supervisory Committee of the Commune on 4 September, opposing Marat by having the mandates removed, and was complicit in the escape of
Adrien Duport,
Talleyrand, and
Charles de Lameth. On 6 September, he was elected by his section, "
Théâtre Français", to be a deputy for the convention, gathering on 22 September. Danton remained a member of the ministry, although holding both positions simultaneously was illegal. Danton, Robespierre, and Marat were accused of forming a
triumvirate. On 26 September, Danton was forced to give up his position in the government; he stepped down on 9 October. At the new
National Convention on 4 October 1792, Danton proposed to declare that the fatherland was no longer in danger, asking only to renounce extreme measures. He measured the risks posed to the Revolution by fratricidal quarrels between Republicans. He preached conciliation and calls the Assembly several times to "holy harmony". “It was in vain that we complained to Danton about the Girondine faction", wrote Robespierre, "he maintained that there was no faction there and that everything was the result of vanity and personal animosities". But the attacks from the Girondins concentrated on him, Marat and Robespierre—the “triumvirs”—accused of aspiring to dictatorship. Danton defends Robespierre at the end of October by declaring that "all those who talk about the Robespierre faction are, in my eyes, either prejudiced men or bad citizens", but dissociates himself from Marat by pronouncing "I don't like the individual Marat. I say frankly that I have experiences his temperament: he is volcanic, cantankerous and unsociable." The Girondins attacked Danton for his management of the secret funds of the Ministry of Justice. Roland, Minister of the Interior, scrupulously gave his accounts but Danton would not. Harassed by Brissot, he only escaped through weariness of the Convention and for months the Girondins shouted “And the accounts?" to interrupt him at the podium. Meanwhile, his influence began to decline in favor of Robespierre as the real leader of the Mountain. 's novel
Ninety-Three ) by Alfred Loudet
1793 On 10 February 1793, while Danton was on a mission in
Belgium, his wife died while giving birth to their fourth child, who also died. Robespierre sent Danton a message. Danton was so affected by their deaths that he recruited the sculptor
Claude André Deseine and, a week after Charpentier's death, brought him to Sainte-Catherine cemetery to exhume her body and execute a
plaster bust of her appearance. On 10 March, Danton supported the foundation of a
Revolutionary Tribunal. He proposed the release of all imprisoned debtors as conscripts in the army. On 6 April, the
Committee of Public Safety, which was then composed of only nine members, was installed on the proposal of
Maximin Isnard, who was supported by Georges Danton. Danton was appointed a member of the committee. He and other members of the committee, despite its primary charge of defeating invasion and internal rebellions, were advocates of the moderation necessary to minimize popular resistance to military requisitions. Due to military reversals in 1793, manyespecially among the
sans-culottescriticized its conduct, and subsequent committee membership included more radical thinkers who pressed for more extreme measures to ensure victory over enemies of the Revolution internal and external. On 20 March 1793 the National Convention sent Danton and
Delacroix to Leuven to investigate
Dumouriez and his generals. On 27 April, the Convention decreed (on the proposal of Danton) to send additional military forces to the departments in revolt. On 1 June
Hanriot was ordered to fire a cannon on the
Pont-Neuf as a sign of alarm. When the Convention assembled Danton rushed to the tribune: "Break up the
Commission of Twelve! You have heard the thunder of the cannon. Girondins protested against the closing of the city gates, against the tocsin and alarm-gun without the approval of the convention; Vergniaud suggested arresting Henriot. That night Paris changed into a military camp according to
Otto Flake. On 2 June according to
Louis Madelin and Mignet a large force of armed citizens, some estimated 80,000 or 100,000, but Danton spoke of only 30,000, surrounded the Convention with 48 pieces of artillery. The next day the Interior minister
Garat forced Danton to disavow the events from the evening before. On 1 July 1793, Danton married Louise Sébastienne Gély, aged 17, daughter of Marc-Antoine Gély, court usher (huissier-audiencier) at the
Parlement of Paris and member of the Club des Cordeliers. He also married in a Catholic ceremony, confessing his sins first to the priest
Pierre-Marie Grayo de Keravenan. On 10 July, he was not re-elected as a member of the Committee of Public Safety. Seventeen days later, Robespierre joined the Committee of Public Safety, nearly two years after Danton had extended an invitation to him to do so. On 5 September, Danton argued for a law to give the
sans-culottes a small compensation for attending the twice-weekly section meetings, and to provide a gun to every citizen. ==Reign of Terror==