In 1865 Michel opened a school in Paris which became known for its modern and progressive methods. She corresponded with the prominent
French romanticist Victor Hugo and began publishing poetry. She became involved in the radical politics of Paris and among her associates were
Auguste Blanqui,
Jules Vallès and
Théophile Ferré. In 1869 the feminist group
Société pour la Revendication des Droits Civils de la Femme (
Society for the Demand of Civil Rights for Women) was announced by
André Léo. Among the members of the group were Michel,
Paule Minck,
Eliska Vincent,
Élie Reclus and his wife
Noémi Reclus, Mme
Jules Simon,
Caroline de Barrau and
Maria Deraismes. Because of the broad range of opinions, the group decided to focus on the subject of improving girls' education. Commonly known as the
Revendication des Droits de la Femme (''Demand for Women's Rights
), the group had close ties with the Société Coopérative des Ouvriers et Ouvrières
(Cooperative Society of Men and Women Workers
). The July 1869 manifesto of the Revendication des Droits de la Femme
was thus signed by the wives of militant cooperative members. The manifesto was also supported by Sophie Doctrinal, signing with Citoyenne Poirier'' (citizen Poirier), who would later become a close associate of Michel in the Paris Commune. In January 1870 Michel and Léo attended the funeral of
Victor Noir. Michel expressed disappointment that the death of Noir had not been used to overthrow the Empire. At the start of the
Siege of Paris, in November 1870, Léo in a lecture declared "It is not a question of our practicing politics, we are human, that is all."
Paris Commune During the siege, Michel became part of the National Guard. When the
Paris Commune was declared she was elected head of the Montmartre Women's Vigilance Committee. In April 1871 she threw herself into the
armed struggle against the French government. Her close ally,
Théophile Ferré, was a senior member of the Commune and of its Committee of Public Safety. It was Ferré who ordered the execution of
Georges Darboy, the
Archbishop of Paris. She was aligned with Ferré and
Raoul Rigault, two of the most militant members of the Paris Commune. However, Ferré and Rigault persuaded her to not carry out her plan to assassinate
Adolphe Thiers, the chief executive of the French national government. Michel fought with the 61st Battalion of Montmartre and organized
ambulance stations during the beginning of the
Bloody Week (May 21–28, 1871), the battle that ended the Commune In her memoirs she later wrote "oh, I'm a savage all right, I like the smell of gunpowder,
grapeshot flying through the air, but above all, I'm devoted to the Revolution." On May 23, after a fierce fight, Montmartre was captured by the French Army. On May 24, she surrendered to the French army in order to save her mother from possible imprisonment. Michel ideologically justified a militant revolution, proclaiming: "I descended the Butte, my rifle under my coat, shouting: Treason! . . . Our deaths would free Paris". She reflected: "It is true, perhaps, that women like rebellions. We are no better than men with respect to power, but power has not yet corrupted us." In her memoirs Michel confessed that the realities of the revolutionary government strengthened her resolve to end discrimination against women. On the attitude of her male comrades, she wrote, "How many times, during the Commune, did I go, with a national guardsman or a soldier, to some place where they hardly expected to have to contend with a woman?" She challenged her comrades to "play a part in the struggle for women's rights, after men and women have won the rights of all humanity?" In December 1871, Michel was tried by a
military court along with soldiers captured during the Bloody Week. She was charged with offenses including trying to overthrow the government, encouraging citizens to arm themselves, and using weapons and wearing a military uniform. She dared the judges to sentence her to death, saying "It seems that every heart that beats for freedom has no other right than a bit of lead, so I claim mine!" Instead, Michel was among 1,169 Commune supporters sentenced to
penal transportation to a French
prison colony in the South Pacific. It is estimated by some sources that 20,000 defenders of the Paris Commune had been killed or summarily executed after combat, though this number is disputed by other more recent sources.
Jacques Rougerie, a noted French Marxist historian, put the probable number at closer to 10,000.
Deportation On August 8, 1873, following twenty months in prison, Michel was loaded onto the ship
Virginie, to be deported to
New Caledonia, where four months later she arrived. While on board she became acquainted with
Henri Rochefort, a famous polemicist, who became her lifelong friend. She also met
Nathalie Lemel, another figure active in the commune. It was this latter contact that led Louise to become an
anarchist. She remained in New Caledonia for seven years and during that period befriended the local
Kanak people. Taking an interest in Kanak legends, cosmology and
languages, particularly the
bichelamar creole, she learned about Kanak culture from friendships she had made with Kanak people. She taught French to Kanaks and took their side in the
1878 Kanak revolt. The following year, she received authorization to become a teacher in
Nouméa for the children of the deported—among them many
Algerian
Kabyles ("
Kabyles du Pacifique") from
Cheikh Mokrani's rebellion (1871).
