Toussaint Louverture was the leader of the Haitian Revolution, the only successful slave revolt in modern history
@Leader of the Haitian Revolution, Life Achievements and Life
Toussaint Louverture was the leader of the Haitian Revolution, the only successful slave revolt in modern history
Toussaint Louverture born at
He married Suzanne Simone Baptiste in 1782. He had fathered several children with different women in his youth, many of who predeceased him. Though not much information is available about all his children, it is known for sure that he had three legitimate children: Placide, Isaac, and Saint-Jean.
In July 1802 he was captured by the French and sent to jail in Fort-de-Joux in the Doubs. He died on 7 April 1803. His death is believed to have been caused by malnutrition, pneumonia and tuberculosis.
He was born on 20 May 1743 in Saint-Dominigue. The exact details about his childhood are not known though it is generally believed that Gaou Guinou, a younger son of the King of Allada, was his father, and his second wife, Pauline, his mother. Toussaint was the eldest among their several children.
Even though he was born as a slave, his father had once been a free man who had been captured and sold into slavery. Fortunately Toussaint had a liberal master who let him read and write. He became an avid reader and read whatever books he could lay his hands on. He especially admired the writings of the French enlightenment philosophers.
By the time he was 20, he could speak three languages—French, Creole, and Latin. He had also acquired some knowledge about medicinal plants and herbs.
He eventually secured freedom from his owner though he continued working for him out of his own accord. With time he got married and raised a family, and settled into a comfortable life.
In August 1791 a sudden slave revolt took place in the northern province in which slaves rebelled by setting fire to plantation houses and fields and killing whites. A free man himself, he helped his former master and his wife escape. He also secured the safety of his wife and children before he too decided to get involved in the revolt.
He realized that some of the rebel leaders were willing to compromise with the European radicals, a point of view that he did not share. Thus he organized an army of his own and trained his followers in the tactics of guerilla warfare.
Realizing that its rule was being threatened, the French National Convention granted citizenship rights and freedom to all blacks within the empire in a bid to secure the loyalty of the black population. Following this, Toussaint joined the French in their war against Spain in 1794.
He led the French in ousting the British and then in capturing the Spanish controlled portion of the island. By 1801 he was ruling Saint-Dominigue as an independent state although it was still officially under French rule. He even drafted a constitution in which he abolished slavery and appointed himself the governor.