Early life and career Bassville was trained for the priesthood, taught
theology in a provincial seminary and then went to
Paris. Here in 1784 he published
Éléments de mythologie and some poems, which brought him into notice. On the recommendation of the
prince of Condé he became tutor to two young Americans travelling in Europe. With them he visited Berlin, made the acquaintance there of
Mirabeau, and became a member of the
Berlin Royal Academy. At the outbreak of the
Revolution Bassville turned to
journalism, becoming editor of the
Mercure international. Then, through the Girondist minister
Lebrun-Tondu, he entered the diplomatic service, went in May 1792 as secretary of legation to
Naples and was shortly afterwards sent, without official status, to
Rome.
Murder in Rome His conduct enraged the more conservative elements of the Roman populace, who considered him to have "insulted the Pope". On 13 January 1793 Bassville, together with his wife, young son and a French naval officer Charles de la Flotte, drove by coach to the
Via del Corso. Provocatively the open carriage was decorated with republican insignia and a tricolour flag. A hostile Roman crowd pursued the coach when the occupants refused to discard the tricolour cockades in their hats. The alarmed coachman turned his vehicle into a courtyard fronting on the Palazzo Palombasra. Bassville was stoned and stabbed before being carried into a nearby police station. The Bassville family and la Flotte escaped without harm but he himself died of his injuries. Rioting spread beyond the Via del Corso and attacks were made on the
French Academy in Rome, the French Post Office and the homes of believed republican sympathisers.
Aftermath Although
Pius VI had sent his personal physician to attend to the dying Bassville, the affair was magnified in the
Convention, being considered "a deliberate murder of the representative of the Republic" by
the pope's orders. In 1797 an article of the
treaty of Tolentino compelled the Papal government to pay compensation to Bassville's family.
Writings Among his writings is included
Mémoires historiques, critiques et politiques sur la Révolution de France (Paris 1790; English trans. London, 1790). ==References==