Jehu is an
Old Testament character, immortalised in
Jean Racine's drama
Athalie. Jehu was famous for killing
Jezebel by having her thrown out of a window and stomping her to death. According to the
Books of Kings, Jezebel was responsible for inciting her husband King
Ahab to embrace the cult of
Baal and for subjecting the prophets of the
God of Israel to
religious persecution, including mass murder. She also brought false testimony against
Naboth and had him killed. By analogy, Jezebel represented the Jacobin regime, responsible for similarly persecuting the
Catholic Church in France and using
judicial murder against both real and imagined
dissidents through the
Reign of Terror. By the same analogy, Jehu was the force of righteous retribution, come to restore the true religion, and kill Jezebel, her children and all those who had turned away from the God of Israel. The reference to Jehu was not universally understood however, and through misunderstanding, uncertain repetition and assimilation with the broader idea of religious restoration, many people referred to
the Companions of Jesus instead of
the Companions of Jehu, despite this name being essentially meaningless, as was pointed out by Louis Blanc. The first reference to their existence appears in the records of the
National Convention in a report presented on 25 June 1795 from
Marie-Joseph Chénier on the recent killings in Lyons. His account says: ==Activities==