Return to France In 1880,
amnesty was granted to those who had participated in the Paris Commune. Michel returned to Paris, her revolutionary passion undiminished. She gave a public address on 21 November 1880 and continued her revolutionary activity in Europe, attending the
1881 London Social Revolutionary Congress, where she led demonstrations and spoke to huge crowds. While in London, she also attended meetings at the Russell Square home of the Pankhursts where she made a particular impression on a young
Sylvia Pankhurst. In France she successfully campaigned, together with
Charles Malato and
Victor Henri Rochefort, for an amnesty to be also granted to
Algerian deportees in New Caledonia. In March 1883 Michel published in
La Vengeance Anarchiste, a journal calling for
propaganda by the deed. Three days later, she led a demonstration of unemployed workers with her friend,
Émile Pouget. In the subsequent
riot, 500 demonstrators led by Michel pillaged three bakeries and shouted "Bread, work, or lead". Reputedly, Michel led this demonstration with a black flag, which has since become a
symbol of anarchism. It was the first recorded use of the
anarchist black flag. Michel was tried for her actions in the riot and used the court to publicly defend her anarchist principles. She was sentenced to six years of solitary confinement for inciting the
looting. Michel was defiant. For her, the future of the human race was at stake, "one without exploiters and without exploited." Michel was released in 1886, at the same time as
Kropotkin and other prominent anarchists. After her release, she published in the anarchist newspaper
La Révolution cosmopolite with
Charles Malato and
Jacques Prolo. She contributed to its first issue and many subsequent publications. Through these contributions, she began to explore the use of literature as a revolutionary weapon, frequently publishing her poems in the journal. It was banned in 1887 for "incitement to murder and pillage".
Exile and speaking tours In 1890 she was arrested again. After an attempt to commit her to a
mental asylum she moved to
London. Michel lived in London for five years. She opened a school and moved among the European anarchist exile circles. Her
International Anarchist School for the children of political refugees opened in 1890 at 19 Fitzroy Square. The teachings were influenced by the libertarian educationist
Paul Robin and put into practice
Mikhail Bakunin's educational principles, emphasising scientific and rational methods. Michel's aim was to develop among the children the principles of humanity and justice. Among the teachers were exiled anarchists, such as
Victorine Rouchy-Brocher, but also pioneering educationalists such as
Rachel McMillan and
Agnes Henry. In 1892 the school was closed, when explosives were found in the basement. (See
Walsall Anarchists.) It was later revealed that the explosives had been put there by Auguste Coulon, a Special Branch agent provocateur, who worked at the school as an assistant. Michel contributed to many English-speaking publications. Some of Michel's writings were translated into English by the poet
Louisa Sarah Bevington. Michel's published works were also translated into Spanish by the anarchist
Soledad Gustavo. The Spanish anarchist and workers rights activist
Teresa Claramunt became known as the "Spanish Louise Michel". By that time Michel had become a well-known speaker, touring Europe repeatedly to speak in front of thousands of people. In 1895
Sébastien Faure and Michel founded the French anarchist periodical
Le Libertaire (The Libertaria
n), now called
Le Monde Libertaire (Libertarian World). In the same year Michel met
Emma Goldman at an anarchist conference in London, at which both were speaking. The young Goldman was hugely impressed by Michel, considering her to have a "social instinct developed to the extreme". In reference to the harsh conditions of Michel's life, Goldman asserted "Anarchists insist that conditions must be radically wrong if human instincts develop to such extremes at the expense of each other." Michel returned to France in 1895. In an 1896 article, entitled "Why I am an Anarchist", Michel argued that "Anarchy will not begin the eternal miseries anew. Humanity in its fight of despair will cling to it in order to emerge from the abyss." In 1904 Michel went on a conference tour through
French Algeria. Michel was scheduled to meet the
anti-colonial campaigner
Isabelle Eberhardt, but Eberhardt died shortly before Michel arrived in Algeria.
Death Michel died of
pneumonia in
Marseille on 10 January 1905. Her funeral in Paris was attended by more than 100,000 people. Michel's grave is in the
cemetery of Levallois-Perret, in one of the suburbs of Paris. The grave is maintained by the community. This cemetery is also the last resting place of her friend and fellow communard
Théophile Ferré. ==Political theory==