Saint-Germain bombing
| Saint-Germain bombing | |
|---|---|
| Part of Ère des attentats | |
Photographical representation of the aftermath of the Saint Germain bombing in L'Illustration (19 March 1892) | |
| Location | 48°51′10″N 2°20′18″E / 48.85275256°N 2.3382118°E Paris |
| Date | 11 March 1892 |
Attack type | bombing |
| Deaths | 0 |
| Injured | 1 |
| Perpetrator | Ravachol Gustave Mathieu (?) Rosalie Soubère (?) Charles Simon Joseph Jas-Béala (?) Charles Chaumentin (?) Clotilde Chaumentin |
No. of participants | 4 |
| Motive | Anarchism Revenge for the trial of the Clichy Affair |
| Verdict | Guilty with mitigating circumstances (Jas-Béala and Soubère acquitted) (Mathieu escaped and charges ultimately dropped against him) |
| Convicted | 2 |
The Saint-Germain bombing was a bomb attack carried out on 11 March 1892, in Paris by Ravachol and some members of his group, although the specific involvement of others is debated, including Gustave Mathieu, Rosalie Soubère, Joseph Jas-Béala, Charles Simon, and Charles and Clotilde Chaumentin. The attack was an act of vengeance against Edmond Benoît, the judge presiding over the trial of the accused in the Clichy affair, where three anarchist demonstrators were arrested by the police, beaten with sabers, deprived of care and water for some time, and judged very harshly by Benoît.
After receiving a significant shipment of stolen dynamite, Simon and Ravachol built the bomb together before some members set out for the judge's residence. Soubère carried the bomb under her skirts before handing it to Ravachol, who placed it. It exploded but failed to kill its target, causing no deaths and one injury.
The operation was a strategic failure: the conspirators missed their target, the police were searching for them, and although they failed to prevent the Clichy bombing on 27 March 1892, where the group attempted to assassinate the prosecutor in the case, Simon was arrested after being denounced by an informant. After the second attack, Ravachol, Jas-Béala, and Soubère were quickly captured and put on trial. Ravachol, whose legal strategy was to take full responsibility for the attack to exonerate his companions, was sentenced to life imprisonment and later to death. Soubère and Jas-Béala were acquitted, while Simon was sentenced to life imprisonment and deported to Cayenne. Meanwhile, Mathieu managed to escape the French authorities going underground.
Despite this, the attack was a significant tactical success, as it marked the beginning of the Ère des attentats (1892–1894), a violent confrontation between the French state and anarchists. The attack inspired other anarchist militants such as Auguste Vaillant, Émile Henry or Amédée Pauwels. In this context, terrorism underwent significant transformations. Although the Saint-Germain bombing was still based on the traditional form of terrorism, 'tyrannicide', figures inspired by it, such as Émile Henry, used it as a model to develop indiscriminate or mass terrorism, a significant form of terrorism in the 20th and 21st centuries.
For his defiance towards death and complete dedication to his ideals, Ravachol, in particular, became a mythical figure among anarchist circles, especially among French illegalists, where he was seen as a martyr for the anarchist cause.