History Daily - The Assassination of the Emperor of Haiti
Episode Date: October 17, 2025October 17, 1806. Former leader of the Haitian Revolution Jean-Jacques Dessalines, now Emperor Jacques I of Haiti, is assassinated after an oppressive rule. Support the show! Join Into History for ...ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's early March
1802
at Fort Cretre Piro
in the French
Colony
of Saint-Dameg in the Caribbean.
Forty-three-year-old General Jean-Jacques Desiline squints against the sun as he peers through a gap
in the fort's whitewashed walls.
Several hundred yards away, thousands of French soldiers stand in neat lines ready to attack.
General Desaline has no intention of surrendering the fort his fellow rebels now hold,
but when he turns to his men, he sees doubt etched on their faces.
General Desaline seizes a torch and holds it high above his head.
His voice booms across the courtyard as he reminds his troops that they are fighting not just for the fort, but for their freedom.
If the French attackers make it inside, those rebels who survive will be in chains before mourning.
All of the men in the fort, including Desilin, were once enslaved.
But ten years ago, a rebellion broke out in Song de Mang, and ever since they've been fighting a brutal war of independence against the French Empire.
Now, as their enemy closes in, rebels roar and roar in.
approval of their commander's words.
But almost as if the French hear their defiance, the artillery outside opens fire.
General Desaline doesn't flinch amid the bombardment.
He stands tall, despite the explosions and shrapnel flying through the air, because he's
determined to lead his people to freedom from their colonial masters or die trying.
Unfortunately for the rebels in the fort, bravery alone cannot repel cannon fire.
After resisting as long as he can, General Jean-Jacques Desaline will have to retreat.
But his struggle will continue, and soon the rebels will proclaim the defeat of the French and the birth of a new nation, Haiti.
General Desaline's fortunes will rise with it until he meets his downfall at the hands of his own people on October 17, 1806.
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On this
podcast
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we tell the
true
stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is October 17, 1806, the assassination
of the Emperor of Haiti. It's May 1802 in rural Zondamang, two months after the Battle of Cretta
Puro. General Jean-Jacques Desaline rides a half-starved horse along a dusty road. His uniform is
worn and filthy after weeks of hiding in the mountains. Desaline pulls on the reins and his horse
comes to a stop. Waiting at the roadside is 58-year-old Tucson.
Lovatier, the leader of the rebellion.
General D'Azaline dismounts and salutes his old friend,
but Lovatier responds only with a wary nod.
He is exhausted, too, and he motions to a wooden table
under the shade of a mahogany tree, the location for a makeshift council of war.
General D'zaline has been fighting alongside Lovatier for 11 years,
ever since enslaved laborers first rose in rebellion.
Both men quickly became leaders of the rebellion
against French colonial rule, and after a decade of brutal war, they finally won victory.
Lvarture named himself governor of Saint-Demagne with D'Ezzellin as his chief general.
But the French leader Napoleon Bonaparte refused to accept defeat.
He dispatched an expeditionary force led by his brother-in-law, General Charles Leclerc.
He was to retake Saint-Demang from the rebels.
And faced with overwhelming French firepower, the rebels had to abandon their strongholds and melt into the mountains.
Now, General Desaline and Lovatur are meeting in secret to discuss their next moves.
Desaline wants to fight on, no matter the cost, so he's shocked when Lovatier declares that the war is already lost.
The rebels are exhausted after 10 years of fighting, and Loveture has agreed to a peace deal with General Leclair.
He's going to surrender, and as part of the deal, General D'zaline's soldiers will be folded into the French army.
Desolene shakes his head, astonished that Lovature has betrayed the cause in the war.
this way, but he has no choice. He follows orders, surrenders his army, and swears an oath to
serve the French. General Leclair waste no time in testing Desaline's pledge. He orders him to arrest
his former commander to Saint-Louvature. Desaline always thought Louvature was a fool to trust the
French, and this new order proves it. But it also leaves Desaline in a difficult position.
