Martinique's Infamous Headless Empress


She looms in the middle of the tropical splendor of  La Savane Park, in Fort de France, Martinique's bustling capital. Strolling past the palm trees, I spotted the marble statue dedicated to the island's most famous daughter, Josephine Bonaparte. Of course, that wasn't her name when she was born in Trois-Ilets in 1763. She was named Marie Josephe  Rose deTascher de la Pagerie and was called Rose until she met Napoleon after she moved to France and he nick named her Josephine.  It seems that Josephine and the statue that was erected in her honor in 1859, represent the tangled and discordant relationship between France and Martinique. Although Martinique is an overseas department of France, the colonial history and legacy of slavery casts an uneasy shadow over the relationship.

In 1991, after remaining in fact for 132 years, Josephine's statue was vandalized. Her head was severed from its base, in much the same way that French aristocrats were guillotined during the French revolution, a fate suffered by Josephine's first husband and one she narrowly escaped herself. A few years later, red paint was splattered on the shoulders and base of the statue. Scrawled in creole on the pedestal are the words, "Respect Martinique, Respect May 22."  The phrase references the date of the 1848 slave rebellion that finally led to the abolition of slavery in Martinique, after Napoleon reinstated the institution in 1802 after a decade of freedom, at the urging, it is said,of Josephine to benefit her family's flagging sugar plantation. The head remains missing and the paint was never removed.

Comments

Andrew said…
Very interesting image and history, Rosalind. Martinique looks beautiful from what you've already shown, but now I'm wondering what social issues there may be. I'm now going to see what Wikipedia has to say about it, as a starting point.
Fly Girl said…
Andrew, it is a very interesting history, especially since unlike most of the Caribbean, the island still retains a legal connection with their colonizers. I doubt if Wikipedia will have much about the social issues although their have been some recent situations that will probably come up on Google. I'll be talking more on the history and how it's influenced the current society.
Fly Girl said…
Tex, Oh it definitely is!
Catherine said…
what a story the decapitated statue tells - fascinating...
Fly Girl said…
Catherine,
The stature reflects the complexity of Martinique's history, which is indeed fascinating.
SandyCarlson said…
Thanks for this story. I love history, and this story is great. Wow.
Fly Girl said…
Sandy,
Thanks. I love history as well, it's a great way to understand a country.

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