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| Théodore Géricault
1791-1824
"Le Radeau de la Méduse"
1819 - Canvas (H. : 4,91 m, W. : 7,16 m)
Musée du Louvre - Paris |
Named for the hideous gorgon of Greek mythology, "La
Méduse" was originally built as a 44-gun
frigate.
With the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, she was
converted to a troop transport, and 30 of her guns were
removed.
On June 16th, 1816, "La Méduse" sailed
as flagship of a four-ship convoy dispatched to establish
a garrison in Senegal,
which had been repatriated to France as part of the
peace settlement negotiated after the defeat of Napoleon
Bonaparte at Waterloo and after the return of the Bourbon
monarchy to the French throne.
The captain of the convoy, Viscount Hughes de Chaumareys,
was a royalist with no previous command experience.
Pressured for a quick passage by the new governor of
Senegal,
Colonel Julien-Désiré Schmaltz, de Chaumareys
disregarded the Naval Ministry's orders first by sailing
ahead of his squadron and then by crossing the treacherous
and poorly charted Arguin Bank
off the coast of West Africa.
On the afternoon of July 2nd, sailing in good weather,
"La Méduse" ran aground roughly 50
kilometers off the coast of the Sahara Desert and 250
miles north of Saint-Louis,
Senegal.
Chaumareys's efforts to refloat the ship failed because
he refused to jettison any of her fourteen 3-ton cannon.
A gale on July 5th only worsened the ship's plight.
Chaumareys proceeded to abandon ship, but rather than
ferry the passengers ashore systematically, he allowed
everyone to clamber pele-mele into the ship's six boats.
These could only accommodate about half the ship's complement,
and 150 people, mostly soldiers and sailors, were ordered
onto a raft, hastily thrown together from spars, planks,
barrels, and loose rigging, and poorly provisioned.
Chaumareys and Schmaltz planned to tow the raft, but
it was so sluggish that they soon abandoned it.
Those in the boats eventually made it to Saint-Louis.
Conditions on the overloaded raft were terrible to
start with and worsened fast. Over a two-week period,
drowning, starvation, burning heat, violent mutiny,
and widespread cannibalism reduced the original complement
to 15, including the ship's doctor, J. B. Henri Savigny,
and geographical engineer Alexandre Corréard.
On July 17th, the delirious survivors were rescued by
the French ship "Argus".
Seven weeks after the shipwreck, four more men were
found aboard the "La Méduse", the last
of 17 men who had chosen to remain with the ship.
News of the catastrophe quickly reached Paris. Savigny
and Corréard's account condemning Chaumareys
and Schmaltz for their incompetence, callousness, and
cowardice achieved wide circulation at home and abroad.
Bonapartists seized on the tragedy to embarrass the
Naval Ministry's nepotistic command structure and to
attack the monarchy.
Chaumareys was tried on five counts but acquitted of
abandoning his squadron, of failing to refloat his ship
and save her cargo of gold, and of abandoning the raft.
He was found guilty of incompetent and complacent navigation
and of abandoning "La Méduse"
before all her passengers were off.
The last verdict carried the death penalty, but Chaumareys
was sentenced to only three years in jail. The trial
was widely denounced as a whitewash and confirmation
of Bourbon
corruption, and by 1818, public opinion had forced the
resignation of Governor Schmaltz and the unprecedented
passage of the Gouvion de Saint-Cyr law legislating
for the first time a meritocracy in the French military.
Perhaps the best-known legacy of the "La Méduse"
shipwreck, though, was a painting by Théodore
Géricault, first exhibited at the Paris Salon
in September 1819.
Popularly known as "The Raft of the La Méduse"
the painting is entitled simply "Scene of Shipwreck"
and portrays the survivors at the moment of their seeing
salvation on the horizon in the form of the "Argus".
In 1980, the remains of the ship itself were identified
by divers on the Arguin Bank
some 50 kilometers off the coast of Mauritania. |