Arresting his old commander will destroy his reputation among his own men. So he responds to General
Lecler's order with a compromise. He won't arrest Louvature himself, but he won't do anything to
stop it either. Within days, Loueture is detained and deported to a prison in France. General
D'Zaline and his soldiers are then sent into the mountains to round up any rebels who have not yet
surrendered, and after being taken into custody, dozens of rebels are executed with others put to work
on sugar plantations. But General D'zaline is walking a tightrope of deception. While feigning
loyalty to the French, he is secretly plotting against them. So on his hunt for rebels,
he only targets men when he doubts their loyalty to him. And as he marches his troops through
Sondamang's mountains, General D'Azaline also hides weapons and ammunition and secret caches
so they'll be ready for him when the time comes. And after three months, Desaline gets the
opportunity he's been waiting for. Word spreads that the French intend to reintroduce slavery to
The Zondamang, the people of the island are horrified and angry, and all at once, the rebellion
is rekindled. With a new insurrection on his hands, General LeClair panics. Paranoid and afraid,
he orders the arrest of many former rebel soldiers now serving in his army. Almost a thousand
of them are loaded onto ships taken out to sea and thrown overboard. But one former rebel
avoids Leclair's purge. General Desaline continues to fake loyalty to the French crown. He even
persuades Leclair to send him more arms and supplies to fight the rebels in the mountains.
But when the munitions arrive, Desaline finally reveals his hand.
He switches sides, takes control of several French-held cities,
and rallies more men to the rebel calls.
Eventually, General Desaline assembles an army of 27,000 men
and marches toward the last French stronghold in the north of the country.
There, at the Battle of Vertier, he shatters the French army and forces its surrender.
With a French expeditionary force defeated,
Zond de Man will be an independent nation once again.
But with Toussaint-Luberture now wasting away in a French prison,
there is no one that out-ranks General Desolene,
and he'll soon take full advantage.
He'll transform himself from a leader of a revolution
into an emperor and from a hero into a villain.
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Sondamang
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Vertiere
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45-year-old
Jean-Jacques
Desaline
steps onto
a wooden
stage.
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fills the
air and
the sound
of drums
and fire
crackers
echo in the
streets,
flanked by
fellow officers, Desaline raises a parchment. With a voice that carries across the crowd,
he declares what many have only dreamed of for the past decade. Having finally defeated the
French on the battlefield, the people of Zondamang are no longer colonial subjects. Instead, they are now
citizens of a new and independent nation, Haiti. After winning a decisive victory at the Battle of
Vertier, General Desaline was rewarded with a new title, Governor General for life. The remnants of the
French army were allowed to leave in defeat.
and under General Desaline's rule, Haiti has become the first country in the Americas to formally abolish slavery.
But Desaline has been careful not to give his newly liberated subjects too much freedom.
He is determined to keep a tight grip on Haiti, and he has set up a highly centralized government
in which all power flows through him.
As the crowds gathered in the city square depart, Governor Desaline returns to his residence trailed by his senior generals.
But he doesn't intend to remain in the new capital for long.
Over the next few months, he conducts a tour of Haiti's major cities.
It's not just an opportunity to take the independent celebrations nationwide.
Desaline also wants to identify and weed out opponents.
In every town and city he visits, his soldiers hunt down suspected enemies
and publicly execute hundreds of white people accused of siding with France.
Desaline insists that the deaths are necessary to protect the revolution,
but as the bloodshed continues, fears spread among the former rebels that the killings will
provoke another French intervention. These concerns deepen when Napoleon Bonaparte sends an
expeditionary force to neighboring Santo Domingo, which is still under French control. With the threat
of another invasion looming, Desaline takes drastic action to increase his power. He crowns himself
Emperor Jacques of Haiti, formalizing his supremacy in the new country. Then over the next few months,
Emperor Jacques drafts thousands into his army. He orders the invasion of French-held territory
and Santo Domingo and lays siege to its capital.
But although the Haitians prevent the French soldiers from leaving the city,
they can't stop French ships from sailing into the harbor to resupply the trapped garrison.
The situation descends into a stalemate,
and eventually the Haitian army is forced into a humiliating retreat.
Meanwhile, the strain of maintaining such a vast army has drained the countryside.
With so many pulled into military service, fields lie fallow and food production plummets.
To prevent famine, Emperor Jacques seizes agricultural land and rebuilds large-scale plantations.
He then imposes a system of forced work on the government-owned sugar and coffee estates.
And for many Haitians, it feels like a cruel betrayal, the return of slavery to their country in all but name.
By the second anniversary of Haitian independence, Emperor Jacques is in a precarious position.
The French are still threatening to invade, and he has few friends in other nations either.
U.S. President Thomas Jefferson has banned American merchants from trading with Haiti,
apparently fearing that the revolution might inspire enslaved people in the States to rise up as well.
But it's at home that Emperor Jacques faces the greatest threat.
Many of the soldiers and generals who stood with him when he proclaimed Haitian independence
are now plotting against him.
Opposition coalesces around 35-year-old General Alexandra Pesion.
Unlike many Haitians, Pesson was born a free black man,
and educated in France.
There he witnessed the outbreak of the French Revolution
and became committed to its ideals of political freedom and liberalism.
Emperor Jacques's swift transformation from a revolutionary hero to dictator
has disturbed Pesson, and he decides that he must take radical action.
But given Emperor Jacques's power, the conspirators must tread carefully.
A single letter in the wrong hands could cost them their lives.
The rebels know their chance will come, only when the emperor is away from the capital,
during one of his tours of the state plantations.
And it's there on the road, far from the security of home,
that they will strike and end the rule of the first emperor of Haiti once and for all.
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It's the morning of October 17, 1806, just north of Porto-Prince Haiti.
A young soldier crouches in a field of sugarcane.
Hidden among the tall green stalks, he grips his musket
and watches his comrades patrol the road ahead.
His orders are clear.
to stay concealed while the others block the road,
only then should he and his fellow soldiers emerge
to carry out their bloody mission to kill Emperor Jacques.
The soldier hears the clattering of horses' hooves,
and he risks a peek through the sugar cane.
He spies his target riding on horseback flanked by guards.
As the soldier watches, Emperor Jacques reigns in his horse,
confusion flickering across his face as he sees the road blocked.
But his bewilderment quickly turns to rage
when one of the men in front of him orders him to surrender.
The Emperor's guards raise their weapons, ordering the traitors to stand down.
Only then does the hidden soldier and his comrades burst out of the cane fields their own guns drawn.
The Emperor is surrounded and outnumbered.
But Emperor Jacques has no intention of giving up.
Outraged at this betrayal, he pulls out his pistol and shoots one of the soldiers in the chest.
Chaos erupts as muskets crack and the robe becomes a blur of shouting and gunfire.
The young soldier fires into the haze unsure of who or what he's shooting at.
Then finally, when the gunfire subsides, the young soldier cautiously advances his weapon at the ready.
As the gun smoke clears, he spots the emperor's horse lying on its side, breathing heavily.
Pin beneath it is Jacques.
His uniform is soaked in blood and his body riddled with bullets.
The Emperor of Haiti is dead.
Without ceremony, the soldiers tie the Emperor's body.
to the back of a horse. They then drag it to Porta Prince and dump his corpse in the city's main
square for all to see. Then, in the power vacuum that follows the assassination, chief plotter
Alexandra Piscion moves quickly to take control in Haiti. But unlike Emperor Jacques, Piscont does not
seek power for himself. He condemns the emperor's tyrannical rule and attempts to turn Haiti into a
republic. A peace does not last, and the young nation will soon spiral into civil war and
political upheaval that will last for much of the 19th century.
As one of Haiti's founding fathers, Emperor Jacques's reputation has been rehabilitated in more recent
years. He is now remembered best for throwing off the shackles of colonialism and paving the
way for the abolition of slavery across the globe. But those achievements came at a bloody cost,
and it was his dictatorial rule that led to his assassination by the very people he helped to free
on October 17, 1806.
Next on History Daily, October 20th, 1973.
After 14 years of construction, Queen Elizabeth II
officially opens the Sydney Opera House.
From Noisor and Ayrship, this is History Daily,
hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham,
audio editing by Mohamed Shazir, sound design by Molly Bach,
music by throm.
This episode is written and researched by Angus Gavin McCarr,
edited by Scott Reeves, managing producer Emily Burr.
Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
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